As the NBA offseason rolls along, so do random interviews and tidbits from the star players that make the league a year-round spectacle.

Kevin Durant might be enjoying the most satisfying summer of his basketball career, one year removed from the stress of leaving the Oklahoma City Thunder now. He's basking in the glory of reaching the pinnacle of hoops after capturing a title with the Golden State Warriors. 

Durant stopped by the YouTube Live studios with the spare time he has now that he's stationed in one of the technology capitals in the United States, taking part in a host of random segments with social media personalities. During the event he revealed a handful of interesting tidbits, including the NBA legends he'd most want to play with. 

KD was asked which historical NBA player he'd love to play alongside with and had two surprising picks. He didn't go with with the greatest of all-time in Michael Jordan, but was split between two legends in their own right: Magic Johnson and Wilt Chamberlain. 

"It'd probably have to be Wilt Chamberlain, or I'll go Magic Johnson... It's a tie between those two. Magic is next level. I'm a huge Magic fan," Durant said. 

It sounds like Durant has a lot of love and respect for two of the Los Angeles Lakers greats, and he also shared a great story about how he reacted the very first time he met another Lakers legend in Kobe Bryant. 

Durant was shown a decade-old picture dug up from the vault of Instagram with Bryant during a Team USA event. While he couldn't recall how the conversation went down, he still remembered the jitters he had meeting a living legend at 18. 

“I don’t remember the conversation but I can remember that I was very very... I was shaking. Kobe is a god to me, basketball-wise. So just to see him actually know my name at that time... I was 18... it was surreal,” Durant said of his first time meeting Kobe. 

Magic, Wilt and Kobe all receiving nods from Durant is pretty cool from one of the game's current best players, and KD even revealed the one thing he learned from Kobe that day. 

"Every time you touch the ball, shoot it," he said when asked what the Black Mamba taught him. 

Considering Durant's averaged 27.2 points throughout his career, and has never averaged less than 20.3 points per game, that's pretty sound advice.