Quote of the Day

“One [cowboy] draws a pistol and fires a shot into a campfire, which bursts into flames. It’s terrific fun, but when we think of Elvis, is a cowpoke spinning a flaming lasso something that springs to mind? I mean, if someone is going to fire a gun, he might as well aim it at a television.” — John Katsilometes, on one of the goofier tropes in Cirque du Soleil‘s Viva Elvis, which opened last night at Aria.

Posted in Cirque du Soleil, CityCenter, Current, Entertainment, MGM Mirage, The Strip | 1 Comment

Skin(less) City

Before we get into the good (?) stuff, I should mention that S&G has been nominated as part of Las Vegas CityLife‘s “Best of the Valley” poll. I probably should have pimped this a week ago, when the poll went “live,” but it kept slipping my mind. Anyway, as an incentive to vote in its survey, CityLife is offering a free iPod Touch, although I imagine that most of you have one — or something much like it — already (along with Vegas Mate, of course, which just added S&G to its news feed).

Among many cruel remarks aimed at our fair city, I winced at the veracity of #14 (“Las Vegas is still a small town, and a hick one at that”). Why? For two, I’d just attended an absolutely riveting revival of Mark Medoff‘s When You Coming Back, Red Ryder? at the College of Southern Nevada and only slightly less meritorious production of Tracy LettsBug at Las Vegas Little Theatre. Both plays call for nudity. Neither production bared more than an odd midriff or two. Recent stagings of Bug in Oakland and Denver didn’t flinch from the full monty but Vegas wimped out.

For all our “decadent” bravado, Continue reading

Posted in Colorado, Current, Detroit, Economy, Entertainment, International, Isle of Capri, Kansas, Massachusetts, MGM Mirage, Midnight Jim Gibbons, Problem gambling, Regulation, Technology, The Strip | 5 Comments

Quote of the Day

“The problem with slapping Mitt Romney is that you’re liable to break your hand on his hair.” — DailyFiasco.com, on the recent sissy fight between the itinerant candidate and rapper Sky Blu.

Posted in Current, Transportation | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

Sheldon Adelson, TV star

There I was, wrapping up a two-day “staycation” with dinner at Metro Pizza when I looked up and … let’s say I’m lucky I didn’t choke to death from shock at what I saw. There was Las Vegas Sands potentate Sheldon Adelson in the hot seat on Face to Face with Jon Ralston. What made this a jolt is that Adelson is a longtime inhabitant of Ralston’s “Chicken List,” home to local figures who boycott the show.

Perhaps since Sue Lowden had renounced her F2F boycott, Adelson couldn’t let it get about that Lowden had bigger huevos than did he. Or perhaps now that Ralston’s show is carried all over Nevada on network affiliates and has Jim Rogers‘ not-inconsiderable backing, Adelson decided it was time to graciously bow to reality.

Venetian-Macao-Hotel-and-Convention-Center

Venetian Macao: cash cow

The timing gave Adelson a chance to put the best face he could on that morning’s earnings report, about which the consensus appears to be “ho-hum,” even though net revenue was a half-million above Street expectations (and a huge improvement on 4Q08). Analysts appear to have gone somewhat into shock at the revelation that Continue reading

Posted in Archon Corp., Current, Economy, Entertainment, International, James Packer, Lawrence Ho, Macau, Melco Crown Entertainment, Pennsylvania, Regulation, Sheldon Adelson, Sports, Steve Wynn, The Strip, TV, Wall Street, Wayne F. Newton | 1 Comment

Sands & MGM previewed

Weighing in ahead of Las Vegas Sands and MGM Mirage conference calls, J.P. Morgan analysts have some early projections. They remain bullish on Marina Bay Sands, although it may now open in late May. (Incredibly, Morgan says this one-month discrepancy is immaterial to cash-flow forecasts.) In Macao, ADRs remain soft — no surprise there — but convention business is expected to double from 2009. If so, heartiest congratulations are in order to Sheldon Adelson‘s management team.

Sands Bethlehem

It’s quantifiable: Sands Bethlehem is a dud.

