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Isiah Thomas’ Name Allegedly ‘Never Came Up’ When Michael Jordan Was Consulted On Dream Team

As basketball fans rehash the feud between Isiah Thomas and Michael Jordan that dates back all the way to the 1988 playoffs, longtime NBA executive Rod Thorn, who worked on the league side during the construction of the Dream Team roster for the 1992 Olympics, said Wednesday that Thomas’ name “never came up” during his conversations with Jordan about the Dream Team.

It had long been assumed that Jordan made it a requirement that if he played, Thomas could not be on the team. Most who believe that theory won’t be persuaded by Thorn, but on Golic and Wingo on Wednesday, Thorn made it clear he did not ever hear from Jordan that Thomas should not play.

“There was never anything in my conversations with (Jordan) that had to do with Isiah Thomas,” Thorn said.

Episodes 5 and 6 of The Last Dance, which airs this weekend on ESPN, will revisit the Dream Team, while last week’s episodes looked back at Bulls’ rivalry with the Bad Boys Detroit Pistons and Thomas’ fractured relationship with Jordan. It is widely believed that the Pistons’ decision to walk off the court before the clock had expired in Game 4 of the teams’ 1991 series was the final straw in the relationship between the two NBA legends.

Though Thorn’s statement is well taken, any other person tasked with organizing Team USA, of course, could have easily spoken in private with Jordan to make sure his conditions were met if this was something he demanded. While the Dream Team won the gold without Thomas and Jordan is clearly a higher priority than Thomas, it’s still impossible to believe that Thomas, a 12-time All-Star and Finals MVP, was organically left off the list for the 1992 Olympics.

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Aaron Gordon Won’t Do The Dunk Contest Because His ‘Focus’ Is On Getting The Magic To ‘Big Games’

After tossing out the possibility in a recent music video that he will not participate in the NBA Dunk Contest ever again, Orlando Magic forward Aaron Gordon confirmed his stance to Stephen A. Smith on First Take.

Gordon said the dunk contest requires so much planning and practice that it actually takes away from his ability to fully focus on the stretch run of the NBA season, and after two near-losses, he’s ready to put it in the past.

Instead, the down time during the NBA’s hiatus has helped Gordon focus on how important it is to him to make it back to the postseason.

“(The 2019 first-round series against Toronto) was the most exciting basketball I’ve ever played,” Gordon said. “That’s the focus, to be in the big games and to win for Orlando.”

Gordon has long been seen as a hinge piece of Orlando’s core, but has fluctuated between roles and playing styles in a way that has made it hard to pin down what exactly he is as an NBA player. The Magic haven’t helped by drafting big man after big man, forcing Gordon to play small forward rather than the 4 or 5 spot, which would give him more consistent physical advantages.

Asked what needed to happen to make his playoff performances stand out more than his Dunk Contest performances, Gordon said he needed to play with more discipline and be more consistent.

Should the NBA season resume, the Magic would enter the playoffs as the eighth seed in the Eastern Conference.

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20 Creative Pasta Recipes You’ll Probably Want To Whip Up ASAP


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39 Mother’s Day Gifts She’ll Actually Use Every Day

Mother’s Day’s on Sunday May 10th. Are you ready?


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Sofia Vergara Posted A Photo Of Joe Manganiello In Quarantine Without His Beard And He Looks Totally Different

*audible gasp*


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I’m A Bit Flabbergasted At All These Celebs Who Have Celebrities For Parents

Wait, Mad-Eye Moody is Bill Weasley’s DAD?


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Selena Gomez Decided To Release An Impressive ‘Doll Version’ Of Her ‘Boyfriend’ Video

It’s hard to promote an album these days with the world being how it is at the moment. Still, Selena Gomez has found a way: Today, she has shared a new version of her recent “Boyfriend” video, except it has been carefully re-created with dolls instead of people.

Gomez herself didn’t actually sit down, meticulously reposition dolls and other props, and make this video frame by frame, though. Instead, she turned to somebody with more experience in that arena: a Instagrammer/YouTuber who goes by “Selena Gomez Doll.” Good news for folks who like this “Boyfriend” video: over the past few years, Gomez Doll has also re-created other Gomez videos in the same fashion.

