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Jan 20, 2026

EXCLUSIVE: Shaq Answers Call to Help Student Whose Education Was at Risk

EXCLUSIVE: Shaq Answers Call to Help Student Whose Education Was at Risk
  • 9 minutes
On a lighter note, a young student. Whose well education hung in the balance, reached out to Shaquille O'Neal for help. And guess what? Shaq showed up. [00:00:16] When a classmate education hung in the balance, one student reached out to Shaq to provide aid. I want you to put up this picture for a mass. We talk about metro Atlanta. You see, this is America, too. The line between public and private education is often imagined as a clean divide. [00:00:34] Those who can afford options and those who cannot. The reality of many families is far messier. So across Georgia, families pieced together tuition assistance, vouchers, scholarships, financial aid and second jobs in an effort to give their children [00:00:50] what they believe will be a safer classroom, more individualized attention, or simply a better chance. So private school for them is not a luxury. It is a calculated risk. One medical bill. One missed paycheck away from complete collapse. [00:01:07] This is the reality. That reality came sharply into view this winter. It's a place called Woodward Academy, a private school long known for drawing students from across the region and for maintaining one of the more economically and racially diverse student bodies [00:01:22] among Georgia's independent schools. When a medical emergency disrupted one family's finances, a mother fell behind on tuition payments despite her efforts. Her child was barred from returning to school. There was no allegation of misconduct, no academic failure, just a policy [00:01:40] colliding with the family's limits. The situation might have ended there quietly, as the stories often do. And not. Had it not been for another student, Ava Wilson, a classmate understood what was happening and how little time remained. [00:02:00] Years earlier, She met Shaquille O'Neal at that time. She asked if he would consider donating to her elementary fundraiser. Elementary school fundraiser. He did so quietly, like he does many times, helping her lead her grade [00:02:19] in contributions that year. There was no announcement. There was no photograph. There was no ceremony. Ava remembered something simpler that he cared about kids. He cared about education, and that despite his fame, he carried [00:02:34] himself like the biggest kid in the room. Her mother cautioned her against reaching out again. O'Neal, she explained, receives countless requests for money, attention and time. It was not fair to add another. Ava decided to do it anyway. Quote. Even though my mom said I couldn't, I knew that Shaq was the only one [00:02:52] who could do this because time was running out, Ava said. Shaq is the best person in the world and I know how much he cares about kids. He knows how to talk to us. He's like the biggest kid, so I knew he would help. [00:03:07] He always does the right thing. End quote. Guess what? Shaq answered again. Shaquille O'Neal answered the call. But rather than handle the situation alone this time, he reached out to people he trusts public officials who he believes represent a kind of civic [00:03:23] leadership that too often goes unseen. So he contacted a guy named, Sheriff Reginald B Scandrick. I know the sheriff. He's the sheriff of Henry County. And he also reached out to Sheriff Pat Labatt of Fulton County. I know Pat, too. [00:03:40] Their decision to step in was rooted not just in their roles, but also in their shared history that long predates their title. Both of these elected sheriffs have been close friends for more than 40 years. Both attended Frederick Douglass High School, growing up in the same area [00:03:56] of Atlanta, navigating similar challenges in their early lives. Both have amazing stories. Those experiences shaped their approach to leadership, and neither has forgotten where they came from. So that perspective informed their response. For them, helping was not a favor. It was an extension of responsibility. [00:04:15] The timing added significance on Christmas Day 2025. O'Neill had been promoted to chief of community relations at the Henry County Sheriff's Office, formalizing years of work focused on building trust, engaging young people and serving as a bridge between residents and law enforcement. [00:04:32] The appointment, made by Sheriff Scandrick expanded a long standing commitment to Community first public safety. Quote. This is exactly what that commitment looks like, Scandrick said. When a child's future is at stake and we can help stabilize it, we should. [00:04:47] And one of the big fella calls we answer always emphasized the broader message. Quote, we want people to see the full picture, he said. We're not perfect, but we care deeply about families and about kids staying on track. That part of the work matters as much. Together, O'Neill and the two sheriffs paid the students tuition arrears [00:05:04] and covered the remaining balance for the school year, allowing him to return to class without interruption. For O'Neal, education is not an abstract value. It is always often credited his upbringing and particularly the influence of his mother, Doctor Lucille O'Neal, with instilling discipline [00:05:23] and respect for learning. If a kid wants to learn, a life gets in the way, he said. That's when adults are supposed to step in. O'Neal. Doctor O'Neal. Doctor Shaquille O'Neal. He's a doctor himself. He's also delivered about where he directs his energy. [00:05:39] He avoids Partizan politics, he said, not out of indifference, but out of focus. Quote I see too much good happening every day, he explained. I'd rather put my time and resources there. End quote. The episode arrives amid broader debates about education access in Georgia, [00:05:57] a nationwide debate over school vouchers, public school funding and whether private education wise will mitigate inequality. Families like this one. Those debates are not ideological. They are in fact practical. They are about proximity to opportunity and the fragile scaffolding [00:06:14] that holds aspiration in place. The story is not ultimately about celebrity intervention or a single school. It is about scale and limits. Shaquille O'Neal is a larger than life figure whose generosity has reached countless people for decades. Even so, he cannot help everyone. But he can do. [00:06:32] And what he did here was respond when it mattered for one child, at one moment when the margin was thin and the outcome uncertain. He later asked whether children should defy their mothers or kneel, laughed. Only this time, he said, flashing his trademark grin. [00:06:52] Then he paused. But moms should listen to, Shaq. A remarkable heart. There's a picture I, I shared with my production team. So This gives you an idea of him. [00:07:09] This is me and Shaq doing the annual Christmas toy giveaway. Now, technically it's me and him, but when Shaq is on the fly with you, it's just Shaq. All right, just Shaquille O'Neal. There's nobody else. And he's with some of the, judges from our Fulton County bench [00:07:27] led by, the remarkable, chief magistrate judge of Fulton County, Cassandra Kirk. We were in the city of Eastpointe. That's a metro Atlanta city giving out toys. I think we gave out 3000 toys that day. [00:07:42] It is one of the most economically disadvantaged cities in the state of Georgia. So that's just the kind of man he is. And big ups to Ava for seeing something, saying something, and knowing when it was appropriate to say, mom, you taught me better than what? [00:08:02] Than what you just said to me. So I'm still going to reach out and try to figure out how to make this work. All right. Alright, thought Sharon. Okay, first doc, you're larger than life too. But it was difficult to pick you out of the picture because he just sucks up so much of the space. [00:08:18] I love Shaquille O'Neal, and I love the way you told this story, because it's about a community that came together. He may be a billionaire or close to it. But he can't help everyone. I don't know why he always answers the call, but he does. [00:08:33] And I just think it's remarkable that the two sheriffs jumped into men that you know, and have worked with again and again to remember where they came from. They weren't always, you know, top law enforcement in their counties. They had struggles and overcame them. [00:08:48] And so I think I loved the way he, Shaq and the sheriffs, they're focusing on the positive here and showing kids early on. You can count on us, us men and, a young lady to see you through this. I do wish the school would have come up with a solution, but that's just me. [00:09:04] Yeah. And that that that becomes the thing that's inside. The thing that has to still be discussed.