Why Allen Iverson is no longer in the NBA - Colin Alert!

Go to youtube and show me 1 game that he looked drunk playing. Until I read this story I never heard of AI be a heavy drinker and if he was he handle his business on the court. He said in a interview that he tried taking care of too many people but o course everyone only wants to read just the negative shit. AI crossed Jordan over and from that day he became a bad guy for disrespecting a legend it was just a matter of time before they turned blacks against him. Now yaw wanna come off like your lives are perfect and judge this guy. All you know this guy don't care about being rich anymore maybe he just want to play in the NBA again

he took care of everyone yet his wife had to pawn shit to pay the bills. he missed special events with his kids for being hungover and you think we're wrong for thinking he's a douche??:lol::lol:

somebody enlighten this dude:smh::smh:
 
he took care of everyone yet his wife had to pawn shit to pay the bills. he missed special events with his kids for being hungover and you think we're wrong for thinking he's a douche??:lol::lol:

somebody enlighten this dude:smh::smh:

OMG let's put him in prison for the rest of his life. Why don't you do a little more reading before you judge him. He is still taking care of his kids so if his ex has to pawn shit to live up to the life she had that's her fault and he's not broke he just don't have the money he use to have but yaw don't want to hear that
 
OMG let's put him in prison for the rest of his life. Why don't you do a little more reading before you judge him. He is still taking care of his kids so if his ex has to pawn shit to live up to the life she had that's her fault and he's not broke he just don't have the money he use to have but yaw don't want to hear that

reread your post...then go back to lurking..:lol::lol::lol:
 
reread your post...then go back to lurking..:lol::lol::lol:

Maybe you were 1 of these guys that hated on AI his whole career bc if the shit he did makes him a loser it's million and millions of losers all over the world. But like I said you must be perfect
 
Go to youtube and show me 1 game that he looked drunk playing. Until I read this story I never heard of AI be a heavy drinker and if he was he handle his business on the court. He said in a interview that he tried taking care of too many people but o course everyone only wants to read just the negative shit. AI crossed Jordan over and from that day he became a bad guy for disrespecting a legend it was just a matter of time before they turned blacks against him. Now yaw wanna come off like your lives are perfect and judge this guy. All you know this guy don't care about being rich anymore maybe he just want to play in the NBA again

Fam, the night he received his MVP trophy in 2001, he scored 50 vs. the Raptors Eastern Conf Semis---that SAME NIGHT---I go to 8th Street Lounge at 8th & Callohill in downtown Philly--I'm in line....& guess who walks up with his whole squad?? exactly--I looked over @ the VIP, and that nigga was with Beans and some other cats drinkin yack straight with no chaser--mind you, this was during the NBA playoffs

I love the dude as a player and a Sixers fan, but he made some horrible decisions, and never really took care of his body--nothing wrong with partying, but that nigga was in Palmers/Transit/every fucking club in Philly damn near every night
 
Fam, the night he received his MVP trophy in 2001, he scored 50 vs. the Raptors Eastern Conf Semis---that SAME NIGHT---I go to 8th Street Lounge at 8th & Callohill in downtown Philly--I'm in line....& guess who walks up with his whole squad?? exactly--I looked over @ the VIP, and that nigga was with Beans and some other cats drinkin yack straight with no chaser--mind you, this was during the NBA playoffs

I love the dude as a player and a Sixers fan, but he made some horrible decisions, and never really took care of his body--nothing wrong with partying, but that nigga was in Palmers/Transit/every fucking club in Philly damn near every night

I believe it bruh, I believe it...damn :smh:

The fact he accomplished what he did at his size and the fact he was such a heavy drinker makes everything so much more amazing

I'm a huge Iverson fan, always will be it's just a shame shit is shaping up the way it is for him

Hope he gets it together
 

did you read that article?? this dude had 250 million and blew thru most of it in 14 years...:hmm:

he has to have checks and restraining orders in place so that he has money for his elderly years..thats AFTER he's already spent most of his 250 million...:hmm:

from the article:
Was Iverson really that bad an hombre for the whole NBA to turn its back on such a crowd-pleasing talent? I can name 10 teams without exhaling that would be better off with Iverson starting or subbing.What’s more, their fan bases would get a whole more entertainment bang for their misspent buck.

