Richard Glidewell
Superstar
Soooooo.......lmfao.......where is Tomas Dimsa now?!?!?
He was 13 when he verbally committed to UCLA. He was 14 when he helped Chino Hills begin its 60-game winning streak. He was 16 when he got his own sneaker. “He’s not following anybody,” LaVar tells me. “He has his own brand.”
True. But Melo is still a character in LaVar’s script. And every move he makes is filmed—even without his family’s permission. Last year, Melo was riding in the car with Gelo, bumping music with the windows down. “MOTHERfukkER! MOTHERfukkER! MOTHERfukkER!” Melo rapped along to the song, unaware a man on the street was filming and would put the video on Instagram.
LaVar was furious with Melo. The kid was just trying to have fun, but much more is at stake. “What mom or dad wants to buy your shoe if you doing all that?” LaVar told him. Melo’s wildness, the thing that makes him glow, can’t always roam free. He isn’t allowed to just be 16. “You gotta understand that it’s not just about Melo,” LaVar tells me. “It’s all eyes on the family. It’s all eyes on the brand.”
Im trying to figure out the issue with this. Lavar has giving Melo way more freedom then I ever had at 16.
They want boys to be boys and a father not to be a father; unitl they are stealing glasses in China and call them lightweight nikkas