Sharon Stone Says Robert De Niro Is 'the Best Kisser in the Business': 'Kissed Me Right Out of My Shoes'

Sharon Stone didn't hesitate to name Robert De Niro "the best kisser in the business"

People Sharon Stone and Robert De Niro.Credit: Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty; Mike Marsland/WireImage

NEED TO KNOW

  • Stone and De Niro starred opposite each other in the 1995 film Casino, during which they filmed a steamy scene where De Niro "just knocked me out," Stone said

  • "Oh, he kissed me right out of my shoes," the actress shared

Sharon Stoneis reminiscing on the best kisser in Hollywood.

In an April 1 appearance onSiriusXM'sAndy Cohen Live,Stone dished on the very best kiss from her acting career: a particular steamy scene with oneRobert De Niro. The duo played Ginger McKenna and Sam "Ace" Rothstein, respectively, in Martin Scorsese's 1995 crime classic,Casino.

"Oh my god. He's the best kisser in the business," Stone said, wistfully. As Cohen expressed his surprise, Stone doubled down: "Oh, he kissed me right out of my shoes."

Sharon Stone and Robert De Niro in Casino.Credit: Universal Pictures/Getty

In the scene leading up to the big lip-lock, Stone recalled her character had to go to the bathroom, and because her character is a "hustler," she gets De Niro's Ace to give her money to go. In turn, Ace pulled out 50 dollars. "And I look at him like, 'Really, I think a little more than 50 for the bathroom.'"

"And he looks at me, and he reaches in and he gives me like a hundred, and then I lean over and I kiss him. And he just really just knocked me out, right?" Stone recalled.

She continued, "And Marty [director Martin Scorsese] cut and he looks at us and he goes, 'I think we got it, but would you guys like another one?' And we were both looked at him and went, 'Yeah, I think I think maybe we need one more.'"

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Stone previously shared that early on in her career, it was her personal goal to work with De Niro one day. Speaking withBusiness Insiderin August 2025, theBasic Instinctstar shared she had auditioned numerous times with him, but it never panned out beforeCasino.

"It was my dream to work with De Niro and hold my own," she told the outlet.

Sharon Stone and Robert De Niro.Credit: Rich Polk/Getty Images; Steve Granitz/WireImage

In a 2023 interview withVariety, Stone detailed the challenges of working as a woman in Hollywood and experiencing misogyny from "some really big stars." Many times, the men she's worked with sought to control her performance, so as not to outshine their own, she said.

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And while she'd run into her fair share of unsavory characters during her time in Hollywood, Stone assured the outlet that De Niro and theirCasinocostarJoe Pesci(who played Nicky Santoro) were the complete opposite.

"I've worked with some of the biggest stars in the business, who will literally talk through my close-up, telling me what they think I should do," she said. "They're so misogynistic — now, that is not Robert De Niro. That is not Joe Pesci, that is not those guys."

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Sharon Stone Says Robert De Niro Is 'the Best Kisser in the Business': 'Kissed Me Right Out of My Shoes'

Sharon Stone didn't hesitate to name Robert De Niro "the best kisser in the business" NEED TO KNO...
Jamie Lee Curtis Shares Heartbreak Over Friends Rob and Michele Reiner's Death on Daughter Annie's Birthday

Jamie Lee Curtis grew emotional when she revealed that her oldest daughter Annie welcomed her first baby in December, days after their family's close friends Rob Reiner and Michele Reiner were killed

People Jamie Lee Curtis and her daughter Annie on Oct. 12, 0222; Michele Reiner and Rob ReinerCredit: CHRIS DELMAS/AFP via Getty; Jim Spellman/WireImage

NEED TO KNOW

  • Curtis is married to Christopher Guest, a close collaborator of Rob Reiner's; Curtis said Rob and Michele were godparents to Annie

  • Rob and Michele's son Nick was charged with two counts of first-degree murder in connection with his parents' deaths

Jamie Lee Curtiswas especially close withRobandMichele Reiner, who were godparents to her daughter Annie. While appearing on the most recent episode ofMichelle Obamaand Craig Robinson'spodcastIMO,the Oscar winner became emotional when discussing how her friends were killed on Annie's birthday.

