Jordan Heck

@JordanHeckFF

Metta World Peace, the player formerly known as Ron Artest, talked to Larry King Wednesday night on the web series "Larry King Now."

The two discussed multiple topics, but near the end of the near half-hour interview King opened up the questioning to Twitter. The first question asked, "If you could win a championship for any city? Which city would that be?" World Peace said Indianapolis.

"Honestly, there are two teams I would want to win a championship for. Number one would be Indiana," he said. "Great owner. A team that kind of sparked my career. Larry Bird and Donnie Walsh, they helped me out a lot."

His second city? Detroit.

"Because of the brawl," he said. "And I just think it would be an amazing story to win a championship for Detroit."

He also spoke in depth about the Malice in The Palace earlier in the interview.

"That night, I was still going through a lot at that time," he said. "I was going through some therapy sessions. And I was working on my anger management problems. So when I got in the altercation with Ben Wallace I immediately said 'Okay, practice what you being told in the sessions.' So I went to lay on the scorer's table. And I didn't expect somebody to throw something and hit me in the face. To this day, I still don't understand why people said I started something when I totally didn't start it. You know, I didn't hit Ben Wallace first, uh, and I didn't throw something at myself.

"Now, I did run in the stands. That's something that's a fact. And I think people should just stick to the facts when they bring up this story. And stop making up stories. Because I didn't start the Malice at the Palace."

King then came in and said World Peace flew off the handles.

"I did fly off the handles. I flew off like three, four handles that night."

As that conversation ended, King went on to ask World Peace about becoming friends with the man who threw the bottle.

"After the brawl happened, and I was getting so much backlash from the media and people telling other people's stories and not being creative and telling the right story. I just thought like everybody hated me. You know, so I had something out towards everybody. And a year later I kept seeing my psychologist and she's like 'I think we might want to face your fears' and things like that.

"So I decided to reach out to John Green (the fan) and we started to talk and it took a lot of weight off my shoulders. We still keep in touch."

You can watch the full interview below or by clicking here.