Silver Spring, Md.- LeBron James visited the White House and attended a movie premiere on Monday in his first public appearances since undergoing surgery to remove a benign growth on his jaw on June 1.
The Cavaliers star looked happy and subdued, and a little self-conscious about the noticeable scar around his right ear, as he walked the red carpet before the premiere of "More Than a Game," the documentary about James and his high school basketball buddies at St. Vincent-St. Mary High School in Akron. The premiere kicked off the Silver docs Film Fes tival in Silver Spring, Md.
James ar rived at the premiere with high school teammates Dru Joyce III, Ro meo Travis, Willie McGee and Sian Cotton, former coach Dru Joyce II, Maverick Carter, the CEO of James' LRMR Marketing, and Akron native and the filmmaker Kristopher Belman.
James, wearing a blue pinstripe suit with no tie and his trademark sunglasses, posed for pictures with his friends and teammates. A large number of former teachers, administrators, classmates and alumni from St. Vincent-St. Mary were on hand, and when James and his teammates arrived a band was playing the school's fight song.
"We had a lot of fun with this because these are my best friends," James said. "This was all about friendship for us and it is great to share this."
Despite the large scar behind and on the side of his right ear, James showed no other effects from the surgery. He answered a few questions about the film, but did not answer questions about the surgery or reports that the Cavaliers are trying to acquire Phoenix Suns center Shaquille O'Neal.
James visited the White House on Monday afternoon in an appearance that was off the public schedule. He said hello to President Barack Obama (the two know one another from the campaign trail, and the president is a huge hoops fan) and got a tour of the West Wing.
It was unclear whether King James upstaged the other VIP at the White House Monday afternoon - Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.
Nike sticks with LeBron James puppet for Finals
Elimination beckoned, and we all figured we knew what that meant. The run was over, here comes summer vacation, it's time to go fishing.
Except the Nike puppets didn't go away.
Even without LeBron James in the NBA Finals, Nike continues to run ads with the LeBron and Kobe Bryant puppets, playing on the theme that Kobe made the Finals and LeBron has to stay home baby-sitting the little kid next door, Lil Dez.
In fact, the new ads have proliferated like rabbits, becoming YouTube staples and reaching the anchor desk on ESPN's "SportsCenter," with puppet LeBron and puppet Kobe plugging two brand names at once.
"It really wasn't about pitting Kobe versus LeBron in the Finals for us," Nike spokesman DeJuan Wilkins said. "If you look at the seasons and careers that both Kobe and LeBron have had, they're quite impressive.
"We felt this was a time when a lot of people would be paying attention to basketball [at] the largest stage during the playoffs. This was a moment for us to celebrate that, what these guys have accomplished.
"For us, the strategy has always been to show the strength of those two guys together. With LeBron and the [Cleveland] Cavaliers being eliminated from the playoffs, our goal was to continue to showcase both Kobe and LeBron."
The commercials, created and produced by Wieden and Kennedy, play off a consistent theme: One puppet trying to annoy the other/others into submission. Lil Dez is so hyper that when he finally shuts up, overwhelmed by long rows of Nike shoes, he reaches for an inhaler.
The puppets earned enough attention that they served as motivation for the Orlando Magic during the conference finals. Members of the Magic said the commercials assumed the Lakers and the Cavaliers were both Finals-bound, that their chances were being ignored.
When Orlando ousted the Cavaliers, some media types wondered whether Nike would quickly bring out a Dwight Howard puppet. Not a chance -- Howard represents Adidas.
Wilkins said the company has heard that while the LeBron puppet bears a passable resemblance to the real James, the Kobe puppet, sporting a goatee, does not look like the real Bryant.
"You know, he's gone back and forth, you look at old pictures, he definitely had a goatee," Wilkins said. "I think he's at a stage now where he doesn't wear it that often, and when he does, its very, very light."
Howard, meanwhile, settled in with a Vitaminwater commercial that spoofs the Kobe-LeBron ad that the company ran during earlier playoff rounds.
So regardless of what happens on the court the rest of the way, Howard at least gets the last laugh somewhere.
EVEN WHEN I'M GRAY AND OLD, WHEN I WON'T BE ABLE TO PLAY IT, I'LL STILL LOVE THIS GAME...
