The Megyn Kelly Show - Mark Cuban on Family, Social Justice and NBA Ratings | Ep. 9
Episode Date: October 12, 2020Megyn Kelly is joined by billionaire NBA owner and judge on ABC's "Shark Tank" Mark Cuban, to talk family, growing up, NBA ratings, social justice, the NBA and China and more.Follow The Megyn Kelly Sh...ow on all social platforms:Twitter: http://Twitter.com/MegynKellyShowInstagram: http://Instagram.com/MegynKellyShowFacebook: http://Facebook.com/MegynKellyShowFind out more information at:https://www.devilmaycaremedia.com/megynkellyshow
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Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show, your home for open, honest, and provocative conversations.
Hey everybody, it's Megyn Kelly and welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show.
Today, Mark Cuban.
He's a billionaire, self-made guy, made his money in the tech industry, and now owns the Dallas Mavericks.
He's outspoken on virtually
all issues. And you'll hear some of that today. Got tense at times. It was a tough interview,
but I think it was fair. And I give him a lot of credit for engaging because most guys in his
position, certainly in the NBA, would never had deigned to take the time. So my hat is off to him.
Keep that in mind as you hear how this went. But first,
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slash MK to save 40% while supplies last. Mark Cuban, thank you so much
for being here. Thanks for having me, Megan. All right. So how does a middle-class kid from
Pittsburgh wind up with $4 billion? A lot of hard work and a lot of luck.
You know, I started off as that kid in school growing up in Scott Township initially that just had every little side hustle that you ever could imagine from selling baseball cards to my friends to selling garbage bags to hustling candy to buying and selling stamps at collector shows.
You name it.
If there is a hustle, I did it. So you were the kid who was mowing everybody's lawn and delivering the newspapers and always
came home from the fair with change in your pocket.
Yeah, pretty much.
I wasn't a lawnmower, but I was a driveway shoveler.
It's funny.
My nana used to give my brother, my sister, and me five bucks each to go down to the little
carnival down the road because we would spend August with her in the summers in just north of New York City. And she used to say, Megan would come home
with just the $5 gone, wouldn't want anymore. Your sister would come back asking for change
after two minutes and your brother would come home with change in his pockets. So my sister
needed more money. My brother always had change and I wound up breaking even. And honestly,
that's how we wound up to this day. You know, that's how you learn, right? That's where you
develop all your initial habits. You know, I try to tell my kids how you do anything is how you do
everything. You know, and it's really important to get good habits that can lead to success as
you get older. It's really true. Was there a pivotal moment when you were a little kid that
that drove you to be this successful, this determined?
I don't know if there was any one. I think it's just how my parents raised me. I mean,
my dad did upholstery on cars and always wanted to be an entrepreneur, but never could quite get
there. Never had a college degree. My mom did odd jobs, never went to college. And so they always
didn't push me, but really supported me and encouraged me to try anything.
I remember I would buy and sell stamps.
And one time I wanted to go to New York and my dad had to take me, right?
Because I was 15, 16 years old.
And he was like, okay, I have no idea what I'm doing. And I would take him around.
And what I would do is at these stamp shows, I would go to from one stamp collector's booth
to another where they would have a dealer who would be selling these different stamps. And I would go to from one stamp collector's booth to another where they
would have a dealer who would be selling these different stamps and I would look for the
inefficiencies. So how one stamp dealer would gauge a stamp or rate a stamp would be different
than another one would. So I'd buy one that I thought was undervalued and go to the next booth
and sell it to somebody who I thought would value it higher. And my dad was like, I have no clue what I just
saw, but you made money, so keep doing it. And so I think I realized then that I was going to
have to make this on my own and I was going to have to figure it out on my own and that I had
the ability to do it. You were a little nerd who went on to become King Nerd.
Yeah, I wasn't so little, but yeah, I was a nerd.
Well, it's funny because when I see somebody like you, who's got as much success in their
back pocket as you do, I always think, oh God, they probably went to Harvard or Yale
or Stanford.
None of us can get into those schools without lifetime family connections and so on.
And then it turns out you went to Indiana, which I love that.
Yeah, and I went to Indiana.
For all the people who are feeling bad about themselves right now, because they didn't go to these top tier schools or the parents who are worried their kids aren't going to get into them. What do they need to know about going to a school like Indiana? the cheapest one. And I'd never been to the campus. And that's how I picked Indiana. And in
terms of what people need to know, it's less the school that you go to and more of the effort that
you make. To me, I learned, I picked up so much knowledge about business because I was really
geared towards taking business classes and challenging myself. So I would say, don't worry
about the school you go to, make it one that you can afford. You don't want to saddle yourself with
a ton of debt these days. And two, when you get there, you don't have to know
exactly what you're going to be when you grow up. Try to challenge yourself and take as many
different types of classes. I ended up being a tech guy, and I took one technology class in
college. I didn't really come to understand that I had a good aptitude for tech until after college,
but what I really
did pick up is all the language of business, accounting, marketing, finance, and sales.
And I think even more importantly, Megan, I learned how to learn. The only constant is change.
