Spike Lee – Do The Right Thing Shelton

Spike Lee – Do The Right Thing ‘Shelton’

Date: June 2, 2026

By: Doctor Cricket Dunkenstein

Title: Spike Lee – Do The Right Thing ‘Shelton’

Topic: New York City, NY / New York Knicks (Knicerbokers) / 2026 NBA Championship Finals

Game(s): New York Knicks verses the San Antonio Spurs

Date: June 2, 2026

By: Doctor Cricket Dunkenstein

Conclusion:  Spurs, Don’t ‘DO A REGGIE MILLER”!   Say only one word to spike, Shelton.

Titled: Spike Lee – Do The Right Thing ‘Shelton’

Topic: New York City, NY / New York Knicks (Knicerbokers) / 2026 NBA Championship Finals.  The Courtside Spike Lee Game effects.

Game(s): New York Knicks verses the San Antonio Spurs

Doctor Dockenstein Scouting Report for the San Antonio Spurs & Wemby

Don’t speak to Shelton , a.k.a. Spike Lee  during the 2026 NBA Finals game in New York!

IF YOU MUST SPEAK TO SPIKE LEE DON’T SAY ANYTHING EXCEPT THIS: Shelton, Shelton, oh Shelton, … … Shelton.  Just say his named. … … don’t say another word …  .   Just Shelton.

If you chat back at him, watch out!  He is a New York City Basketball Park trash talking genius.  … … change CAN happen with your verbal and mental tone oif only one sole word is muttered, … …   SHELTON ONLY, suggestion for the entire team.

We won’t even get into him and the other top trash talking gunslinger , Reggie Miller.  

Shelton is going to be talking to all of the Spurs players during the games in New York.  He is an old school basketball NY park trash talking unconditional loving New York Knicks FANATIC.  He would do most anything in reason to help the Knicks win a basketball game.

Say, for example,  you loose it,  …  … you could then say, perhaps, something like this,

Hey Shelton!

How about ‘dem (them) ‘Apples’, Shelton.  

That’s all for now from the Doctor Dunkenstein basketball suggestion report.  Play ball fellas, … … 

Spurs and Wemby, team, you are on your own.  If you get lost call Dylan Harper, hel will tell you how to get home.

….  Forward this report to Coach Mitchell Johnson, tape it on his clip board, for practice.  … mark it as:

ADVICE On NYC trash talkin’

[Somebody help this guy, Coach Clipboard!  Mitch is doing great!  But help him, for goodness sakes Spur people, what’s up with dat (that)?  Get the guy a chair … …]

See: Articles ‘Butt Slapping Bobby ‘/ or / Mitchell Johnson: ‘1st Person Plural ‘ ]

Shelton’s History

Spike Lee, whose real name is Shelton Jackson Lee,  will either be DEAD, or he will be sitting mid-court , front row center, during the entire 2026 NBA Finals at Madison Square Garden, (The Garden).

He will attempt to distract you.  As the current day, number one Knick Fan, and an all time hard core basketball enthusiast.  His dreams have return after 27 years of waiting, the NY Knickerbockers are back in the NBA Finals.  He dreams often of these things.  Shelton has lots of hoops dreams.  We like his basketball attitude and his dreams, not to mention his great films. 

Side Note

[By the way Spike, you used my writing, exact words, word for word, 30 years ago, … … in an MJ commercial.  I never got any royalty payments, not a dime, nor recognition.   The advertisement on TV about a younger Jordan eventually, … … you on the steps of a building, outside.  … that was my words, my idea.  You’re very welcome. I’ll take an I.O.U .; or some public promotion and recognition on this great article.

Question: Seriously Spike, do you want my MJ autographed ’86 Fleer Rookie trading card, it’s a real card Spike?  I’ll make it reasonable for you.  Interested?]

The only thing better than attending these NY Finals for Spike would be if the Knicks win the Championship.  The Spurs want to win the Championship too.  Only one team will win the 2026 NBA Championship, that’s for sure.

We are certain, our beloved Spike Lee will be doing his best to make that happen for the Knicks from his expensive luxury seats.  As a great dedicated fan of the entire game of basketball, I want to watch Spike during the games.  I want a split screen TV, Spike in one tiny corner of the screen, and the active game on another screen above on the large flat screen TV.  

Spike’s history in the NBA cannot fit into 10 books.  He makes basketball and life fun and entertaining.   We won’t try to change his methods, just ignore him.  Just … don’t do it!

Don’t ‘DO A REGGIE MILLER”! 

The NY Knicks will open the finals game 1, on June 3, 2026,  on the road against the Western Conference Playoff winner, either OKC Thunder or the San Antonio Spurs.  (As of May 29, yet to be determined ). 

The Knicks are set to start the the 2026 Finals conceding home court advantage to their opponent.  The Spurs will begin the best of seven game series at home, as they have had a better regular season record than the NY Knickes.  

2026 NBA Finals Scheduled Games:

[ Game 1 / Date: June 3, 2026    /    Game 2 / Date: June 5, 2026     /     Game 3 / Date: June 8, 2026     /     Game 4 / Date: June 10 2026     /    IF Required – Game 5 / Date: June 13, 2026      /If required – Game 6 / Date: June 16, 2026 /   If required – Game 7 / Date: June 19, 2026]

Western Conference Team is yet to be determined.