1. its universally agreed or at least the perception is his skills especially his speed has diminished significantly in the waning years. So he's not getting a starting job.

2. He's made it clear he won't accept coming off the bench or at least won't accept it for too long which is why he's bounced from team to team.

Old colleagues tried to help him comeback and he's been difficult to work with. Larry Brown wants to give a I assume something of a coaching/mentor/administration job but AI isn't a suit and tie 9 to 5 type of dude. He has no discipline beyond doing whats good for him. He can't teach or coach because he clearly doesn't have the patience for that.

So whats left?
 
I am not a Iverson fan, I recognize him as an athlete but that is it. I remember when he came here to Detroit folks got excited and what ended up happening he hung out at MGM Grand talking shyt, losing big money and not wanting to pay his markers. It would be one thing if because of the way he carries himself no teams wanted him then I could support him and his comeback, but he comes to these towns and just poisons the team. Outside of the Sixers name a team that is worse off since he left?

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They tolerated him cause his game spoke for itself

They waited until he was no longer useful to not invite him back
They enabled him because he was talented, and then when the talent diminshed, the enabling stopped.

A man is responsible for his actions in life. But alot of them motherfuckers are culpable. They fed the beast.
 
I never get why people waste so much time worrying about bums.

Black people invest so much time, energy, and money on kids that are losers, knowing they aint gonna make it. But that kid that could use just a little help, but doesnt act like a fool. We say fuck him.

You keep spending money on at risk youth, gang bangers, car thieves, etc. And you get the so called "black community" you have today. Keep it up. Just keep it up.
:yes:
Basically, I just hope his kids are ok... He's a grown-up, so he's got to figure his shit out at some point...

Kenny Anderson suffered from the same alcoholism and overspending issue... Luckily Reebok stepped in like they were his parents and forced him to put his money away...
:yes:
AI was a person that believed that his athletic ability was enough to get over on. When you're an athlete of that caliber you can drink all night, and show up right before the game and perform.

When he was in Denver, George Karl said his skills started to decline, but he had one of the best sports trainers and coaches in the business to maximize his talents he had. But everything came out in Memphis.

Dude wants to do it his way. I don't think he knows any other way. The yes men didn't help matters. I actually wished he got picked up by the Heat because for no other reason that LeBron's offseason workout would get him back to where he needs to be. His peers (like Kobe) take care of themselves. He doesn't. He could have a great comeback story if he wanted, but he doesn't. THAT is why I don't feel sorry for him. He's the old nigga in the club living off what he used to do.
Shame.
No offense to anyone here but how could a 6'0 155 pound cat who's getting up there in age change his ala Kobe or MJ?

He really had nowhere to go, he's small and light and being a passer wasnt really for him.

He's always been on the clock, I'm personally surprised he was able to play past 30 on this level.

AI lived the life many dreamed of, fucked bitches niggas dreamed they had, had hoes everywhere, cheated on the wife constantly, spended like crazy, he was hip hop, he was a huge money maker for the NBA at one point.

He brought in hip hop and a lifestyle the NBA profited from.

I think he deserves a 10 day contract as a last going away party.
:yes:
If they taped his comeback and he did it right it could make millions. Iyanla Vanzant should have a talk with dude.
This right here.
 
Definition of a *******.

GTFOH!

AI is no different than many other people who are talented but have deep seeded emotional issues.

I hate when black people refer to other black people as this. You are no different than the white racists. You reinforce white supremacists ideology by these statements.
 
I've seen Jesus work effectively in situations like this. Dude needs a reason while he still thinks he is the answer.
 