And so I think Indiana really gave me a toolkit to say, new things are always going to be coming
at me. And I learned how to learn new things. And I learned that putting an effort in to read and absorb information however I could
really gave me a competitive advantage.
And those are the skills I think you should look for.
And none of that really applies to which school you select.
So in a nutshell, what does the business do that you sold for all that money?
Oh, okay.
So let me take a step back.
My first job out of college when I got down to it, well, actually, my first job in Dallas
when I came down here, I got a job as a bartender at night.
I was living six guys in a three-bedroom apartment and then got a job during the day selling
software.
And that's really what got me into computers and technology.
And so I was there for like nine months before I got fired. And then I started a company called
Micro Solutions, where I just said, you know what, nobody really knows all this new computer stuff.
If I teach myself, then I'm going to have an edge. And I went and found a customer who would
put the money up front for a software package they wanted to buy, told them if it didn't work,
I would walk their dog, you know, clean their, clean their floors, whatever it took to make them happy.
And then built that up to a company, built that up to about 30 million in sales and 80 employees.
And we sold it to H&R Block when I was about 30. And then I took a couple years off. And in 1994,
early 95, a buddy of mine from Indiana, Todd Wagner,
came to me and said, you know, there's this new internet thing, and you're the technology
and networking geek. There's got to be a way that we can use this internet thing to listen
to Indiana sports over the internet. And I'm like, okay, let me see if we can make this work.
And the first thing I did was look to see if there was anybody else doing anything like that. And the answer was no. There were some academic things going on,
but no businesses. And so I bought a Packard Bell computer, set it up in the second bedroom of my
house, and learned how to do internet broadcasting is what we called it at the time. And we started
a company called AudioNet. We built that up to where we had, I don't know, 100 radio stations
and thousands of broadcasts on there. And then we changed it to broadcast.com and added video.
1998, we went public. And effectively, we were the YouTube of the early internet. I mean,
we just dominated streaming. We went public in 1998, July, and it was the biggest IPO in the history
of the stock market at the time. And then a year later, we sold to Yahoo for $5.7 billion in stock.
How old were you then?
I was just turned 40. I take that back about to turn 40.
So I heard you tell the story about when you saw the stock go up and you realized you were
making $6 billion and that you were, you didn't have any clothes on. You were sitting in a seat
looking at your computer. Kind of like I am right now. No, just kidding. Me too. Yeah. Right. See,
you know, sometimes you just got to hang loose. So what, I was just wondering, like, you know,
when you, I realize it's stock and so, but like you get when you get that money at some point you actually get that money and like
is that like direct deposit is it how do you get that money so what happened was you know i had
been after i sold my first company micro solutions i traded stocks and did really well and that helped
me allowed me to finance audionetbroadcast..com and own enough to really do well when we sold it.
And so when we got it, we got stock. And so what happens was they literally put 1.9 million shares,
I forget the number of shares that we got, 19 million or something like that,
shares of Yahoo stock. But because I traded stocks before, I knew that there was
risk to the internet bubble, that these stocks were not going to go up forever. And honestly,
I had a B next to my name at that point and thought to myself, how much more did I need?
So I did something called a caller, where I sold calls and bought puts to protect my downside.
And that's how I ended up converting all that stock into cash. And as it
turns out, when the internet stock market crashed, I was protected. And a lot of our employees,
we had 330 employees when we sold and 300 of them became paper millionaires. And we convinced a lot
of them to hedge like I did. And they protected themselves as well. But at that point in time,
once we collared it, which... and by the way, it ended up being
called one of the top 10 trades on Wall Street of all time.
But when I collared it, and as those collars bled off, that's how I got cash in my account.
So it wasn't just like one big wire transfer.
I understood like every third sentence of what you just said, but I get the basic message.
I get that you hedged, and so you protected yourself and your employees so that when the
bubble burst, you guys were still in the black. Yeah, I got it. Okay. So I wanted to ask
you as somebody who came from a middle-class background and winds up, as you say, with the
B after your name, is there any downside to having all that dough? No, absolutely not.
Nothing at all? Here's what I thought you would say. Having to wonder whether people coming into your life after you've got the B after your
name are sincerely interested in you, the man.
Yeah, but you know what?
There's hassles in life no matter how much money you have.
You know, the friends I have now are my friends from high school and college and my rugby
team and, you know, guys, you guys, my roommates from Dallas, when I first
got to Dallas, they're all still my good friends. And yeah, I've added some friends along the way,
but I wasn't looking for new friends. What about women? When you were dating,
I know you're married now, but when you were dating, did you worry about that?
Not so much worry because it was pretty obvious. obvious, you know, when you start to date somebody or go out with somebody and the first two things they said, it was, you know,
I, you know, I really love to just do charity work and travel. Um, those are kind of my life goals.
You kind of knew, you know, I have a good friend who I used to work at the Jones day and, and she
was this like hard ass lawyer. She was great. Uh, and went to great schools and all this stuff.
And she fell in love with a guy who also worked at Jones Day.
And he was also super brilliant on their first date.
