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Rudy Giuliani’s Failed Joe Biden Movie Apparently Sparked An FBI Investigation

Rudy Giuliani’s star turn in the Borat sequel was apparently not the only Hollywood venture he’s had in recent years. Donald Trump’s basically broke former personal attorney and resident conspiracy theorist was reportedly hard at work on a movie about president Joe Biden that drew some unwanted attention.

According to Mother Jones, Giuliani went digging for dirt on the Bidens along with California businessman George Dickson III. They attempted to produce a movie about Joe and Hunter Biden’s alleged dealings in Ukraine, but things didn’t get very far and may have broken the law in the process:

The would-be producers wanted to help Trump. And they also wanted to make money, people involved in the project said, plotting ways to profit off material they had assembled.

The venture produced no movie, only about 15 minutes of notably low-quality footage. And now the FBI is investigating the project, according to two people Dickson told about the probe.

The investigation appears tied to an ongoing federal probe into whether Giuliani violated foreign lobbying laws by working on behalf of a Ukrainian prosecutor.

Mother Jones reported that the FBI searched Dickson’s home, and they’re apparently investigating the film itself as part of a wider probe of Giuliani in general. The full report on Mother Jones really is something, but considering America’s Mayor has already claimed he’s willing to go to jail for crimes he says he didn’t commit, well, none of this can really be much of a surprise anymore, can it?

(Via Mother Jones)

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LeVar Burton Breaks His Silence Following Reports That Mike Richards Will Be The Next ‘Jeopardy!’ Host

In a sign of humble graciousness that reflects why he was the center of a well-received fan campaign to become the next permanent host of Jeopardy!, LeVar Burton has responded to reports that the honor of succeeding Alex Trebek will most likely go to Jeopardy! executive producer Mike Richards, who is the frontrunner for the job.

On Thursday morning, Burton tweeted out a message to fans thanking them for their overwhelming support and expressing his happiness with the entire experience even if he (probably) won’t become the new host of Jeopardy! Via Twitter:

I have said many times over these past weeks that no matter the outcome, I’ve won. The outpouring of love and support from family, friends, and fans alike has been incredible! If love is the ultimate blessing and I believe that it is, I am truly blessed beyond measure.

Of course, there were some fired up and passionate reactions to Burton not getting the permanent gig, but the former Reading Rainbow host is clearly choosing to go out gracefully, and his fans would have expected nothing less.

On a bright note, Burton’s short one-week stint did pull in a sizable haul for Reading Is Fundamental. Going back to the ’80s, Burton has been a longtime advocate for childhood literacy, and his Jeopardy! appearance brought in a $204,800 donation for the charity organization. While Burton may not have gotten the top job, he did walk away a champion for a valuable cause.

(Via LeVar Burton on Twitter)

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Go Sit In A Park For A While

You seem a little stressed out. I’m talking to you, specifically, the person reading this sentence right now on your phone or, God forbid, an actual computer that is plugged into something. Hello. I’m Brian. Maybe your name is Brian, too. (It’s a good name.) Maybe your name is Greg or Zack or Lisa or Denise. Maybe your name is Zelda Fantastic. It probably isn’t, I suppose, but it could be. There is really very little stopping you from changing your name to Zelda Fantastic if you want to. Or, like, Lonnie Orlando. You could be Lonnie Orlando. That’s something to consider. And when you’re done considering that, here’s another thing to consider, regarding the stress: Maybe you should go sit in a park for a while.

Like, now. Maybe you should go sit in a park right now. My employers and I would prefer if you read to the bottom of this page or at least scroll there before you leave, but I can’t really go about getting upset at you for listening to me right away, now can I? The rest of this is just going to be The Case For Sitting In A Park For A While anyway. If you’re already convinced, stop here. STOP. I can’t run the risk of unconvincing you. I’ll feel terrible.

One thing, though, if I still have you: Bring a beverage to the park. Most beverages will do. Water is fine. Some people like lemonade. I enjoy drinking iced tea in a park. Iced tea is a good park drink. Sometimes I’ll do a peach iced tea. Sometimes I’ll mix up my iced tea with some lemonade, which is called an Arnold Palmer. It’s kind of funny that Arnold Palmer was one the best golfers in history — a cool one, too, who just kind of whacked the ball as hard as he could and then went and found it and figured out how to beat you from wherever he ended up — and his greatest contribution to society at large might be mixing some delightful beverages in the same glass to make a new, also delightful beverage. There’s a good lesson here: If you play your cards right in life, you could end up with a refreshing beverage named after you. That’s nice to think about sometimes.