Any and everybody can say all the shit they want about him.But if you give that cat a chance back into the nba.Some team will have a sell out ,tv rights,and merchandise sells will go to the moon.How many teams have given bad back over the age cats another chance? How many cats are over 35.That are still putting in work?

AI help the nba bring in millions.They need to give this cat one more chance.


I don't understand delusional shit like this. This dude quit on 3 teams...the Grizzlies, 76ers, and his team overseas and you STILL think he should get another chance(more importantly he quit on his family, but that's not for me to judge). I got his appeal, but it's over now. Life goes on.
 
I don't understand delusional shit like this. This dude quit on 3 teams...the Grizzlies, 76ers, and his team overseas and you STILL think he should get another chance(more importantly he quit on his family, but that's not for me to judge). I got his appeal, but it's over now. Life goes on.

Basically
 
Getting married and having children is the dumbest thing any sensible man could do, especially if he's a superstar. The story always ends the same way...She'll talk badly about you and make you look like shit, and she will wind up with most of your money and possessions. Meanwhile the bum bitch probably never earned one fucking cent in her entire loser life.
 
Getting married and having children is the dumbest thing any sensible man could do, especially if he's a superstar. The story always ends the same way...She'll talk badly about you and make you look like shit, and she will wind up with most of your money and possessions. Meanwhile the bum bitch probably never earned one fucking cent in her entire loser life.

She's been with him since high school. She was with him when he had nothing. :hmm:


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“I Can’t Even Buy A Cheeseburger” The Fall of A.I.

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(BlackMediaScoop) Less than an hour before the 8 p.m. tipoff, Philadelphia 76ers employees are scurrying around the Wells Fargo Center, hoping this Saturday night unfolds as planned.

It’s late March, and the team is handing out Allen Iverson bobblehead dolls. Iverson himself is scheduled to attend, a rare public appearance for the 37-year-old former NBA superstar. He’ll be introduced during a pregame ceremony and then watch the game from Sixers chief executive Adam Aron’s suite. But Iverson isn’t here yet, and a troubling rumor is passing through the arena’s arteries: Iverson has missed his flight.

“He’ll be on time,” Aron says assuredly. “That’s all that matters.” Three years after Iverson’s last NBA game, the spotlight has shifted from his play to his flaws. His refusal back then to play by society’s rules was seen as an independent player’s quirks, part of the character and the brand, same as his cornrows and tattoos.

Practicing with hangovers added to the legend. Skipping team functions and refusing to obey the league’s dress code was a man who wouldn’t be held down. And embarrassing defenders on the way to the basket, in the NBA and before that at Georgetown, was a nightly statement by the 6-foot, 165-pound guard: If a man, no matter his size, is determined enough, he can get the better of giants.

But Iverson isn’t a basketball player anymore. This is something most everyone but Iverson has accepted, and for years a question worried those closest to him: What happens when the most important part of a man’s identity, the beam supporting the other unstable matter, is no longer there?

For the past three years, as Iverson chased an NBA comeback, his marriage fell apart and much of his fortune – he earned more than $150 million in salary alone during his career – dissolved. Now, those who once ignored past signals have recognized that basketball may have been the only thing holding Iverson’s life together.

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“He has hit rock bottom, and he just hasn’t accepted it yet,” says former Philadelphia teammate Roshown McLeod. A few minutes before 8 o’clock, a black Suburban pulls into the players’ parking lot. At 7:59, the passenger door opens, and Iverson climbs out, shouting profanity. Then he notices Aron, who wraps his arms around Iverson. They walk toward the entrance, Iverson still shouting, for one more night under the lights.

“God gave him this great gift,” says Pat Croce, the former Sixers executive who selected Iverson first overall in the 1996 NBA draft. “But you knew one day, he was going to take it away.”

‘I worry about him’

Iverson stood during a divorce proceeding in Atlanta in 2012 and pulled out his pants pockets. “I don’t even have money for a cheeseburger,” he shouted toward his estranged wife, Tawanna, who then handed him $61.