They'd been sort of eyeballing each other for a while.
And they go out to dinner on their first date and they're hitting it off.
They're both having a great time.
And she says to him at one point during the dinner, I'm going to get up and go to the
bathroom.
And if you're still here, when I get back, I'll know that none of the three things I'm about to tell you are deal breakers.
And if you're gone, no harm done. We can stay friends. The three things are I smoke. I'm going
to quit, but right now I'm still struggling with it. And I smoke. The second thing is I have
terrible credit. I'm going to fix it, but I, it's not that I don't pay my bills. She said,
it's just I pay them more on a quarterly basis. She said, the third thing is, I know you know me
as this high-powered lawyer at Jones Day, but what I really want to do is be a stay-at-home mom.
She got up. She went to the restroom. She came back. He was still there. They've been married
ever since. They have two daughters. That's awesome.
Right? I love that. What a great story story that's like owning great story that's owning who you are and and what perceptions are of
you just sort of exactly right up front exactly right i mean and you got to be honest then you
know and during that dating period um i did a lot more having fun than than truly dating um but
what does that mean was that a euphemism for action? Well, yeah. It just meant that I
didn't have a lot of long-term girlfriends in that in-between period. Oh, man.
But when I met my wife, I was playing basketball at the gym, and she was on the bike, and one of
my basketball buddies dated her sister. And he was like, you see that girl there? You want to
meet her? I'm like, hell yeah.
And we've been together pretty much ever since with a couple of breaks in there,
but been married 18 years, three weeks ago. Oh, that's great.
Yeah, I got really lucky. Do you worry about, I know you do, because everybody who makes that kind of dough does. I'm nowhere near your level,
but even just having achieved success in my own life, coming from a middle-class background, I worry about it. Raising kids who are entitled,
you know, who don't have the drive to work hard. Yeah. After their health, that is the first and
foremost thing that scares the hell out of me. Literally, Megan, it's something I think about
every day, something my wife and I talk about all the time, you know, and it's something I talk to
them about. I mean, now they're 11, 14 and 17. My youngest son, Jake, middle Alyssa and oldest is Alexis. And, you know,
with kids, they all have their own unique personality. So you have to kind of tailor
the message to each one of them. But I make it really clear that there's no money train coming
for them. They're going to have to make their own way and figure out how to earn a living that I'd never let them fail,
you know, so that they really, you know, couldn't, so they, they had bad struggles,
but I was going to allow them to struggle if, you know, if that makes sense.
Well, how do you do that though? Right. Because I think about it now,
I never had a desire just to be rich. I just wanted to work hard and be successful.
That was the drive I had and it
worked for me. But I don't know. I look around, I say to the kids, you like the way we live,
you better work hard. Because I always say, my kids will say, are we rich? And I'll say,
dad and I are doing just fine. You got nothing. Yes, I say the same thing.
Right? But the truth is, I will leave them something. I don't want them to have to not have
anything. And I don't know about these billionaires like Bill Gates were like, I'm giving it all away.
My kids are getting nothing. That seems weird to me too. I take, I take a little bit different
approach than those guys. One, because, you know, as I said, I'm most concerned about their health.
And so I really tried to keep a decent amount of liquidity just in case, God forbid, you know,
knock on wood, something goes wrong with their health and you have to step in and it's something unique and there's
not a readily available treatment, then that's when it's got to be all guns blazing.
And so that's kind of my save for a rainy day as it applies to their health.
After that, it's just trying to connect with them and set an example, particularly how
I try to treat people when we go out and, you know, they see me interact and always being nice, always being cordial, always being respectful.
You know, they see me pick on, you know, the president and politicians and referees at Mavs
games. And we have discussions about that. But generally, you know, I really try to set an
example and really communicate to them that, you know, your education and how you
do to school is going to be the door opener because each of you are different. And if you
want to blaze your own path, you're going to have to, you know, set your own goals and do your best
to achieve them. Yeah. Well, it sounds like you're setting a good example. And by the way,
you're allowed to run on all those people. They're in the arena. You put yourself in the arena,
you know, you're going to take a punch here and there. Exactly. Yeah. Including me, right? I got
to take the punches too.
Yeah, absolutely.
So you wind up buying the Dallas Mavericks.
And I warn you up front, I know very little about sports. I only know sports to the extent they veer over into my news lane.
So you buy this basketball team.
Why?
My wife and I used to, we're season ticket holders, and we used to go to every game,
and they were awful.
You didn't like your seats?
Yeah.
Well, no, my seats were fine, right?
But, and I was,
right after we sold the broadcast.com to Yahoo,
I was at the opening night of the 99-2000 season.
It wasn't a sellout.
I mean, it's opening night, we're undefeated.
I was excited,
but it didn't seem like there was any energy in the arena.
And I thought, you know,
I could do such a better job than this.
And then it finally dawned on me that, hey, I can afford to put my money where my mouth
is. And so I reached out to a former player, Mark McGuire, who knew the then owner, Russ Brode Jr.
