Kobe Bryant, 36, has been playing basketball in the NBA for 18 years. He's been playing at an elite level the whole time, defying time through meditation, paleo diets, and mysterious surgeries in Germany, keeping him on track to pass Michael Jordan this season as the third-highest scorer in regular-season history. But even Bryant will retire some day, and when he does the incredible competitor will face a new challenge in finding what to do with the rest of his life.
He's not too worried. Talking to the New York Times recently, Bryant said he is inspired by a conversation he had many years ago:
I’ve been thinking about that since I was 21. I had a great conversation with Giorgio Armani back then. He told me he started his company at age 40. It was a real wake-up call for me. “What are you going to do?”
Armani served in the Italian armed forces and worked at a department store and as a freelance designer before founding the now-legendary Giorgio Armani S.p.A. in 1974.
Bryant speaks Italian and has a close connection to Italy, having lived in the country for much of his childhood while his father Joe "Jellybean" Bryant played in a basketball league there. Bryant is apparently a fan of Armani's work, too. Bryant owns several Armani suits and sported one of them in a Turkish Airlines ad campaign in 2011.
Although Bryant hasn't announced any definite plans for life after the NBA, he has become increasingly curious about learning the secrets of top entrepreneurs and other successful people, according to a recent Sports Illustrated profile. While recovering from a torn Achilles, Bryant read lots of business books and filled notebooks with ideas.
“Just nothing but sketches and drawing and org charts and direction and all this s---. Conversations I’ve had with muses, how they built their company, notes and all kinds of s---," he told SI.
Bryant also makes a habit of cold-calling luminaries in different fields and asking for their insights."You can start in the Nike Family, I cold call Mark Parker all the time. Jony Ive. Dan Wieden. Oprah Winfrey. Recently Arianna Huffington. The list just goes on and on and on and on. Hilary Swank," he told Bloomberg.
Most recently, his biggest off-court exploit is a Showtime documentary titled "Muse," which will air in November.
*SEE ALSO: 16 examples of Kobe Bryant's insane work ethic*
Join the conversation about this story » Reported by Business Insider 8 hours ago.
He's not too worried. Talking to the New York Times recently, Bryant said he is inspired by a conversation he had many years ago:
I’ve been thinking about that since I was 21. I had a great conversation with Giorgio Armani back then. He told me he started his company at age 40. It was a real wake-up call for me. “What are you going to do?”
Armani served in the Italian armed forces and worked at a department store and as a freelance designer before founding the now-legendary Giorgio Armani S.p.A. in 1974.
Bryant speaks Italian and has a close connection to Italy, having lived in the country for much of his childhood while his father Joe "Jellybean" Bryant played in a basketball league there. Bryant is apparently a fan of Armani's work, too. Bryant owns several Armani suits and sported one of them in a Turkish Airlines ad campaign in 2011.
Although Bryant hasn't announced any definite plans for life after the NBA, he has become increasingly curious about learning the secrets of top entrepreneurs and other successful people, according to a recent Sports Illustrated profile. While recovering from a torn Achilles, Bryant read lots of business books and filled notebooks with ideas.
“Just nothing but sketches and drawing and org charts and direction and all this s---. Conversations I’ve had with muses, how they built their company, notes and all kinds of s---," he told SI.
Bryant also makes a habit of cold-calling luminaries in different fields and asking for their insights."You can start in the Nike Family, I cold call Mark Parker all the time. Jony Ive. Dan Wieden. Oprah Winfrey. Recently Arianna Huffington. The list just goes on and on and on and on. Hilary Swank," he told Bloomberg.
Most recently, his biggest off-court exploit is a Showtime documentary titled "Muse," which will air in November.
*SEE ALSO: 16 examples of Kobe Bryant's insane work ethic*
Join the conversation about this story » Reported by Business Insider 8 hours ago.