During the interview, theFreakier Fridayactress, 67, who's married toChristopher Guest, revealed that her older daughter Annie, 39,welcomed a baby back in December, a week after the Reiner deaths.

"Their baby boy was born in December, and it was a week after Rob and Michele [died], and Rob and Michele are her godparents," Curtis said through tears. "They died on her birthday. My beautiful daughter, who loved them as we all did, managed to be able to metabolize that grief and sadness … [and then] brought their son into this world a week later."

Rob and Michele werewere found dead inside their Los Angeles homeon Dec. 14. The couple's sonNick, 32, wasarrestedthat same night andcharged with two counts of first-degree murderin connection with their deaths.

On the podcast, Curtis described the series of events for her family in December as "life on life's harshest terms and life on life's most beautiful, perfect terms."

Jamie Lee Curtis and Annie Guest on Oct. 11, 2022Credit: Jon Kopaloff/Getty

Curtis and Guest, who have been married since 1984, sharedaughtersAnnie and Ruby. As Curtis revealed on Instagram in 2019, her familyhosted Annie's weddingto husband Jason Wolf at their home in Los Angeles. (The couple's younger daughter Ruby also got married to her partner Kynthia at Curtis and Guests' home; Curtisofficiatedthe 2022 ceremony.)

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Curtis' husband Guest famously worked with Rob on his impactful 1984 mockumentaryThis Is Spinal Tap. The pair reunited for a sequel to the cult comedy,Spinal Tap II: The End Continues, which released in September 2025, just months before the filmmaker's death.

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Rob Reiner and Michele Reiner on March 30, 2019Credit: Amanda Edwards/WireImage

In the immediate aftermath of Rob and Michele's deaths in December, Curtis told PEOPLE in a statement that she and her husband were "numb and sad and shocked about the violent, tragic deaths of our dear friends."

"Our ONLY focus and care right now is for their children and immediate families and we will offer all support possible to help them," she wrote at the time.

In addition to Nick, who remains incarcerated more than three months after his parents' deaths, Rob and Michelesharedson Jake, 34, and daughter Romy, 28. Rob was also a father to daughter Tracy, whom he adopted during his first marriage to Penny Marshall.

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Jamie Lee Curtis Shares Heartbreak Over Friends Rob and Michele Reiner's Death on Daughter Annie's Birthday

Jamie Lee Curtis grew emotional when she revealed that her oldest daughter Annie welcomed her first baby in December, day...
Louis C.K. making Netflix comeback with standup special, LA show

Louis C.K.is returning to Netflix years after he was embroiled in theMe Too movement.

USA TODAY

The 58-year-old comedian's upcomingheadlining showat the Hollywood Bowl, a new addition to theNetflix Is a Joke Festlineup, was announced on Thursday, April 2.

The standup set will take place Tuesday, May 5, toward the beginning of the streaming giant's weeklong schedule that's jam-packed with hundreds of comedy events across Los Angeles starring the likes ofJerry Seinfeld,Larry David,Kevin HartandSteve Carell. Tickets go on sale April 6 at 10 a.m. PT.

C.K.'s standup special, "Ridiculous" – for which he will also receive directing and executive producing credits – will come out this summer.

Louis C.K. performs during the 2025 New York Comedy Festival at the Beacon Theatre on Nov. 14, 2025, in New York City.

The same day as C.K.'s set, Hart, Seinfeld, Katt Williams, David Letterman and John Mulaney, Ilana Glazer and Ramy Youssef, Nicole Byer and Jim Gaffigan are among the dozens of performers also taking the stage across LA County. Shane Gillis,who also landed in hot waterover past comments widely viewed as racist and more recent jokes deemed offensive, is also part of the lineup, hosting "a blockbuster night of comedy" at the Bowl on May 4.

Tony Hinchcliffe, who faced widespread backlash in 2024for calling Puerto Ricoa "floating island of garbage" and making otherremarks deemed as racistat a rally for then president-electDonald Trump, will do a live recording of his "Kill Tony" podcast at Inglewood's Intuit Dome on May 7 as part of Netflix is a Joke.

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C.K., whose shelf is lined with a number of Grammy and Emmy Awards, was exposed for sexually harassing behavior in a 2017New York Times reportin which five women alleged the comedian had exposed himself and masturbated in front of them. The allegations followed a few years ofreports about the comedian's inappropriate behavioraround women, which he had steadfastly denied at the time.