They connected us, or he connected us. And, you know, it took just a few weeks and the deal got
done. And so, you know, from initial thought, around November 1st, we closed the deal January
4th or January 8th or something right around there.
What do you love about it?
I love – I mean, I'm a basketball junkie.
And so there's a couple things I love.
One, I learned very quickly that I may be responsible for the finances, but all of North Texas truly owns the Dallas Mavericks.
It's so different than any other industry, Any other business I've ever been involved with, I never got requests, hey, my son has
cancer.
Can you get a player to come visit us or call us or talk to us?
Or will you come visit?
Or unfortunately, my son or daughter passed away from cancer.
Would you mind if Luka Doncic signed a jersey so we can bury him in it because he was his favorite
player. Just heartbreaking things like that that you don't see in any other industry.
So that connection to community is first and foremost. And, you know, just the challenge of
it all. There's every season, there's, you know, 30 teams, 29 losers and one winner.
And I've only been that, you know, walk away final winner one time. So I love the challenge of it.
And I love the basketball side of it. I mean, I get to go to basically my own arena before a home
game and get out there and shoot baskets. And to me as a basketball junkie growing up, that's one
of the coolest things ever. And that's really how I clear my head. Even today, I can go down to the
practice court. And if I'm stressed about something or want to just clear my head or think about something,
I'll just get up shots. I'll get up there and shoot baskets.
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Mark Cuban. My husband put on The Last Dance, you know, the documentary about Michael Jordan.
And we watched that.
And I loved Michael Jordan.
I lived in Chicago during a lot of those Bulls years.
So I saw that team play and wound up getting to know Dennis Rodman a little bit later in life, which is a whole other story.
He was my roommate for a little bit, which is another story.
No, he was not.
Yes, he was.
How did that happen? It was when I bought the Mavs my first year, we hadn't been to the playoffs in 10 years and had a,
or 16 years and had a losing record for like the last 10 or something like that. And I was trying
to do anything to win. And so we signed him for what ended up being a total of 12 days. And, um,
because he had had a suspended driver's license, he couldn't drive. And so I put him in the guest
house in my house until the NBA, the NBA told me that it was against
the rules and he couldn't do it. So D Rod and I have been friends ever since. He's he's such an
interesting guy. I asked him, you know, like, how many times have you been arrested? It was like
over 80. And I'm like, okay, okay. And but he's, he's kind of a sweet soul. And also the Henry
Kissinger of our time.
Yes.
You know, instead of ping pong diplomacy, you know, you got North Korean basketball diplomacy.
But yeah, he's got a great heart.
Right.
Who would have thought Dennis Rodman could be a critical player in in forging maybe a better relationship between the United States and North Korea?
Nobody.
Absolutely nobody. But you're right. He's got a great heart and I
really like Dennis. Well, so I love Michael Jordan, like everyone in the world. And I loved
that the last dance. I thought it was so well done and he was so interesting. But I wanted to ask
you, one of the things they highlight in that documentary is that he never got political,
even though there was pressure to do so. And he just thought, I'm not going to do that because I know my fans might not agree with me on whatever issue you
want me to push or whatever candidate you want me to take. Republicans buy sneakers too. Yep.
Yeah. Republicans buy sneakers too. Exactly. And, and, you know, I, I like that because politics
has just taken over. It's like, you can't turn on the Emmys or the Oscars or the sports games.
It's like, it's everywhere. And as you know, it know, it's so ubiquitous just in the news. It's really just hard to escape
it now. And that's not the way the NBA is going. It seems like it's gotten very political. But
from what I've seen, again, and I'm sort of outside your lane, but there's the big BLM logo
on the basketball court down there for the finals. And the guys are wearing social
justice messages on their jerseys. And they've been having some protests like the night Jacob
Blake got shot. They didn't play. And so what do you think? I mean, do you think that it's appropriate
to take a side on issues that are so charged? Well, first, let's go back, right? Let's go back
to Michael Jordan's era. Just because Michael wasn't a participant didn't mean that players weren't activists back then as well,
right? I mean, going back to the extent we see now. Well, I just think, remember, there's a
different media environment. There's a huge difference between media availability in the
Michael Jordan days. That was just the beginning of cable. Fox News only existed for half of Michael's career, right?
The last three years of Michael's career, there was no social media.
The internet was in its infancy.
So there really weren't the mechanisms to really convey to people messages.
You know, you had to go through all the gatekeepers.
So it wasn't that players weren't active.
They were in their own ways.
But now we're in a different social media environment
and things progress. You know, politics and sports have always gone together. You know,
Muhammad Ali was the champion of the world when he was Cassius Clay. And then, you know,
he was ostracized when he became Muhammad Ali and he was not even allowed to fight because,
you know, he did not want to go to Vietnam. And he had a lot of commentary there.
You know, we can go to the Olympics 1980 when we withdrew from from the Olympics. So you know,
while I get your point, I don't agree that sports and politics have been disassociated. And this is
something new. It's certainly not. Now that's the court though, not on the court. I mean, listen,
I'm close. I related close enough to remember there was never a huge logo on a divisive issue on the basketball
court during the finals. Okay, well, let's talk about that. So you wear a pink ribbon to support
breast cancer. That's one thing putting BLM in the middle of the court when it's not supported by
virtually any Republican in the country. It's done less than 20% Republicans support the group.
