So this will be the fault of Dish, that each city is now having two, three, four sports channels, all wanting the highest possible price, all negotiating separately...... I can tell you in advance. If they want enough that Dish has to raise rates for everyone, it may not happen.
I'm not in the LA area, and don't care about the Lakers, but, in general terms, I think having access to the local sports teams' games is a big driver of subscriptions for cable and satellite. When I was a kid, my family subscribed to cable for the first time primarily because my father and I wanted to have access to every Orioles (baseball) game. Just recently as an adult, when I had to cancel my cable package due to cost, I declined to subscribe to their $20 lifeline (Basically OTA only) or $30 no-sports packages because without the local sports teams, I felt like I'd get more out of diverting the money to something that didn't have anything to do with television if it came right down to it. When I started looking at some dish options a few weeks later, my primary determining factors after "Can I afford to pay the bill?" were "Will I get all the Orioles games?" and "Will I get my favorite news channel, MSNBC?". Anything below that combo and I felt like I didn't want to sacrifice to pay a bill that wouldn't offer me enough value.
Even after subscribing to Dish, one of it's pluses versus cable is that it carries the alternate overflow channel for CSN Mid-Atlantic, so I can see those Caps games that conflict with Wizards games (or whatever). One of the big minuses is that I have to miss those Caps games that air on Versus (Versus is a America's Top 250 channel on Dish, and I can't afford that package), and don't get an out of market local OTA channel that used to give me additional Ravens games (Not a huge deal, because mainly they don't air the home games out here, and I have a relative who has tickets and usually invites me to the home games -- and if not I can try to watch at someone's house or hit a bar a couple times a year -- but it's something I do think about).
I'm not even, except for Ravens football (Which I'm kind of fanatical about), someone who watches every game of my favorite sports teams. I usually get really into it and watch all the games for a few weeks, then just catch the box scores or news clippings for a while, then get into it again. But when I want to watch a game, it's very important that it be available to me.
It's not that I totally ignore television shows and movies, but, truthfully, in this day and age, Netflix and Redbox are inexpensive enough that they are more convenient -- I pick the movie, and can pause it to make dinner, take care of my dog, take a phone call, rest my eyes if they are strained, etc.. And the idea of scheduling my life around television shows feels obsolete these days, generally one can catch them online later on hulu or whatever (Not consistently with my current slow Internet connection, but in generalized terms). Granted, people can get DVR, but I'm not paying for it personally -- I am poor enough that a barbones no-HD no-DVR type setup is all I can really manage or justify. In the end, yeah, I'll turn on the tv and channel surf and catch a sitcom or some wrestling every once in a while, and occasionally I might watch a movie on it, but that's not what I'm paying for, that's just a bonus.
Anyhow, I don't think I'm alone in this by any means. Probably a good 50% of the adult male population in this country has cable or satellite primarily because of sports, and usually it's their local sports that they mostly watch. I had a friend who had relatives with Dish Network a few years back, and Dish's slowness to pick up MASN actually caused them to pay a massive fee to exit their contract after only a few months with Dish because they had a family member who couldn't do without Orioles games.
So, I've got to imagine, these RSNs that they get into contract disputes with or are slow to pick up cost them big money in terms of losing subscribers and potential subscribers. I'm surprised that Dish doesn't just pay whatever the increase is. I mean, if they play hardball with FX or CourtTV or whatever channel like that, very few people will leave over it, but the local sports RSN(s) is(are) a "must-have" for a ton of people.