Sands is predicted to beat revenue projections, thanks largely to Macao. The Chinese enclave represents 79% of 4Q09 cash flow. When you consider that Morgan is projecting Marina Bay Sands to surpass those numbers in seven months, in an untested market, S&G skepticism may be forgivable. The one spider at the LVS picnic is Sands Bethlehem, which isn’t even coming close to cash-flow projections (less than $10 million for the quarter). If that Pennsylvania trend doesn’t improve, Adelson is looking at a measly 5% return on investment.

Macao casino floorOver at MGM Mirage, CEO Jim Murren can point to MGM Grand Macau‘s 12% ROI in the last quarter as vindication of his decision to bail on Atlantic City in favor of China. (In truth, the former was a lost cause the moment Pansy Ho refused to testify before the New Jersey Casino Control Commission, dumping the whole mess in Murren’s lap as she waltzed off into the sunset.)

Morgan predicts a nearly $40 million shortfall from Wall Street’s cash-flow consensus for tout MGM Mirage ($302 million). However, its analysts enumerate several positive auguries, including …

• Improved Chinese New Year and Consumer Electronics Show attendance.

• Room rates still declining — but more gently than before.

• Strong high-end play, especially from overseas “whales.”

• Re$ort fee$ (’nuff said).

• 90%+ occupancy last month at (unspecified) major MGM Strip hotels.

• “Bellagio‘s results remain strong,” trending upward from last year’s. He may have been gone a decade, but one of the key players in MGM’s continued success is the living ghost of Steve Wynn. If he wants to take credit for that, he’ll get no argument from this corner of the peanut gallery.

Posted in Atlantic City, Current, Economy, International, Macau, MGM Mirage, Pansy Ho, Pennsylvania, Regulation, Sheldon Adelson, Singapore, Steve Wynn, The Strip, Tourism, Wall Street | 6 Comments

Harrah’s: too big to fail

halkyardTake a good look at that fresh-faced man to the left. His name is Jonathan Halkyard and he’s the CFO of Harrah’s Entertainment. If he seems like a kid who’s running up a reckless tab on Dad’s credit card, blame it not on youth (he’s 45) but on a financial strategy that the Sun‘s Liz Benston and industry insiders describe in terms that include: “Byzantine,” “reckless,” “curious,” “risky,” “extremely opaque,” as well as, to be fair, “spectacular”. Halkyard’s Job #1 is to pay down — or find creative ways of avoiding paying down — $15 billion over the next nine years … plus whatever additional debt CEO Gary Loveman has managed to rack up in the interval.

So if you’ve been wondering where Harrah’s is getting the scratch to take on Planet Hollywood, possibly build an Ohio racino, expand into Rhode Island and even — if rumors are true — offer $600 million to buy James Packer out of Melco Crown Entertainment, it’s all a matter of Halkyard’s ledger-demain. As Benston explains, Harrah’s is meeting its debt schedules, “And yet, it has often paid bondholders millions less than they were owed. Some analysts call this a form of backing out on debts.” (S&G would call it something considerably less diplomatic.)

In other words, it’s easy to — as one Wall Street firm put it — be “manufacturing cash flow” if your modus operandi includes persuading bondholders to take a Yul Brynner haircut in the form of a dime-on-the-dollar buyback. Of course, if you’re creditor who signed off on that Faustian pact, it must be chagrining to see Loveman lard up Harrah’s with another half-billion in Planet Ho debt or read leaks that he’s supposedly flinging 600 mil at James Packer’s feet.

Perhaps had these bankers and bondholders not been meant to fleeced, the good Lord would not have made them sheep — but the shears have been working long and skillfully at One Harrah’s Court. And, unlike bankrupt colleagues Station Casinos and Herbst Gaming, nobody has uttered the “F” word (“fraudulent conveyance”) in connection with Harrah’s, even though the blue-sky projections that accompanied its LBO were nearly as hard to believe as Station’s. (Perhaps it’s because the price-to-cash-flow valuation of the Station deal was so preposterous, much more so than Harrah’s was, that the Loveman/Leon Black cock-up has drawn less opprobrium.) The company still remains overexposed in Atlantic City and Lake Tahoe (despite shuttering teeny-weeny Bill’s Casino up there) and has accrued so much Las Vegas Strip acreage it could take decades to recoup the investment.

octaviustowerrendering_011209For that matter, were they not secured by real estate (like perhaps the lovely, vacant Octavius Tower, above), we’d say new Harrah’s bonds are scarcely worth the paper on which they’ll be printed. And though they are secured, anybody underwriting Harrah’s management at this point had better have a high pain-tolerance threshold in their wallet. What’s the over/under on Halkyard announcing a postponement of the maturity on the new notes — or offering to buy them back at distressed rates? It’s worked for Harrah’s before.