West: OKC Thunder –  San Antonio Spurs

PODCAST  – The Kickabockers  – 2026 NBA Finals & Playoffs / Podcast #6

The NY Knickerbockers in the 2026 NBA Finals

2026 NBA Finals

Game 1 / Date: June 3, 2026

Game 2 / Date: June 5, 2026

Game 3 / Date: June 8, 2026

Game 4 / Date: June 10 2026

Game 5 / Date: June 13, 2026

Game 6 / Date: June 16, 2026

Game 7 / Date: June 19, 2026

Teams to be determined

Conference winners

East: NY Knicks

West: OKC Thunder –  San Antonio Spurs

Date May 25, 2027

The New York Knickerbockers Sweep Into the 2026 NBA Finals

Date May 25, 2027

By: Mr. Fat Hat

Title: The Knickerbockers

The New York Knickerbockers advanced to the 2026 NBA Finals by winning the first four games of the 2026 Eastern Conference Playoffs Finals against the Cleveland Cavaliers on Monday the Memorial Day Weekend Holiday.   The Knicks dominated every game in the series from start to end.

The NY Knicks return to the NBA Finals after a 27 year hiatus.  The world of basketball will now witness the return of the game to its roots as the Knicks attempt to win the crown jewels of an NBA Championship Trophy and Gold Diamond rings!

New York City is well know as the ‘Capitol of Basketball’ with a deep rich history reaching into the 1946 origins of the NBA, and to the first professional professional basketball teams and players from 1900 -48 .

Today, the New York City NBA basketball team is globally known as the New York Knicks.  The current teams’ nickname ‘Knicks’ stems from the organization’s actual original name Knickerbockers.  The name “Knickerbockers” comes from the loose-fitting pants rolled up just below the knee, which were worn by Dutch settlers who colonized New Amsterdam (now New York) in the 1600s. The first basketball players of the 20th century (1900’s) wore knickerbockers as basketball uniforms.  The original first use of the name Knickerbockers goes back to the 1858 New York Baseball team.  These New York baseball players set the ‘knickerbocker pants fashion style’ –  used by athletes for next 60 years.  Yes, the NYC sports scene was setting fashion long before Spike Lee.

The modern day NBA basketball New York Knickerbockers officially shortened their name to the New York Knicks before the start of the 1949–1950 NBA season. Fans and the media had already been using “Knicks” as a shorthand nickname since the franchise was founded in 1946.

New York City, NY,  as hosting one of the very first professional basketball teams and a National Basketball Association (NBA) original pillar organization,  has a long history and  connection to the game.   For many decades,  NYC was famous for having the best professional players and the best amateur players in their many famous outdoor park games. Ruckers Park, the Greenich Village Chain Court and many more locations became famous hoops locations throughout the entire world.

Dozens of globally famous players have roots into the famous outdoor park tournaments. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Julius Irving top the list of hundreds of great players who came from the street game of New York  …  … .

The First NYC Champions the 1949 New York Knicks:

Coached by Joe Lapchick, the Knicks finished the 1949–50 season with a 40-28 record, placing 2nd in the Eastern Division and making it to the Eastern Division finals. Their roster featured notable players like Carl Braun, Harry Gallatin, and Dick McGuire

They city holds proud and rightful ownership to the game of basketball’s origins.  But don’t dare mention it to a proud current day Knick fan in New York City, but the very first NYC professional basketball team was called the NY CELTICS.  Yes, it is true and factual …  the 1918 New York Celtics were NYC’s first professional basketball team.

A good understanding of  how professional basketball teams operated and made money in the 1910 to 1930 time period can be found in a review of the 1918 (New York ) NY Celtics. 

There is NO team organizational relationship to the current day Boston Celtics with the early NY Celtics.  Coincidentally they share a nickname.   But in today’s NBA, the Knicks and Celtics remain strong rivals, so be very careful what you say about the NY Celtics in the presence of Knick fans.  Asking the nickname of the first pro team in NYC, does, however,  make a great trivia question or a good bar bet in New York City, if you are willing to take the risk.

The Original 1918 N.Y Celtics  were a barnstorming professional American basketball team. At various times in their existence, the team played in the American Basketball League, the Eastern Basketball League and the Metropolitan Basketball League.

The N.Y. Celtic’s roots lay in the New York Celtics team that disbanded during World War One.   In 1918, James Furey assembled his own team around a nucleus of those truly “original” Celtics, adding other players mostly from the West Side of New York City, and defiantly called his new squad the Original Celtics.  Initially, they played in various struggling professional leagues, before becoming primarily a touring squad, which traveled up to 150,000 miles a year while completing a 150–200 game schedule. They won about ninety percent of their games and finished 1922–23 with the unbelievable record of 193–11–1.

Compare that playing schedule to today’s new age pampered NBA player requirement for off rest days . 

After a World War II hiatus of professional basketball, in 1946 many of the NYC pre-war basketball financiers and executives created the current day NBA organization the New York (Knicks) Knickerbockers.

