When he found out he had made the NBA All-Star Game for a second consecutive season, Karl-Anthony Towns was outside a movie theater screening of his first film role in the comedy "What Men Want."
Perched on a bench, Towns was watching the announcement on TNT, and upon broadcaster Ernie Johnson saying his name, he let his iPhone fall to the floor. He needed both hands to bury his face and cry.
Soon his parents came running to congratulate him. Eventually the tears dried.
The next day after Timberwolves practice, Towns spoke about what that moment meant to him. How making the All-Star Game, which takes place Sunday in Charlotte, is his rainbow amid a stormy season, one that he said has taken a toll on him both personally and professionally.
Towns hasn't discussed much about his personal life, except to say he had a friend die the week of the All-Star selection. Professionally, he said this season has taken a toll on his body.
"I'm a guy who keeps off social media and keeps myself off of being TMZ paparazzi and all this stuff. No one really gets to know what's really going on in my life, and that's how I like it," Towns said. "If people knew everything I had to go through, not just anything else but just physically with my body, I went through a lot to get to this point, and I'm just glad I've come out stronger and I've come out able to play at this kind of level."
Renewed dominance
The All-Star appearance comes after a season in which former teammate Jimmy Butler questioned Towns' drive and ability to succeed both before Butler left Minnesota and after he was traded to Philadelphia.
The Wolves were 4-9 at the time of the trade, and after two energetic home wins last week — games in which Minnesota outscored the Clippers and Rockets by a combined 40 points with Towns on the floor — they sit at 27-30 at the break. That's not where they want to be, but they do have a winning record since the trade, after Butler said they couldn't win without him.