Regarding his 2019 deadline, Halkyard says, “I like our chances that business will recover in that period.” Yes, and a stopped watch will be accurate 6,572 times during his timeframe. Saying the casino biz will recover by 2019 is like predicting the sun will rise tomorrow: There’s a chance you’ll be wrong but nobody’s taking odds against you. Still, he can afford a bit of swagger. Harrah’s has got the bond and banking sectors by the short hairs, and they don’t dare force the issue given their level of exposure.

Who’s too big to fail? Harrah’s, that’s who. For its financiers, bankruptcy is not an option. As Benston puts it, “Although top executives typically lose their jobs and ownership in a company in bankruptcy, the process can wipe the slate clean of debt, enabling it to compete more effectively.”

Sounds good to us.

Posted in Atlantic City, Harrah's, Herbst Gaming, James Packer, Lake Tahoe, Melco Crown Entertainment, Ohio, Planet Hollywood, Racinos, Station Casinos, The Strip, Wall Street | Comments Off on Harrah’s: too big to fail

Canaries in the coal mine

A minor brouhaha has been playing out in the pages of Howard Stutz‘s blog. Last Friday, Susquehanna Financial Group apparently sacked gaming analyst Robert LaFleur. “[D]ue to the departure of the analyst from the firm,” said SFG, with faultless deadpan comedic delivery, it would be discontinuing coverage of the sector.

For all of one day, that is. Even before LaFleur’s seat cushion was cool, Rachael Rothman had been designated to fill it. So casino coverage is back “on” at SFG. Could this have anything to do with LaFleur’s divergence from the preferred narrative that MGM Mirage is running away from the field with CityCenter? Or his blowing the whistle on sinking room rates at Aria? In the gaming sector, nobody dares whisper a discouraging word about, say, the ongoing fiasco that is Marina Bay Sands, so Lerner’s CityCenter heresy probably came as a rude shock. It will be interesting to see where he and lands and whether Ms. Rothman is more inclined to sing from the Wall Street hymnal.

Posted in CityCenter, Current, MGM Mirage, Sheldon Adelson, Singapore, The Strip, Wall Street | 1 Comment

Case Bets: Sands in Singapore, casinos in Hawaii, Foxwoods’ prophecy

marina-lvsWhat a turnaround: Las Vegas Sands has finally ‘fessed up that India will be a top feeder market for Marina Bay Sands (left). There’s no shame in that — it simply gives S&G the opportunity to remind Sands that we called “B.S.” on departed COO William Weidner‘s claims that the Indian subcontinent was a target market for Macao.

So where was $5.4 billion MBS (now expected to miss yet another deadline for opening) supposed to get its clientele? Afghanistan? Mozambique? Tasmania? Meanwhile, not only is Resorts World Sentosa eating Sands’ lunch, Genting Bhd Chairman Lim Kok Thay is rubbing Sheldon’s face in it by projecting a Genting foray into American markets. His wish list consists of “existing resorts that [are] down on their luck.” The line forms to the right …

Is Utah next? Speaking of feeder markets, Las Vegas now needs to worry about one of its crucial arteries: Hawaii. While the news out of the Aloha State isn’t as bad — especially for Boyd Gaming — as it first appears, if budgetary worries are weaking Mormon-thick Hawaii’s once-ironclad opposition to casinos, that would imperil one of Vegas’ most reliable and loyal customer bases. And if Hawaii falls, how much longer can Utah‘s hidebound anti-gambling stance hold fast? S&G doesn’t begrudge entrepreneurs from pursuing gaming ventures in either state but LDS prudishness has been one of Las Vegas’ (and Wendover‘s) best friends.

Foxwoods giveth, Foxwoods robs you blind. In return for giving raises to some employees, Foxwoods Resort Casino is screwing most everyone, halting 401(k) matches. Casino management says the matching contributions will be restored “when the market improves within 12 months.” Wow, that’s some nice crystal ball Foxwoods has. Mind if I borrow it?