After the Times' article was published, C.K. issueda contrite response, acknowledging the accusations were "true" and saying, "The power I had over these women is that they admired me. And I wielded that power irresponsibly."

Within a year of the comedian vowing to "step back and take a long time to listen," he was on tour and selling out several shows. He addressed the allegations in the 2020 standup special "Sincerely Louis C.K.," and at one point explained, "Men are taught to make sure the woman is OK. The thing is, women know how to seem OK when they're not OK. So you can't just look at her face and be like, 'Her eyes are dry, we're fine. Let's just keep going.'"

In July, he went on the road with hisRidiculous comedy tour, which took him across North America, and to Europe, India, Thailand, Hong Kong and Japan.

Contributing: Marco della Cava, USA TODAY

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Louis CK Netflix standup special announced years after allegations

Louis C.K. making Netflix comeback with standup special, LA show

Louis C.K.is returning to Netflix years after he was embroiled in theMe Too movement. The 58-year-old comedian...
Cubans take to bikes and electric tricycles to protest US sanctions

By Ayose Naranjo

Reuters People riding in electric vehicles carry Cuban flags as they pass by the U.S. Embassy during an anti-imperialist march amid a months-long energy crisis since U.S. President Donald Trump's administration cut off its fuel supply, Havana, Cuba April 2, 2026. REUTERS/Norlys Perez A person riding in electric vehicle carries a sign with an image of late Cuban President Fidel Castro that reads, People riding in electric vehicles carry Cuban flags as they pass by the U.S. Embassy during an anti-imperialist march amid a months-long energy crisis since U.S. President Donald Trump's administration cut off its fuel supply, Havana, Cuba April 2, 2026. REUTERS/Norlys Perez

Cubans hold an anti-imperialist march in Havana

HAVANA, April 2 (Reuters) - Cuban activists paraded on Thursday on bikes and electric tricycles along Havana's waterfront ‌Malecon boulevard, accompanied by Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel, in ‌a show of defiance amid U.S. efforts to starve the island of fuel.

Participants ​in the government-organized caravan rode past the U.S. Embassy in the Cuban capital, their electric and pedal-powered vehicles displaying flags and banners attacking the sanctions imposed on the country by President Donald Trump's administration.

The ‌rally came a day ⁠after Cuba's top diplomat in Washington publicly invited the U.S. government to help overhaul Cuba's crippled economy ⁠as part of ongoing negotiations that have yet to yield results.

Participants in the rally said they favored talks with the United States ​but demanded ​respect for Cuba.

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"I believe that ​genuine dialogue between both governments ‌is possible, but international law and our country's autonomy must be respected," said Sheila Ibatao, a Havana law student and participant.

Diaz-Canel did not speak during the event.

The Cuban government often organizes large rallies at the U.S. Embassy. This caravan was smaller and more ‌discreet, hampered by fuel shortages that ​have crippled mobility and hobbled public transportation.

A ​Russian-flagged tankership arrived in ​Cuba this week and off-loaded 700,000 barrels of ‌crude oil, promising some relief in ​the coming weeks.

The ​Trump administration, which has threatened to slap tariffs on countries that export oil to Cuba and explicitly prohibited imports of ​Russian oil, said ‌it allowed the Russian-flagged tanker to dock in Cuba's ​Matanzas port for humanitarian reasons.

(Reporting by Ayose Naranjo; Editing ​by Dave Sherwood and Will Dunham)

Cubans take to bikes and electric tricycles to protest US sanctions

By Ayose Naranjo Cubans hold an anti-imperialist march in Havana HAVANA, April 2 (Reuters) - Cuban activist...
Inspection finds dozens of violations of detention standards at a major immigration camp in Texas

A recent inspection at the nation'slargest immigration detention facilityfound dozens of violations of national standards that potentially exposed detainees to excessive force, disease, and other unsafe conditions.