The scene showed a stark side of a man who had captivated crowds, pushed boundaries, and became one of the NBA’s biggest stars. He did things his way, on his schedule, speaking honestly during news conferences and snubbing the professional sports establishment. Crowds connected with Iverson, who’d succeeded despite physical limitations and mistakes, such as a felony conviction at 18 for his role in a bowling-alley brawl in Hampton, Va., his home town.

“For all of the small people, he gave all those people hope,” said Aaron McKie, a Sixers assistant coach and Iverson’s former teammate. Years later, word has spread of Iverson’s family troubles and that he is essentially broke. Croce called more than a year ago, leaving a message through Gary Moore, Iverson’s longtime friend and business manager. There was no response.

“I just want to see him,” Croce said. “I don’t even know what he looks like.” Larry Brown, who coached Iverson in Philadelphia, has called often recently, extending invitations to Dallas. Brown now coaches there, at Southern Methodist University, and two of Iverson’s former Sixers teammates, Eric Snow and George Lynch, are on Brown’s staff. Brown thinks it would be good for Iverson to be around the game and people who still care about him, but Iverson hasn’t visited.

“I worry about him,” Brown said. “A lot.” McKie and others have texted. Iverson responds sometimes, although days or weeks often pass. Other times, there’s no reply. He keeps to himself, something of a recluse, and declines most interview requests. Last year his eldest daughter, Tiaura, asked to live with her father, according to divorce testimony transcripts. She was concerned about how few people her dad interacts with. “I just don’t like to see it end this way,” Brown said.
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Multiple attempts to reach Iverson for this story were unsuccessful; Moore said Iverson has been told to avoid the spotlight. But more than 600 pages of transcripts and court documents from the divorce proceeding suggest that spurts of questionable behavior during his career weren’t just layers to Iverson’s character. They were warning signs.

“For him to be as successful as he was, he had to be determined and have that little chip on his shoulder and that inner voice telling him, ‘Do it your way, Allen,’ ” Lynch said. “And that’s probably his downfall.”

‘Didn’t think about the future’

During Iverson’s prime, teammates accepted Iverson’s unique style, be it hangovers during some practices or his trademark single-arm sleeve. His response to a question in 2002 about missing workouts became iconic: “We’re talking about practice.” As long as his game was sharp – he was named MVP in 2001 and won four NBA scoring titles – they ignored all else.

Basketball was Iverson’s sanctuary, and he signed huge contracts: a six-year deal in 1999 worth $70.9 million and, four years later, a new agreement worth $76.7 million. Reebok signed him to a huge endorsement deal, including a deferred trust worth more than $30 million, a lump sum he can’t touch until he turns 55.

His play kept his shortcomings in the shadows, but at home, his behavior caused increasing worry. Tawanna testified that her husband was undependable and volatile. Alcohol intensified his flaws, she said, leading him to skip milestone events and stagger through others.

He hadn’t been present for Tiaura’s birth in 1994, and three years later, when Allen Jr. was born – they would call him Deuce – Iverson was “very intoxicated” and unable to drive her to the hospital, Tawanna told the court.

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He supported family members and rarely said no to a request for money. McLeod, who occasionally went to the bar with Iverson’s entourage, says his teammate always paid the tab, no matter how much. “He never turned down anybody,” Brown said. “He was there to help everybody. He didn’t think about the future.” Iverson feuded in 2006 with the Sixers, who removed his likeness from the Wells Fargo Center before trading him to the Denver Nuggets, who later traded him to Detroit. When he became a free agent in ‘09, teams were reluctant to sign him.

Moore said he told Iverson to consider life after basketball. In November 2009, Iverson played in three games with the Memphis Grizzles before being released, and the Sixers brought him back for 25 games. In his final NBA appearance, Feb. 20, 2010, he scored 13 points in a 32-point loss to the Chicago Bulls. His career ended abruptly, without closure.

