The Auburn legend has a word for those who criticize the NCAA’s all-time leading scorer and Indiana Fever rookie Caitlin Clark.
Indiana Fever rookie Caitlin Clark is navigating her way through the WNBA waters just one month after becoming a professional basketball player.
Entering the WNBA as the NCAA’s all-time leading scorer, Clark has experienced her share of criticism, and one Auburn legend is not standing for it.
During a recent episode of “Inside the NBA” former Auburn star [autotag]Charles Barkley[/autotag] took time to call out Clark’s critics.
“You woman out there, y’all petty, man,” Barkley said. “Y’all should be thanking (Caitlin Clark) for getting y’all (expletive) private charters.”
The 2024 WNBA draft altered the league’s popularity for the better. Outside of Clark, players such as Stanford’s Cameron Brink, LSU‘s Angel Reese, and South Carolina’s Kamilla Cardoso also joined the league this season. Several organizations including the Atlanta Dream have had to move venues to accommodate fans who wish to watch Clark play live. WNBA players are also taking private charters to away games this season instead of flying commercial.
Los Angeles Lakers star LeBron James also shared his thoughts on Clark’s doubters by saying “Caitlin Clark is the reason a lot of great things are going to happen for the WNBA.” Barkley shared praise for James’ comments.
“(James is) 100% right on these girls hating on Caitlin Clark,” Barkley said. “What she’s accomplished, give her her flowers… Caitlin Clark, thank you for bringing all that money and shine to the WNBA.”
In five games this season, the former Iowa Hawkeye is averaging 17.8 points, 5.8 assists, and 4.6 rebounds while maintaining a 91% free throw percentage.
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A lot of fans think Charles Barkley would be a great fit for a TNT College Football Playoff show. Are they right?
TNT Sports will air two first-round College Football Playoff games in 2024 and future years. TNT reached a deal with ESPN in which ESPN sublicensed these games from its College Football Playoff rights package. ESPN needed the revenue after paying a lot of money up front to have primary broadcast rights for the 12-team playoff. With TNT needing studio talent in addition to a broadcast team for the playoff, a lot of college football fans and sports fans think Charles Barkley is a natural choice to be on the TNT crew.
First of all, a lot of sports fans are sad that TNT’s “Inside the NBA” show appears to be on its deathbed. There have been no announced plans to keep the show on the air beyond next season, given that TNT is losing NBA media rights. (NBC, which formerly covered the NBA, is back in the game as an NBA broadcaster.) Barkley seems likely to find, or want, another new media involvement after “Inside the NBA.” Working College Football Playoff games would give him the ability to stay under the Turner umbrella, which includes his work with CBS and TBS for the NCAA Tournament.
Charles Barkley might not be a “football” analyst in the truest sense, but he could certainly be a Lee Corso-like figure on TNT’s studio show, putting on helmets or mascot heads and being the “fun personality” on the broadcast alongside a serious “football” guy.
During Thursday’s episode of The Dan Patrick Show, Barkley discussed a lot of the recent fervor concerning the NBA’s TV negotiations with TNT, NBC, and Amazon. As the days have passed, it seems likely that TNT will lose its NBA broadcasting rights after the 2024-2025 season, which, in turn, will officially end Inside the NBA.
This does not sit well with Barkley, who lit into his TNT bosses for likely ruining a good thing while expressing dismay for all the people who work behind the scenes on the show:
Charles Barkley says morale sucks amid the uncertainty of "Inside the NBA" moving forward. And discusses the possibility of hiring the crew to his production company, continuing to do the show, and selling it. pic.twitter.com/gLoiKm7SM3
That’s the key problem here. Guys like Barkley, Shaquille O’Neal, Kenny Smith, and Ernie Johnson will probably be OK. It’s the crew in the background that makes Inside the NBA sing that isn’t guaranteed anything in their careers moving forward.
Good on Barkley for acknowledging that fact.
Barkley noted that he’s talked about continuing the show in other avenues. Namely, he does have a production company that could potentially transfer over Inside the NBA. However, it’s worth noting that Ernie Johnson would likely not be a part of the show, as he’s expected to continue working with Turner Sports in other capacities.
All in all, what an honest and gut-wrenching interview by Barkley.
Charles Barkley absolutely roasted Kenny Smith here.
Charles Barkley wasn’t having fellow TNT analyst Kenny Smith’s position about the importance of the 2024 NBA Western conference finals.
Ahead of Wednesday night’s Minnesota Timberwolves and Dallas Mavericks game, Smith argued that the winner of that series would become the face of the NBA between Anthony Edwards and Luka Doncic.
