Having come from an upbringing in a broken family and financial distress in the Chicago area, Wade said he appreciates the shelter-at-home difficulties for many."In a sense, for me, I feel like we're so lucky, we're so blessed, and everyone isn't in the same position that that ones talking on the front line are," he said. "So it’s been a little hard for me to come out and put those messages out.“And even though we definitely got to play as a team — to beat this, we all got to get on the same page and we definitely got to stay in and make sure we’re taking care of ourselves — it’s been hard for me to come out and say, ‘Hey, stay at home,’ this and that, because I’m living in a mansion. We have things at our home that a lot of people don’t have.”He said it is imperative to consider those less fortunate."So this world that we live in has never been equal," he said. "And it's a lot of communities have never felt equality, what people talk about. Right now, we're trying to make everybody equal, but the world has never been that way.“So it’s been hard for me, as someone who lives a life of privilege, to come out and really say a lot of those things. Even, though, yes it needs to be said, it needs to be done, because we definitely need everybody to play together.”