Next month in  June, during the 2026 NBA finals games, the NY Knicks will not be wearing ‘Knickerbockers’ , but the team will always be the New York Knickerbockers to basketball fans worldwide!

Mr. Fat Hat’s:   A Deep History into the Game of Basketball:

New York Celtics
The First Basketball NYC Trading Card
The 'Original' New York Knickerbockers baseball Team 1858

Spike Lee

Spike Lee

Lee in 2025
Born
Shelton Jackson Lee

March 20, 1957 (age 69)

Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.
EducationMorehouse College (BA, 1979)
New York University (MFA, 1982)
Occupations
  • Film director
  • producer
  • writer
  • actor
Years active1977–present
WorksFilmography
Board member of
40 Acres and a Mule Filmworks
Spouse
Tonya Lewis

(m. 1993)

Children2
FatherBill Lee
Relatives
  • Joie Lee (sister)
  • Cinqué Lee (brother)
  • Malcolm D. Lee (cousin)
AwardsFull list

Shelton Jackson “Spike” Lee (born March 20, 1957) is an American filmmaker and actor. Cited by various publications as one of the most important filmmakers of the late 20th century,[1][2] his work explores issues including race relations, issues within the black community, the role of media in contemporary life, urban crime and poverty. Lee has received numerous accolades including an Academy Award, a British Academy Film Award, two Primetime Emmy Award, and three Peabody Awards, as well as nominations for three Golden Globe Awards and a Grammy Award.

Lee studied filmmaking at Morehouse College and New York University Tisch School of the Arts, where he directed the student film Joe’s Bed-Stuy Barbershop: We Cut Heads (1983), which won a Student Academy Award. Under his production company, 40 Acres and a Mule Filmworks, he has produced more than 35 films. Lee made his directorial debut with the comedy She’s Gotta Have It (1986) and received acclaim for the drama Do the Right Thing (1989), for which he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay. He directed the historical epic Malcolm X (1992), which was nominated for the Berlin International Film Festival’s Golden Bear. With the biographical crime dramedy BlacKkKlansman (2018), he won the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay and the Cannes Film Festival Grand Prix Award.

Lee has also written and directed films such as School Daze (1988), Mo’ Better Blues (1990), Jungle Fever (1991), Crooklyn (1994), Clockers (1995), Bamboozled (2000), 25th Hour (2002), Inside Man (2006), Chi-Raq (2015), Da 5 Bloods (2020), and Highest 2 Lowest (2025). He has also acted in eleven of his feature films and directed documentary projects including 4 Little Girls (1997), which was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature Film. He directed the HBO series When the Levees Broke (2006), which won two Primetime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Directing for a Documentary/Nonfiction Program and Exceptional Merit in Documentary Filmmaking. He also directed the HBO documentary If God Is Willing and da Creek Don’t Rise (2010) and the David Byrne concert film American Utopia (2020).

Lee’s honors include the Honorary BAFTA Award in 2002, an Honorary César in 2003, the Academy Honorary Award in 2015, and the National Medal of Arts in 2023. Five of his films[a] have been selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the National Film Registry as “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant”.[3][4][5] He received a Gala Tribute from the Film Society of Lincoln Center and the Dorothy and Lillian Gish Prize.[6][7] His films have featured breakthrough performances from actors such as Denzel Washington, Laurence Fishburne, Samuel L. Jackson, Giancarlo Esposito, Rosie Perez, Delroy Lindo, John Turturro, and John David Washington.

Early life, family, and education

Shelton Jackson Lee was born in Atlanta, Georgia, to Jacqueline Carroll (née Shelton), a teacher of arts and black literature, and William James Edwards Lee III, a jazz musician and composer.[8][9] He has five younger siblings, three of whom (Joie, David, and Cinqué) have worked in many different positions in his films. A fourth, Christopher, died in 2014.[10] His youngest sibling is half-brother Arnold. Director Malcolm D. Lee is his cousin. When he was a child, the family moved from Atlanta to Brooklyn, New York. His mother nicknamed him “Spike” during his childhood. He attended John Dewey High School in Brooklyn’s Gravesend neighborhood.

Lee enrolled in Morehouse College, a historically black college in Atlanta, where he made his first student film, Last Hustle in Brooklyn. He took film courses at Clark Atlanta University and graduated with a B.A. in mass communication from Morehouse in 1979. He did graduate work at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts, where he earned a Master of Fine Arts in film and television in 1982.[11]

David Lee

David Lee, a younger brother of Spike, is a still photographer,[12] and has done the still photography for all of his older brother’s feature films before 2013 with the exception of Get on the Bus and He Got Game. Other films he has done still photography for include The Preacher’s WifeThe Best ManPollockMadeEternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, and American Gangster, and the television series The Wire.[12]

Career

1983–1990: Early work and breakthrough

In 1983, Lee premiered his first independent short film, titled Joe’s Bed-Stuy Barbershop: We Cut Heads. Lee submitted the film as his master’s degree thesis at the Tisch School of the Arts.[13] Lee’s classmates Ang Lee and Ernest R. Dickerson worked on the film as assistant director and cinematographer, respectively. The film was the first student film to be showcased in Lincoln Center’s New Directors New Films Festival. Lee’s father, Bill Lee, composed the score. The film won a Student Academy Award.

