It’s certainly a great appetizer for the season to come, but on its own, it could go deeper and maybe even darker.
What it's about
The 10-episode series follows five NBA All-Stars on and off the court as they get candid about their play, the league, and their lives.
The take
Starting 5 takes some of the best players in the NBA’s current roster and follows them throughout the latest season. We follow them in their training sessions, their homes, their private jets, and even during the most intense games, where we get to hear them trash-talk their opponents through their mic’d uniforms. As to why these five specific players, one can only guess (there are certainly others in the league who lead more interesting lives, or whose rise to fame might be equally if not more promising) but they do contrast well enough to entertain. Rising stars Jayson Tatum and Anthony Edwards are positioned against NBA veteran LeBron James, whose only true nemesis at this point is himself. Jimmy Butler, by far the most entertaining, is the comic relief who proves there’s more to life than just ‘ball and family (everyone here is a dedicated father), while Sabonis’ patience and gentleness temper passions. The series doesn’t go too in-depth into the athletes’ lives or their psyches, but it has a template that’s enjoyable and easy to replicate. It’ll be fun to see which five it’ll deem worthy in the following seasons.
What stands out
Butler is unpredictable. As the “Black King of All Trades,” as he calls himself, he’s always full of surprises, many of them hilarious and a handful of them actually wise. The way he correlates dominos with basketball will have you thinking about the two sports for days.