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The first thing you notice when you enter Crypto.com Arena for a Lakers playoff game isn’t the noise or the roar of the crowd. 

Oftentimes, it’s the famous faces that walk right past you.

On any given night it could be the biggest names in sports, music, and entertainment. Stand in line for the bathroom with Bad Bunny, overhear a joke from Eddie Murphy, or high-five Matthew Stafford. 


  Laker fans cheer during a slam dunk by LeBron James. MediaNews Group via Getty Images Laker fans cheer during a slam dunk by LeBron James. MediaNews Group via Getty Images

It’s true that the arena feels more like a stage than a furnace. ESPN broadcaster Doris Burke commented on it just before tipoff of Game 3 between the Thunder and Lakers.

“Is this building remarkably quiet for a playoff game?” she asked Dave Pasch. She wasn’t wrong. But she wasn’t entirely right either. 

A Lakers game doesn’t behave like other NBA arenas. It’s not meant to be a college-like atmosphere, or have a PA announcer yelling at the crowd what to do every second of the game.


  Lakers fans cheering at Game 2 between the Oklahoma City Thunder and the Los Angeles Lakers. NBAE via Getty Images Lakers fans cheering at Game 2 between the Oklahoma City Thunder and the Los Angeles Lakers. NBAE via Getty Images

Former Lakers’ owner Jerry Buss always envisioned a Lakers game as a theatrical experience.

He wanted fans to experience a “show.” He added a live band, the Laker girls, and courtside celebrities. He dimmed the crowd lights low and put a spotlight on the court. He mixed basketball with Hollywood glamour, music and performance. He wanted you to feel like you were in “the hottest night club” in town.

It was a must-see event, and fans flocked to be seen. 

And that is still the vibe to this very day. 


  Bad Bunny sitting courtside at a Lakers game. Getty Images Bad Bunny sitting courtside at a Lakers game. Getty Images

  Matthew Stafford and Kelly Hall watching a Lakers game. Getty Images Matthew Stafford and Kelly Hall watching a Lakers game. Getty Images

In OKC, the experience is engineered. A voice booms through the speakers, directing every emotional beat. “Stand up!” “Get Loud!” Chant “De-fense” on cue.

The arena is much smaller, the ceiling lower, the acoustics sharper. The sound has nowhere to go but down. Yes, it’s louder, and an exceptional atmosphere, but it’s also a lot different than LA for a reason. 

In Houston, at the Toyota Center, they leaned on volume too—sometimes artificially.

The in-house sound system is the loudest we’ve ever heard. It’s constantly blasting music that rattles your chest and hurts your ear drums. But turn that music off and you’ll notice a half-empty arena for a playoff game with at least 40% of the fans in attendance wearing purple and gold.

When the Lakers go on a run, and the music stops playing, guess which fanbase you hear?

At a Lakers game, there is no conductor commanding the crowd or music to drown out everyone.

Lakers fans operate on instinct. They recognize matchups before they unfold. They sense momentum shifts like a change in the wind. When the moment demands it, the building responds organically. Not because it was told, but because it knows it has to. 


  Lakers fans watch a game from the sidelines. William Navarro-Imagn Images Lakers fans watch a game from the sidelines. William Navarro-Imagn Images

During several sequences in Game 3, the referees didn’t blow the whistle on obvious fouls committed by the Thunder.

“Good no call,” said Burke on the broadcast. 

But fans in the arena knew better.


  ESPN broadcaster Doris Burke commented on the atmosphere just before tipoff of Game 3 between the Thunder and Lakers. NBAE via Getty Images ESPN broadcaster Doris Burke commented on the atmosphere just before tipoff of Game 3 between the Thunder and Lakers. NBAE via Getty Images

They knew the history of one of the worst officiated games ever seen in Game 2. “Refs you suck!” The sellout crowd chanted in unison. Minutes later, after Rui Hachimura drained a corner three, they chanted “Rui! Rui! Rui!” 

That nuance doesn’t always translate on television.

The camera loves the celebrities sitting courtside.

It’s Leonard DiCaprio, Will Ferrell, and Noah Wyle.


  Emmy Award-winning actor Noah Wyle with his wife Sara Wells clapping at a Lakers game. Los Angeles Times via Getty Images Emmy Award-winning actor Noah Wyle with his wife Sara Wells clapping at a Lakers game. Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

Some celebrities are diehards. Some are guests. Some are there because a studio handed them a seat hours before tipoff to promote their new movie, show, or album. The result can feel detached through a screen.

But that’s only a fraction of the room.

Beyond the floor is a different audience.

Season-ticket holders who have been through every era of Lakers basketball. They know the playoffs are not a fashion show but a war of attrition. Fans will save for months just to sit in the upper bowl and cheer for four quarters. Tourists from all over the world come for the experience of seeing LeBron James and the Lakers in action. 

But the Lakers are just one experience in a city that never stops moving.


  Flea sticking out his tongue next to Melody Ehsani at a Lakers game. Getty Images Flea sticking out his tongue next to Melody Ehsani at a Lakers game. Getty Images

On any given night you can see the back-to-back World Series champion Dodgers a few miles away. LAFC and LA Galaxy are kicking off down the street. There’s concerts, movie premieres, live shows. It’s a constant competition for attention.

OKC doesn’t have that problem. The Thunder are the main event in town. They are the only event in town. 

So yes, Lakers fans can arrive late and leave early. Traffic will do that to you. They’ll take photos because everything in L.A. is a backdrop. And yes, they’ll even bet against their own team. But they’re also one of the largest and well-represented fanbases in the world. 

The Lakers playoff atmosphere might not be the loudest in the NBA.

But it might be the most misunderstood.

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