Associated Press A series of hardened tents at the Camp East Montana immigrant detention center loom large in the desert at a U.S. Army base on the outskirts of El Paso, Texas, Friday, Feb. 13, 2026. (AP Photo/Morgan Lee) A sign marks the entrance to a series of hardened tents at the Camp East Montana immigrant detention center in the desert at a U.S. Army base on the outskirts of El Paso, Texas, Friday, Feb. 13, 2026. (AP Photo/Morgan Lee)

Immigration Detention Conditions

Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Office of Detention Oversight performed a congressionally mandated inspection over three days in February at Camp East Montana in El Paso, Texas, according to areport posted onlineby ICE this week.

The report documents 49 deficiencies, which it defines as violations of detention standards or policies, in areas including the use of force and restraints, security, medical care and more. It was the first inspection released by that office since Camp East Montana was hastily built and opened last summer.

Attorney calls inspection findings 'scathing'

The number of deficiencies at the camp is highly unusual. The most found in any other inspection by the oversight office so far this year was 13.

"This report is scathing. Camp East Montana gets an F," said attorney Randall Kallinen, who represents the family of a36-year-old detainee who diedthere in January — one of at least three deaths since its opening. "It's very dangerous. Not only are the detainees in danger of excessive force, they are also in danger of improper or negligent medical care and mental health care, as well as danger from other detainees."

The report comes as ICE's parent agency, the Department of Homeland Security, ispausing the purchaseof warehouses intended to house up to 7,000 or more immigrants at a single location. ICE data through Feb. 5 shows that Camp East Montana has been the largest detention site, housing nearly 3,000 detainees per day, the majority of whom are men who have not been convicted of crimes.

The inspection was conducted before ICE moved last month toreplace the prime contractor, Acquisition Logistics LLC, amid intense scrutiny over conditions at Camp East Montana. The company had been awarded a contract worth up to $1.3 billion to build and operate the camp, even though it had no experience in the field. The company and its president, Ken Wagner, didn't respond to messages seeking comment.

Lawmaker calls ICE 'uninterested' in improving conditions

A more experienced contractor, Amentum Services, took over operations at Camp East Montana on March 12. A federal database says its nearly $453 million no-bid contract to provide detention, transportation and medical services runs through Sept. 30.

Detainees usually live at Camp East Montana for several days or weeks while they are awaiting deportation or before they are transferred elsewhere.

U.S. Rep. Veronica Escobar, an El Paso Democrat who has toured and met with detainees at the facility several times, said the inspection findings were "a drop in the bucket of what is so profoundly wrong with that facility." She said detainees have consistently complained of medical neglect and other problems.

She said conditions have not improved and wonders whether that is by design to pressure detainees to agree to self-deport.

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"ICE is completely uninterested in really creating any change or holding the contractor accountable," she said.

An ICE spokesperson said the new contract will result in improved medical care, more staff on site and stricter oversight by ICE.

Report documents safety issues

The inspection report documented a series of safety lapses found during Acquisition Logistics' tenure. Camp staff didn't document whether they were conducting required checks to prevent self-harm and suicide, which 911 calls show have been a major problem at the facility.

Acquisition Logistics refused to provide information about staffing levels to ICE, which made it impossible to determine whether they were sufficient to maintain security, according to the report. In one instance, a detainee escaped when there was no staff assigned to watch the perimeter fences.

Inspectors found that tools and equipment were "unsecured and unaccounted for throughout the facility" and that staff did not maintain an accurate inventory of its ammunition.

Security guards who used and witnessed the use of force and restraints such as handcuffs failed to file written reports as required in some instances, the report said.

Supervisors also didn't document their observations, staff failed to record or preserve video recordings in some cases, and the facility did not review incidents afterward to examine whether chemical agents or other types of force were used appropriately.

Medical staff failed to isolate a detainee who had symptoms consistent with tuberculosis, which spreads through the air, and did not notify ICE of the case.

The camp also acted slowly in response to a dozen grievances filed by detainees about medical care, taking between six and 14 business days to respond, the report said.

Despite the problems, the report gave the camp an "acceptable/adequate" rating and recommended ICE work with the new contractor "to resolve the deficiencies that remain outstanding."

It pushed back on one of the most common complaints from detainees: that the food portions were too meager. It said the food service program, run by subcontractor Disaster Management Group, provided certification from a dietitian that the "average daily caloric provision of the menu" met federal recommendations.