Said Nuggets Coach George Karl: “Finding his last chapter of his career never happened.”

“They don’t want you anymore”

Iverson kept living as if another contract was imminent, and Tawanna struggled to curb his spending. According to a bank statement submitted in the divorce, the couple’s checking account was overdrawn by more than $23,000 in July 2011. In a single day, $23,255.36 was deducted – at a diamond store, a hat shop, a steakhouse and a hotel.

Tawanna testified that her checks bounced that month when she paid for housing and electricity. She sold jewelry and Tiaura’s car to pay for household expenses, including school clothes and supplies. Before their home in Denver was foreclosed, Tawanna testified, she sold more jewelry at a pawn shop to pay toward debt. Iverson owed thousands to a Georgia home builder, was hit with tax liens, and his wages were garnished to settle a nearly $860,000 balance with a jeweler.

The public image for years had been of a bad boy tamed by his growing family sitting near the baseline. The truth was that Iverson was often an absentee husband and father. Tawanna testified that during a 2009 family vacation in Orlando, Iverson spent evenings with a friend while his family made plans without him. On the day they were to fly home, Iverson nursed a hangover in a van, lying on the floor with a foot draped on the seat. While their children saw a movie, Tawanna sat for hours with her husband, afraid if he was left alone the driver would take photographs.

Another time, she said, Iverson left his children alone in a hotel room during a weekend at a water park. Tawanna picked them up at 2 a.m., one of the kids still in her swimsuit, with no sign of Iverson. “I always thought that my kids needed their father,” she’d testify later. “And what I’ve learned is that they don’t need him if he’s going to be that destructive in their lives.”

Iverson kept waiting for NBA teams to call. Last August, Iverson’s son Deuce, now 15, enrolled in a Pennsylvania school and families were invited to group counseling. Tawanna testified that Iverson skipped most of the sessions, including a lunch with his son. During a meeting he did attend, the speaker told the children about success, and how Donald Trump had seized opportunities.

Iverson interrupted, telling them that he had been the man with money and fame. Then he said something Tawanna would remember.
“What are you supposed to do,” she recalled him saying, “when, you know, they don’t want you anymore?”

‘He deserves a better ending’

In February 2012, Moore sent Tawanna an e-mail: “THE BLUEPRINT FOR IVERSON RETURN.”

Iverson played in Turkey and briefly joined a team in China, but he believed he belonged in the NBA. One of Moore’s bullet points stood out: “No more drinking!” He also included an article on how to select an intervention leader. A subsequent e-mail suggested Iverson attend Alcoholics Anonymous meetings.

Moore contacted NBA teams, but there was little interest. Besides, Tawanna had filed for divorce, and they spent much of last summer in court. He and Tawanna had been together since they were 16, prom dates and partners through challenges and triumphs.

“I love u,” Iverson wrote to her in a text message submitted in the divorce filing. “I miss your pretty face & I’m sorry! Ppl make mistakes!”

He kept making them. When he met with an investigator to discuss custody of his five children, he “smelled remarkably of alcohol,” according to the investigator’s testimony. Months later, during a scheduled alcohol evaluation, he again arrived with alcohol on his breath.

Iverson didn’t take the witness stand during the divorce hearing or publicly dispute his wife’s claims, and his deposition testimony was sealed. The judge awarded Tawanna sole legal custody, calling Iverson a “hindrance” to his children. He appealed, but it was dismissed last month.

In a statement, released through Moore’s office after the custody ruling, Iverson said the court was biased and its ruling “one-sided.”

A person close to Iverson, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that half of the Reebok trust, established as Iverson’s rainy-day fund, was transferred to Tawanna as part of their divorce settlement. Tawanna’s attorney, John Mayoue, would not comment, and attempts to reach Tawanna for additional comment were unsuccessful.