To Smith, whichever team would come out of the Eastern Conference between the Boston Celtics and Indiana Pacers would get overshadowed by the star power of Edwards or Doncic, to the point where the loser would get more attention than the winner if the loser featured one of those players.
Barkley immediately chimed in after Smith by saying, “that was one of the dumbest things I’ve ever heard.”
Kenny: [45 second sermon on the future of the NBA]
On the same night he got blasted for his unfounded hot take about perceived pettiness toward Caitlin Clark, Barkley got in a roast of his own at his co-worker for his hot take about the importance of this NBA playoffs.
He also hilariously reiterated the now-famous Timberwolves catchphrase in a video to showcase his new hat.
This has turned into one of the most wonderful moments of the 2024 NBA playoffs, and it’s making us all want to make the trip to Minnesota and be a part of this very exciting moment in sports.
Even though he’s technically there for work with TNT, Barkley absolutely had the right idea to make the return to Minnesota.
This is a great Timberwolves reference from Minnesota Gov. Tim Waltz.
Ahead of the start of the 2024 Western conference finals, Minnesota governor Tim Waltz declared Wednesday as “Wolves Back Day” to celebrate the Minnesota Timberwolves being a series away from the NBA finals.
In Waltz’ official proclamation, the first letters to all the first words in the sentences spell out “BRING YA ASS,” which Edwards told Barkley about coming to Minnesota after some time away from the state.
“Music and sports have always been intertwined and probably always will be.”
Shaquille O’Neal and Kenny Smith had no idea what was coming next. Neither did Charles Barkley and Ernie Johnson, though neither would have recognized it even if they did.
As TNT’s Inside the NBA welcomed fans to halftime between the Mavericks and Clippers on May 1, the hosts of the beloved basketball talk show were met with a clip from “Euphoria” by rapper Kendrick Lamar, which was perhaps the most vicious of Lamar’s many diss tracks against Drake.
Johnson, unaware of the context of the music, introduced his co-hosts as the song continued to play. It took some time for Smith to realize what was happening but once he did, he couldn’t help but laugh.
“Why y’all putting us in the middle of the rap beef, man?” Smith said on the broadcast. “Come on, man!”
Once he caught on, O’Neal laughed wholeheartedly at the absurdity of the situation. Barkley looked disgruntled and couldn’t believe “grown [expletive] men” would involve themselves in such petty drama as a rap beef. Johnson tried his darnedest to bring it back home and get the crew to talk about basketball, asking his co-hosts about the Mavericks to no avail.
Clever audio programming like this has become one of the many secret ingredients that leads to the continued success of Inside the NBA. Music is typically the first part of the halftime studio show and sets up whatever the crew is going to talk about for the next 15 minutes. None of this happens by accident.
“We’re just trying to throw as much stuff in front of Shaq, Charles, Kenny and Ernie that’s going to get a reaction out of them,” Keith Robinson, a TNT Sports studio producer for Inside the NBA, told For The Win. “It created a moment.”
Within seconds, fans on the internet went wild for the “Euphoria” clip. It was especially captivating because the song had only been released the previous day. The “Euphoria” lead-in was also a perfect encapsulation of the show that has aired since 1989, which has now spanned more than a decade with this unique cast of characters.
Robinson works directly alongside Donzell Floyd, a senior associate producer and director for TNT Sports, on these choices.
“Every now and then, our talent will have input but very rarely will they know what song is coming in,” Floyd said. “That’s why you saw the reaction you saw when we played the Kendrick record. They had no idea. They usually don’t know.”
For example, they knew when they played Kendrick Lamar, it could have gone one of several ways. That includes the cast potentially not even hearing it or having any reaction whatsoever.
“Or maybe Shaq is going to hear it and jump up and do something that is so crazy that it’s going to have to make us play an extra minute or a minute and a half,” Floyd said. “All of those things are on the table at that point.”
Multiple record labels have reached out to the folks at TNT Sports with a list of new releases they can potentially play on the broadcast.
It isn’t just the studio show that uses music to keep the audience engaged, though. During games on TNT’s broadcast, associate producer Erron Banks is also intentional with his music decisions.
Banks picks between 12-to-15 pre-cut songs when he is fading in music on the game broadcast. For the studio show, meanwhile, Floyd said that he will actually have somewhere between 60-to-100 songs queued up at any given moment.
TNT is under an ephemeral clause, which means they are allowed a courtesy one-time use only. When the game does re-air, they substitute their TNT theme music where those songs played.
Whether it’s something as obscure as “Game Over” by Houston rapper Lil’ Flip during a Rockets victory or a popular throwback like nWo’s Wolfpac theme during a Timberwolves win, these choices can lead to viral moments online as well.