Posted in Boyd Gaming, Current, Economy, Genting, International, Labor, Sheldon Adelson, Singapore, Taxes, Tribal | 3 Comments

Quote of the Day

“Because of the [Gov. Jim] Gibbons and [Sen. John] Ensign thing, people come up to me at every event and say, ‘Can he keep it in his pants?'” — Amy Tarkanian, wife of senatorial aspirant Danny Tarkanian, articulating the new litmus test for Nevada politicians.

Posted in Current, Election | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

The Flying Dutchman of the Strip

Pity poor Rockstar: The Tribute. It briefly played Planet Hollywood‘s Wyrick Entertainment Complex last June, then got the boot. An announced revival at the Harmon Theater never materialized. A late-2009 move to the Riviera was ballyhooed. Guess what? Rockstar never opened, quickly supplanted by a rival tribute show, Masters of Rock. So it was back to the Harmon. Or maybe not. Today, LVA received the following e-mail from an undoubtedly long-suffering Rockstar promoter:

I want to thank you very much for assisting me with the promotion and sales for Rockstar: The Tribute, however I have just been informed that due to some structural re-formation the show has been postponed until further notice.
I do hope and look forward to working with you in the near future. As soon as there is a set date for the show to re-open I will be in contact with you and do hope that you will concider [sic] working with us again. Thank you again for all of your efforts and I am truely [sic] sorry for any and all inconvenience this has caused.”
It’s no inconvenience to us, but sympathy accrues to anyone whose wagon was hitched to the chimera that is Rockstar. If this vagabond show ever opens on the Strip, it’ll be front-page news.
• Just what Atlantic City needed …
It looks like they can kiss off February out there.
• Having taken the better part of a year to review the tip-confiscation controversy at Wynn Resorts, Labor Commissioner Michael Tanchek now threatens to delay his oft-postponed ruling into May. Don’t blame him but a passel of Wynn attorneys who just sandbagged him with a new set of legal briefs. If this decision comes down in our lifetimes, it better be earth-shaking in ramifications.
• Mid-March room rates on the Strip look good for (almost) every major player. Wynn is flat but MGM Mirage (11%) and Las Vegas Sands (7%) are up in the March 7-13 period. The laggard is Harrah’s Entertainment, off a whopping 24%. Or, as the Nevada Gaming Control Board would say, “Move along folks, nothing to see here.”
Posted in Atlantic City, Economy, Environment, Harrah's, MGM Mirage, Planet Hollywood, Regulation, Riviera, Sheldon Adelson, Steve Wynn, The Strip | 2 Comments

Now it’s Aria, too

CityCenter‘s new locals-friendly policy has extended to the Aria spa. Unlike the Vdara offer announced last week, this one is good Sun.-Thurs. only but still a 25% discount is not be sneezed at, is it? Hopefully, MGM Mirage has done something to abate the deafening racket in the Aria spa lobby. Stone, stone and more stone: What could possibly go wrong-ong-ong-ong-ong? [/echo effect]

Posted in Architecture, CityCenter, MGM Mirage, The Strip | Comments Off on Now it’s Aria, too

Buy a Vegas condo, get a political donation

A piquant news item, cobbled together from two @RalstonFlash tweets:

This is embarrassing: George Maloof, tapped to host POTUS for DNC fundraiser this week in LV, gave $2,400 to [Sen. Harry] Reid foe [Danny] Tarkanian in Sept. Maloof gave to Reid in ’07, Obama in ’08. I hear Tark bought Palms condo so Maloof felt obligated. Palms boss is big D donor over years.”

What they won’t do to move a Vegas condo in today’s market …

Posted in Economy, Election, George Maloof, Harry Reid, Politics | 2 Comments

President-ial politics

You know January was bad in St. Louis when the lowly President‘s $2 million take was the only revenue increase in the area. While the Harrah’s Entertainment/Ameristar Casinos pair of Maryland Heights riverboats continues to dominate the market with a 57% share, Pinnacle Entertainment‘s late-blooming Lumiere Place continues to suck customers away from the competition, being essentially flat year/year while everybody else slipped 2% or more.

admiralEven though the President is a money-losing proposition for Pinnacle, lawmakers may intervene to keep Missouri regulators from stripping its license. After all, if every casino whose bilges were filling with red ink was de-licensed for that reason, the U.S. casino industry would become considerably emaciated at present. The Missouri Gaming Commission‘s weak reasoning attempts to put a legalistic rationale on a very real frustration: Although the President is a charity case, Pinnacle clings to it as a means of playing keep-away with the Show-Me State’s 13th and final license. That’s a license that could go to a new and more lucrative casino, so watching Pinnacle prop up its failing riverboat is understandably irksome, at least if your brief is to help generate tax revenue for Jefferson City.