Inspection finds dozens of violations of detention standards at a major immigration camp in Texas

A recent inspection at the nation'slargest immigration detention facilityfound dozens of violations of national stand...
US ICE detains Islamic Society of Milwaukee President Salah Sarsour

By Kanishka Singh

Reuters

WASHINGTON, April 2 (Reuters) - Islamic Society of Milwaukee President Salah Sarsour, who is a Palestinian American, has been detained by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, the mosque said ‌on Thursday.

ISM, which is Wisconsin's largest mosque, said Sarsour, 53, is a legal permanent resident who ‌has lived in the U.S. for over three decades and was detained on Monday. He grew up in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

"He was ​pulled over while driving by over 10 ICE agents with no cause," a page on the mosque's website said, adding he was taken out of the state to a detention facility in Chicago before being transferred to a detention center in Indiana.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel cited Othman Atta, the executive director of the mosque, as saying that deportation documents ‌focused on Sarsour's arrest by Israeli ⁠authorities as a teenager living in the West Bank to argue he provided material support for extremists.

Atta said Sarsour was convicted as a teenager in an Israeli military court, ⁠according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Though Israel has ratified the U.N. convention against torture, Israeli rights group B'Tselem says military courts in the West Bank, where Palestinians are tried for alleged crimes, have a 96 percent conviction rate and a ​history ​of extracting confessions through torture.

Atta denied that Sarsour supported the ​militant group Hamas.

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Sarsour is "being targeted on the basis ‌of his Palestinian and Muslim background, and his advocacy for Palestinian rights," the mosque said.

The Department of Homeland Security, of which ICE is a part, confirmed his arrest and accused Sarsour of lying on his immigration forms and alleged that he was "suspected of funding terror organizations."

DHS said he came to the U.S. in 1993. Noting his past conviction, it said he was previously "convicted for throwing Molotov cocktails at the homes of Israeli armed forces."

President Donald ‌Trump's administration has pursued an immigration crackdown condemned by rights groups ​as being in violation of due process and free speech. Advocacy ​groups say it has created an unsafe environment ​for minorities.

Trump has particularly cracked down on pro-Palestinian voices by attempting to deport foreign ‌protesters, threatening funding freeze for universities where protests ​were held and ordering screening ​of immigrants' online comments.

The crackdown has faced judicial obstacles. Many of the protesters targeted for deportation have been freed from detention by court orders while their cases proceed. Judges have also blocked some of Trump's ​attempts to freeze funds for universities.

Trump ‌alleges protesters are antisemitic and support extremists. Demonstrators, including some Jewish groups, say he wrongly conflates ​criticism of Israel's assault on Gaza with antisemitism and advocacy for Palestinian rights as supporting extremism.

(Reporting ​by Kanishka Singh in Washington; Editing by Aurora Ellis)

US ICE detains Islamic Society of Milwaukee President Salah Sarsour

By Kanishka Singh WASHINGTON, April 2 (Reuters) - Islamic Society of Milwaukee President Salah Sarsour, who is...
The NBA is planning a European basketball league. Investors think it's worth billions.

Decades after the NBA first took an interest in Europe, it took a significant step this week toward establishing a new basketball league on the continent. It heard from potential investors, who valued some clubs in the proposed league there at $1 billion.

NBC Universal NBA Commissioner Adam Silver  (Matthew Stockman / Getty Images file)

In the fall of 2027, the NBA expects to open a league of 14 to 16 teams in 12 European cities. Yet while the NBA has been public in recent years about its desire for a league across the Atlantic, it didn't have a formal measure of interest on the European side. That was until this week, when potential investors had until Tuesday to submit nonbinding bids.

The NBA received multiple bids worth more than $500 million, including some at and over $1 billion, according to a person with knowledge of the matter who was not authorized to speak publicly. The person said that more than 120 investors were involved in the bid process.

"The level of engagement and the scale of the bids reflect the marketplace's belief in our proposed model and the enormous, untapped potential for European basketball," said Mark Tatum, the NBA's deputy commissioner and chief operating officer, in a statement. "We will now review the bids in more detail and shortlist the partners who share our vision and commitment to accelerating the growth of the game across the continent."

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With multiple bids in hand, the NBA now plans to select those it considers the best, using input from its Board of Governors. Because of that process, teams in the European league are expected to be announced in stages, instead of all at once.