The person behind the Gomez Doll account was certainly thrilled when they discovered that the real Gomez followed them on Instagram, writing last month, “I cannot believe that Selena actually followed me!! i woke up and saw a message that said selena followed me and i was so confused.. i can’t believe it was actually true!!! i can’t believe my idol actually followed me!! i’m still shaking, this was so unexpected!! i’ve been a hardcore selenator since 2012 and i’ve been making stop motions on youtube and pictures on this account for almost 6 years, never did i think that selena would actually follow me!! i’m so happy right now ahhhhhhhhhh!!! this honestly feels like a dream come true!!”

Watch the “Boyfriend” video above, and check out some other re-made videos from Selena Gomez Doll below.

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Will Smith Reunited With ‘The Fresh Prince Of Bel-Air’ Cast Ahead Of The Show’s 30th Anniversary

With the 30th anniversary coming up in September, The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air cast reunited on Will Smith’s Snapchat show, Will From Home. In (virtual) attendance was Smith (he’s the titular Will, and he’s at home… it’s a complex premise), Alfonso Ribeiro (Carlton Banks), DJ Jazzy Jeff (Jazz), Tatyana Ali (Ashley Banks), Karyn Parsons (Hilary Banks), Daphne Maxwell Reid (Aunt Vivian), and Joseph Marcell (Geoffrey). The great James Avery passed away in 2013, but the reunion will include a tribute to Uncle Phil.

In the clip below, Smith teases Ribeiro for coming up with his character’s name:

“The reason that my character’s name is Will Smith is because of you, do you remember that? It was such a deep insight that you had. You said, ‘Because people are going to call you that for the rest of your life!’”

Sadly, calling Will Smith “Willenium Smith” did not catch on.

Smith also asked his co-stars how they felt about being recognized by The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air fans, with DJ Jazzy Jeff admitting that he was annoyed when people would ask him to do his and Will’s handshake. “You would see in people’s eyes when they were about to sneak the handshake and I would just grab their hand and hold it,” he said.

The Will From Home finale is airing in two parts: part one is out now (and available here), while part two will premiere on Thursday, April 30, at 6 a.m. EST.

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The Best American Single Malt Whiskeys To Get Delivered Before The Weekend

American single malt whiskey might be the next big thing to hit the American whiskey scene. Whereas bourbons and ryes have mash bills (grain recipes) with two, three, and sometimes four or more grains and cereals, American single malt has only one grain. Malted barley is the star of the show.

There’s little to no place to hide when you only have one grain to work with. That means American single malts — like Scotch or Japanese single malts — have a certain clarity of focus by design. It also means that we’re dealing with a very different flavor profile than your average bourbon or rye, since there’s no corn, wheat, or rye at play. To create distinct expressions, American single malt distillers often experiment with aging and barrel types, evident when you compare their bottles to common bourbons and ryes, which both have fairly strict aging rules.

The ten whiskeys below will introduce you to American single malts in a major way. These are the bottles that’ll help you elevate your whiskey game and expand your palate. You can also get any of these bottles delivered right now, just in time for another weekend in quarantine.

Virginia Distillery Port Cask Finished Virginia-Highland Whisky

ABV: 46%
Distillery: Virginia Distillery, Lovingston, VA
Average Price: $36.97

The Whisky:

Okay, we’re already cheating a little with this choice. While this is made from 100 percent malted barley, it’s made from a Scotch single malt and a Virginia single malt. This is technically a blend of two single malts to create one whiskey that’s then finished off in port casks from a port winery in Virginia.

Tasting Notes:

Apple orchards, ripe figs, and fresh honey lead the way here. Sweet and crisp apples play next to dark chocolate cut with powdery cinnamon and clove as hints of oak and smoke linger in the background. An almost rummy sense of brown sugar peeks in late as the warmth, oak, and figgy nature of the sip fades slowly away.

Kings County Distillery Single Malt

ABV: 47%
Distillery: Kings County Distillery, Brooklyn, NY
Average Price: $45.99 (half bottle)

The Whisky:

This is an American single malt made in Brooklyn by way of Scotland. The spirit is made in New York from malts acquired from England and Scotland. Scottish pot stills are employed for the double distillation. Then the hot juice goes into Kings County’s own ex-bourbon barrels for up to four years.

