Pablo Torre
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And that, to me, feels like all of the evidence you need in terms of this being a no-show job if you're an endorser of something, I would argue.
It's a great question that Calais Campbell just asked, I believe, because he just asked that question.
It's a really good question.
There's sloppiness in this.
There's sloppiness all over the place because, yes, all you had to do was do a couple of things.
But the whole this is the legend, right?
Like people are saying, oh, you're snitching on Kawhi Leonard.
Kawhi Leonard, to me, is not the villain of the story.
Kawhi Leonard.
is maybe the most clear cut example of a straight up capitalist, right?
Board man gets paid.
Dude wants money.
Dude doesn't want to work.
He wants to get paid.
And so Kawhi Leonard could have done some of that stuff to get everybody plausible deniability.
He preferred not to.
He signed a deal in the contract, which we have.
We have the signed and executed endorsement contract.
And it's Kawhi Leonard, his autograph right next to the guy who turns out to be, by the way, the youngest speechwriter in White House history for Bill Clinton, Andre Charney, the co-founder of Aspiration.
In that contract, he has outs that our pal David Sampson poured over in which you clearly see Kawhi was also not obligated to do anything.