The NBA has long wanted a permanent foothold in Europe, going back to the 1980s and the tenure of former Commissioner David Stern. The league believes basketball's popularity in Europe — its data suggests there are 270 million basketball fans there — is a largely untapped business opportunity, with large markets such as London and Rome devoid of top-flight basketball teams.

Stern pushed for NBA players to take part in the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona. The league took teams abroad for exhibitions against European clubs. Eventually Stern's successor, Adam Silver, began hosting regular-season NBA games on the continent, too, with stops in Berlin and London as recently as January.

Yet the proposed league, which is also backed by FIBA, international basketball's governing body, is not intended to act as an easternmost conference of the current 30-team NBA, which is mulling its own domestic expansion in Las Vegas and Seattle.

Instead, the NBA's European league would be its own, distinct entity, anchored by 10 to 12 permanent members, with the remaining league slots earned by teams that qualify through other competitions, similar to European soccer leagues. At a March meeting of the NBA's Board of Governors, Silver said 12 cities were being targeted for the launch but did not go into detail. Currently, the league is focused on placing teams in London, Manchester, Paris, Lyon, Madrid, Barcelona, Rome, Milan, Berlin, Munich, Athens and Istanbul.

That doesn't mean the NBA and its European cousin would be entirely separated. The NBA has already looked at creating competitions that could pit NBA teams against their European counterparts, said one person with knowledge of plans. Tatum, the NBA's deputy commissioner, last fall described a "preseason cup" as one hypothetical possibility in the short term.

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"Five, 10 years down the road, you could see a situation where the winners of the top two finishers in the European league get entered into the NBA Cup tournament," Tatumtold Sports Business Journal.

The NBA's in-season cup tournament, which began in 2023, drew inspiration from European soccer, whose popularity in the U.S. has partly factored into the league's belief that now is the right time to launch a league on the continent. Despite the time difference, U.S. fans have gotten used to watching England's Premier League on weekends, plus European competitions during the week.

The geographic divide also hasn't limited interest in the NBA from abroad. European-raised NBA superstars such as Giannis Antetokounmpo, Luka Doncic and Nikola Jokic led to record viewership numbers for the NBA in Europe last season.

Nikola Jokic of the Denver Nuggets handles the ball under pressure from Royce O'Neale of the Phoenix Suns  (Christian Petersen / Getty Images)

The European cities the NBA has targeted come with complications. Though Manchester and London have arenas that would meet the league's state-of-the-art standard, others would likely need renovations.

Not all cities currently have top-flight basketball clubs, either, which is why any new European league would require some clubs founded from scratch.

The NBA has also sought to determine whether established, high-profile soccer clubs in some of their desired markets would be open to adding a basketball team. And while some cities do have established and high-profile clubs, they currently play in EuroLeague, a closed league of 20 teams including such powers as Real Madrid and Barcelona.

The bids that arrived by Tuesday's deadline followed discussions in recent weeks between the NBA and more than a dozen existing European basketball teams about potential inclusion. Among those interested were teams that currently play in the EuroLeague, one of the people said. Under the NBA and FIBA's proposal, the only way a team can guarantee a permanent place in their European league would be to go through its investment process.

The NBA and EuroLeague are expected to resume talks soon that would explore a potential collaboration, rather than a collision.

"I think for the betterment of European basketball, the best outcome would be if we came together with the EuroLeague here and that we came up with a systematic approach to growing the game throughout Europe," Silver told reporters last month.

EuroLeague had taken a defiant tone as the NBA's interest in Europe became public; in January,it reportedly warnedthe NBA of legal action if it spoke to EuroLeague-affiliated clubs. But in March, EuroLeague hired Chus Bueno, a new chief executive with a more conciliatory stance. He previously worked as an executive in the NBA league office for 12 years.

"If they raise the money, the most logical thing would be a joint competition," Bueno told Spain'sMundo Deportivo in March. "Having two top-level competitions would split the market and lower the average level. It wouldn't help anyone. The best thing is to do it together, even if it means compromises from both sides."

The NBA is planning a European basketball league. Investors think it's worth billions.

Decades after the NBA first took an interest in Europe, it took a significant step this week toward establishing a new ba...

 

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