Candace Parker opens up on playing career and personal life in new documentary

Published 2:30 am Friday, November 10, 2023

LOS ANGELES — Candace Parker has done just about everything there is to do in basketball. She’s won three WNBA titles, two most valuable player awards, made seven All-Star appearances and was the league’s rookie of the year. She also has two Olympic gold medals and in college she was a two-time national champion.

So with few peaks left to climb in the sport, she’s no longer trying to be like Mike, or even LeBron. Now she wants to emulate Jay-Z, the rapper, record producer and agent whose entrepreneurial empire spans everything from clothing lines and beverages to real estate and technology.

“He has been my North Star for sure,” Parker said during a break in last month’s espnW summit at the Ojai Valley Inn, where she was a featured speaker. “I admire his forethought in knocking down the misconceptions about what you have to be to be something. It’s similar to what women’s basketball players are thought of. I don’t think that there’s any one lane that I have to fit in.”

Parker’s latest lane change came Sunday when “Candace Parker: Unapologetic” debuted on ESPN, and is now streaming on ESPN+. Though Parker spends all her time in the 77-minute documentary in front of the camera, the filmmaking experience has given her new ideas for expanding her own entrepreneurial empire, one that already includes broadcasting, an ownership stake in women’s soccer club Angel City FC, a production company and a shoe and clothing partnership with Adidas.

“It’s been unbelievable to kind of go down that lane and learn, obviously, producing and content,” said Parker, an academic All-American who majored in sports management at Tennessee. “I’m a big history buff so I would like to do something in that space. It’s important for a variety of people to tell history, different sides of history.”

Imagine Ken Burns if he was 6 feet 4, had been a single mother and could dunk.

“I could see that,” said Joie Jacoby, the award-winning filmmaker who directed the doc. “I think that will be one of the several things that she will do. She has so many things that she’s up to, like speaking, connecting to people. That’s one of her superpowers.”

Which is why Jacoby sees a different role model for Parker, who had the grade-school nickname Can Do, as in Can Do Anything.

“I would say Magic Johnson,” Jacoby said, referencing the Lakers Hall of Famer who has become a billionaire businessman in retirement. “That sort of career trajectory for her as an all-media entrepreneur, I see that for her.”

The documentary traces the trajectory of Parker’s basketball career, from her first dribbles with her brothers on a concrete court in a park in Naperville, Ill. — a court that now bears Parker’s name — through high school, where she dunked as a 15-year-old. From an award-winning college career under Pat Summit at Tennessee through 16 WNBA seasons with the Los Angeles Sparks, Chicago Sky and Las Vegas Aces, winning a title with each. Through injuries, pregnancy and a marriage, divorce and second marriage to Anna Petrakova, a teammate for three years in Russia.

Shot over 14 months beginning in the fall of 2021, the film follows Parker through the 2022 WNBA season in Chicago and pulls back the curtain on a career that had almost as many setbacks as successes. And though it gets personal, even painful at times, it is the kind of carefully curated work we’ve come to expect from athletes telling their own story.

“We had creative control over a lot of stuff,” Parker said of the documentary, executive produced by ESPN Films and produced by L.A.-based Film 45, and credited ESPN for “not wanting something in there that I wouldn’t want.”

Still, there probably is enough bite to make the title, “Unapologetic,” work.

“She was like ‘I’m going to be who I am. And everybody else can kick rocks’,” Jacoby said. “She spent a lot of her life trying to live up to a lot of expectations. And she always met them. But there’s a lot that comes with that, where you’re expected to be someone, a specific person, for someone else.

“That’s where we are in this film. This moment, this time capsule, where she’s unapologetic. She does not care. She knows who she is.”

Parker hopes viewers see her as more than a basketball player.

“The goal is to reach those that are kind of at a place in their life where they’re not sure where they need to be or where they need to go,” she said. “My goal is to really talk about authenticity and how important it is to be that. It’s also talking about you’re an entire person, you’re not just an athlete. I’m so much more than that.”

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