After everything, Moore said, Iverson loves his children “more than life” and still has feelings for Tawanna. After the divorce went final in January, Moore restarted the NBA comeback effort. Iverson declined an offer from the Dallas Mavericks’ NBA Development League team, posting on Twitter that “it is not the route for me.”

Moore called Tim Grover, a personal trainer who worked with Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant. Grover said he spoke with Iverson, and they discussed a conditioning program. “Just get the muscles to get firing,” Grover said. In late March, Grover pulled out of the arrangement, telling Moore he couldn’t dedicate the time for training Iverson.

And that was that. It was over.

Brown called Iverson during the following weeks. The coach is still asked often about him, and when he visits college campuses, he sees players with cornrows and a sleeve on one arm – a generation of influence. “He deserves a better ending than he’s getting,” Brown said.

‘We talking about love’

Former Georgetown coach John Thompson Jr. was asked about Iverson last month. He was preparing for a radio broadcast before an NCAA tournament game at Verizon Center. “What I think about Allen Iverson is in my heart,” Thompson said.

Thompson, who took a chance by offering Iverson a scholarship after the bowling alley incident, is protective of Iverson and wouldn’t be interviewed. But he recommended a discussion with Lorry Michel, Georgetown basketball’s longtime trainer.

She answered her office phone, quick to say that she doesn’t do interviews. But for Iverson, she’d make an exception. “You go along life,” she said, “and you run into people. And some really intrigue you more, maybe, I don’t know. Or they just treat you differently.”

Michel underwent surgery for a brain tumor in June 2011. Amid the emails and cards was a note from Iverson. It wouldn’t be the last time he checked in. She said he remembers people and their paths; because his was so unlikely, he appreciates how others reached their goals. “He would see people for what they were,” she said.

Earlier this year, Michel contacted Iverson. She’d heard about the divorce and wanted to know how he was doing. Fine, he told her, and she chose to believe him. Shortly before Michel was inducted Feb. 9 into Georgetown’s Hall of Fame, Iverson asked someone to point a camera at him and ask him about practice. The blurry footage would be sent to Washington and played during the ceremony.

He stood at a lectern, his hat crooked, and mimicked his famous rant. “We talking about love?” he began. “Not Coach Thompson. Not the baddest guard that ever played at Georgetown. Not Alonzo Mourning. Not Patrick Ewing. Not Dikembe Mutombo? “I’m supposed to be here talking about Georgetown. But we talking about love. We talking about love? Miss Michel? Oh, we talking about love.”

He paused.

“I love you. I miss you. Well-deserved congratulations. I love you. I can’t put it in words how much I do love you.”

‘With truth comes consequences’


On that evening in late March, Aron, the Sixers CEO, leads Iverson into the players’ entrance, through the Philadelphia locker room, and into a tunnel. At 8 p.m., the lights are lowered, and flames blast from tubes. The announcer’s voice booms through the arena’s speakers: “A six-foot guard from Georgetown,” extending the syllables. The crowd erupts.

Iverson stands at midcourt, wearing a throwback Philadelphia Phillies warm-up jacket and dark sunglasses. He smiles and soaks in these seconds, cupping a hand around his ear the way he used to.

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This is the closest Iverson will get to an NBA comeback. If the past three years have been this chaotic, what awaits him as he drifts farther from his basketball career – inching toward June 2030, when he’s eligible to receive what’s left of the Reebok money?

Moore has implored the Sixers to hire Iverson as a consultant. Friends and former teammates think he should travel, tell his story – the whole story, not just highlights like the arena’s big screen will show.

“Sometimes we don’t want to accept the fact that with truth comes consequences,” Moore says. “I just don’t think that he ever really grasped the fact that that existed. And maybe he never really accepted that fact because so many times, he didn’t have to.”

A moment later, Iverson retreats backstage and conducts a brief interview with Comcast, the team’s partner station. The reporter asks what’s next.

“I put it in God’s hands,” Iverson says, his voice cracking. “I’ve accomplished a lot in the NBA, and if the road ends here, then it does.”
He continues, looking contemplative, choosing the right words.

