Kevin Durant is going to be the lastest basketball player to have a film created about his childhood and how growing up shaped his NBA career today.

According to Joe Otterson of Variety , here's some news on the series set to be created by Apple:

Titled “Swagger,” the series is inspired by Durant’s youth basketball experiences. It will explore the world of Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) basketball and the lives of the players, their families, and coaches.

Brian Glazer and Ron Howard from Imagine Television will produce the film alongside the media company owned by Durant called Thirty Five Media. Glazer and Durant will executive produce the film while Reggie Rock Bythewood will write and direct.

Durant as a young child was risen by his mother and grandmother before his dad came back in the picture around age 13.

He was a gifted basketball player from a young age and always played on the best AAU teams in the Maryland area. While playing for these teams he won two national titles and played with the likes of Michael Beasley, Greivis Vásquez, and Ty Lawson.

He actually wears his famous number 35 because one of his AAU coaches, Charles Craig who was murdered at the age of 35. Durant was eight years old when he first met coach Craig, who was murdered.

This movie will feature some of those AAU coaches and other players he met in his time growing up in Maryland, and how they helped shape his life.

A release date for the film has not been announced, but keep your eyes peeled in the near future.