What “Air” and Michael Jordan teach us about parenting

Early in his NBA career, Michael Jordan sat down with Diane Sawyer for “60 Minutes,” and she arrived at his townhouse to find the Chicago Bull vacuuming.

Off-camera, Sawyer marveled that a young, rich superstar cleaned his own home. The 1987 segment featured footage of him doing myriad domestic chores, including scrubbing dishes and folding laundry.

“These are things that I did because we had chores to do at home,” he told Sawyer. “And I had grown accustomed to doing them at home … I don’t mind doing it.”

According to his mother, Deloris Jordan, her son wasn’t sprucing up for the television crew.

Rather, it was “because he wanted to have everything looking nice before his mother arrived for a visit later that afternoon,” Deloris wrote in her 1996 parenting book, “Family First: Winning the Parenting Game.”

Michael Jordan could soar through the air — but he could also hem pants, dust and cook. Life skills were “a result of such parental expectations,” she wrote.

The mother of five, now 81, ran a tight ship. And even after her son hit the big time, she still wielded great influence over him.

That bond is seen in “Air,” a new Ben Affleck-directed film opening Wednesday. In the movie, Matt Damon portrays Sonny Vaccaro, the trailblazer executive who, against all odds, signed Jordan to Nike, snatching him from the clutches of Converse and turning the upstart brand into a basketball powerhouse.

But while most of the action centers on Vaccaro, Deloris – played by Viola Davis at Jordan’s personal request – emerges as the quiet but powerful force behind the superstar. Jordan (Damian Delano Young) is only ever seen from behind as a background presence in the story.

In the movie, his mother not only convinced him to sign with Nike but also negotiated the deal that would give the then-rookie a percentage of the profits from shoe sales.

But in reality, his agent, David Falk, unsuccessfully tried to get Michael, now 60, to take a meeting with Nike, so he enlisted Deloris’ help.

“My mother said, ‘You’re gonna go listen. You may not like it, but you’re gonna go listen.’ She made me get on that plane and go listen,” Jordan said in the 2020 docuseries “The Last Dance.”

And thus the Jordan brand was born. He went on to win six NBA championships, and Deloris became a legend in her own right.

While she was strict, she and her husband were also hyper-involved and loving – and Jordan reciprocated.

When Michael was playing at the University of North Carolina, she and her late husband saw every home and away game, traveling as far as Hawaii and Greece. She missed exactly one game, and only because she was sick with the flu. When his father got word to his son that she was ill, Michael called home to check on her as soon as the game ended.

“I found it reassuring that my All-American son seemed so concerned when I wasn’t able to be there for one of his college games,” she wrote.

When he went to the pros, he was only 19, so she saw to it that either she or her husband were at every home game, as they felt he was too young to be out on his own.

“I never regretted the effort our family made to be there for Michael his rookie season,” she wrote. In 1989, she and her son co-founded the Michael Jordan Foundation to raise money for disadvantaged children. And she continues to live in Chicago, where she moved in 1995.