His journey from the locker room, where he was a member of three division-winning teams, to the editing bay wasn't a straight line. Still, family, preparation guided it, and a vision that began even before his NFL career ended.
Wilson enrolled in law school, mapping out a stable future. But then tragedy struck. Wilson's brother was killed in a gun violence incident, a loss that cut deep, but clarified his purpose. Tomorrow wasn't promised. If he wanted to tell stories and chase his passions, now was the time.
"That made up my mind to go ahead, and if you're going to do something, do it because everything ain't promised. Tomorrow is not promised. So, you got to go ahead and do what you got to do, and I was like, I always can fall back on law."
In a family where his grandmother and aunt taught in Harrisburg classrooms and his mother balanced social work with teaching, Wilson had been raised to see education as a way forward. That foundation gave him direction in the middle of grief. It also pushed him in sports.
At J.P. McCaskey High School in Lancaster, Wilson excelled on both the football field and the basketball court, once squaring off against powerhouse Chester High and its star guard Jameer Nelson as the packed gym throbbed with anticipation. Nelson would later become the 2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Player of the Year at Saint Joseph's and go on to an NBA career.
The lessons of preparation and resilience he carried from those gyms and fields would echo throughout his career. The 2011 NFL lockout proved to be a blessing in disguise for Wilson, who took advantage of the pause to imagine life after football. While teammates debated training regimens, he sat with LSAT prep books.
By the time his playing days ended in 2012, Wilson already knew his next move — especially after receiving the life-changing call after practice with the Ravens, somewhere between the soothing sting of treatment and the monotony of the training room. A Los Angeles number flashed across his screen. Just like that, a dream became reality.
He moved to Los Angeles to pursue a career in entertainment by enrolling in the UCLA School of Law. Upon earning his Juris Doctorate with a specialization in sports and entertainment, Wilson passed the California State Bar Exam but declined to practice as an attorney. Instead, he launched his own film company while learning to direct at the UCLA School of Theater, Film, and Television.
While enrolled at UCLA TFT, Wilson's first student film, Mid City Blue, was nominated for a Student Academy Award in 2018 and won competitions at several other film festivals, including HBO Best Short Film at the Martha's Vineyard African American Film Festival. Before earning his Master of Fine Arts from UCLA in 2019, Wilson served as executive producer on the NFL Network docuseries Indivisible for its first season.
Law school at UCLA was rigorous, but Wilson found himself drawn away from statutes and contracts toward scripts and cameras. Movies had always been his first language, shared with cousins in late-night marathons and memorized lines. Storytelling felt less like a pivot than a return. Throughout his journey from UCLA Law to UCLA Film, Wilson leaned on The Trust (Powered by the NFLPA).