Are you in a park yet? No? Okay, I’ll keep going. Maybe it would help to consider some activities you can do in a park. You can throw a frisbee with a friend, if you want. You could text “hey do you wanna go throw a frisbee in a park or something?” to one of your friends right now. I bet you have a friend who would say yes. (You can always say “lol jk” if they say no, like you were doing it as a bit. It’s good to have escape hatches like this at various points in your plans.) You could jog, or walk, or bring a dog and throw the frisbee to the dog. You could also just bring a blanket and a book and, like, sit there. Or look at your phone if you want, although it kind of defeats the purpose a little. But looking at your phone outside in a park on a sunny day is probably better than looking at it in inside your house. Baby steps are fine. We can build from there.

I like to listen to music in a park, usually with a book in my lap that I am reading between extended stretches of being distracted by things that are happening around me. You can pop in your headphones and listen to any music you want. I recommend music that has good vibes, if you really want to maximize the experience, but it’s your call. Maybe an example will help. Hmm. How about Stevie Wonder? Stevie Wonder makes some primo Sitting In The Park music. Like, imagine it’s a sunny 78-degree day, little breeze, handful of wispy clouds in an otherwise blue sky, maybe some ducks in a pond or little kids running around playing tag, and this song comes on in your headphones.

That’s a day-maker right there, friend.

You know what else you can do in a park? People-watch. People-watching is fun as long as you are not creepy about it. (Do not be creepy in the park!) Just casually look up from your book or conversation or picnic and take a quick glance at some of the other people in the park. I wouldn’t do it if you’re throwing a frisbee, though. You don’t want to become The Guy Who Got Hit In The Face With A Frisbee At The Park. That’s not ideal. But otherwise, go nuts. People are fascinating. Some of the things they wear and do, man. Wowsers.

Occasionally, while you are people-watching, the people you are watching will make eye contact with you. This is okay! You can give a little smile and a half a wave and go back to whatever you were pretending to do before the little moment happened. Sometimes they’ll smile and give a half-wave back. This is nice. It feels good to connect with people, even just a little. You can even try some small talk, too, if you’re feeling it. Maybe a cursory “how’s it going?” or a “what a day” or even a “your dog is so cool,” if they have a dog. People love to hear that their dog is cool. But only say that if they do have a dog. Otherwise, you will look like a creep, which you should not do. We have already discussed this.

Another thing you can do in a park is daydream. You can sit right there in the middle of the park and daydream all you want. Think of all the times you can’t do this, or at least when you’re not supposed to. Daydreaming too much at work will get you in trouble, especially if you are a bus driver or heart surgeon or any other kind of surgeon, really. But no one gets mad at you for daydreaming in a park. Leave that book open in front of you if you feel self-conscious about staring into space, but let your mind wander. Think about anything you want. Here, I’ll give you a few topics to get you started, in addition to the Arnold Palmer thing from earlier:

  • Birds can just, like, fly, any time they want, and it is super easy for them
  • Every person who has ever competed in the luge at the Olympics had to wake up one day at some point in their lives and say “I think I will try the luge today”
  • Vin Diesel’s real name is Mark Sinclair but, per Wikipedia, he changed it “while working as a bouncer at the New York nightclub Tunnel, wanting a tougher sounding name for his occupation”

I included this last one in part because it is my favorite thing to think about ever and in part because I feel like you didn’t believe me back in the first paragraph when I said you could change your name to Zelda Fantastic if you wanted. I mean, the man changed his name to “Vin Diesel.” Everyone just calls him that now like it’s a normal thing to call a person. At some point in his life, someone he knew called him Mark and he looked them dead in the eye and said, “Actually, I go by Vin Diesel now.” That’s incredible. It’s borderline inspirational. You are only limited in life by the furthest boundaries of your own imagination.

Okay, I think that’s enough. It’s probably time for me to go home anyway. I wrote all of this while sitting in a park myself just now. So I guess you can add Write A Blog About Sitting In A Park to the list of things you can do while sitting in a park. And you should, probably, if the inspiration strikes you. It would be nice to have more blogs about sitting in a park. I would happily read one park blog every day. Let’s all work on that for the rest of the summer.

