I was in the arena the night Flau’jae Johnson won a national championship as the freshman starting 2 guard for the LSU women’s basketball team. I watched her grow from a promising freshman into one of the most recognizable names in women’s basketball, and being chosen #8 overall in the WNBA draft in April.
A few days ago, I met “Big 4” (her nickname based on the trademark number 4 she wears) in person after a Seattle Storm game in Atlanta. Amidst the hundred-plus fans waiting to meet her, she signed a jersey, told me “I appreciate you” and gave me a fist bump and I had a brush with greatness. I have met other heroes in my life, including Raúl Alfonsín, Andre Braugher, Geoff Tate and even the Dalai Lama, but Flau’jae is different and perhaps the most unique of them all. Why? Because she personifies the limitless American Dream and all that talented, driven individuals can achieve in the United States.
First of all, she is 22 years old, and has accomplished more than most accomplish in 22 lifetimes. Second, she excels in multiple fields that rarely overlap, and third, she gives back all the time. Her story isn’t just a sports story or a music story. It’s an American story, and it has something to say to those of us who spend our careers helping people who we believe “belong” in this country and why. Lastly, she is the personification of the enduring reality that the American Dream is limitless.
For those of you who don’t know her: she’s a professional athlete. Drafted eighth overall in the 2026 WNBA Draft, she arrived in the league having already won an NCAA championship as a freshman at LSU in 2023, then spent four seasons compiling All-SEC honors and nearly 15 points a game as one of the most dynamic guards in college basketball.
She’s also an accomplished recording artist. Long before the WNBA drafted her, national audiences knew her as a rapper, a Golden Buzzer recipient on “America’s Got Talent” at 14, a cast member on Lifetime’s “The Rap Game,” and, more recently, a collaborator with Lil Wayne and an artist with her own catalog of albums and singles. She has turned pain into art: her father, Savannah rapper Jason “Camoflauge” Johnson, was murdered five months before she was born, and much of her music, including songs written about gun violence in her hometown, carries that loss directly into the public conversation.
Last but not least, she has built a name as an advocate and philanthropist. In 2026, she formalized that work by founding the More to 4 Foundation, named for her jersey number, but built around the idea that there’s more to her than the number suggests. The foundation focuses on family support, education, arts, and sports and wellness in the communities that shaped her, running annual back-to-school drives, holiday assistance, and support aimed at single mothers and under-resourced families, first in Savannah and now in Baton Rouge and Seattle as her career has moved her.
Before the foundation even had a name, she was already putting her platform to similarly concrete use: as a spokesperson for Experian’s 2025 debt-relief campaign, she helped the company erase $5 million in consumer debt for thousands of Louisiana families in a state with one of the highest poverty rates in the country, with more wiped out for every LSU tournament win.
That work runs alongside an endorsement portfolio that reads like a Fortune 500 client list: e.l.f. Cosmetics, Experian, JBL, MassMutual, Oreo, Powerade, and Samsung, on top of a recording deal with Roc Nation and an equity stake in the 3-on-3 women’s league Unrivaled that she signed before she’d even turned pro. It’s the kind of portfolio companies build around athletes who’ve been stars for a decade, not a 22-year-old rookie, and it exists because she built an audience and a brand well before the WNBA drafted her.
Basketball alone would be a career. Music alone would be a career. Advocacy alone would be a career. She is doing all three, at the same time, before turning 23.
Why this matters beyond basketball
Flau’jae Johnson is proof of concept that the U.S. is still the greatest place to be the best you can be. She didn’t inherit a stable, resourced path to any of this. She grew up in Savannah without a father, in a family that had to build its own machinery of support from scratch—her mother became her manager, founding a company to handle her deals before Flau’jae had even graduated high school. Nothing about her circumstances guaranteed a Division I scholarship, let alone a WNBA draft slot, a national fan base, and a music career layered on top. What she had was talent, relentless work, and the best place for that talent and work to actually go somewhere.
That is the same promise immigrants are betting on when they uproot their lives and cross oceans and borders to get here. It’s the reason the phrase “American Dream” means anything at all: not that the starting line is equal, but that the finish line isn’t fixed by the starting line. Flau’jae Johnson’s rise from a Savannah childhood marked by tragedy to a national platform in two different industries is the same story, told from a different starting point, that every immigrant family is hoping to write for themselves. If the promise can hold for a kid dealt a hard hand inside the country, it’s the same promise worth extending, honestly and consistently, to the people still arriving from outside it. That’s the case for keeping the lanes open—not a metaphor, but a policy choice, and one this country still has the chance to get right.
The dream, still open
Flau’jae Johnson will keep making music, keep playing professional basketball, and keep talking about the community that shaped her. None of that erases how uneven American opportunity still is. But it does something else worth holding onto: it proves the ceiling isn’t fixed.
That’s the case worth making with her story: the dream’s door has to stay open to the kids already here trying to climb through hardship, and to the people still arriving, still betting that this is the one place where a story like hers can still be written.
Thank you, Flau’jae, for inspiring so many kids out there, even this 52-year-old kid. You are proof positive that the American Dream is real.