“Sometimes we have played music like Lil’ Flip and I haven’t thought of him in ages and we’ll see he’s trending on Twitter because people are tagging him that he was on NBA on TNT.” Robinson said. “I always wonder what guys like Lil’ Flip are thinking of when that happens. Did he even hear it or see it himself? Why am I trending right now?”
Music is genuinely one of the characters on TNT for the live broadcast and the studio shows. But if people are starting to notice that more now, that’s only because there are more people tuning in this time of year.
“It’s basically a part of the show just as much as we show fan tweets and posts talking about the guys, the music is a part of our overall coverage,” Robinson said “It’s just amplified now because people are watching the playoffs and more eyes are tuned in.”
“Music and sports have always been intertwined and probably always will be,” Floyd added. “It feels like it may be a little bigger recently but we have been doing music for years now because it’s a part of our DNA at this point.”
The cast will sometimes sing songs when they’re creating a mood on the set, even when they’re not on the air. But while the reactions are often beautifully spontaneous and improvised, the audio programming is not.
“It’s not just to play music,” Robinson said. “It’s all thoughtful and looking for the right moment for the right song at that moment to not only have an impact with the guys in the studio but for stuff to catch online.”
Inside the NBA producers are often thinking of location and demographic for the game they are assigned when they make their needle drops. Perhaps the halftime highlights lead with Anthony Edwards, then TNT may choose a musician from Edwards’ hometown of Atlanta.
Or if the game is in Indianapolis, Floyd is likely to have his headphones on midway through the second quarter to find the perfect track to play at the break. Even if people do not realize TNT chose to play Babyface during a Pacers game because the rapper is from Indiana, there was an intentionality to the process.
“It depends on where we are and then I start digging through the crates,” Floyd said.
Last season, for example, they had a Warriors game in the Bay Area and used it as an excuse to play Oakland-native MC Hammer.
O’Neal heard the song and brilliantly challenged Barkley to do MC Hammer’s typewriter dance, which immediately derailed all attempts at analysis for the remainder of the segment.
It wasn’t ideal to spark high-level basketball analysis but it was wildly entertaining for fans.
Similarly, a few years ago, the crew was providing halftime analysis when the Heat played the Bucks. The studio played Rick Ross because he is from Miami and O’Neal had a joking moment with Johnson, assuming he didn’t know who that was.
Johnson correctly identified the song as one by “The Boss” Rick Ross and hilariously shouted out “M.I. Yayo”, a signature catchphrase of the rapper. It is all a part of the magic that keeps this show so engaging.
“That’s just another way to have fun with them and give the audience a peek behind the curtain with not just basketball but part of the culture,” Robinson said.
Even though the future of TNT’s NBA rights are up in the air, it is this sort of careful attention to detail that makes Inside the NBA such a defining part of the basketball ethos.
“We have the best show going and we’re going to continue to do what we do.” Floyd said. “We hope that it impacts and affects someone and it makes your day feel that much better because we’re in the business of entertainment.”
We say “indirectly” because Barkley will most likely be on-site with TNT for the first game of the Western Conference finals in Minneapolis on Wednesday night, making an in-person moment with Barkley and Edwards very possible.
So, while this is more of a work trip than one directly influenced by Edwards, it’s still a very fun coincidence.
The Minnesota Timberwolves’ run to the conference finals, and potentially further, is bringing Charles Barkley back to the North Star State for the first time in two decades.
One native Minnesotan is doing his part to make sure Barkley isn’t the only one to make the trip up north.
Less than a day later, Minneapolis native and comedian Jon Savitt has already purchased a domain by the same quote — bringyaass.com — and has it set to redirect people to the Explore Minnesota tourism site.
Barkley’s not done finding humor in this potentially unfortunate situation.
On Sunday night, as host Ernie Johnson talked about the NBA’s upcoming awards schedule, Barkley joked that he would need to spend time on job site LinkedIn (for obvious reasons) rather than be around for further announcements:
Charles Barkley once again jokes about Inside the NBA potentially coming to an end if TNT loses its broadcast rights to the NBA, which got some laughs out of Kenny Smith.
"Wait, 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon? We're not doing that are we? Because I'm gonna be on LinkedIn tomorrow… pic.twitter.com/4NHYuXplu0
— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) May 20, 2024
OK, that’s too funny. Beyond the premise of someone like Barkley actually using LinkedIn, the fact that he’s even making this connection on live television is absolute gold. Whatever happens to Inside the NBA moving forward, it’s nice to see Barkley and Co. hamming it up as they can.