So that's different. So okay, so first there, when you said the group,
what group are you talking about? Black Lives Matter, capital B, capital L, capital
O. No, okay, but who is that
group?
It's a group founded by Marxists
who want to dismantle the
nuclear family and defund the police.
No, first that's incorrect. So first of all,
No, it's 100% correct. Okay, so
let's go there. Okay, so first of all, let's talk in terms of who we support. There's black lives matter.com. And that's where you go to get the information about the organization. Those are the people who started the hashtag. That's all they did. If we were supporting black lives matter.com, don't you think Megan, we would have been smart enough to put the.com on the court along with Black Lives Matter? Come on, now you're splitting hairs.
No, I'm not. I'm not. No. So let's go. No. So what BLM are you supporting?
We're supporting the movement. It's really a distributed movement across the country to
try to end racism, to bring awareness to social justice issues. And if you, and I've done this, right? Talk to people who go,
that are at Black Lives Matter rallies
and ask them who the three founders are.
They don't have any idea.
And if we were supportive of those three founders,
don't you think we would have had one of them
on an NBA broadcast to talk about?
You know as well as I do that the main takeaway on BLM,
the main push, this is what they say their single issue,
their biggest issue is, whenever you see a representative from the group, an organizer, people who go to the protests, it's one thing, defund the police.
No, that's crazy.
Okay, so that's not crazy.
Trust me, I've been following every news cycle on this.
I've marched with them.
Yep, that's the whole thing, Megan.
You just answered the question.
You're following the news cycles, right?
And where you get your source of news determines, you know, pretty much the perspective that
people are going to have on this.
I can tell you from being in NBA meetings, right?
I can tell you from being part of the discussions.
I can tell you from talking to players.
So when I speak, I'm speaking for the NBA as an owner, you know, and so I can tell you, it's been very
clear that we're supportive of the movement. We're supportive of trying to end racism.
We're supportive of police reform, but you've never, ever heard us talk about Marxism.
Okay, fine. You don't need to endorse Marxism. But you know, but Mark, to pretend but to pretend that Black Lives Matter dot com or otherwise is not about defunding the police is to be dishonest.
It is. It is about. No, it absolutely is. And the basketball players who have spoken about this have made clear that they support that.
I mean, they've talked about how they want to defund and dismantle the police force. Individual players can have their opinion, right? And that's fine, right?
But me as a governor in the NBA, and having been in all those meetings, I can tell you that while
we are interested in police reform, yes, and we have had discussions about police reform, yes,
we have never talked about defund, yes. We have never talked about
defunding the police. And they are an extremely different end. But BLM hasn't devoted itself to
it. No, you're wrong, Megan, because BLM, the hashtag, BLM, the hashtag, the founders,
is completely different than BLM, the movement. Mark, people don't understand this distinction
you're trying to make. That's why they find this logo alienating. It's not that they
don't support lowercase BLM. It's that what this group has become with the protests in the streets
that have turned into riots, with bothering people at their dinner tables, making them raise a fist
and say Black Lives Matter. And with this push to defund the police, which has already worked
in some cities in New York, they took a billion bucks away from the police force to the detriment
of the inner city, to the women and the children and the men who are in the inner city.
Okay, so now we're talking about something different.
Now, okay, I agree with controversial, right? So first of all, you know, when we talk about
defunding the police, that's one extreme. Disrupting the police is a completely and trying to reform the police is a completely different issue.
OK, so now you're going to have to put footnotes on the BLM on your court. See footnote 47 for exactly which BLM we support.
Issue number two. So you're raising a very good issue that in terms of controlling the narrative, it's been awful. And the reason it's been awful is because there
is no leadership. There is no one speaking for BLM. This is a conversation I've had with our
player. There is true because the co-founder of Black Lives Matter, Patrice Cullors, was on TV
and has openly said, and I quote, we should abolish law enforcement. Where was she on TV
and when, Megan? How many times? She's been out there a few times and her co-founder has said the
same and half the organizers of the group go on television and say the same. Most of the time
when you see those, it's the same interview from 2015 or 2016 that's being rebroadcast.
No, they're not hiding this goal, Mark. I mean, the city of Minneapolis voted to defund the
police and now they've already regretted it and backtracked on it. Okay.
So what I'm telling you is in terms of the NBA's involvement, right?
Whatever the founders of the hashtag. And again, you have to distinguish between the hashtag and the movement.
And to you, it may be a distinction without a difference.
But I'm telling you to the people who are marching and the people that are involved
in the NBA, it's not.
According to Gallup, in the latest poll, 81 percent of black Americans want the same or
more police in their neighborhoods. You're conflating two different things, Megan. You're
talking about defunding the police and do they want more police support? That's completely
different than how the players responded to the Jacob Blake shooting. No, no, I understand. I
understand the point you're making. But what I'm trying to tell you is that that that people have been fed a media narrative about police hunting black men. That is a lie. African-American males in particular. Right. And I didn't have this understanding until I sat and
talked to our players and their families and other people around them. Right. And, you know,
they said, Mark, you know, you have a daughter about that just started driving at the time.
