Quote of the Day

Gibber & Prez“[President Barack] Obama‘s team, content to have bailed out Wall Street, seem to now run the rest of the economy on a cash accounting basis. That’s bad, self-defeating policy.” — The Washington Note Publisher Steve Clemons, accusing the White House of setting a course “for the next three years [that] will essentially forfeit America’s growth future to China.” Good reading, as is Robert Reich‘s takedown of the “tiny … ideas” being proposed.

Posted in Economy, International, Macau, Midnight Jim Gibbons, Politics, Transportation, Wall Street | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

Two minutes at Mandarin Oriental

It can’t be as cool as it looks, right? Trust me … it’s cooler.

Posted in CityCenter, Current, Dining, MGM Mirage, The Strip, Tourism | 2 Comments

Head over to Twitter …

I’m in the nexus between one big research project and another, scrambling like made to catch up on news in the casinosphere. So the blogorrhea is suffering but the Twitter feed is jumping like a pack of jackrabbits. So check out @StiffsGeorges for a steady stream of news McNuggets and (hopefully) some decent snark. Or is “decent snark” oxymoronic?

Posted in Current, Technology | Comments Off on Head over to Twitter …

Quote of the Day

Casino Oceanus“Once visiting Oceanus, one can see why it is not having a negative impact on Sands [Macao] (the quality of properties are vastly different).” — J.P. Morgan analyst Joseph Greff, politely dissing Stanley Ho‘s newest gambling den, built in a converted department store.

Posted in Macau, Sheldon Adelson, Stanley Ho, Wall Street | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

Illegal casino bucks mar NV governor’s race

MontandonOK, with a candidate field that includes scandal-prone incumbent Midnight Jim Gibbons, you might ask, “What’s there to mar?” Well, how ’bout illegal overseas campaign cash funneled to former North Las Vegas Mayor Michael Montandon (left) by the reclusive owners of a “failsino.”

To backtrack briefly, North Las Vegas has three undeveloped gaming-entitled parcels. One is held by Boyd Gaming, while another set, along I-15 near Lamb, is titled to Runvee Inc., a consortium of Hong Kong-based businessmen who dabble in Las Vegas real estate. It’s a nondescript assemblage of scrubland that various Runvee iterations have been sitting on since the Carter administration. Since its casino zoning is irrevocable, there’s nothing NLV can do to nudge, budge or blast Runvee into doing Continue reading

Posted in Archon Corp., Boyd Gaming, Election, Harry Reid, International, Midnight Jim Gibbons, North Las Vegas, Politics, Station Casinos | 2 Comments

Paging Estée Lauder …

tropicana“Back to Vegas … just how would one combine hotel room disinfectant, smoke, glittery exotic dancer lotion, rental car upholstery cleaner and buffet food into a pleasant cologne? For authenticity, you’d also need an injection of White Shoulders that has been worn since 1945 by the little old lady vacationing from Topeka.” — from Monday’s Raving Consulting e-mail blast.

Posted in Marketing, Tourism | Comments Off on Paging Estée Lauder …

Quote of the Day

Lance Burton_Background“He’s gone all Criss Angel and it’s not for the better.” — LVA staffer’s comment on the gloomy, vampiric-looking Lance Burton who haunts the newish ads for his Monte Carlo show.

Posted in Current, Entertainment, MGM Mirage, The Strip | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

Quote of the Day

lady_gaga_ac“There’s [sic] still rumors about Lady Gaga signing with the Palms. Singing sensation Matt Goss has ended his four months at the Palms, so there may just be room available for someone new.” — Monti Rock III, from his latest e-mail blast. He thinks George Maloof‘s gonna stick Lady Gaga in “The Gossy Room”? Tell me another one.

Posted in Entertainment, George Maloof | 1 Comment

Ghost town

crystalsEconomic forecasting is a forbiddingly tricky science but you still have to wonder what convinced MGM Mirage that there was either A) an unabated market for ultra-high-end retail in Las Vegas or B) that such demand as already existed could be siphoned away from the (considerable) competition elsewhere.

This thought is prompted by a Thursday-night visit to Crystals. Had it not been for the media event at Tiffany & Co. (at which I accidentally baptized myself with half a martini), attendance in the mall would have fallen over 50%. Most of those strolling through were middle-class sightseers, just there to look, and the big draw was clearly the marvelous set of water cyclones at the center of the mall.

Consumption was conspicuous by its absence. The score at Roberto Cavalli was Salespeople: 4, Customers: 0. Maybe Continue reading

Posted in Architecture, CityCenter, Current, Dining, Economy, Entertainment, George Maloof, MGM Mirage, The Strip, Tourism | 7 Comments

S&G readers are the best


How come? Well, here’s a fr’instance: I was chatting with one of our regulars yesterday and he volunteered an idea that gave me one of those, “Wow! I could have had a V-8” moments.

In discussing beloved but hard to find games like Sigma Derby, he suggested that a Downtown casino with floor space to spare (like the Plaza or Binion’s Gambling Hall) might clear out some of its Joe Average slot inventory in favor of a kind of Slot Machine Hall of Fame. It would feature games that don’t have mass appeal but still are remembered fondly. In addition to Sigma Derby, you could have Lion’s Share or some of the many, many, many themed slots that IGT, Bally Technologies and others poured onto the market in the early part of the decade — Marilyn Monroe, Frank Sinatra, S&H Green Stamps, etc.