“And I’m not bitter about it. I don’t feel no type of way. I just understand that He helped me accomplish a lot of things in the NBA. I’ve done so many things that people thought that I couldn’t do . . .

“But at some point, it comes to an end. And regardless of however it comes — regardless if it’s retirement, injury, or whatever — at some point, it comes to an end.”

Then he smiles.

“Now, if I get a chance to play again,” he says, pausing at the thought, “I would love the opportunity.”

Damn.

BOTTOMSCOOP: He will get nearly $30 million in about 18 years. Let’s hope he can live nicely off of that at the young age of 55.

What do you think?

http://www.blackmediascoop.com/2013/04/22/i-cant-even-buy-a-cheeseburger-the-fall-of-a-i/
 
Sad shit. Gave us a lot of great memories in Philly. But dude was always in his own way. Here's hoping he's able to redeem himself one way or another. Hope he takes up Larry Brown's offer and goes down to SMU with him, Snow and Lynch. Maybe he'd be a good coach one day if surrounded by good people who can teach him humility.
 
Getting married and having children is the dumbest thing any sensible man could do, especially if he's a superstar. The story always ends the same way...She'll talk badly about you and make you look like shit, and she will wind up with most of your money and possessions. Meanwhile the bum bitch probably never earned one fucking cent in her entire loser life.

She had been with him since he was thuggin in high school and nobody knew he would make it to 21 let alone become an NBA superstar

She is probably one of the few people who actually told him no and the way that he was living is wrong
 
Re: “I Can’t Even Buy A Cheeseburger” The Fall of A.I.

fuck that made me sad
 
Cant believe some of you cats continue to entertain and reply to that bitter ass, woman hating, cross dressing, loser nigga.
 
Re: “I Can’t Even Buy A Cheeseburger” The Fall of A.I.

He had more money than most people can even dream of. Oh well...
 
Re: “I Can’t Even Buy A Cheeseburger” The Fall of A.I.

Brb....looking for a fuck to give..
 
I think all this religious "just put yo worries in Jesus' hands" shit doesn't help.
i hate that shit. biggest cop out in the world and if you point it out you're the wrong one.

How the hell is he a fuck up because he didn't kiss the NBA's ass? He did what he was suppose to do had fun and took care of his whole family and all of his fans for over a Decade so so the hell is that being a loser? Just like AI told Lebron kiss ass and never tell them no bc if you do you become the enemy just like with most other jobs. I have more respect for a AI, Mornin, Rasheed Wallace, T.O and players that speak their minds than ass kissers like Jordan, Lebron, or Tiger Woods and players that says what they think their bosses want to hear. If you read the whole story you would see he loss a lot of money bc he was trying to take care of too many people but everyone just read the negative shit.
*sigh*

They enabled him because he was talented, and then when the talent diminshed, the enabling stopped.

A man is responsible for his actions in life. But alot of them motherfuckers are culpable. They fed the beast.
i've seen it happen to a lot of people. everyone being on your dick hurts the weakest of us.

Definition of a *******.
foh

I've seen Jesus work effectively in situations like this. Dude needs a reason while he still thinks he is the answer.
replace one delusion with another but i guess i'm like sharif pops on this one

Getting married and having children is the dumbest thing any sensible man could do, especially if he's a superstar. The story always ends the same way...She'll talk badly about you and make you look like shit, and she will wind up with most of your money and possessions. Meanwhile the bum bitch probably never earned one fucking cent in her entire loser life.
some of you niggas boy :smh:
 
Re: “I Can’t Even Buy A Cheeseburger” The Fall of A.I.

Nice to know that this was done.

"Reebok signed him to a huge endorsement deal, including a deferred trust worth more than $30 million, a lump sum he can’t touch until he turns 55."

What stands out to me most is that I.A. and his wife really love each. The relationship and marriage was not just for show as with many of the celebrity marriages. She hung in with him for the long haul.
 
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