In 1985, Lee began work on his first feature film, She’s Gotta Have It. The black-and-white film concerns a young woman (played by Tracy Camilla Johns) who is seeing three men, and the feelings this arrangement provokes. The film was Lee’s first feature-length film, and launched Lee’s career. Lee wrote, directed, produced, starred and edited the film with a budget of $175,000, he shot the film in two weeks. When the film was released in 1986, it grossed over $7 million at the U.S. box office.[14] New York Times film critic A.O. Scott wrote that the film “ushered in (along with Jim Jarmusch’s Stranger Than Paradise) the American independent film movement of the 1980s. It was also a groundbreaking film for African-American filmmakers and a welcome change in the representation of blacks in American cinema, depicting men and women of color not as pimps and whores, but as intelligent, upscale urbanites.”[15] He followed this with the musical drama School Daze (1988).[16]

In 1989, Lee made perhaps his most seminal film, Do the Right Thing, which focused on a Brooklyn neighborhood’s simmering racial tension on a hot summer day. The film’s cast included Lee, Danny Aiello, Bill Nunn, Ossie Davis, Ruby Dee, Giancarlo Esposito, Rosie Perez, John Turturro, Martin Lawrence and Samuel L. Jackson. The film gained critical acclaim as one of the best films of the year from film critics including both Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert who ranked the film as the best of 1989, and later in their top 10 films of the decade (No. 6 for Siskel and No. 4 for Ebert).[17] Ebert later added the film to his list of The Great Movies.[18]

To many people’s surprise, the film was not nominated for Best Picture or Best Director at the 62nd Academy Awards. The film only earned two Academy Award nominations for Best Original Screenplay—Lee’s first Oscar nomination—and for Best Supporting Actor for Aiello. At the academy ceremony Kim Basinger, who was a presenter that evening, stated that Do the Right Thing also deserved a Best Picture nomination stating, “We’ve got five great films here, and they are great for one reason, because they tell the truth, but there is one film missing from this list because ironically it might tell the biggest truth of all and that’s Do the Right Thing“.[19] The film that did win Best Picture was Driving Miss Daisy, a film that focused on race relations between an elderly Jewish woman (Jessica Tandy) and her driver (Morgan Freeman).[20] Lee said in an April 7, 2006, interview with New York magazine that the other film’s success, which he thought was based on safe stereotypes, hurt him more than if his film had not been nominated for an award.[21][22]

1990–1999: Established director

Lee c. 1990s

In 1990, Lee had his first collaboration with Denzel Washington in Mo’ Better Blues. After the release of Mo’ Better Blues, Lee was accused of antisemitism by the Anti-Defamation League and several film critics. They criticized the characters of the club owners Josh and Moe Flatbush, described as “Shylocks”. Lee denied the charge, explaining that he wrote those characters in order to depict how black artists struggled against exploitation. Lee said that Lew Wasserman, Sidney Sheinberg, or Tom Pollock, the Jewish heads of MCA and Universal Studios, were unlikely to allow antisemitic content in a film they produced. He said he could not make an antisemitic film because Jews run Hollywood, and “that’s a fact”.[23] His next film was Jungle Fever (1991), for which Samuel L. Jackson won acclaim for his performance as a crack addict.[24]

In 1992, Spike released his biographical epic film Malcolm X based on the Autobiography of Malcolm X, starring Denzel Washington as the famed civil rights leader. The film dramatizes key events in Malcolm X’s life: his criminal career, his incarceration, his conversion to Islam, his ministry as a member of the Nation of Islam and his later falling out with the organization, his marriage to Betty X, his pilgrimage to Mecca and reevaluation of his views concerning whites, and his assassination on February 21, 1965. Defining childhood incidents, including his father’s death, his mother’s mental illness, and his experiences with racism are dramatized in flashbacks. The film received widespread critical acclaim including from critic Roger Ebert, who ranked the film No. 1 on his Top 10 list for 1992 and described the film as “one of the great screen biographies, celebrating the sweep of an American life that bottomed out in prison before its hero reinvented himself.”[25] Ebert and Martin Scorsese, who was sitting in for late At the Movies co-host Gene Siskel, both ranked Malcolm X among the ten best films of the 1990s.[26] Denzel Washington’s portrayal of Malcolm X in particular was widely praised and he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor. Washington lost to Al Pacino (Scent of a Woman), a decision which Lee criticized, saying “I’m not the only one who thinks Denzel was robbed on that one.”[27]

External videos
video icon Presentation by Lee at the New York University’s Black Genius series, October 18, 1996, C-SPAN
Lee at the 1999 Cannes Film Festival

He followed Malcolm X with Crooklyn (1994),[28] Clockers (1995),[29] and Girl 6 and Get on the Bus (both 1996).[30][31] His 1997 documentary 4 Little Girls, about the girls killed in the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing in Birmingham, Alabama, in 1963, was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Feature Documentary.[32] In 2017, the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant”.[33] He had his third collaboration with Denzel Washington on the sports drama He Got Game (1998).[34] He followed this with Summer of Sam (1999),[35] based on the Son of Sam murders.