It’d be gambling’s answer to the Pinball Hall of Fame, newly ensconced near the Liberace Museum. The Pinball HoF gives you the best time-on-device value in Las Vegas, in my humble opinion. Why couldn’t the casino industry take a page from its book? And, hey, if Downtown doesn’t pick up the gauntlet perhaps the Tropicana could be the one to give it a whirl. After all, that casino’s got “nostalgia” writ large. If you’re reading this, Alex Yemenidjian, just remember that S&G‘s advice is worth exactly what you’re paying for it.

Posted in Alex Yemenidjian, Bally Technologies, Downtown, IGT, Tamares Group, Technology, Tourism | 10 Comments

More from the mailbag …

Here’s some inside insight into what was happening during the most recent Consumer Electronics Show, during which Las Vegas Sands tossed some exhibitors from their Venelazzo suites because they were conducting product demos off the show floor. A show attendee writes …

“Interesting. The company [X] works for was in one of the hundreds of ‘Official CES’ demo rooms that held all of the high-end audio companies. CES has put the high-end audio exhibits in an off-site hotel for as long as I can remember because they need the private rooms to quietly demo their equipment. I’m guessing that the people kicked out were using other rooms at the hotel.

“However, also for as long as I can remember, there have been vendors showing off-site. What I don’t know is if they were paying the CEA some fee for this or just doing it on their own. My guess is that they were paying the CEA but wanted to be offsite so they could have more private meetings. These shows are incredibly expensive and it would be good to find a lower cost way for smaller companies to exhibit and hold meetings. Unfortunately the CEA has a ‘one size fits all’ mentality where you pay the same per square-foot cost for the convention center and then must pay the exorbitant fees for all the on-site services.”

Posted in Current, Economy, Sheldon Adelson, Technology, The Strip, Tourism | 1 Comment

Quote of the Day

“This is of serious concern to me and to the other commanders in Iraq and Afghanistan because, indeed, it conveys a perception that is absolutely contrary to what it is that we have sought to do. It is disturbing to us, frankly, that this was done … I can assure you that there is much greater sensitivity among our troopers about this kind of thing than, apparently, there is in whatever contractor produced those sights.” — Gen. David Petraeus, on the subject of references to 2 Corinthians 4:6, found embossed upon rifles made by Trijicom Inc. The latter will cease the practice, which was uncovered by the Military Religious Freedom Foundation.

Posted in Current, International | 3 Comments

Gibbons replaced!

So says the U.S. Postal Service, so it’s gotta be true, right? On my “Change of Address Confirmation,” under “Community Resources,” it lists the chief executive of the Silver State as “Gov. Jon Corzine (D),” followed by a Reno phone number. Wow, that Corzine sure landed on his feet! Or did he merely go from a budgetary frying pan to a fire?

Seriously, when the USPS transposes the governors of New Jersey and Nevada, and can’t tell me who my new (?) congressperson is, it’s a doggone miracle they can figure out where our mail is supposed to go.

Continued sh!tty with intermittent crappiness. That’s the forecast for Las Vegas. Those of you who stayed home to “game” aren’t missing squat. We’re in our fourth straight day of rain and you can’t even see the tops of the hotels, so pervasive is the overcast. Jets taking off from McCarran International Airport are scarcely airborne before they’re lost to view. The street outside S&G HQ is a literal torrent, rushing northbound and submerging at least half the roadway. Little did I know that you could get riverfront property in Vegas.

If you’re staying for the weekend and are in the mood for laughs, Las Vegas Little Theatre has them in plentiful supply with Don’t Dress for Dinner. Seats, however, are at a premium. This Franco-Anglo bedroom farce is doing so well LVLT has added a Sunday-night performance, making Don’t Dress probably the hottest ticket in Vegas.

Posted in Current, Entertainment, Midnight Jim Gibbons, Tourism, Transportation | 2 Comments

From the mail bag

las-vegas-monorail
“How is that nobody seems to be giving (dis)credit where it’s due regarding the failure of the Monorail? It’s pretty simple — the damn thing is too far from the Strip. If you’re standing on the corner in front of MGM Grand and want to go to the corner in front of Bally’s, I’d guess the trip is quicker walking down the street than making your way through each casino. Even if you’re in the middle of the casino at MGM it’s quite a hike to the train. The BellagioCityCenterMonte Carlo tram is similarly pointless, but at least that one didn’t cost hundreds of millions.”
Posted in CityCenter, Harrah's, MGM Mirage, The Strip, Tourism, Transportation | Comments Off on From the mail bag

Loveman lays down the law

You can do whatever you like at a Harrah’s Entertainment property … provided it’s legal. CEO Gary Loveman explains, albeit with an uncharacteristic degree of opacity:

Posted in Harrah's | 4 Comments

Quote of the Day

“[Oakland Raiders Coach Tom] Cable has pointed to the team’s improvement after [JaMarcus] Russell‘s midseason benching as proof that he deserves another year to get the Raiders back to the playoffs.” — No, it just proves that Bruce Gradkowski is the superior quarterback … and that Cable is scraping the bottom of the excuse barrel. Raider Nation deserves better.

Posted in Current, Sports | 2 Comments

Wynn getting into bargain race

Steve WynnWith MGM Mirage aggressively discounting its Strip properties, it was only so long before Wynn Resorts had to enter the chase. It’s taking the form of a 25% “early savings” markdown that you get if you book your room 45 days ahead of time. The deal comes with a $100 resort credit that’s good for everything up to and including Garth Brooks tickets. