In the pantheon of global branding, few logos are as instantly recognizable as the silhouette of Michael Jordan soaring through the air. Yet, the "Jumpman" wasn't born from a game-winning dunk or a professional highlight reel. Instead, it was the result born out of a combination of basketball and dance.
Yes, everyone’s beloved “Air Jordan” is not a pose of Jordan dunking but an instruction by a photographer to mimic a graceful dance move inspired by ballet.
Michael Jordan confirms it wasn’t a dunk
During an interview with the Hoop Magazine in 1997, Michael Jordan revealed that the jumpman logo wasn’t what people thought it was: him dunking. He said, "I wasn't even dunking on that one."People think that I was. I just stood on the floor, jumped up, and spread my legs, and they took the picture. I wasn't even running. Actually, it was a ballet move where I jumped up and spread my legs. And I was holding the ball in my left hand."
The story begins in 1984, before Jordan had even played a minute in NBA. Photographer Jacobus Rentmeester was commissioned by Life magazine to capture the stars of the upcoming U.S.
Olympic team. Rather than having Jordan perform a standard power dunk, Rentmeester asked him to execute a grand jeté, a ballet leap.
On a grassy hill at the University of North Carolina, Jordan jumped straight up, splayed his legs wide, and held the ball in his left hand. It was a pose completely unnatural to his actual playing style, but the camera loved it. When Nike saw the photo, they knew they had found their visual north star. They eventually staged their own version of the shoot with MJ in Chicago Bulls gear, with the city skyline in the background, to create the high-resolution image that would become the logo.
One pose helped Michael Jordan build an empire
While Peter Moore designed the initial Wings logo for the Air Jordan 1, it wasn't until the Air Jordan 3 in 1988 that the Jumpman made its official debut on the tongue of the shoe. Designer Tinker Hatfield made the bold choice to favor this silhouette, signaling that Michael Jordan was a brand in himself. What makes the logo authentic is that it captures the feeling of flight rather than the mechanics of it and makes believe that the #23 jersey flies on the court.
It was believed that only 3 million pairs of the shoes would sell in the first year of its release, but $126 million pairs were sold. Michael Jordan’s five-year, $2.5 million deal with Nike in 1984 has evolved into a benchmark that each NBA player dreams of. In 2024 alone, the Jordan brand has generated an estimated $7 billion in sales. Michael Jordan set such a high tone with his sneaker, logo, and branding that the fan craze is still unbeatable to this day.
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