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‘Cobra Kai’ Takes The Rivalry Back To The All Valley Karate Tournament In A Season 4 Teaser

Cobra Kai continues to harness nostalgia in the most effective way, by reeling in a new generation of audience members and handily defeating the vast majority of reboots, revivals, and relaunches. Season 4 somehow wrapped shooting months ago after hot-dropping Season 3 early last year, and now, we’re seeing a teaser that previews how the rivalries will go down at the All Valley Karate Tournament. This, of course, takes Daniel-san and Johnny Lawrence back to the event that changed both their lives three decades ago: when Daniel crane-kicked his bully (thereby defeating his bully’s bully as well) and launched himself into local celebrity status forever, car dealership and all.

We know how that all played out for Johnny, who is obviously still a bit of an a-hole, but he’s a likable a-hole now. Furthermore, Johnny and Daniel united their dojos in the last season finale to go up against their now-mutual enemy: John Kreese. As for that guy, he’s already called in reinforcements in the form of his old Vietnam War buddy and O.G. co-founder of the Cobra Kai dojo, Terry Silver, who will definitely return to the franchise. How will the action play out? Expect a lot of pain, along with an angry Hawk and Tory keeping their bully-spirits alive while Miguel and Samantha and Robby and and Daniel-san and Johnny all battle for the very soul of the valley. And we’ve got a synopsis:

Season 4 finds the Miyagi-Do and Eagle Fang dojos joining forces to take down Cobra Kai at the All Valley Under 18 Karate Tournament… and whoever loses must hang up their gi. As Samantha and Miguel try to maintain the dojo alliance and Robby goes all in at Cobra Kai, the fate of the Valley has never been more precarious. What tricks does Kreese have up his sleeve? Can Daniel and Johnny bury their decades-long hatchet to defeat Kreese? Or will Cobra Kai become the face of karate in the valley?

Cobra Kai will return for Season 4 in December.

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Finneas’ ‘A Concert Six Months From Now’ Video Heralds His Debut Album ‘Optimist’

Finneas may be best known for his production work on his sister Billie Eilish’s music, but the eight-time Grammy winner also has a musical career of his own. After gaining recognition with his previous effort Blood Harmony, Finneas has inked a deal with a major label and is gearing up for the release of his debut album.

The musician returned Wednesday to to take over an empty concert venue in his wistful “A Concert Six Months From Now” video. Directed by Sam Bennett, the cinematic visual depicts Finneas stumbling through the deserted Hollywood Bowl theater in LA as he delivers each tender lyric with a sense of urgency. The track will be the album-opener on his upcoming 13-track effort Optimist, which he announced alongside the visual.

Watch “A Concert Six Months From Now” above and find Finneas’ Optimist cover art, tracklist, and tour dates below.

Interscope

1. “A Concert Six Months From Now”
2. “The Kids Are All Dying”
3. “Happy Now”
4. “Only A Lifetime”
5. “The 90s”
6. “Love Is Pain”
7. “Peaches Etude”
8. “Hurt Locker”
9. “Medieval”
10. “Someone Else’s Star”
11. “Around My Neck”
12. “What They’ll Say About Us”
13. “How It Ends”

09/03 — BottleRock Festival @ Napa, CA
09/18 — iHeart Radio Music Festival @ Las Vegas, NV
10/01 — Austin City Limits @ Austin, TX
10/08 — Austin City Limits @ Austin, TX
10/25 — The Observatory North Park @ San Diego, CA
10/27 — The Wiltern @ Los Angeles, CA
11/01 — The Fillmore @ San Francisco, CA
11/03 — Crystal Ballroom @ Portland, OR
11/04 — Showbox SoDo @ Seattle, WA
11/06 — The Depot @ Salt Lake City, UT
11/08 — Summit @ Denver, CO
11/10 — Vic Theatre @ Chicago, IL
11/12 — Ohio University @ Athens, OH
11/13 — Theatre of The Living Arts @ Philadelphia, PA
11/14 — 9:30 Club @ Washington, DC
11/16 — Irving Plaza @ New York, NY
11/18 — House of Blues @ Boston, MA
11/20 — Théâtre Corona @ Montreal, QC
11/21 — The Danforth Music Hall @ Toronto, ON

Optimist is out 10/15 via Interscope. Pre-order it here.