Did you have to have the talk with them? And I'm like, what's the talk? And they start to tell you
about, well, one, here's what you have to do if you get pulled over by the police.
You never told your son to obey when pulled over by cops?
No, that's not it.
That's you're not letting me finish.
That's obvious.
Of course, you spoke.
They tell him to do everything that he's supposed to do.
But also, when you get pulled over, make sure you pull over in the lighted area if you at all can.
If you have somebody else in the car with a phone, make sure they're videotaping it. If you at all can. If you have somebody else in the car with a phone, make sure they're videotaping it if you at all can. If you can call somebody so people can listen in to what's going
on, please do if you all can. If you can automate something on your phone to do a quick dial to make
all this happen, please do if you can. That's part one. Part two, when you go into a retail
establishment, don't be surprised if people start eyeballing you and
following you simply because you're black. You could be dressed the exact same way as a white
individual walking down the same aisle, and there's still a greater chance that they're
going to watch you, and you just have to be able to deal with it and not get mad.
If you're running in a neighborhood, please do have somebody with you, because when people see
a black male running through a
neighborhood, they get concerned and there's a good chance you're going to have the police called
on you. So don't be surprised. So you're better off running or jogging or walking or walking your
dog with another person because you are at risk. Mark, have you ever had to have these conversations
with your children? The answer is no.
And that's the difference.
And so when they see Jacob Blake shot, they're not looking to make Jacob Blake a martyr.
Jacob Blake just happened to be the person that was just one more brick in the wall that just cemented where the African-Americans feel that they are.
That's the problem.
That's why I support it.
That's why the NBA supports him.
And the points you're making, I don't dispute any of those.
I think you can argue about whether, I mean, young women also get followed around stores a lot because we're the ones who are likely to steal.
I mean, they think young women who can't afford the dresses are going to take them and shove them in their purse.
So it doesn't just happen based on skin color.
But I'm not disputing that.
But what's been force fed to the American public is the lie that that cops are hunting black men.
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score. Visit scoremaster.com slash MK, scoremaster.com slash MK. And now back to Mark Cuban. Your audience is fleeing.
They,
they object to the politicization of their game and the,
you guys have suffered.
Have you not?
I mean,
the,
the ratings,
what I saw is that the finals are underway.
Let me just finish the question.
Okay,
go ahead.
Sure.
Lowest finals opener ever.
Game two,
another new low game three down and unprecedented 58% since last year. This is
during a marquee matchup, right? The Lakers and the Heat. I know enough to know that they were huge.
And last year they had some team from Canada and that matchup was crushing what we're seeing this
year. And the sports analysts say this is a disaster. It's an unprecedented viewership
collapse for you guys. So first, okay, my turn. Okay. So first, I really love this conversation. I love going back and forth like this. So I don't want any of this to be anything but total respect. And I'm really enjoying this. Okay, same. I appreciate that. Okay, so number one, who are the when you talk about, you're putting these things out, after just having said how bad the media was by using extreme examples, and picking sources that may not be reflective of the
reality. So you're just, what you just said was wrong in terms of crime. You're doing the exact
same thing with this. So I just want to make this point. So when you say the expert, I'm telling you,
this is the accusation that your ratings are down because you're too political.
Right. This is the accusation, but you're not saying who's making the accusation because
that last line of disaster
I got from Clay Travis
of OutKick.
Of course you did, right?
Now, what is...
But the numbers are
what the numbers are, Mark.
The numbers are what the numbers are.
I mean, was it not
the lowest finals opener ever?
Yes.
And it was a new low
for game two
and an unprecedented low
for game three?
I'm going to tell you a quick story.
So there's this old probability thing where people use this example of during World War II,
they brought in this statistical analysis guy to help them reduce the number of planes that were shot down.
And so what he did was look at all the planes that returned from flying over the Pacific
and looked at all those who had been shot.
And all the people in the military said, look, all the planes that were shot returned, all
the bullet holes are right here.
So we've got to make that area where the bullet holes are stronger.
And he said, no, because it's already strong enough.
That's why the planes returned.
You've got to look to see what shot them down.
You're using these examples, and this analogy is here,
because you're using these examples.
I'm asking you about the ratings.
Let me finish.
You're not looking outside the NBA ratings
to see what else is happening in media.
You're not correlating this.
Are there some other ratings you want to point me to?
Sure.
Okay.
Here's one.
This is a group of people that are incredibly woke, right?
Horse racing.
Horses are the most woke species on the planet.
We all know that, right?
Horse racing is down significantly.
The triple crown, the numbers are down 40, 50, 60% from last year because horses are
the most woke beast on the planet, right?
Because it must be politics that horse racing. I know you want to compare yourself to horse
racing right now, but the big indicators they look at are foot, our football and baseball,
and they haven't taken anywhere near the hit that basketball has. Well, football has always
done really well, right? What about hockey?
