🥊 Muhammad Ali’s only son 🥊– "I was a Crack addict & Regularly paid for Sex after boxer dad abandoned me aged 5"

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MUHAMMAD Ali's only son has revealed he was a crack addict and regularly paid for sex after his famous dad abandoned him when he was five.



The boxer's son, Muhammad Ali Jr has opened up about growing up in poverty in a Hollywood biopic on his life which is due to be released next month.







The only son of Muhammad Ali has opened up about his crack addiction and using prostitutes, as the story of being abandoned by his boxing legend father has been turned into a Hollywood film.



Just two years ago, Muhammad Ali Jr was taking drugs and regularly paying for sex but has dramatically reversed his fortunes.



For most of adulthood and despite his dad’s vast wealth, Jr lived in abject poverty and reverted to “crack and hookers” to escape his bleak situation.



The producer of The Irishman, filmmaker Chad Verdi, has told Ali Jr’s story in the documentary “My Father Muhammad Ali”, which is out in cinemas from January 13.















For the first time in years, Ali Jr is off the crack and is now studying for his General Education Development [GED].



He’s also set up the organization, The Muhammad Ali Legacy Continues, to help kids who are struggling with bullying and promote anti-racism.



The biopic focuses on how Ali Jr was effectively abandoned by his dad, nicknamed “The Greatest”, but was certainly not the best father, leaving Ali to be raised by his maternal grandparents from the age of five.



In an exclusive joint interview, Ali Jr, Verdi and co-director Tommy DeNucci open up on the movie, which exposes the struggle Ali’s only biological son went through due to childhood neglect.







Verdi says: "Where he is today, from where he was, is night and day. The guy is studying for his GED, he's off drugs.



"Jr was a junkie, he was addicted to crack, that that's what he was, but the guy today, all he wants to do is help his family and really live his father's legacy because it’s in his DNA.



"The documentary is telling the story. We're able to have Jr open up about his addiction to drugs. He got off crack, got off the hookers, let's just call it the way it is.



"He wants to be a better person every single day. For the first time it's working. Because when we first met, it wasn't really there.





It took a little time. A year and a half ago, to where he is today, is incredible.



Ali Jr adds: "I was a crack addict two and a half years ago. [I wanted to get better] because I want to better my life.”



Ali Jr has largely been shunned by his natural family and his father's fourth wife Lonnie, who has control over his $50 million estate.



The movie claims that Ali Jr only gets around $1,000-a-month from the estate and is currently making ends meet as a painter with his best friend, retired New York cop Richard Blum, who also acts as his manager.



Verdi says Ali’s always had to appease stepmom Lonnie in interviews, but that’s all changed now, adding: ""He got very little, but he didn't want to get nothing.



"So it was best for him to play ball and just go with the flow. What's different is his life has changed.



“He's happier. Obviously, he's not on drugs, he's trying to better himself. He's surrounded by a lot of people, including the entire Verdi team that love him.



"We wrote Lonnie and her team a letter, they just chose, politely, not to respond. They had no comment



He was isolated from the family. He is still isolated. And that's fine. I think he's overcome that now. And that's why he's doing better.”



Ali Jr adds: "I've never been scared [of Lonnie]. I had to hold my tongue for a reason."



The 50-year-old opens up on film to Harvard-trained celeb psychologist Dr Monica O’Neal about being bullied incessantly as a child and still calls his high school teacher, Dr Larry Baran, “daddy", who appears in the movie to be a better role model than his father ever was.



DeNucci adds: "We all know so much about Muhammad Ali, the athlete, Muhammad Ali, the celebrity, and Muhammad Ali, the activist, but there's really not a lot out there about Muhammad Ali, the father, and what type of family person he was, and what life would be like inside the walls of the Muhammad Ali home.



I want to tell the story of what it's like to be kind of a person that probably required a little more help from Day One, that never got that help from the people who are literally put on the planet to help you, the Number One people, your mom and dad. He just didn't get that support.”



Verdi is even more forthright but blames the onset of Ali’s Parkinson’s Disease, which was diagnosed at the age of 42 in 1984.



Although the film argues whether ignoring his son from an early age was the work of the disease or willful neglect.



He says: "This is the son of one of the biggest names in the world. He shouldn't f******have to be working ever.





 

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A whole bum. Crazy that Laila, who is a woman, and Nico, who is almost a whole cac, both carry more of Alis fighting spirit and dignity than his own son.
:gucci:maybe if he didn't abandon him he would have. I imagine his father having this hero persona in the public only to abandon him in poverty fukked with his mental.
 

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SOHH ICEY MONOPOLY
So dude had money to trick on hookers but was living in abject poverty? I’m confused

Cacs love to exploit family drama and specially if it’s tied to a legend Like Ali

He gets a thousand dollars a month just for existing but hes gonna drag his fathers name through the mud smfh
 

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So dude had money to trick on hookers but was living in abject poverty? I’m confused

Cacs love to exploit family drama and specially if it’s tied to a legend Like Ali
@KingsOfKings stated in the other thread that this dude was so down bad he sold Ali gloves and robe on some show called Hardcore Pawn
 
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So dude had money to trick on hookers but was living in abject poverty? I’m confused

Cacs love to exploit family drama and specially if it’s tied to a legend Like Ali
Ain’t no real poverty in the United States. He just felt entitled to be a millionaire cause who his daddy was.
 
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