You or I might think the company’s game is just not cricket. Pinnacle is certainly facing the karmic consequences of persuading voters to bar the state to new entrants (unless an existing casino goes out of business or is sold). Hell, if the President sank at its moorings, Pinnacle would probably put a slot machine in a lifeboat and declare, “Business as usual.” But that’s a situation that Missouri voters countenanced (to the extent that they pondered the ins and outs of the gaming bidness). If the MGC is going to make Admiral Goeglein and Captain Giovenco walk the plank, it’s going to have to demonstrate that the President is a menace to life and limb or something comparably dire. Besides, why deprive us of the piquant spectacle of Pinnacle deliberately inflicting financial losses on itself lest somebody, somewhere else in Missouri should get to open one more casino?

Posted in Ameristar, Current, Harrah's, Missouri, Pinnacle Entertainment, Regulation, Taxes | Comments Off on President-ial politics

“YCMIU”

As I learned earlier today, that’s PDA shorthand for “You can’t make it up.” (It was used by Jon Ralston in reference to a certain governor’s claim to 11-plus years of celibacy … but I digress.)

Actually, maybe you can make it up. In Massachusetts, a group called United to Stop Slots (U.S.S., geddit?), has issued a Casino Math Workbook for Beacon Hill whose facts and figures, at first glance, look suspiciously like they emanated from someone’s hindquarters. “The report said that for every $1 generated by casinos, it costs taxpayers $3 to deal with increased crime, bankruptcies and other ill effects,” declares The Republican, a western Massachusetts newspaper. “The total increased costs of casinos on social services and regional police and other services is not known, showing a need for an independent analysis of the costs and benefits, the report said.”

Proving that it could talk out of both sides of its mouth, USS’ Workbook also bemoaned the loss of lottery dollars to casino play. So I guess some forms of gambling are OK-er than others. But back to this matter of $1 of casino revenues = $3 of social costs. Gee whiz! We’ve just figured out how to balance the Nevada budget: Close all the casinos (and slot routes, too)! Why, gosh darn it all, we’ll just be rolling in dough. Who knew?

Posted in Economy, Massachusetts, Politics, Problem gambling, Taxes | Comments Off on “YCMIU”

Caveat emptor!

Dr HoCasinos are a good investment — provided they’re outside the United States. That’s pretty much the bottom line, as seen through the rose-colored spectacles of blogger Martin Spring. He likes Genting Bhd and Internet-casino operator bwin Interactive Entertainment. Fine with me. But he also picks Stanley Ho‘s dud of an IPO (scarcely more robust than the frail, ailing casino oligarch himself) and “recovering” Las Vegas Sands. If $16.81/share — or 12% of Sands’ historic high — is recovery, I’d hate to see Spring’s definition of a serious ailment. Also, if he thinks casinos have “largely escaped political attack,” it’s been a long time since he’s read a newspaper.

On a less-snarky note, yes, the runaway runup in Macanese casino business bodes well for SJM and Sands — but also Wynn Resorts and even traditional market laggard MGM Mirage — now with 100% less Borgata! (I won’t throw in Melco Crown Entertainment, as it appears to be experiencing serious internal problems.) And, given Sheldon Adelson‘s surfeit of big-ticket, unfinished projects in the Pacific Rim, wouldn’t you be leerier of that stock than of almost any other Macao or Singapore operator? I know I would.

Posted in Genting, International, Internet gambling, James Packer, Lawrence Ho, Melco Crown Entertainment, MGM Mirage, Sheldon Adelson, Stanley Ho, Steve Wynn, Wall Street | Comments Off on Caveat emptor!