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Donald Trump (Wrongly) Blamed The USWNT Being Woke For Their Winning A Bronze At The Olympics

The United States women’s national soccer team finished up its run at the Tokyo Olympics on Thursday, picking up a 4-3 win over Australia in the bronze medal match. If you have come here for any sort of coherent analysis on their run to a medal and why they were unable to get a gold, I have bad news!

Former United States president and current guy who really hates not having a Twitter account Donald Trump released his latest statement that features strange capitalization decisions. This one is about the USWNT, a longtime foe because they were mean to him over the fact that he did numerous bad things as president, and features him blaming wokeness on their inability to win a gold medal.

Now, is this nonsense? Of course it is! The team won the World Cup during the aforementioned time they were publicly clowning him — “the woman with the purple hair” is Megan Rapinoe, who was the best player at said World Cup, the most consistently vocal anti-Trump member of the squad, and quite literally did something no one other than herself had ever done at the Olympics for the second time — and while the team did not secure a gold despite entering the tournament as favorites, it was, obviously, not because of wokeness.

Anyway, they’ll probably win the World Cup in 2023.

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‘Star Wars: The Bad Batch’ Has Been Renewed For A Second Season On Disney+

If you’re still mourning the loss of Star Wars’ critically-acclaimed animated series, series like The Clone Wars and Rebels, rest assured that Lucasfilm Animation and Dave Filoni aren’t calling it quits on bringing Star Wars’ ever-expanding universe to life just yet. Disney has announced Star Wars: The Bad Batch will return to Disney+ for its second season in 2022. The news comes just ahead of season one’s two-part finale, which is scheduled to hit the streaming service on August 6. According to Disney+ president Michael Paull, the newest entry in the Star Wars series has become a “fan-favorite,” and they are “excited to see the Star Wars animated universe expand on Disney+.”

For those who’ve yet to watch The Bad Batch, the series follows Clone Force 99, a group of “enhanced clones, more capable than an army” who are left aimless following the Clone Wars’ end. The mercenary group consists of Hunter, Echo, Tech, Wrecker, and Crosshair, all of which excel in certain areas of combat that relate to their names. For example, Hunter is a skilled tracker and fighter, Tech is, well, a techie, and Crosshair is the group’s ranged attacker. At the series start, the team is joined by a young medical assistant clone named Omega, and nothing but your usual Star Wars high-stakes, high-drama ensues following her arrival — and apparently none of us can get enough of it.

If you’ve been waiting for the series’ end to do a good ‘ol fashioned Disney+ binge, the good news is you’ll be able to starting tomorrow, giving you plenty of time to be caught up before the second season airs next year. If you’re already all caught up, allow me to happily remind you we have both Disney+’s upcoming Boba Fett spin-off series, The Book of Boba Fett, and the third season of The Mandalorian coming between now and The Bad Batch’s second season. While The Mandalorian has yet to get a season 3 premiere date, The Book of Boba Fett hits Disney+ this December.

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The ‘Fox & Friends’ Gang Clashed Over Whether TV Hosts Should Be Doling Out Medical Advice

Fox News is going through some things when it comes to the COVID vaccine. Despite the Delta variant spiking numbers across the country by ravaging the unvaccinated, the network has been extremely disjointed when it comes to its stance on the vaccine, which has unfortunately been politicized. While Tucker Carlson has been pushing anti-vaxxer conspiracy theories on the network, other hosts have been twisting themselves into knots by attempting to “both sides” the issue by not encouraging vaccination, and instead, suggesting that viewers talk to doctors. This approach was particularly evident when Sean Hannity walked back his vaccine endorsement and told his radio listeners that he’s “not urging people to get the COVID vaccine because I’m not a doctor.”

It’s exactly that sort of wishy-washy approach that led to a confrontation between Fox & Friends hosts Steve Doocy and Brian Kilmeade on Thursday morning. For his part, Doocy has been one of the Fox News hosts who has openly encouraged viewers to get vaccinated, and he defended that approach despite objections from Kilmeade and Ainsley Earhardt, who think anchors shouldn’t give medical advice.

You can see the relevant portion of the argument around the 9:00 mark above, and here’s what they said, via Mediaite:

Kilmeade then echoed comments made last month by Tucker Carlson, saying “I don’t think anchors should be recommending medical advice,” to which Earhardt agreed with “yeah, I agree.”

“But a lot of people have been tuning in to the show for 25 years to see what we think about different things,” Doocy gracefully replied. “I think if you have the opportunity, get the shot.”

