In 1991, illustrator and designer Michael Doret was a freelancer living in New York City. Some of his best known clients were Time magazine, the New York Times, Kiss, Paul Simon, and Columbia Records — he also designed a fall preview cover for this magazine in 1977. But it was his sports work — his scorebook covers for the Los Angeles Dodgers, the Toronto Blue Jays, and the World Series logo for Major League Baseball — that likely caught the eye of the NBA, which tasked Doret with designing a new logo for the New York Knicks. Since then, his logo has become synonymous with the franchise and, by extension, the whole city. Read our interview with Doret about the process behind creating it, along with his favorite rejects: https://t.co/2aY5OYXKd3
Jalen Brunson thrives under pressure in a way few ever have.
Because of that, and my very recent 12-round bout with anxiety, I wanted to learn more about his relationship with pressure so I can continue to better understand myself.
Free for all:
https://t.co/nlKWvK5s6Z
This is such important journalism. taking people behind bars and showing similarities all New Yorkers have with folks locked up up on Rikers— a deep, unwavering love for the Knicks
https://t.co/ZILo08t49e
My son’s teacher just called and said I might have to pick him up from school today because he started a loud “KNICKS IN 4 !” chant followed by a “LETS GO KNICKS!” chant during class.
I’m not sure if I should discipline him or be proud that he’s showing leadership qualities.