Aqueduct: Penn got hosed

Despite its runaway hyperbole, this Empire State editorial makes a good point: The Aqueduct racino deal smells like a week-old fish and ought to be investigated. (It isn’t — but it should be.) Since all bids involved multiple players, sorting out the “best” candidate involves delving into a lot of companies with which S&G is unfamiliar. However …

A common denominator to all would-be ownership groups was the presence of a casino operator. The winner, Navegante Group is hardly a newbie to the business, having helped Galaxy Entertainment find its feet in Macao. But right now it’s mostly associated with rural Nevada casinos, and with trying to make a go of underfunded operations in downtown Las Vegas and at the Sahara. In both cases, tightwad owners Tamares Group and Sam Nazarian have locked their casinos into a slow death spiral and there’s not much Navegante can do but manage the ensuing decline.

More germane to Aqueduct, Navegante has no racino experience. Neither did rival MGM Mirage (nor did Steve Wynn, who realized that the fix was in and withdrew). Nor did the Seminole Tribe, which was bidding under the rubric of Hard Rock Entertainment. That leaves Harrah’s Entertainment and Penn National. Both run racinos and Harrah’s could install a much larger marketing engine. However, Harrah’s also has an oversupply of Atlantic City casinos (four) and a parimutuel in Chester, Pa., so Eastern Division President Don Marrandino might not promote the property as aggressively as Penn.

Besides, Harrah’s has developed a bad habit of toying with projects, then abandoning them for the next shiny object that comes along. Finally, Penn is better capitalized than Harrah’s — and who thought the day would ever come that one would type that statement? Heck, it was the only candidate to pledge $300 million in upfront money. (Navegante’s partners did, but only after some strong-arming from Albany.)

So if all other considerations are put aside and it’s purely a question of which operator’s resumé most closely measures up with the job at hand, the winner ought to be Penn and it shouldn’t even have been close. Peter Carlino, you got screwed and you have S&G‘s sympathies.

A bit to the south, both racino operators and lawmakers in Delaware are hustling to get table games into play ASAP. A significant motivator is the desire to siphon off players from the Philadelphia market. Enjoy your honeymoon, Delaware, because it’s going to be short. You’ve got a beautiful state but Pennsylvanians aren’t going to drive there once they can play 21 closer to home.

It’s a nippy day in Hell when S&G sees an anti-gambling editorial it likes. But Mike Hollis not only acknowledges his moral/societal objections to gambling in Alabama, he then sets them aside. What Hollis proceeds to do is make a very thorough takedown of legislation pending in Alabama that would legitimize the state’s non-tribal bingo parlors. He raises serious free-market questions, as well as others regarding how the potential tax revenues would be disbursed. Finally, showing that he’s a man of his word, Hollis proposes putting the whole kit ‘n kaboodle to Cotton State voters, in the form of a constitutional amendment.

Hollis makes substantive points I’ve not seen addressed elsewhere. And, given the crazy-quilt of laws that makes electronic legal in some Alabama counties (except when it isn’t), a constitutional amendment looks like the cutting instrument this Gordian knot requires.

Speaking of Hell … the increasingly infernal Fontainebleau saga now pits one bankrupt entity versus another. By the way, it’s become accepted wisdom that F-bleau is 70% finished. What evidence do we have of this? Neither the on-site photographs or video I’ve seen supports that claim. Also, in a KLAS-TV report on Carl Icahn‘s takeover of the property, completion time for F-bleau was estimated at 18 months … on a megaresort that was supposedly only six months from opening last April. Penn National projected that $1.5 billion was required to finish a property on which at least $2 billion has already been spent. None of this sounds like “almost there,” does it?

Posted in Alabama, Atlantic City, Carl Icahn, Downtown, Fontainebleau, Harrah's, Macau, MGM Mirage, New York, Penn National, Pennsylvania, Politics, Racinos, Sahara, Steve Wynn, Tamares Group, The Strip, Tribal, TV | 2 Comments

Quote of the Day

“One of the joys of my youth was watching the Harlem Globetrotters. I have seen them live when I was about 10, as well as watched their movie from the 1940’s and, of course, their legendary appearances on ABC Wide World of Sports. I know that they have struggled to find their place and relevance in recent years. Which is why I was so excited to hear that they are shaking things up in their show a little bit. In order to enhance the audience experience they are removing the Washington Generals as their traveling opponent.
“They’re replacing them with the New Jersey Nets.” — e-mail from an S&G reader and disappointed NBA fan.
Posted in Sports | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

