Donald Sterling on Magic Johnson |
It was the second time in
about a month that the owner of the Los Angeles #Clippers launched into
tirade against the #NBA Hall of Fame point guard, entrepreneur and
philanthropist.
In the recorded
conversation that earned Sterling a lifetime ban from the NBA, he was
caught telling friend V. Stiviano that he doesn't want her posting
pictures with African-Americans, including Johnson. In Monday night's CNN interview with Anderson Cooper, he went further -- much further.
"What has he done? Can
you tell me? Big Magic Johnson, what has he done?" he said, turning the
question on the CNN host. "He's got #AIDS. Did he do any business, did he
help anybody in South LA?
"What kind of a guy goes
to every city, has sex with every girl, then he catches HIV? Is that
someone we want to respect and tell our kids about? I think he should be
ashamed of himself. I think he should go into the background. But what
does he do for the black people? He doesn't do anything."
So, let's ask the question: What has Magic Johnson ever done?
As it turns out, quite a bit -- and he's been doing them for a long time.
Sterling insists he's no racist, still slams Magic Johnson
He won championships
For more than three decades, Earvin Johnson has had the "Magic" touch.
He led Michigan State to
a national title in 1979 before going first in the NBA draft and
winning the championship with the Los Angeles Lakers during his very
first year in the league.
The paycheck was nice
too. Johnson signed a 25-year deal for $25 million. It was the longest
and highest-paying gig in sports at the time.
In 13 seasons with the
Lakers, he racked up five NBA championships and three MVP awards. And
don't forget the Olympic gold medal in 1992 as a part of the "Dream
Team" -- the first year pro players could take part. Nine months earlier, Olympic gold seemed like anything but a dream.
He helped change attitudes about HIV/AIDS
When Johnson announced
he was HIV positive and retiring from the Lakers in November 1991, it
sounded more like a death sentence -- so little was known about the
disease at the time.
But he helped change America's attitude toward the disease.
In an interview with Cooper in November, he described himself as "the blessing and the curse of HIV."
"I'm the blessing because people were talking about it, they ran out and got tested at that time," he said."Then I'm the curse because...people now say, oh well, HIV is nothing because if I get it I can be like Magic. He's doing good, and I can do the same thing he's doing or take the same medicine he's taking and I'll be okay.""But what they don't understand," he added, "in 22 years, millions of people have died."And so, he says, his work isn't done.
He's raised millions for charity
The same month he tested
positive for HIV, he formed the Magic Johnson Foundation which "works
to develop programs and support community-based organizations that
address the educational, health and social needs of ethnically diverse,
urban communities."
Fact-checking the Sterling interview
In the two-plus decades
since the world gasped at his HIV announcement, the foundation has
raised more than $20 million for charity and given out almost $4 million
in scholarships.
He's brought business to minority communities
As it turns out, Johnson was a pretty good businessman too. He founded MJ Enterprises in 1987.
The focus again was on
serving diverse communities, bringing high-quality businesses to
minority areas typically under served by larger corporations.
And Johnson seemed to invest in nearly everything -- theaters, restaurants, fitness centers, sports teams and a TV network.
A partnership with Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz made him millions. So did a share of the Lakers he bought and sold.
All together, Johnson's business empire is estimated at $500 million.
He's taken the high road
With numbers like that,
it's no surprise that Johson's longtime agent and friend Lon Rosen came
to his defense Monday night, saying Magic was "the exact opposite" of
the way Sterling portrayed him in the CNN interview.
"I've known Earvin since 1979 and his whole mission in life has been to create business opportunities in urban America and to be charitable," Rosen said in a Los Angeles Times interview on Monday. "He has literally donated tens of millions of dollars of his own money to organizations and individuals forever and ever and ever."
For his part, Johnson didn't dignify Sterling's contentions with a remark.
Johnson posted a series of tweets after the interview aired, but he didn't respond to the specific allegations.
"I'd rather be talking about these great NBA Playoffs than Donald Sterling's interview," he said in one.
"After this week, no more Sterling talk. Just the NBA Playoffs," he said in another.
Sterling's claims vs. reality
Source: CNN News
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