2000–2014: Studio films and career fluctuations

In 2000, Lee directed Bamboozled (2000),[36] a satire about a modern televised minstrel show. He followed this with 25th Hour (2002) starring Edward Norton and Philip Seymour Hoffman which opened to positive reviews, with several critics since having named it one of the best films of its decade. Film critic Roger Ebert added the film to his “Great Movies” list on December 16, 2009.[37] A. O. Scott,[38] Richard Roeper[39] and Roger Ebert all put it on their “best films of the decade” lists.[40] It was later named the 26th greatest film since 2000 in a BBC poll of 177 critics.[41] The film was also a financial success earning almost $24 million against a $5 million budget.[42] He followed 25th Hour with She Hate Me (2004), which received negative reviews.[43]

In 2006, Lee directed Inside Man starring Denzel Washington, Jodie Foster, Clive Owen, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Willem Dafoe and Christopher Plummer. The film was an unusual film for Lee considering it was a studio heist thriller. The film was a critical and financial success earning $186 million off a $45 million budget. Empire gave the film four stars out of five, concluding, “It’s certainly a Spike Lee film, but no Spike Lee Joint. Still, he’s delivered a pacy, vigorous and frequently masterful take on a well-worn genre. Thanks to some slick lens work and a cast on cracking form, Lee proves (perhaps above all to himself?) that playing it straight is not always a bad thing.”[44]

On May 2, 2007, the 50th San Francisco International Film Festival honored Spike Lee with the San Francisco Film Society’s Directing Award. In 2008, he received the Wexner Prize.[45] The same year, Lee directed the World War II drama Miracle at St. Anna.[46]

At the 2008 Cannes Film Festival, Lee, who was then making Miracle at St. Anna, about an all-black U.S. division fighting in Italy during World War II, criticized director Clint Eastwood for not depicting black Marines in his own World War II film, Flags of Our Fathers. Citing historical accuracy, Eastwood responded that his film was specifically about the Marines who raised the flag on Mount Suribachi at Iwo Jima, pointing out that while black Marines did fight at Iwo Jima, the U.S. military was racially segregated during World War II, and none of the men who raised the flag were black. He angrily said that Lee should “shut his face”. Lee responded that Eastwood was acting like an “angry old man”, and argued that despite making two Iwo Jima films back to back, Letters from Iwo Jima and Flags of Our Fathers, “there was not one black soldier in both of those films”.[47][48][49] He added that he and Eastwood were “not on a plantation”.[50] Lee later claimed that the event was exaggerated by the media and that he and Eastwood had reconciled through mutual friend Steven Spielberg, culminating in his sending Eastwood a print of Miracle at St. Anna.[51]

Lee at the 2009 Tribeca Film Festival

In 2012, Lee directed Red Hook Summer, in which he reprised his role as Mookie from Do the Right Thing.[52] In 2013, Lee won The Dorothy and Lillian Gish Prize, one of the richest prizes in the American arts worth $300,000.[53] The same year, he directed Oldboy, a remake of the Park Chan-wook 2003 film, which was reportedly taken away from Lee in the editing room, leading him to remove his trademark “A Spike Lee Joint” credit for a more impersonal “A Spike Lee Film”.[54] He followed this with Da Sweet Blood of Jesus (2014), which was primarily funded on Kickstarter.[55]

2015–present: Career resurgence

In 2015, Lee received an Academy Honorary Award from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for his contributions to film.[56] Friends and frequent collaborators Wesley Snipes, Denzel Washington, and Samuel L. Jackson presented Lee with the award at the private Governors Awards ceremony.[57] Lee directed, wrote, and produced the MyCareer story mode in the video game NBA 2K16.[58] Later that same year, after a perceived long dip in quality, Lee rebounded with a musical drama film, Chi-Raq. The film is a modern-day adaptation of the ancient Greek play Lysistrata by Aristophanes set in modern-day Chicago’s Southside and explores the challenges of race, sex, and violence in America. Teyonah Parris, Angela Bassett, Jennifer Hudson, Nick Cannon, Dave Chappelle, Wesley Snipes, John Cusack, and Samuel L. Jackson starred in the film. The film was released by Amazon Studios in select cities in November. Chi-Raq received generally positive reviews from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has rating of 82% with the site’s critical consensus stating, “Chi-Raq is as urgently topical and satisfyingly ambitious as it is wildly uneven – and it contains some of Spike Lee’s smartest, sharpest, and all-around entertaining late-period work.”[59]

Lee with the cast of BlacKkKlansman promoting the film at the 2018 Cannes Film Festival

