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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Sport
Kate Feldman

HBO defends ‘Winning Time’ against Jerry West’s criticism of on-screen portrayal

NEW YORK — HBO would like to remind you — and Jerry West — that “Winning Time” is not a documentary.

The network is sticking by its Showtime era Lakers show after team icon Jerry West lashed out about how he was portrayed in the series.

“HBO has a long history of producing compelling content drawn from actual facts and events that are fictionalized in part for dramatic purposes. ‘Winning Time’ is not a documentary and has not been presented as such,” the network told the New York Daily News in a statement Tuesday.

“However, the series and its depictions are based on extensive factual research and reliable sourcing, and HBO stands resolutely behind our talented creators and cast who have brought a dramatization of this epic chapter in basketball history to the screen.”

Last week, lawyers for West, who played for the Lakers before becoming the head coach and then general manager, demanded a retraction and public apology for his depiction in “Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty,” calling it “a baseless and malicious assault” that “falsely and cruelly portrays Mr. West as an out-of-control, intoxicated rage-aholic” and “bears no resemblance to the real man.”

“The portrayal of NBA icon and L.A. Lakers legend Jerry West in ‘Winning Time’ is fiction pretending to be fact — a deliberately false characterization that has caused great distress to Jerry and his family,” his lawyer, Skip Miller, said in a letter sent to HBO and producer Adam McKay and obtained by the Daily News.

“Contrary to the baseless portrayal in the HBO series, Jerry had nothing but love for and harmony with the Lakers organization, and in particular owner Dr. Jerry Buss, during an era in which he assembled one of the greatest teams in NBA history.”

Magic Johnson, played by Quincy Isaiah, and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, played by Solomon Hughes, have also criticized “Winning Time.”

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