Jaylen Brown can’t seem to escape the spotlight this offseason. The Boston Celtics star has been on his Twitch stream multiple times in the last week, addressing everything from a $50,000 NBA fine to Tracy McGrady’s cryptic comments about his standing inside the organization. Each appearance has generated a new round of headlines.
Now, NBA champion and former teammate of some of Boston’s bigger names, Kendrick Perkins, is begging him to log off. Perkins took the microphone on ESPN and didn’t hold back.

Kendrick Perkins Tells Jaylen Brown to Stop Talking
Perkins sat in the studio and went straight to Brown’s recent string of commentary.
“It’s everything. My advice to Jaylen Brown is to go on vacation, bro. Quit doubling down because you’re making matters worse,” Perkins said.
“Second thing is, let me tell you why it’s everything, because one, T Mac and Jaylen Brown have a personal relationship. A few people has dropped the ball in this situation…. One was T Mac on his podcast. For him to say that, where you gettin’ that information from? And I’m not gonna question T Mac’s credibility, because that’s my guy. But he dropped the ball by dropping that information,” he said.
The bigger frustration was Brown’s own framing of the season as a personal favorite.
“And now you’re listening to Jaylen Brown, one, if you’re gonna say this was your favorite season of your career, can you provide context and tell us why? Can you tell us why? This is a guy who has won an NBA championship, Finals MVP, conference finals MVP… and you know there’s been questions out there about this relationship,” Perkins continued.
Kendrick Perkins GOES IN on Jaylen Brown doubling down on this season being his favorite of his career:
“It’s everything. My advice to Jaylen Brown is to go on vacation bro. Quit doubling down because you’re making matters worse. T Mac and Jaylen Brown have a Personal… pic.twitter.com/43xqgfRj6E
— NBA Courtside (@NBA__Courtside) May 7, 2026
He kept going, questioning the Tatum dynamic next.
“Fan base has been asking him, when is Jayson Tatum coming back? And all he kept saying, oh, he’s gonna come. JT was just busy, xyz.”
“Jayson Tatum is coming on. He came back and took a back seat, JB, and let you be the Batman of this car you were driving, and you’re excited? This is your best season after being home in the first round? Can somebody help me out?”
Perkins rounded off his arguments by circling back to JB’s fine.
“All I’m sayin’ is stop, dawg! At this point, stop. You’re probably gonna get another fine. The NBA fined you $50,000 for your first comments, and then you somewhat double down again on your livestream and question the officiating again. Stop. Stop!”
“Every time you speak, you’re only making matters worse.”
How Jaylen Brown’s Offseason Spiraled Into a Headline Machine
Boston’s season ended in a Game 7 loss to the Philadelphia 76ers in the first round. Brown went on Twitch shortly after, ripping Joel Embiid for flopping and accusing officials of having an agenda against him. The NBA fined him $50,000.
He hopped back on stream the next day and went after the same talking points. The officiating remarks earned him the fine. The Embiid flopping remarks earned him a separate batch of criticism from analysts and former players.
Then Tracy McGrady spoke on his podcast and lit a different fuse.
“I think his frustration lies deeply within the organization and other things that we don’t have the details to,” McGrady said. “There’s just been a lot of stuff that I’ve been hearing going on with the Boston organization with JB.”
All of this forced Brad Stevens into damage control at his end-of-season press conference on May 6.
“I talked to Jaylen on Monday real quickly, and it was nothing but positive,” Stevens said. “He has not expressed those frustrations to me. We’ve been here 10 years together.”
Brown went back on Twitch the same day to back his president up.
“I hate that our president of basketball operations even had to respond to this,” Brown said. “Me and Brad have a great relationship. I love Boston. If it was up to me, I’d play in Boston for the next 10 years.”
He still defended his earlier “favorite season” framing. Brown pointed to Tatum’s Achilles recovery, the team carrying on without its franchise star, and the locker room’s response to outside doubt. He averaged a career-high 28.7 points per game.
The Celtics finished with the second-best record in the Eastern Conference. And then they blew a 3-1 lead to Philadelphia.