“Right. But shouldn’t you see a doctor to give you expertise to what they are seeing?” Kilmeade stubbornly replied.

Kilmeade and Doocy have disagreed on a lot lately regarding the pandemic, so the fireworks should continue.

(Via Mediaite)

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Charli XCX Is Launching A Podcast With The BBC Called ‘Charli XCX’s Best Song Ever’

Charli XCX is launching a podcast, and you better believe some of the best new musicians from around the world are going to be involved. As NME reports, the new project with the BBC is called Charli XCX’s Best Song Ever, and early confirmed guests include people like Beabadoobee, Mark Ronson, Tove Lo, Christine and the Queens and Caroline Polachek (whose latest single, “Bunny Is A Rider” is absolutely a rider!). The first episode launches next Monday, August 9, as Charli will “chat to friends and celebrity guests from around the world to discover the songs that have been instrumental in shaping their lives.”

Music recommendations from the musicians Charli XCX is friends with? That’s better than an algorithm any day. The podcast series is slated for a 20-episode run for its first season, and Charli cited emotional connections with people over music as one of the driving forces for the project. “The reason I wanted to do this podcast is because I love talking to people, and I love exploring the emotional connection any person can have with music,” she said in a statement. “Songs that soundtrack specific moments in life can amplify and affect a moment drastically and so I wanted to explore what those moments and songs are with some of my favourite creative people. In every conversation I’ve had, I’ve learnt something brand new about each guest and I feel like I’ve gotten to know each and everyone one of them a little bit more.”

This all comes right before a new song from Charli, her new single “Good Ones” is set for release on September 3.

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PWRFWD Is Building A Place For Athletes To Thrive Beyond The Margin Of Sports

Luke Bonner felt restless upon moving back to his hometown of Concord, N.H. eight years ago. From 2009-12, Bonner played overseas for clubs in Hungary and Lithuania and had a cup of coffee with the Austin Toros, the Spurs’ G League team. He was a self-proclaimed nomad every summer, splitting his time between Austin, Boston, and Concord. Bonner grew up the youngest of three siblings in a basketball-inclined family — his brother, Matt, is a two-time NBA champion; his sister, Becky, played overseas before becoming the Director of Player Development for the Magic — and had an intuitive understanding of the disruptive beat careers in the sport can have on the rhythm of a regular life.

Concord, settled in what once was the watershed of the Merrimack River that winds through the city, is hugged by gently climbing hills that roll into woods daisy-chained with lakes, downtown still a snapshot of the Neoclassical and Federal-style architecture of the 1800s with its grecian columned and gold-domed State House and downtown stretches of tall, shoulder-to-shoulder snug redbrick buildings. One time, Bonner recalls, Kwame Brown and Brian Scalabrine came to visit when Summer League was held in Boston and only had one person politely approach them with the advice that they might want to try basketball some day. It’s the sort of place, Bonner says, “where if you were super famous, everyone would just be like, ‘Hey, that guy looks like Brad Pitt.’ You would never be like, ‘Oh, that’s Brad Pitt.’” The sort of place where Bonner could let the rhythm of his life settle, at least a little.

Two summers ago, when Matt was back in Concord to run the annual Bonner Basketball Camp, he and Luke struck up a conversation with a local developer who was fixing up some of the older buildings around town. The developer, Mark Ciborowski, owned one particular historic building that piqued the Bonners’ interest.

“I have these vague memories of when I was little, really little, of there being a random gym, meathead fitness club thing, right downtown,” Bonner recalls of the space where his dad once taught aerobics and his mom would sign people up for classes. The brothers’ minds instinctively went to one thing.

“We asked him, ‘Hey, is there a court in that building?’” Bonner says. Ciborowski confirmed and took them into the building’s abandoned upper, open floors to see. Bonner’s voice still lifts in quiet awe when he remembers what they saw, a court tinged with a fair amount of dust and debris, light spilling onto it from floor to ceiling windows, “We were just like, ‘Are you kidding me?’”

The space would sit vacant for a little longer. Bonner occasionally used it to host one-off events for the work he did with his ad agency, like welcoming candidates during the last presidential election to come shoot hoops when they were in town. But it stirred up something in him. It seemed like the place where the fervent, occasionally restless passions that had driven him since he stepped off the court could come together.