Again, do you think hockey is analogous to basketball more than football and baseball?
Hockey had their finals. What about regular TV, broadcast television?
You're trying to dodge. No, I'm not trying to dodge. I'm trying to convey the point. Why do you think your ratings are so low? I think up until the finals, I think our finals
disappointed. I'll agree with that. And I don't think it has anything to do with low. I think up until the finals, I think our finals disappointed.
I'll agree with that.
And I don't think it has anything to do with politics.
I just think we don't have the matchup and we don't have the storylines and did do a
good job promoting it.
But be that as it may, right?
Prior to the finals, our numbers were good.
All things considered, our numbers were fine in the demographic that we shoot for.
Remember, the only point of ratings is to help advertisers buy advertising, correct?
Yes.
That's why ratings exist.
So within that realm, we were winning our night every single night.
And that's despite having four games a day on some days and even more on others, starting our games at one in the afternoon when nobody's watching. Despite all that, we were winning not only in viewers, but also
in terms of the 18 to 49 demographic. That's our demographic. But here's the NBA challenge in terms
of media. Up until the finals, and again, I'll admit that the finals have been somewhat disappointing.
Up until the finals, the only way to get an NBA game was on cable or satellite.
All of our games are on ESPN or TNT.
Our core audience, our fastest growing audience is younger demographic.
They court cut.
They don't have cable.
They don't have satellite.
There was just a morning consult, I forget who came out that said, among Gen Z and young millennials, the NBA is just behind
the NFL with 47% to 49% of fans saying it's their favorite sport.
We're right there, but the problem is that our largest growing viewership base and the
one we want to be our viewership base, the youngest viewership base, Gen Z, can't watch us during our games or doesn't have regular TV to have our games.
But that's a fundamental problem.
They can watch the finals if they have broadcast television available to them, right?
And I'm not saying that's our reason for it.
I'm not making an excuse.
It's lower than I expect them to, wanted them to be, right?
But at the same time, the rest of the playoffs, we did really well.
But our problem- Look, I would just suggest to you, I would just, I'm telling you the whole, the whole
go, the whole thing about politics is nonsense. Okay. I mean, time will tell. Let me move on.
Cause I have to ask you about China. The NBA is under all sorts of fire for taking money from
China and China. I, what I'm told is that the NBA's revenue from China is around
500 million bucks at least. So it's a lot of money that the Chinese put into basketball,
into the players and endorsements and so on. And my question for you is whether the NBA needs to
get more, not less vocal about this. There was some guy who sent out one tweet. He was the GM
for the Houston Rockets back
in October of 19 saying, simply fight for freedom, stand with Hong Kong. And all hell broke loose.
The Chinese Basketball Association suspended all cooperation with the team. The Chinese
stopped state TV, suspended airing of the games and so on. The NBA commissioner had to come out
with his tail between his legs and said, we have great respect for China and its history. It's all regrettable.
Then people freaked out in response to that and so on.
And now people with his tail between his legs, with his tail between his legs,
Megan, why can't you just ask me a straight up question?
I'm trying to summarize it for our viewers, Mark.
Yeah, but Megan, every single topic we've tried to discuss that I've just tried,
you know, you get to come into this interview prepared with your quotes.
I don't get to come in industry. Yeah, but Megan,
that's that's what I'm talking about. I don't care what industry we're talking about.
Every single topic that you brought up, there's been one pejorative aspect to it in terms of how you present the question. Look, I get it. I'll give you the objective statement from Adam Silver,
the NBA commissioner. I don't I'm just telling you, people freaked out after he said this. I take no position here. Oh, a lot of people. I mean, I'll give you an GM, his Morey's views, quote, have deeply offended
our friends and fans in China, which is regrettable. We have great respect for the history and culture
of China and hope that sports and the NBA can be used as a unifying force to bridge cultural
divides. In response to which many people, here's just one example, Florida Senator Rick Scott came
out and said, the NBA is more interested in money than in human rights.
They are kowtowing to Beijing and it's shameful.
So you tell me whether the NBA needs to get more vocal in condemning what we're now seeing there,
which is an ethnic cleansing of a minority Muslim group known as the Uyghurs.
One million or more are being held against their will right now.
Men, women, and children facing torture, forced labor, physical and sex abuse,
coercive population control, forced abortion, forced sterilizations.
And the question remains, why won't you and the NBA explicitly condemn that?
So first,
first, we pay attention.
I personally, okay,
let's just talk about me.
I personally put a priority on domestic issues, right?
When it comes to human rights,
I'm against all human rights violations
around the world.
Including the ones in China?
China is not the only country
with human rights violations.
Right, but including the ones in China,
you're against their human rights violations? I'm against all human rights violations. Right, but including the ones in China, you're against their human rights violations?
I'm against all human rights violations.
Including China, Mark?
Yes, including China.
Any human rights violations anywhere are wrong, okay?
Okay.
Now, what do we do about them?
That's the problem, right?
So the first thing you do, you say,
okay, there's people from China trying to escape that.