Lee’s 2018 film BlacKkKlansman, a true crime drama set in the 1970s, centered around the true story of a black police officer, Ron Stallworth, infiltrating the Ku Klux Klan. The film premiered at the 2018 Cannes Film Festival, where it won the Grand Prix and opened the following August.[60] The film received near universal praise when it opened in North America receiving a 96% on Rotten Tomatoes with the critics consensus reading, “BlacKkKlansman uses history to offer bitingly trenchant commentary on current events – and brings out some of Spike Lee’s hardest-hitting work in decades along the way.”[61] In 2019, during the awards season leading up to the Academy Awards, Lee was invited to join a Directors Roundtable conversation run by The Hollywood Reporter. The roundtable included Ryan Coogler (Black Panther), Yorgos Lanthimos (The Favourite), Alfonso Cuarón (Roma), Marielle Heller (Can You Ever Forgive Me?), and Bradley Cooper (A Star is Born).[62] It was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture and Best Director (Lee’s first ever nomination in this category). Lee won his first competitive Academy Award in the category Best Adapted Screenplay.[63][64][22] When asked by journalists from the BBC if the Best Picture winner Green Book offended him, Lee replied, “Let me give you a British answer, it’s not my cup of tea”.[65] Many journalists in the industry noted how the 2019 Oscars with BlacKkKlansman competing against eventual winner Green Book mirrored the 1989 Oscars with Lee’s film Do the Right Thing missing out on a Best Picture nomination over the eventual winner Driving Miss Daisy.[66][67][68]

Lee’s Vietnam war film Da 5 Bloods was released on Netflix. The film starred Delroy Lindo, Jonathan Majors, Clarke Peters, Isiah Whitlock Jr., Mélanie Thierry, Paul Walter Hauser and Chadwick Boseman.[69] The film was released worldwide on June 12, 2020.[70][71] The film’s plot follows a group of aging Vietnam War veterans who return to the country in search of the remains of their fallen squad leader, as well as the treasure they buried while serving there. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, the film was scheduled to premiere out-of-competition at the 2020 Cannes Film Festival, then play in theaters in May or June before streaming on Netflix.[72] The film received widespread critical acclaim; the website Rotten Tomatoes gave it an approval rating of 92% based on 252 reviews, with the critical consensus reading: “Fierce energy and ambition course through Da 5 Bloods, coming together to fuel one of Spike Lee’s most urgent and impactful films.”[73] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 82 out of 100, based on 49 critics, indicating “universal acclaim”.[74][75]

Lee in 2024

Lee has been linked to a movie musical about the origin story of Viagra, Pfizer’s erectile dysfunction drug.[76] In December 2021, he signed a deal with Netflix to direct and produce more movies.[77] In February 2024, it was announced that Lee was confirmed as the director of Highest 2 Lowest, a reinterpretation of High and Low (1963) originally directed by Akira Kurosawa, with Denzel Washington to star.[78] He would also make the Netflix three-part documentary series Katrina: Come Hell and High Water.[79]

Lee in 2025

Academic career and teaching

In 1991, Lee taught a course at Harvard about filmmaking. In 1993, he began to teach at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts in the Graduate Film Program. It was there that he received his master of fine arts. In 2002, he was appointed as artistic director of the school.[80] He is now a tenured professor at NYU.[81]

Commercials

In mid-1990, Levi’s hired Lee to direct a series of TV commercials for their 501 button-fly jeans.[82] Marketing executives from Nike[83] offered Lee a job directing commercials for the company. They wanted to pair Lee’s character, Mars Blackmon, who greatly admired athlete Michael Jordan, and Jordan in a marketing campaign for the Air Jordan line. Later, Lee was asked to comment on the phenomenon of violence related to inner-city youths trying to steal Air Jordans from other kids.[84] He said that, rather than blaming manufacturers of apparel that gained popularity, “deal with the conditions that make a kid put so much importance on a pair of sneakers, a jacket and gold”.[84] Through the marketing wing of 40 Acres and a Mule, Lee has directed commercials for Converse,[85] Jaguar,[86] Taco Bell,[87] and Ben & Jerry’s.[88]

Since 2015, Lee has been part of Capital One’s “Road Trip” advertising campaign, starring in a series of television commercials alongside Samuel L Jackson and Charles Barkley to coincide with March Madness.[89]

Artistic style, themes and reception

Lee in September 2011

Lee’s films are typically referred to as “Spike Lee Joints”. The closing credits always end with the phrases “By Any Means Necessary”, “Ya Dig”, and “Sho Nuff”.[90] His 2013 film, Oldboy, used the traditional “A Spike Lee Film” credit after producers had it re-edited.[54]

Themes

Lee’s films have examined race relations,[91] colorism in the black community, the role of media in contemporary life,[92] urban crime and poverty, and other political issues. His films are also noted for their unique stylistic elements, including the use of dolly shots to portray the characters “floating” through their surroundings, which he has had his cinematographers repeatedly use in his work.[93]

Influences

In 2018, during an interview with GQ, Lee cited some of his favorite films as Elia Kazan’s On the Waterfront (1954) and A Face in the Crowd (1957), as well as Martin Scorsese’s Mean Streets (1973). Lee says that he befriended Scorsese after attending a screening of After Hours at NYU.[94]

