High-Stakes Drama in Clipped Season Finale As Playoffs Loom for the Clippers

Note: This story contains spoilers from “Clipped” Season 3, Episode 6.

The final episode of “Clipped” sees the Clippers headed to the playoffs, as Shelley Sterling (Jacki Weaver) looked for a buyer for the team and Donald Sterling (Ed O’Neill) conducted his infamous “apology” interview with CNN’s Anderson Cooper. The conversation went off the rails, with him accusing Cooper of being “more of a racist than I am” and yelling about Magic Johnson having AIDS.

High-Stakes Drama in Clipped Season Finale As Playoffs Loom for the Clippers

After watching the interview and talking about selling the Clippers with her lawyer Pierce O’Donnell, public relations representative Seth Burton and friend Justine, Shelley revealed she’d revised the family trust so Donald could be removed as a co-trustee if he was found incompetent. After being tested by a doctor, Donald and Shelley are told that he has Alzheimer’s Disease. Meanwhile, Doc Rivers (Laurence Fishburne) told his players to block out the noise from the Sterling interview and focus on winning the playoffs, but they end up losing.

High-Stakes Drama in Clipped Season Finale As Playoffs Loom for the Clippers

Shelley and Donald proceeded to meet with Steve Ballmer about an offer to buy the Clippers for $2 billion, which the latter rejected and said he won’t sell the team. Pierce O’Donnell urged Shelley to use the revised family trust to her advantage. While Donald quickly caught onto the plot and sued both Shelley and the NBA, he was ultimately removed and replaced by Ballmer.

High-Stakes Drama in Clipped Season Finale As Playoffs Loom for the Clippers

Later in the episode, V. Stiviano (Cleopatra Coleman) met with her lawyer, revealing she’s running out of money and at risk of losing her house due to a lawsuit with Shelley. Upon entering the court house, V. saw Shelley and told her that if Donald were there, he would take her side. But he immediately followed in behind Shelley, taking her hand as the couple walked into the courtroom.

High-Stakes Drama in Clipped Season Finale As Playoffs Loom for the Clippers

This is her house of cards tumbling down. She finally got everything she wanted… And then it just starts to devolve…, Coleman told TheWrap. In the end, Stiviano lost the court case and her house. Before exiting her home, Stiviano scratched the words “Sterling Properties” into the wall using a Clippers bottle opener.

High-Stakes Drama in Clipped Season Finale As Playoffs Loom for the Clippers

Coleman revealed that director Michael Blyden had her enter the empty duplex for the first time when the cameras were rolling for a more authentic reaction.

I walked in with my roller skates in hand and was able to just discover the empty space… They shot it all handheld so that I wasn’t restricted… Coleman explained. Coleman added that her performance in the scene was inspired by watching Cate Blanchett in Tár.

High-Stakes Drama in Clipped Season Finale As Playoffs Loom for the Clippers

You don’t own him, Justine told Shelley during a confrontation while celebrating the sale of the team. The show then moved to V. watching her children wash a graffiti-covered car to help make ends meet, which prompted her decision to return to working for Donald Sterling.

While carrying cups of coffee toward the house, her lawyer told her about a podcast asking her to share her story—a reference to the ESPN 30 for 30 series that ‘Clipped’ is based on—but she declined. After signing for a package, she’s last seen sitting on the Sterlings’ doorstep. Meanwhile, the Sterlings act as if everything was normal, though Shelley is still privately disturbed by the tape.

High-Stakes Drama in Clipped Season Finale As Playoffs Loom for the Clippers

Those last moments represent… how they are somewhat inescapable…, Coleman said. The fact that we ended it there really does speak to… how… .

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