
Can't Knock the Hustle
Inside the Season of Protest, Pandemic, and Progress with the Brooklyn Nets' Superstars of Tomorrow
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Narrated by:
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Will Damron
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By:
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Matt Sullivan
“Brilliantly audacious...written with the profundity of a sage baller and the acuity of a seasoned journalist.” (Kiese Laymon, New York Times best-selling author of Heavy)
An award-winning journalist's behind-the-scenes account from the epicenter of sports, social justice, and coronavirus, Can't Knock the Hustle is a lasting chronicle of the historic 2019-2020 NBA season, by way of the notorious Brooklyn Nets and basketball's renaissance as a cultural force beyond the game.
The Nets were already the most intriguing start-up in the NBA: a team of influencers, entrepreneurs, and activists, starring the controversial Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving. But this dynasty-in-the-making got disrupted by the unforeseen. One tweet launched an international scandal, pitting the team's Chinese owner and the league's commissioner against its players and LeBron James. The sudden death of Kobe Bryant, after making his final public appearance in Brooklyn, sent shockwaves through a turbulent season.
Then came the unimaginable. A global pandemic and a new civil-rights movement put basketball's trend-setting status to the ultimate test, as business and culture followed the lead of the NBA and its empowered stars. No team intersected with the extremes of 2020 quite like the Brooklyn Nets, and Matt Sullivan had a courtside view.
Can't Knock the Hustle crosses from on the court, where underdogs confront A-listers like Jay-Z and James Harden, to off the court, as players march through the streets of Brooklyn, provoke Donald Trump at the White House, and boycott the NBA's bubble experiment in Disney World.
Hundreds of interviews - with Hall-of-Famers, All-Stars, executives, coaches, and power-brokers across the world - provide a backdrop of the NBA's impact on social media, race, politics, health, fashion, fame, and fandom, for a portrait of a time when sports brought us back together again, like never before.
©2021 Matt Sullivan (P)2021 HarperCollins PublishersListeners also enjoyed...




















Gets beyond the usual narratives
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Good history and narrative shifting
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Great Insights
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The audience is unlikely to judge a story by the timbre of its narrator’s voice, but it is interesting to hear the overtones nonetheless. It’s as if the narrator was picked for a millennial consciousness, rather than a universal one. We tend to judge history by its last minute, rather than its last decade or century. From afar, everything seems equally minute or gigantic, but upon further review we are subjected to the inequities of time and place. Context, be it racial, environmental, economic, social, or historical, is big enough to swallow content whole in almost every scenario of life. And so we find ourselves glued to the minute, to the millisecond, waiting for more stories when we could realize they were set in distant realities. This underpins the performance here; we are as beholden as we want to be to time, to fame, to justice, to Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving or to whatever master(s) we serve. But context does not spoonfeed us; we must go to it, or it will elude us in perpetuity.
Thoughts and prayers
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Great listen.
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