Los Angeles Lakers veteran forward Jared Dudley wants the NBA to allow fans to hear all the trash-talking that goes on during games on TV.

There won't be any fans at the “bubble” games down in Orlando, Florida, so Dudley thinks this is a great opportunity for basketball enthusiasts to really get a chance to hear what players are saying on the court.

“If I was the NBA, I know obviously there’s inappropriate language at times but throughout most of the game there’s not, but I would have a camera so you could hear,” Jared Dudley told Lakers reporters, via Ryan Ward of ClutchPoints. “This is the one experience we’re trying to sell for the fans at home.

“We don’t have a crowd, so what’s one thing we can give you that we were never able to give you guys before? That would be the in-game experience of what’s trash talking, hearing ‘Bron talk to refs, hearing James Harden when it comes to trying to get a call from a ref, trash talking with Pat Bev and other people. I think fans are intrigued by that. I think they want to hear what people have to say and I think it can bring excitement.”

If the NBA is worried about little kids hearing swear words, maybe commissioner Adam Silver can consider doing what ESPN did for Michael Jordan's documentary, The Last Dance.

The Jordan doc was aired on ESPN and ESPN 2, with the latter bleeping out curse words.

Dudley and the Lakers have the best record in the Western Conference standings. The team will use the eight seeding games to knock off the rust after such a long layoff from basketball.

Once the 2020 playoffs start, the Lakers will have a good shot of winning the title with superstars LeBron James and Anthony Davis leading the way.