Having come from an upbringing in a broken family and financial distress in the Chicago area, Wade said he appreciates the shelter-at-home difficulties for many. “In a sense, for me, I feel like we’re so lucky, we’re so blessed, and everyone isn’t in the same position that that ones talking on the front line are,” he said. “So it’s been a little hard for me to come out and put those messages out. And even though we definitely got to play as a team — to beat this, we all got to get on the same page and we definitely got to stay in and make sure we’re taking care of ourselves — it’s been hard for me to come out and say, ‘Hey, stay at home,’ this and that, because I’m living in a mansion. We have things at our home that a lot of people don’t have.”