Reception

In March 2012, after the killing of Trayvon Martin, Lee was one of many people who used Twitter to circulate a message that claimed to give the home address of the shooter George Zimmerman. The address turned out to be incorrect, causing the real occupants, Elaine and David McClain, to leave home and stay at a hotel due to numerous death threats.[95] Lee issued an apology and reached an agreement with the McClains, which reportedly included “compensation”, with their attorney stating “The McClains’ claim is fully resolved”.[96][97] Nevertheless, in November 2013, the McClains filed a negligence lawsuit which accused Lee of “encouraging a dangerous mob mentality among his Twitter followers, as well as the public-at-large”.[95][98] The lawsuit, which a court filing reportedly valued at $1.2 million, alleged that the couple suffered “injuries and damages” that continued after the initial settlement up through Zimmerman’s trial in 2013.[95] A Seminole County judge dismissed the McClains’ suit, agreeing with Lee that the issue had already been settled previously.[99]

Lee has been criticized for his representation of women. For example, bell hooks said that he wrote black women in the same objectifying way that white male filmmakers write the characters of white women.[100] Rosie Perez, who was in an acting role for the first time as Tina in Do the Right Thing, said later that she was very uncomfortable with doing the nude scene in the film, saying, “I had a big problem with it, mainly because I was afraid of what my family would think…It wasn’t really about taking off my clothes. But I also didn’t feel good about it because the atmosphere wasn’t correct.”[101] Subsequently, Perez stated that Lee had offered an apology, and the two maintained their friendship.[102]

Over the course of his career, Lee has defended Woody Allen, Michael Jackson and Nate Parker, all of whom have been accused of sexual misconduct.[103][104][105][106][107]

Personal life

Family, religion, and residence

Lee met his wife, attorney Tonya Lewis Lee, in 1992, and they were married a year later in New York.[108] They have two children.[109][110]

When asked by the BBC whether he believed in God, Lee said: “Yes. I have faith that there is a higher being. All this cannot be an accident.”[111] Lee continues to maintain an office in Fort Greene, Brooklyn, but he and his wife live on the Upper East Side of Manhattan.[112] In the late 1990s, Lee bought the Barbara Rutherford Hatch House on the Upper East Side.[113][114]

Sports

Lee watching the New York Knicks play the Orlando Magic in 2025

Lee is a fan of the New York Knicks basketball team, the New York Yankees baseball team (although he grew up a New York Mets fan),[115] the New York Rangers ice hockey team, and the English football club Arsenal.[116][117] One of the documentaries in ESPN’s 30 for 30 series, Winning Time: Reggie Miller vs. The New York Knicks, focuses partly on Lee’s interaction with Miller at Knicks games in Madison Square Garden. In June 2003, Lee sought an injunction against Spike TV to prevent them from using his nickname; he claimed that because of his fame, viewers would think he was associated with the channel.[118][119][120] In March 2020, Lee and the security team at Madison Square Garden had a disagreement over which entrance to use to see the New York Knicks; Lee stated he would not attend the rest of the games for the season.[121][122] Spike Lee has also frequented New York Liberty games at Barclays Center, sitting courtside during the 2024 WNBA playoffs in a Sabrina Ionescu jersey.[123]

Lee is also a supporter of Spanish tennis player Carlos Alcaraz[124] and Italian soccer team Inter Milan, featuring as the narrator in a promotional video for the club in June 2025.[125]

Politics

Lee speaking at a rally in support of the presidential campaign of Bernie Sanders in Washington Square Park, April 2016

In May 1999, the New York Post reported that Lee made an inflammatory comment about Charlton Heston, president of the National Rifle Association of America (NRA), while speaking to reporters at the Cannes Film Festival. Lee was quoted as saying the NRA should be disbanded and, of Heston, someone should “Shoot him with a .44 Bull Dog.”[126][127] Lee said he intended it as a joke. He was responding to coverage about whether Hollywood was responsible for school shootings. “The problem is guns”, he said.[128] Republican House Majority Leader Dick Armey condemned Lee as having “nothing to offer the debate on school violence except more violence and more hate”.[128]

In October 2005, Lee responded to a CNN anchor’s question as to whether the government intentionally ignored the plight of black Americans during the 2005 Hurricane Katrina catastrophe by saying, “It’s not too far-fetched. I don’t put anything past the United States government. I don’t find it too far-fetched that they tried to displace all the black people out of New Orleans.”[129] In later comments, Lee cited the government’s past, including the Tuskegee Syphilis Study.[130][131]

In October 2015, Spike Lee visited the National Basketball Association’s Manhattan headquarters to discuss producing a commercial that would denounce gun violence in America.[132] In December 2015, Everytown for Gun Safety Support Fund joined with the NBA and Lee to launch the ‘End Gun Violence,’ campaign focusing on the 88 Americans who are killed with guns every day.[133]

In May 2020, Lee published a three-minute short film, NEW YORK NEW YORK, on Instagram[134] that was later featured on the city’s official website.[135] Lee celebrated Joe Biden’s victory over Donald Trump in the 2020 presidential election with champagne amid a crowd on the streets of Brooklyn.[136] Lee endorsed Kamala Harris in the 2024 United States presidential election and spoke at one of her campaign rallies on October 24, 2024.[137][138]

Lee has been critical of Trump, whom he often refers to as “Agent Orange”. When asked about the president’s tariffs on the film industry, Lee replied: “People are hurting [and] no one’s working. There’s this guy (Trump) who wants to put a tariff on every film that shoots [outside the U.S.]. I don’t know how that’s going to work. I love to shoot [in New York]… it’s the vibe, it’s an energy. I’m very lucky that I’ve been able to shoot films that take place in New York.”[139]

