Skip navigation

Beastie Boy makes basketball documentary

Adam Yauch directs ‘Gunnin’ for That No. 1 Spot’

Image: Adam Yauch
Jeff Christensen / AP
Adam Yauch of the "Beastie Boys" is now a filmmaker. He helms a new basketball documentary, "Gunnin' For That No. 1 Spot."
Image: Jackson fan outside Staples Center
AP
Web lottery for Jackson memorial tickets
A public service will take place Tuesday at the Staples Center in Los Angeles with 17,500 seats available via lottery. Meanwhile, officials are asking non-credentialed fans to stay home.

  Latest on Toyota concert series
  Jonas Brothers dish on style, 'Bonus Jonas'
June 19: The Jonas Brothers answer questions from the Black Eyed Peas. Listen to them dish on everything from their style to the “Bonus Jonas.”

NBC News
  Jermaine Jackson: ‘I wish it was me’
July 2: In his first interview since his brother’s sudden death last week, Jermaine Jackson, one of Michael’s older brothers, talks to Matt Lauer in a TODAY exclusive.

updated 4:13 p.m. ET April 11, 2008

NEW YORK - Some of college basketball’s brightest stars, including Kansas State’s Michael Beasley and UCLA’s Kevin Love, are featured in Beastie Boy Adam Yauch’s new documentary, “Gunnin’ for That No. 1 Spot.”

And while it’s less than two years since he followed the then-high school players for a week, he still can’t get over how much they’ve changed.

“They already look different, and I think it will be really interesting to look at this doc five or 10 years from now and see these guys when they were high school students. There’s a good chance that several of them may be superstars in the NBA,” Yauch told The Associated Press in an interview this week. “They were like babies in this picture.”

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

Yauch took his camera to Harlem’s famed Rucker Park, made famous by streetballers, in September 2006 to document some of the nation’s top high school talent, who were playing in an event there.

Yauch said he was struck by how the players — who also included Jerryd Bayless of Arizona, Donte Green of Syracuse and Kyle Singler of Duke — could act like kids one minute, yet live in such an adult world.

“They have this infrastructure around them, and they are being groomed for stardom,” he said.

Slideshow
Image: The Pretenders Perform In Madrid
  Celebrity sightings
Chrissie Hynde is a long way from Ohio, friends and family remember Ed McMahon, Kiefer Sutherland takes a New York stroll and more.

more photos

“When I was in high school I wasn’t getting the quantity of media that these guys are,” he said. “But it’s not necessarily a bad thing.”

Yauch, 43, said the documentary, which premieres April 28 at the Tribeca Film Festival, doesn’t make a judgment on the world where the precocious teens lived, but does give viewers a glimpse into it. He added: “The people around these kids really do care about them.”

“Gunnin’ for That No. 1 Spot” is slated for wide release June 27.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Sponsored links

Resource guide