NBA film rooms go public: league leans into behind-the-scenes content as New Balance series debuts
The NBA has begun distributing video content on its own app that puts viewership of the league's own film-room culture on display, with a Clippers guard at the centre of the launch.

The NBA's in-house content arm pushed a new branded series onto the NBA App on 29 June 2026, inviting viewers inside the film work that precedes tipoff. The launch instalment is built around Los Angeles Clippers guard Darius Garland and presented by New Balance Hoops, the athletic brand's basketball vertical.
The project is a small, deliberately merchandised window onto a part of professional basketball that has historically been off-camera. The league appears to be betting that the appetite for behind-the-scenes access is durable enough, and the cultural footprint of star guards large enough, to underwrite a recurring piece of original video.
What the league actually published
Two Telegram-distributed items from the official NBA channel on 29 June — logged at 19:33 UTC and 18:16 UTC respectively — frame the series as a hybrid of training access and sponsored content. The 18:16 UTC post positions Garland at the centre of the launch, describing him by team (the LA Clippers) and by format: a behind-the-scenes look at his preparation routine. The 19:33 UTC post casts the work in more procedural terms, putting the camera on the film-room practice itself — the breakdown of opponent tendencies that precedes a game.
Both items route viewers to the NBA App rather than to broadcast partners or to social platforms outside the league's control. That routing matters. For most of the last two decades, NBA content of this kind has lived in third-party studios: regional sports networks, national broadcasters, and the documentary arms of streaming platforms. The NBA App pushes that distribution back inside the league's own walled garden.
A sponsor, a star, a setting
New Balance's presence is more than a logo. The series sits inside the athletic-apparel partnership the brand has been steadily building across European basketball, US college and now the NBA itself, with Cleveland Cavaliers alumnus Darius Garland as one of the brand's more visible athlete-marketers. Putting him at the centre of a launch designed to be consumed in-app gives the sponsor a recurring placement across the league's own surfaces, and gives the league a star whose profile travels.
Garland's appearance for the Clippers is itself worth noting. The Cavaliers selected him with the fifth overall pick of the 2019 NBA draft, and he spent his first six professional seasons in Cleveland before a 2025 trade to Los Angeles. Film-room access, by definition, follows players across teams. That the league is opening its in-house production to a recently moved star suggests the editorial choices inside the NBA App are not strictly tied to jersey colour.
The structural read
What the league is doing here is not novel in form — team and league video departments have produced similar material for years. It is novel in distribution. By routing the content through the NBA App rather than through, say, a YouTube channel, the league retains the audience relationship, the first-party data layer and the sponsorship inventory that come with it. The footage remains owned rather than licensed to platforms that monetise on their own terms.
The wider pattern across US sports has been a steady accumulation of direct-to-consumer distribution by the leagues themselves. The NBA has moved earlier and faster than most. A branded content series built around a star guard and a sponsor turns that distribution muscle into a measurable marketing product rather than a passive archive.
What remains uncertain
The two posts that anchor this read are promotional. They tell readers what the series is and where to find it; they do not disclose view counts, episode cadence, or how long the league intends to run the format. Whether this becomes a recurring property or a one-off tied to a New Balance campaign is not stated in the available material.
It is also worth noting that a behind-the-scenes series is, definitionally, the league's own framing of its own culture. The NBA has elected to open the film room; what it chooses to keep off-camera is a separate question, and one this promotion does not address.
Desk note: Monexus framed this as a distribution-and-sponsorship story rather than a player profile, because the league's own promotional material foregrounds the format and the partner over Garland's career arc.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/NBALive/27194
- https://t.me/NBALive/27193
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darius_Garland
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Balance