Two athletes — Pau Gasol at 0.94 and Kyle Kuzma at 0.94 — sit at the top of the Los Angeles Lakers' similarity graph, but the second cluster pulling the shape is not other sports teams: it's musicians.
The shape is classified as two-peak, and the structure bears that out. The first peak is athletes: Gasol (0.94), Kuzma (0.94), and Lonzo Ball (0.85) are all former Lakers, making this cluster tightly franchise-specific rather than broadly basketball-shaped. The second peak is Musicians and Bands — YG (0.90), ScHoolboy Q (0.86), and Zoe Saldana (0.85, an Actor) round out the top ten alongside a footwear brand, Shoe Palace (0.85), and a rival franchise, the LA Clippers (0.85). Across the full top 10, three neighbors are Athletes (subcategory), three are Musicians and Bands, one is an Actor, one is a Sports Team, one is Footwear, and one is a Website — a genuinely mixed set with no single subcategory dominating.
The footwear and sneaker-media presence (Sneaker News at 0.85) threads the two peaks together: an audience that follows both franchise-adjacent players and LA-rooted hip-hop acts, with sneaker culture as connective tissue. No other Sports Teams appear in the top 10 beyond the Clippers, meaning the Lakers' audience shape is not defined by basketball fandom broadly but by a specific cultural intersection of LA sports, hip-hop, and streetwear.
This two-peak structure suggests an audience whose identity is as much about a city and a cultural scene as it is about basketball.