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Posted At : May 5, 2009 04:05 PM | Posted By : D McKee
Related Categories:
George Maloof,MGM Mirage,Marketing,Politics,Steve Wynn,Encore,Entertainment,Economy,Morgans Hotel Group
On Monday, Gov. Jim Gibbons (R-NV) proclaimed this to be "State Employee Week," complete with flowery script and many a preambulatory clause. That'd be the same Jim Gibbons who, the week before, vowed to cut those same employees salaries even further than the -6% he'd already proposed. No word yet on whether aforesaid employees think having a whole, entire week designated in their honor makes up for a decrease in their take-home pay. (Nevada has the fewest state employees per capita in the U.S., so it's not like they're underworked ... just pay a visit to the DMV sometime.)
Sic transit gloria Gans: Singer/actress Beyoncé Knowles (above) will be playing a short run at Wynn Encore this summer. Reports a source who keeps tabs on casino Web pages, "she was selling tix on what was formerly Danny Gans' 'page' before he was even cold." Lest we need reminding, this is not a sentimental town.
The 'CityCenter effect.' Although MGM Mirage estimates it's had 110,000 applications for a maximum of 12K jobs at CityCenter, it transpires that 17K of those came from within MGM Mirage. While that may give you a 70/30 shot at a CityCenter job if you're already with the company, the rest of us might as well forget it and scan the job listings for vacancies at other MGM Strip casinos. If a Bellagio slot attendant gets a job at Aria, that promotion should manifest itself all the way down to food chain. On other words, this is your big chance to work at Slots A Fun, the casino of which MGM is so ashamed it doesn't list it as a discrete property on its Web site.
Rising above the fray. Confronted with a classless gesture in front of his casino -- and I say that as somebody who saw the protest-like promotion with his own eyes -- Palms owner George Maloof responded with class. By the way, those weren't just 40 guys with signs, they were wearing illuminated, sandwich board-sized placards on their backs. It made quite a startling sight late on a Friday evening, one of the tackiest things I've seen in Vegas (and we write the book on "tacky" here). The Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, meanwhile, continues its downward mobility.
Not quite true. I've seen plenty of entry-level listings on MGM's job site, and even got a few calls back from Circus to Treasure Island (which has a load of open positions listed for what is probably obvious reasons) to Mandalay Bay. None of these ever translated into jobs, or even interviews, but that's largely a problem of my own making by being out of state the moment the calls came.