Long before individuals who participate in college sports became able to profit off of their name, image, and likeness earlier this year, Bonner championed the rights of college athletes.

“I grew up in very unique circumstances. I’m five years younger than Matt and four years younger than Becky. They were both All-American players,” Bonner says. “But [I] also saw what the experience was like for my parents and how stressful it was. Even though my brother and sister were both full scholarship, top-tier college basketball players, there’s a lot of things that stood out to me even when [I was] in middle school thinking, ‘Oh, wow, this is really cool, there’s 20,000 people chanting my brother’s name on this game on CBS on a Saturday afternoon.’”

Bonner pauses a beat, “And then you think about it and you’re like, ‘Wait, there’s 20,000 people at this game chanting my brother’s name on CBS in the afternoon [and] my parents can’t even afford to go see him play.’”

In 2014, Bonner co-founded the College Athletes Players Association (CAPA) alongside a pair of college football players, Ramogi Huma and Kain Colter, with the intention to unionize the Northwestern football team. They had the additional support of United Steelworkers and were initially successful, but the ruling was overturned by the National Labor Relations Board in 2015. While various reforms to college athletics have since been brought forward, including the College Athlete Right to Organize Act tabled by U.S. Senators Bernie Sanders and Chris Murphy, there are many former athletes, like Bonner, who consider the more public-facing amendments like the NIL rule “easy and obvious.”

“Every incremental positive for players at the collegiate level of the United States has been the result of, basically, a lawsuit,” Bonner says. “A lot of the rhetoric from the NCAA side, or the administrative side, is that it’s only going to help the top one percent of college athletes. And I find that really offensive and it almost fires me up a little bit.

“By saying that it’s only gonna help the top one, you’re basically saying the other 99 percent of your athletes in college sports have zero value as human beings, ‘cause NIL isn’t just influencer posts and paid posts and stuff like that. It’s everything you do,” Bonner gives the example of his brother’s basketball camp, or an athlete appearing on a podcast. “The default stance from NCAA is always, there’s only interest because you’re an NCAA athlete, which is bullshit.”

The legal system moves slow. Against behemoths like post-secondary institutions and the college athletics system the schools are entrenched in, that pace can be glacial. Bonner knew there was more he wanted to be doing, but the vehicle in which to do it didn’t pull up on him until he began fiddling with its eventual engine.

Bonner had been working with an athlete on a personal project and started to look at the search analytics their name returned on a monthly basis, finding the numbers to be “really high.” At the same time, Bonner had been watching the endorsement space and, when he realized the athlete was delivering high search returns despite no personal website or e-commerce in place, he went to his friend and former coworker in the agency space, Allen Finn.

“And I just kind of said something like, ‘Somebody should build a thing where it’s really easy to stand up the shop, sell stuff that’s meaningful, and that can be an easy digital hub for an athlete,’” Bonner recalls, noting that it didn’t need to be a “full on personal site” but a one-stop spot outside of a team contract. “Basically like Etsy for athletes.”

As is often the case when an idea stubbornly settles, Bonner and Finn realized that they should be those somebodies. Bonner was already fired up with how far he felt changes like the NIL rule fell short, and Finn, who is in Bonner’s words, “one of those people where they’ll figure anything out,” pushed his friend past talking around the idea of something that could quickly be a difference-maker in the lives of athletes at the college and professional level.

Bonner began to share the idea for the new project, called PWRFWD, with agents he knew through the wide-ranging network of the Bonner siblings both as a way to put the feelers out and to “make sure I wasn’t crazy.” The response was overwhelmingly positive, something Bonner attributes to being honest and transparent with what he and Finn wanted to build, which helped them establish a sense of trust early on for the four people who would join them from the beginning as founding athletes: Sue Bird, Mo Bamba, Breanna Stewart, and Tacko Fall.

“What appealed to me most about PWRFWD, and working with Luke, was just the fact that the players, the athletes, were put first,” Stewart says over the phone. “I feel a lot of times for athletes to have logos on a shirt, or names on a shirt, it seems always really, really difficult. And Luke was just like, this is what we’re going to do. And whatever design we want, we’ll come up with the concept, and we’ll get your gear out there so people can represent you.”

“PWRFWD allows me to build out my brand in a way that I can retain ownership and control over the messaging, creative, and product types. I think there’s a substantial opportunity for us to provide value to athletes and fans that are too often underserved or overlooked,” Bamba echoes.