There's people from Turkey.
There's people from Africa all trying to escape and receive asylum here in the United States.
Would you agree with them?
Would you agree with that?
Look, according to you—
I'm asking a question.
I'm asking a question.
Would you agree that—
Which question?
The question, there are people who are trying to escape human rights violations around the world
and gain asylum as refugees here in the United States of America.
Would you agree with that?
Yes, that's true.
Okay.
Would you agree that it's probably a good idea that we should allow more of them to come
so they can escape these human rights issues? You're not going to put this back on me.
This is about you, the NBA, and China. I'm not putting anything on you. I'm just asking a
question. I'm just asking you a question. No, we're talking about human rights violations.
No, I'm explaining to my audience that what's happening now is you're dodging because you're
uncomfortable because the NBA will not condemn China. And it's-
I just told you I'm
against human rights violations everywhere, including China. Let's get specific. Do you
condemn the genocide that's going on right now in China? I can get all human rights violations.
Why can't you be specific? Yes, because the way proclamations work in this country,
the minute you say them anywhere, you're going to use this as a headline. Cuban says this,
this and this. What's wrong with that headline? Cuban condemns ethnic cleansing in China.
Because I got to deal with the troll bites then. I got to deal with the troll bites.
Now, what's more important to ask is what actions that I think are important to deal with these
issues. You want proclamations, but you're not, when I try to talk about actions, you ignore them
and say, I'm evading the question. No, I wouldn't. I have been told silence is violence. And my
question for you is, why have you been so silent on this?
I'm telling you, action is change.
So what are you doing about this?
So I just tried to explain it to you, right?
I've been involved trying to increase the number of slots available for asylum seekers here in the United States.
Right now, if someone were to escape any country that has human rights violations and get to this country, they can't get a job.
Come on.
You know why?
That's not a response to what's happening in China.
Bullshit, that's not a response.
Why would the NBA take $500 million plus from a country that is engaging in ethnic cleansing?
So basically, you're saying that nobody should do business with China ever.
Why don't you just answer my question?
No, Megan, I'm just trying to get to the root of it.
So you're just trying to put that.
You're the one, you are the one who said.
Because they are a customer.
They are a customer of ours.
And guess what, Megan?
I'm okay with doing business with China.
You know, I wish I could solve all the world's problems, Megan.
I'm sure you do too, but we can't.
And so we have to
pick all battles. And while you'd like to get proclamation so you can create a clip that says,
look what I got Mark to say, you don't want to deal with the actual action item. You might think
silence is violence, but action gets changed, right? And so when I start to talk about-
I await your action. I mean, that's-
You won't let me say it. You stopped me every single time and said I was changing the subject.
Providing for asylum for those seeking it does absolutely nothing to help the women. Zero.
So first of all, you don't know what you're talking about. You don't know what you're talking about because there are people.
You know how many people are on the waiting list for visas and asylum in China right now trying to get here but can't?
More than 200,000. And you know how I know that?
Because it's not a published figure. Because I went to the State Department and contributed the
resources to figure it out and find out what's going on. Because when people are able to get out,
we don't get them a chance to come here. And when they are able to get here, we don't give them a
chance to work because they're not allowed to work and so when they get here and so they go into the underground economy so all
these people crying for human rights you know helping the people when we find a way to help
them we stop them we don't we don't help them and so don't give me all the nonsense about
i got it i have to ask you before we go are you going to take these problems on from the
executive office of the White House?
No, no, I'm not going to run for president. Nope. You're not? Nope.
I've never heard you rule it out so explicitly. No, I have. Yeah, I have many times.
Right. When the only reason I considered it because I because of Donald Trump.
Right. Prior to that, I was apolitical, you know, and I'll go back to being apolitical when he's hopefully out of office.
Thanks for being here. All the best.
I appreciate it, Megan.
Well, that was interesting.
Spirited, interesting, surprising.
Listen, a couple of things.
Look, he is actually right that helping asylum seekers from China,
it is a good thing.
It is.
And they certainly can't stay where they are or go back home if they're here.
But it doesn't do anything for the million people who are already in China's forced labor camps right now.
And that's the ethical challenge of getting rich off of China's money.
Also, in case, by the way, you were wondering whether those terrible ratings really were caused by the NBA going political? Well, the NBA commissioner just announced that next year
they will not be allowing messages on the floor or, it seems, on the jerseys.
He said he got the message from fans who turn on the TV and, quote,
just want to watch a basketball game.
Right? Can't you relate to that?
So good. Good for them.
Ratings speak.
They have the ultimate power on these guys.
That's the truth of it.
And our thanks again to Mark for the spicy exchange. I can't think of another team owner
who would have had the guts for that conversation, right? He deserves credit for that, and we
respect it and appreciate it. Hope you enjoyed the show. Tune in later this week for Alan Dershowitz.
I'm really looking forward to that. See ya. Thanks for listening to The Megyn Kelly Show. No BS, no agenda, and no fear.
The Megyn Kelly Show is a Devil May Care media production in collaboration with Red Seat Ventures.