While promoting his film Highest 2 Lowest in the fall of 2025, during an interview with MSNBC’s Politics Nation host Rev. Al Sharpton, Lee said President Trump should “think twice” if he was considering a Federal takeover of New York.[140]

During the October 2025 No Kings protests, Lee posted on his Instagram encouraging his followers to, “get up, stand up.”[141]

Philanthropy

In 2019, Lee partnered with the Jackie Robinson Foundation and Budweiser to mark the 100th anniversary of Robinson’s birth in 1919. Lee directed a 3-minute short film narrated by Robinson’s daughter, Sharon Robinson.[142]

Lee has also worked with Soles4Souls, Champions for Children, the Creative Coalition, and the AARP.[143]

Filmography

Directed features
YearTitleDistributor
1986She’s Gotta Have ItIsland Pictures
1988School DazeColumbia Pictures
1989Do the Right ThingUniversal Pictures
1990Mo’ Better Blues
1991Jungle Fever
1992Malcolm XWarner Bros.
1994CrooklynUniversal Pictures
1995Clockers
1996Girl 620th Century Fox
Get on the BusColumbia Pictures
1998He Got GameTouchstone Pictures
1999Summer of Sam
2000BamboozledNew Line Cinema
200225th HourTouchstone Pictures
2004She Hate MeSony Pictures Classics
2006Inside ManUniversal Pictures
2008Miracle at St. AnnaTouchstone Pictures
2012Red Hook SummerVariance Films
2013OldboyFilmDistrict
2014Da Sweet Blood of JesusGravitas Ventures
2015Chi-RaqRoadside Attractions
2018BlacKkKlansmanFocus Features
2020Da 5 BloodsNetflix
2025Highest 2 LowestA24
Apple TV

Awards and honors

In 1983, Lee won the Student Academy Award for his film Joe’s Bed-Stuy Barbershop: We Cut Heads.[144] He won several awards at the Black Reel Awards: Outstanding Director, TV Movie for Mike Tyson: Undisputed Truth, Outstanding Television Documentary for If God is Willing and Da Creek Don’t Rise, and Outstanding Film Director for Inside Man (2006).[145] He also won at the Black Movie Awards for Inside Man,[146] and the Berlin International Film Festival for Get on the Bus.[147][148] He won a BAFTA Award for Best Adapted Screenplay for BlacKkKlansman (2018), which also received nominations for Director and Best Film.[149]

In 2007, he won two Emmy Awards, Outstanding Directing For Nonfiction Programming and Exceptional Merit In Nonfiction Filmmaking for When The Levees Broke: A Requiem In Four Acts. He was previously nominated in 1988 for Outstanding Non-Fiction Special for 4 Little Girls, and later nominated in 2021 for Outstanding Variety Special (Pre-Recorded) and Outstanding Directing For A Variety Special for David Byrne’s American Utopia.[150]

Lee was nominated for Academy Awards for Best Original Screenplay for Do the Right Thing[151][152] and Best Documentary for 4 Little Girls, but did not win either award. In 2015, at the age of 58, Lee became the youngest person ever to receive an Academy Honorary Award.[153] Lee received the award as “a champion of independent film and an inspiration to young filmmakers”. Frequent collaborators Denzel Washington, Samuel L. Jackson, and Wesley Snipes presented Lee with the award at a private ceremony at the Governors Awards.[154][155] In 2019, Lee’s film BlacKkKlansman went on to receive six Academy Award nominations. Lee himself was nominated for three: Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Adapted Screenplay.[156] He went on to win the Best Adapted Screenplay, his first competitive Academy Award.[157]

Two of his films have competed for the Palme d’Or award at the Cannes Film Festival, and of the two, BlacKkKlansman won the Grand Prix in 2018.[158] Lee’s films Do the Right Thing,[3] Malcolm X,[4] 4 Little GirlsShe’s Gotta Have It, and Bamboozled were each selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the National Film Registry for being “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant”.[5] On May 18, 2016, Lee delivered the Commencement address for The Johns Hopkins University Class of 2016.[159]

In 2020, Lee received the Chaplin Award at a New York City gala presented by Film at Lincoln Center.[160] In 2021, he was recognized by American Cinema Editors (ACE), receiving its ACE Golden Eddie Filmmaker of the Year Award.[161][162] In 2022, Lee was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award by the Directors Guild of America (DGA).[163] He was named as the recipient of the Ebert Director Award at the TIFF Tribute Awards for the 2023 Toronto International Film Festival.[164] In March 2024, Lee received a Board of Governor’s Award from the American Society of Cinematographers (ASC).[165] In October 2025, he accepted a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Chicago International Film Festival.[166] That same year, Lee received a Career Achievement Award at the Critics Choice Association’s 8th Annual Celebration of Black Cinema & Television.[167]

Four of Lee’s films (Bamboozled,[168][169] David Byrne’s American Utopia,[170] Do the Right Thing,[171][172] and Malcolm X[173]) had been included in The Criterion Collection. Do the Right Thing was also included in CC40, a 40-film box set celebrating Criterion’s 40th anniversary.[174]

References