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First episodes of new Michael Jordan series spark fan frenzy

Pictured here, Michael Jordan and coach Phil Jackson after the Bulls won their sixth NBA championship.
Fans are buzzing about the new Michael Jordan docu-series The Last Dance. Pic: Getty

The first two episodes of ‘The Last Dance’ have finally arrived and - for the first night in a month - the NBA fans of the world had what they wanted.

For two hours, viewers received an unprecedented look into the lives of Michael Jordan, Scottie Pippen and the rest of the 1997-98 Chicago Bulls.

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Between its background, subject matter and timing with the sports world shut down by the coronavirus pandemic, ‘The Last Dance’ premiered as quite possibly the most anticipated sports documentary of all time.

It was certainly appointment viewing for NBA Twitter, which went into a frenzy on a moment’s notice throughout the two hours. Here are the first of likely many highlights:

The Bulls’ traveling cocaine circus

The first indication that this documentary was going to get very real was a prod from Jordan’s interviewer about a certain habit of his Bulls teammates when he was first drafted.

Point blank, it was a question of how accurate the term “the Bulls traveling cocaine circus” really was.

After a prolonged laugh and claiming he had never heard that nickname, Jordan led his response off with an incredible “Ahhhh ... look.”

Jordan went onto explain how he walked in on his teammates partying with, among other things, cocaine and women, then walked right out to preserve his career.

Hey, it was the NBA in the 1980s, what did you expect?

Naturally, a T-shirt has already been drawn up.

‘Former Chicago Resident’ Barack Obama

Sometimes, it’s the little things that elevate a work from good to great.

Take for example an interview with Barack Obama. The former president was a natural inclusion given his well-known fandom of Chicago sports, and it was a mark of how full this documentary is that he only got a few sentences in.

And then Twitter noticed how the producers described him.

Yeah, that’s the good stuff.

As you could imagine, people had thoughts.

Another former president got a similar treatment a half-hour later.

Everybody Hates Jerry Krause

It’s hard to believe how everyone on the Bulls seems ready to pull the plug on a dynasty. One year, the Bulls had Michael Jordan, Scottie Pippen, Dennis Rodman and Phil Jackson, and then, one year later, they did not.

They still had general manager Jerry Krause, though, and that was kind of the point. One thing that became very clear in the first few segments of the documentary is how much Jordan reviled Krause, and who followed his lead.

For starters, consider a United Center crowd booing its team’s general manager during a championship ring ceremony. As the first episode raps up, Krause is the first man introduced for the Bulls’ fifth championship celebration and the jeers are audible through the background music.

There was also Jordan’s casual bullying of Krause on camera and the infamous drama between the GM and Jackson.

with Yahoo Sports US

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