Buss was managing a real estate company in
Las Vegas when his father appointed him in 1982 to run the
Los Angeles Lazers of the
Major Indoor Soccer League (MISL). Buss began racing
Formula Three cars. He wanted a million-dollar race car, but his father refused to pay for it, not wanting his son to race at the higher speeds. When the
Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) was founded in 1996, Buss's father appointed him as president of the
Los Angeles Sparks. Buss would say he was feeling exhausted with the managerial tasks, and when announcing to his father he no longer had the heart in working there, Jerry agreed to sell the Sparks. He started a social networking site for artists, Musester.com. By 2013, Buss was the
Los Angeles Lakers' executive vice president of strategic development. His father died that year, and his 66% controlling ownership of the Lakers passed to six of his children via four trusts, the Buss Family Trusts, In addition to Buss and his siblings
Jim,
Jeanie, and Janie, the other heirs were their half-brothers—Joey and Jesse—from an ex-girlfriend of their father. On February 21, 2017, Jeanie, the Lakers' president, fired Jim as president of basketball operations. Buss thought that his brother should have been reassigned privately instead of a public firing. In a letter from Buss three days later, Jeanie was informed that he and Jim were proposing a Lakers' board of directors that did not include her. She responded by filing a
temporary restraining order and suing her brothers for breaching their duties as trustees. After the brothers' proposal failed, Buss resigned from the team, and he and Jim resigned as co-trustees, replaced by Janie and Joey. one of the oldest comedy clubs in the country. A few months after his purchase, the club closed due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. Buss took the opportunity to renovate the club, which re-opened in 2023 after a three-year hiatus and $4 million overhaul. ==Political career==