It's easy to write off a book about NBA players during the pandemic as nothing more than the soap operatic saga of juvenile multi-millionaires oozing with machismo--but to do so with "Can't Knock the Hustle" would be a tragic and overly simplistic mistake. As Sullivan shows, the NBA sits at the nexus of pop culture, race relations, capitalism, geopolitics and American politics. Through the lens of the 2019-20 season of the Brooklyn Nets, Sullivan paints a rich portrait of the collision of the NBA's superstars like Lebron James, Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving with the likes of Donald Trump, Xi Jinping, and even at one point Kim-Jong Un.
Consider just a smatter of the storylines in the book. Lebron James, chasing after the glory of surpassing Michael Jordan, slowly develops a social conciousness after being humbled by the sheer brutality of police violence in the U.S., yet, also finds himself sitting in a sinful silence during the Hong Kong democracy protests out of fear of disrupting his $90 million shoe deal with Nike. Later, all star players Kyrie Irving and Kevin Durant bring their mutual distrust of concentrated authority and institutions with them to the Nets and exert their strength over the owners of the team via their ability to collectively rally, not just their teammates, but also legions of loyal online fans. And as the power dynamics begin shifting between all star players and owners, the NBA Players Association collectively begins a public campaign to assert that economic power should ultimately reside in the hands of the players, awakening a nascent communal sense of class solidarity as workers among many of the athletes.
Oh, and not to mention, this is all happening while the league is playing, by some accounts, the greatest basketball the sport has ever seen.
It's a thrilling vehicle to consider how the social fabric and culture of the United States has evolved in just the past few years. Sullivan clearly understands that the confluence of social unrest, media saturation and the pandemic clearly created a tectonic shift in societal values, and his ability to weave those into the personal sagas of the bizarre characters that populate the NBA is masterful.