Though Bonner originally envisioned focusing on basketball for the first year, PWRFWD now hosts 68 athletes across basketball, football, baseball, soccer, tennis, MMA, swimming, as well as media. Kelsey Trainor, for instance, has a popular ‘Invest in women. Pay women. Hire women.’ shirt and hoodie.

With so many different athletes signing up for the kind of commercial and creative space Bonner was offering, he and the PWRFWD team, now made up of 10 full-time employees scattered from Concord to San Francisco and interns at various colleges throughout the year, realized quickly that the creative process had to be hands-on for everyone to reflect the myriad backgrounds, sports, and interests each person brought to the table. And that process extends to the physical items each athlete wants to offer, the design process, and the quality of the final product which utilizes only on-demand production practices to decrease overall waste.

“One of our responsibilities is ensuring that we’re creating something with the athlete that is true to what they want, whatever that is,” Bonner says. “Athletes will do this for different reasons. It might be to make a statement. It might be to support a cause that’s near and dear to them. It might be for fun and for vanity. So understanding that is kind of key.”

That creative process starts as soon as an athlete decides they want to join PWRFWD in a kickoff call with Bonner and the design team. It’s an intriguing spectrum where some people come with a full aesthetic in mind or designs in hand, while others may only allude to glimmers of personal interest that Bonner and his team have become experts at panning for creative gold.

“It almost always emerges organically, somehow,” Bonner says, mentioning the initial call his team had with WNBA player, Sylvia Fowles, whose lockdown obsession with houseplants gave way to her Plant Parenthood line of merch, with hoodies and t-shirts showing tropical houseplants nestled in basketball planters.

Bonner says that those conversations have been some of the most fascinating, and while he almost wishes he could put them into the world, he also acknowledges that when anyone is getting involved on the creative side, “you are vulnerable at the same time. And being able to make people feel comfortable, and to be honest about what they’re trying to accomplish. It’s a really cool experience, personally, for me to have.”

One of the first faces on the PWRFWD team that new athletes get to know is Hannah Nelson, the company’s first Athlete Success Coordinator. Nelson, who grew up outside of Concord, played basketball throughout college and knew Luke and Matt through the Bonner Basketball Camp. She had been a supporter of PWRFWD since it started, oftentimes directing people on social where to buy merchandise or talking up the company in her networks.

“And I guess they noticed that,” Nelson laughs.

Bonner contacted her and asked if she’d be interested in joining the new team as an intern, but Nelson quickly found herself doing “a little bit of everything,” from administrative organization, to number crunching, to the hands-on creative process with athletes. It was that process that appealed to her most because it was apparent each piece of merchandise had come from the mind of the athlete, there was no sign of the too often ubiquitous last name and number. Now, in her full-time role, Nelson values helping athletes “figure out who they are, what kind of merchandise they would like, that’s personal to them” all with the end goal of letting people know they’re more than just an athlete.

“We definitely collaborate as a team,” Stewart says, giving a soft chuckle, “Funny, I just got off a Zoom meeting with the team, and just talked about what we liked from the last line.”

For Stewart, her first release was a series based on a photo she’d taken on her phone of all her rings lined up, that the PWRFWD designers turned into a punchy, effervescent graphic of Stewart from behind, tying up her hair for a game with a ring on each finger. These shirts, along with shirts for Storm teammate Jewell Loyd have popped up around Seattle, which Stewart calls “awesome.”

That sense of ownership is crucial to the company’s, as much as Bonner’s, business model, in that every item listed on the site as a finished product belongs to the athlete, not to PWRFWD.

“I don’t know if consumers or fans necessarily understand that when I buy this Charli Collier t-shirt from PWRFWD, I’m literally buying it from Charli Collier,” Bonner stresses. “And it’s either going to the cause that she wants to give it to, or it’s going to support her to do her thing.”

Athletes who have existing partnerships are encouraged to highlight them and build fulfillment, like the partnership Bamba has with Detroit-based jewelry designer, Rebel Nell.

“We can sell that product on our shop homepage,” Bamba says, “and PWRFWD handles all the backend stuff to get the product in the customer’s hands and get Rebel Nell the cash from the sale.”

It also allows athletes like Bamba to think beyond the traditional avenues of athlete merch, as he already has ideas percolating for future additions to his shop. “Candles! I love a good candle,” Bamba says. “Soon you might even be able to buy one where the wax has my signature haircut that sorta melts over time.”