And now for a word from our sponsor …

1249There are only a few opportunities remaining to catch Rainbow Company Youth Theatre‘s Unsung Heroes of Nevada’s Past. This speedy theatrical primer on the founding of Las Vegas is far more delightful than didactic (including a quintet sung by four burros and a cottonwood tree). Director/author Karen McKenney‘s script draws heavily and cleverly upon one of Huntington Press‘ finest efforts, The First 100 by A.D. Hopkins. This comprehensive biographical collection will get you up to speed on any number of Las Vegas’ founding fathers and mothers — from John C. Fremont to Steve Wynn. (If we ever reprint it, we should add a chapter on George Maloof and call it The First 101.)

Many’s the Question of the Day that would have had us stumped were it not for Hopkins’ tireless research. If you can’t make it to Unsung Heroes (a terrific bargain at $3-$7), a copy of The First 100 can be yours for $3. Such a deal! Speaking as a frequent user, I can honestly say it’s worth far more than that.

iq_342059651If Unsung Heroes is a bit too wholesome for your taste, you can always go ’round the back corner of Trump International and partake of the Erotic Heritage Museum ($15 a head). If you think the sheer variety and volume of erotica on display is mind-boggling, get this: It’s but a tiny fraction — approximately 3% — of the entire collection, which includes tens of thousands of adult films. There’s even an entire gallery curated by Ginger Lynn Allen. Actually, that’d be one of the mildest exhibits on display, as there’s something to titillate — or offend — anyone. Even supposedly shocking Zumanity is extremely weak tea by comparison.

Posted in Current, Donald Trump, Entertainment, George Maloof, Movies, Steve Wynn, The Strip | Comments Off on And now for a word from our sponsor …

Quote of the Day

Gibbons-sunglasses-288x300“We will have to eliminate programs and services which make some people feel good, but which we simply can no longer afford.” — Gov. Jim Gibbons (R-NV), proposing to zero-out — among other things — the state’s $1.8 million in grants to programs that treat pathological gamblers. A “feel good” program? The contemptuous wording speaks for itself. Considering that the State of Nevada is the primary beneficiary of casino gambling, its chief executive needs to accept “personal responsibility” rather than plan to just mooch.

Posted in Current, Economy, Midnight Jim Gibbons, Politics, Problem gambling | 1 Comment

IGT quits Japan; Vdara goes bargain-friendly; Singapore opens

rising-sunAfter losing $21 million in Japan last year, IGT is saying a not-so-fond farewell to the Land of the Rising Sun. Its sales of pachislot machines had been in decline and were nowhere near the volume needed to reach break-even. According to a J.P. Morgan research note, governmental tweaking of pachislot rules had ironed much of the game’s volatility away, flattening its customer appeal. If Japan ever OKs Vegas-style casinos, IGT will be back faster than you can say “Jimmy Doolittle” — but Japanese casinos have been “just around the corner” for years now, so don’t go holding your breath.

D’ya remember how, not so long ago, MGM Mirage CEO Jim Murren was kind of pooh-poohing the importance of local customers to CityCenter? It sounds as though there’s been an ever-so-slight modulation of that tune. Today, Vdara e-mail blasted a 20%-off, week-’round spa promotion. If you’re reading this on your mobile device and want to take advantage, text “VDARALV” to 37160. Alas, there’s no additional discount if you tell them S&G sent you.

Resorts WorldJust in the nick of time, the high pajandrums who rule Singapore have given their blessing for Resorts World Sentosa to open its casino for Chinese New Year. It looked very nip and tuck for a while there but Genting Bhd pulled it off. Singaporeans can also start buying their $70/day passes (or $1,000/year all-access pass) to the casino. Make no mistake, this is a huge coup for Genting and a massive embarrassment for Las Vegas Sands which, even with a considerable head start, couldn’t get its act together and thus will miss out on the biggest gambling fortnight of the year. By the time Marina Bay Sands‘ executive team was sacked, it was too late, and while Sheldon Adelson has been putting an exceedingly good face on the whole debacle, it’s a lead-pipe cinch that he’s seething behind his placid façade.

Posted in CityCenter, Genting, IGT, International, MGM Mirage, Regulation, Sheldon Adelson, Singapore, Technology, The Strip, Wall Street | 2 Comments