Tasting Notes:

There’s a sense of fruit and dried flowers on a dry edge, cut with honey. That honey carries through and dried orange zest mixes with dried straw and an echo of peaty smoke. The malts shift toward creamy as the honey, earthiness, and light oaky touches take center stage before the dry, slightly medicinal final notes.

Old Line Single Malt American Whiskey

ABV: 43%
Distillery: Old Line Distillery, Baltimore, MD
Average Price: $51.99

The Whiskey:

This whiskey is a bit of West Coast meets East Coast. The Maryland-made tipple has a base of malted barley grown all the way out Pacific Northwest. The juice is then aged in small-format 10-gallon charred new white oak casks. The smaller casks mean shorter aging times, so this expression only spends two years mellowing.

Tasting Notes:

Those malts come through with a sense of oaky char and plenty of fruit. Honey is present and mixes well with the vanilla. There’s a slight wisp of smoke and a hint of spice on the malty and full finish.

Del Bac Dorado Mesquite Smoked Single Malt Whiskey

ABV: 45%
Distillery: Whiskey Del Bac, Tucson, AZ
Average Price: $58.23

The Whiskey:

Usually, Scotch single malt uses malted barley made with peat. This small, family-run distillery out in Arizona changes that up by using locally grown mesquite wood to malt their barley. It’s a great way to really imbue a local flavor into single malt. The copper pot distilled juice is then aged in white oak barrels under the Arizona sun.

Tasting Notes:

It should come as no surprise but tobacco smoke is front-and-center with a hint of dark chocolate cut with spicy chili. The smokiness turns those chilis towards chipotle with the chocolate bitterness fading as a burnt sugar note sails in alongside a clear billow of campfire smoke.

All that smoke, spice, and vegetal nature fade slowly like the coals dying down at the end of a spring evening.

Deerhammer American Single Malt Whiskey

ABV: 59.9%
Distillery: Deerhammer Distillery, Buena Vista, CO
Average Price: $53.99

The Whiskey:

This is a grain-to-glass distillery that takes their whiskey-making very seriously. This expression is made from a mash fermented via open air for days and is then distilled in direct-fire copper pot stills. The juice then goes into charred new white oak and is aged at the base of the Rocky Mountains for at least two years.

Tasting Notes:

Dark, spicy chocolate bars dipped in fresh honey greet you. That bitter chocolate carries on with the spice as a sense of caramel and sweetened coffee come into play. Oak, grassy bales of hay, and rich toffee take hold on the long, warming end.

Copperworks American Single Malt Whiskey

ABV: 52%
Distillery: Copperworks Distilling Company, Seattle, WA
Average Price: $64.99

The Whiskey:

Seattle’s award-winning waterfront distillery has its roots in craft beer. Co-founder Jason Parker has brewed beer for Seattle craft icons Pike Brewing (he was their head brewer), Fish Brewing, Redhook, and Pyramid. In fact, Copperworks’ entire ethos for making whiskey is based on its craft-beer heritage. It’s a good ethos, as Copperworks is now a multiple award-winning craft distiller.

Tasting Notes:

Bales of hay next to freshly broken honeycombs mingle with notes of sherry plum and a hint of roasted nuts. A dried fruit nature takes over with malts covered in treacle with a whisper of orange Necco Wafers. A sourdough malted bread loaf baked with pecans kicks in late as the sip ends on a warm-yet-sweet final note.

Balcones Texas Single Malt Whisky

ABV: 53%
Distillery: Balcones Distillery, Waco, TX
Average Price: $69.99

The Whisky:

This Texas whisky does things a little differently. The mash bill is made from 100 percent unpeated barley, giving the mash a very clean line of malts. The juice is then aged in various sized barrels in the Balcones rickhouse, on various floors. Once the right notes are hit, the whisky is then blended and aged in single large-format barrels for a finishing touch.