In this way the PWRFWD model is unique. Athletes aren’t plugged into existing campaigns led by a parent brand, whatever they want to sell is being created by and with them or, if it exists already in a previously established partnership, isn’t restricted but helped to grow. It’s an almost aggressive approach of reclamation when considering that many are, for the first time, exercising that kind of absolute control, especially for athletes who came up through the same exploitive system Bonner did.

“I think that as athletes, we see there’s a lot going on and I would say what we do on the court is important, but not the only thing we do,” Stewart says. “So to be able to have control, to be in those meetings for off the court things, for continuing to help build our brand, is something that’s really exciting just because we’re able to lead the charge and not just be the ones following a big company or something.”

“You see it with the NCAA now, and when I was in college,” Stewart adds. “We didn’t have control over our own likeness and image. And now working with Luke, he makes sure that we do.”

Bamba finds it empowering, being in control over each step, noting how straightforward the actual business transaction part of the process is. “Everything is simple and transparent. I get a report each quarter showing exactly how much I sold and what the margin was on it.”

Bonner acknowledges that creating a business “where the athletes win before the company does, might be stupid short-term,” but thinks it can set them apart long-term as they build that trust with athletes. The importance of a company with an ethos like PWRFWD’s is simple, maybe, in the way that most life-altering inventions often are, but not, stupid. In an era of athlete autonomy and empowerment that has been too often put in air quotes by leagues and organizations like the NCAA virtue signaling with optics and lip-service rather than listening to insight from the athletes driving these businesses, Bonner and PWRFWD have come in like a quiet corps of utilitarian engineers, building a direct bridge from athletes to the people who happen to be their biggest and loyal consumers — their fans.

At a recent practice on the road, Stewart saw a young player wearing her Rings hoodie. “That’s cool because she went out of her way to get that. To see these fans finding ways to represent us, and now Luke has created that with PWRFWD. He has given them a place to get easy access to connect with the athletes, to represent us and to help build women’s basketball up.”

Bonner’s vision for the company’s future is likewise simple and straightforward, to continue doing what they have been with a focus on transparency and trust that’s geared toward growth for an athlete’s brand, platform, and entire person.

“Catering specifically to what is the life of an athlete outside of a team contract and how can we help facilitate income and more engagement, and allow them to own all of that themselves. What I have been drawn to is areas where there’s an underserved fan base and overlooked athletes, is where I think that there’s a lot of power to what we’re doing,” Bonner says, his usual affable tone shifting serious. “I’d love to see, if you go to an athlete’s shop, that doesn’t just mean t-shirt and hoodie anymore. It’s, sign up for camp registration, an experience, so on and so forth.”

PWRFWD’s founding athletes share those same hopes. Stewart says she hopes the company will “continue to be an outlet for people to express themselves as an athlete, as an activist, as an ally, and just in as many ways as possible.” Bamba believes it will become a go-to for athletes at all levels who want to build something with their personal brand that will be unique to them — “Pro athletes. College athletes. Anyone with any following, really.”

Building on the cause has remained keen and close for Bonner. It’s what propelled the idea for PWRFWD in the first place, and there’s the full-circle hope that the company can be a place for college level athletes to reclaim themselves, eventually reflecting the self-actualization players in the next generation will have known all along.

“Part of my theory is that you don’t necessarily know who’s going to be very good at the internet. You don’t necessarily have to be an All-Star to be that. Especially when you think of college sports, there’s a lot of people,” Bonner says. ”And there’s a lot of really interesting, inspirational personalities in that realm who may get overlooked for certain types of deals, but may actually be able to drive a lot of that on their own. College is definitely an area that we’re looking at as that world opens up.”

It took Bonner returning to where he came from, both physically in the world as much as what’s been most important to him, to start PWRFWD, and that those roots weave through everything is clear.

There’s a vision that Bonner has for Concord and the PWRFWD HQ, a place he can invite athletes to come hang and shoot hoops, and it parallels the vision he and his team have for how they can accelerate total autonomy for those same people to exist past the margins of their sports and athletic skills.

“That’s part of the driving force in what we’re doing,” Bonner says. “there’s a lot of athletes that, I think, hold value. And I think we have a tool that we’re building that’s really helpful for everyone, and simultaneously, I think it’s going to have an impact on the landscape, big picture, eventually.”