Ben Affleck's Air ties a bow on how Nike cashed in on Michael Jordan - Action News
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Entertainment

Ben Affleck's Air ties a bow on how Nike cashed in on Michael Jordan

Air tells the story of how a Nike employee convinced the company to build a shoe around Michael Jordan. CBC's Eli Glasner says if you don't mind cheering for Nike, the snappy story works best when Matt Damon and Ben Affleck share the screen.

Matt and Ben are back on screen in film about how shoe company changed the game

Matt Damon as Sonny Vaccaro and Viola Davis as Deloris Jordan in Air.  A man and woman sit a table facing each other.
Matt Damon, left, who stars as Nike employee Sonny Vaccaro, is shown paying a visit to Deloris Jordan, played by Viola Davis, in a scene from Air. The movie depicts how the shoe company and Vaccaro struck a business deal with rookie basketball player Michael Jordan. (Prime)

What isAir?

Moneyball, but instead of about baseball, make it about Nike.

The latest from director Ben Affleck is many things: An on-screen reunion of the Good Will Hunting duo. Acelebration of the greatness that isMichael Jordan. But more than anything,Airis about a man with a vision.

Not Michael Jordan.Not Phil Knight, the CEO played by Ben Affleck, with curly hair and running tights. It's Sonny Vaccaro. Matt Damon plays the basketball scout who works at Nike, except you won't find him in the office much. He's at the high school. He's at the basketball tournaments sitting in the bleachers, glad-handing the parentsand handing out shoes.

The year was1984, and in the basketball world, Nike wasadistant third place. Converse ledthe pack with56per cent of the market share, followed by Adidas. Thanks to Run-D.M.C.,everyone wanted the runners with the three stripes.

A businessman with a beard leans back in his chair and puts his bare feet on his desk.
Ben Affleck both directed Air and appears in the movie as Phil Knight, the self-made CEO who started Nike by selling shoes out of a car. (Ana Carballosa/Prime)

In the mid-1980s,Nike was an incredibly successful company for its running shoes. With basketball exploding in popularity, hoops guru Sonny was hired for his insights. The right kind of endorsement could make critical inroads for customers who sawNike only as a company for rich white joggers.

But Sonny doesn't fit that well in the office environment.He can barely contain his impatience as his colleagues debate how to share Nike's $250,000 basketball budget. An unrepentant gambler, hewants to bet big on an 18-year-old phenom from North Carolina.


But there are obstacles. Jason Bateman plays Rob Strasser, Nike's shaggy-haired marketing man who wants to play it safe.Even the big boss, Phil Knight, isn't sure about Sonny. Then there's the question of even if Phil gets the green light, how do you sign Jordan?

Enter Howard White asone of the few critical Black employees at Nike.As the field rep, Whiteconnected the company to the players and their families.

Fans of Chris Tucker might be surprised to see the fast-talkingcomedian in his first film role in seven years. For the role, Tucker says he reached out to White, a friend he knows from his charity work, and rewrote the parts ofthe screenplay involving White.The result is something different from Tucker a slower gear from his Rush Hourpersona, but certainly a smooth-talking operator,all too aware of his place in the corporate food chain.

Man in nice suit smiles at another.
Chris Tucker, right, plays the field rep Howard White in Air. Tucker, who counts White as a friend, says White wasn't in the film when Affleck approached him. So Tucker interviewed his friend and took 20 days to alter the screenplay and add White to the story. (Ana Carballosa/Prime)

When Sonny sets his sights on Jordan, Howard gives him the game plan. In Black families,he says, "Always go through the mother." Soon Sonny finds himself driving down the interstatetosit down at a picnic table across fromDeloris Jordan, someone less than enthused to besweet-talked by some third-rate shoe company.

As Mrs. Jordan, Viola Davis speaks softly but precisely.Her words have weight. Part of it is just the screen presence of the EGOT winner.But it's also the character.Deloris knows her son's worth.The challenge is so do we. In some of Air's rareunconventional moments,Affleck usesa montage to hint at the future highs and lows of Jordan's career to come.


The superstar at the heart of Air isn't the rarely seen Michael Jordan (who Affleck keeps carefully obscured)but rather Matt Damon as Sonny Vaccaro.He's a TV dinners and beer kind of guy. He's the guy who wears loafers to work at a running shoe company.

Ata time ofCEOs with purple Porsches and basketball players worth millions, Sonny isa corporate cog. This is a man with no swag. But hissense of suretyis seductive. He's confidentthe world will eventually see what he sees.

A man sits at a desk in an empty office at night.
Damon's character, Sonny Vaccaro, is a basketball scout who's brought in to Nike to improve the company's market share. (Ana Carballosa/Prime)

While it's fine watching Sonny try to finesse Deloris, it's when Sonny and Phil go head-to-head thatAir really flies.As the Buddhist CEO who likes to quote his own corporate koans, Affleck makes a great foil tothe basketball scout who wants to bet the house.

The dialogue snaps back and forth with such ease, I assumed the two co-wrote the script. (They didn't.It wasAlex Convery.)With the two real-life friends on screen, there's a sense of trust that allows Damon and Affleck to go further, capturing the push and pull as Sonny tries to convince the corporate titan totrust his gut.

Director Ben Affleck points camera in office setting.
Affleck is shown on the set. He spared no expense putting the audience in the 1980s. (Ana Carballosa/Prime)

As director,Affleck spares no expense putting us in the era.Like a heavy-handed version of Paul Thomas Anderson's Boogie Nights, he hammers the opening of the sceneswith quick-cut collages to set the mood. If the film had a genre, it would be dadcore.Just about every scene starts with a song, andAiropens over a montage of '80sephemera set to the tune of Dire Straits'Money for Nothing.

When Sonny arrives in North Carolina to meetthe Jordans, the soundtrack blares In a Big Country.Music aficionados might wonder what aScottish rock band is doing in a celebration of American can-do capitalism. But Affleck'sstyle is more about maximum impact what to see and feel as the camera crane soars over the corporate headquarters.

We root for Sonny because he sees the spark in Jordan we know will make hima once-in-a-generation kind of player. But cheering for a company feels different. As the end credits state,Jordan's contract with Nike changed player endorsements forever. Even until this day, Jordan makes $400 million a year in passive income from Air Jordans. In 2022 alone, Nike earned $5.1 billion.

Man in front of White board
Jason Bateman plays Nike marketing executive Rob Strasser in Air. (Ana Carballosa/Prime)

But there's an interesting grace note during a late-night brainstorming session with Sonny and Rob Strasser, the marketing executive played by Jason Bateman. Strasser talks about rocking out in his car to Bruce Springsteen's Born in the U.S.A. until one moment he stopped and read the lyrics,realizing the song is about a disillusioned Vietnam vet struggling to put his life back together.

I'm ten years burning down the road

Nowhere to run ain't got nowhere to go

Born in the U.S.A.

I was Born in the U.S.A.

The contemplation ends and Rob shrugs. Good song, though.

It's a moment thatspeaks to the complexity of the American dream, where millions struggleand only a few can dream of the kind of success Phil Knight and Michael Jordan achieved.Airis a story of how a shoe company commodified a player's greatness.

The real story of how the deal was done is far from settled.But too much of that would killthe feel-good vibes Affleck is aiming for. It's aslam dunk as long as you ignore the subtext.