Tasting Notes:

A fruit bowl brimming with bananas, pears, and peaches mingle with light notes of rose water cut with citrus oils and honey. The sip turns towards a toasted sourdough slice with plenty of butter and a dollop of orange marmalade. That toast fades as the oak rises to the fore — along with burnt sugar, malty earthiness, and a lingering sense of citric acid.

FEW Single Malt Whisky

ABV: 46.5%
Distillery: FEW Spritis, Evanston, IL
Average Price: $69.99

The Whisky:

FEW also brings their own flourish to the single malt game. They use both smoked and unsmoked barley, using cherry for smoking. This is also a grain-to-glass distilling experience so all the barley is sourced with 100 miles of the distillery.

Tasting Notes:

Marzipan and a wisp of smoke open this one up. There’s a clear sense of grainy malts next to mild notes of spice and fruit with an echo of herbal oils. The oak is more reminiscent of a lumberyard as more hints of fruit with vanilla enter the mix near the sweet-yet-mild finish.

Stranahan’s Sherry Cask Single Malt Whiskey

ABV: 47%
Distillery: Stranahan’s Colorado Whiskey, Denver, CO
Average Price: $80.82

The Whiskey:

This one is all about the finish. Stranahan’s takes their 100 percent malted barley that’s been aged for four years and transfers it to special sherry casks. They source 500-liter (i.e. huge) casks from Andalusia in Spain. They specifically choose casks that have been aging sherry for up to 40 years.

Tasting Notes:

Freshly threshed straw mingles with ripe cherries and tart apples alongside a note of leather. The cherry carries through with nice hits of walnuts, figs, tart red berries, and a honey sweetness that’s cut by a slight salinity. On the palate, the dram hits notes of a creamy and buttery pudding filled with all that fruit, counterpointed by a slash of chili spice on the quick finish.

Westward American Single Malt Stout Cask

ABV: 45%
Distillery: Westward Whiskey, Portland, OR
Average Price: $95.00

The Whiskey:

Westward starts its distilling process in true Pacific Northwest fashion by using craft beer techniques in the mash to make their base American single malt. After four years of aging, that expression is moved into barrels that have been seasoned with stouts from a long-list of Oregon’s craft brewers. The whiskey spends another year in those barrels, giving the single malt a clear line of brewery-focused whiskey throughout.

Tasting Notes:

Orange zest, Christmas spices, toasted oak, and rich dark chocolate come through upfront. The sip really embraces the dark chocolate notes as burnt sugar sits next to vanilla, dried orange, and slight roasted almond flavor. The dark chocolate hits a bitterness note — balanced by the oak and spices — which carry the vanilla and sweetness to a long and warming finish.

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Hulu’s ‘Crossing Swords’ Trailer Gives Off Heavy ‘Robot Chicken’ Meets ‘Game Of Thrones’ Vibes

Hulu is on a roll with it’s animation offerings. After dropping a trailer for Solar Opposites, the latest animated series from Rick and Morty creator Justin Roiland, Hulu is back with a peak at its latest original: Crossing Swords.

In case you couldn’t tell from the stop-motion aesthetic, Crossing Swords is the newest brain-child from Robot Chicken creators John Harvatine IV and Tom Root that focuses on a young man’s journey to become a knight in a noticeably raunchy medieval kingdom. Whether the show is a deliberate riff on Game of Thrones isn’t known, but it definitely has that flavor to it with its horny, power mad queen, dragons, and a whole bunch of gratuitous violence and nudity.

From the synopsis:

Crossing Swords stars Nicholas Hoult as Patrick, a good hearted peasant who lands a coveted squire position at the royal castle. However, his dream job quickly turns into a nightmare when he learns his beloved kingdom is run by a hornet’s nest of horny monarchs, crooks and charlatans. Even worse, Patrick’s valor made him the black sheep in his family, and now his criminal siblings have returned to make his life hell. War, murder, full frontal nudity—who knew brightly colored peg people led such exciting lives?

In addition to Hoult, the stop-motion comedy series boasts an impressive voice cast that includes Tony Hale, Luke Evans, Adam Pally, Seth Green, Tara Strong, Yvette-Nicole Brown, Wendi McClendon-Covey, Maya Erskine, Breckin Meyer, and more.

A full season of Crossing Swords will be available for streaming on June 12.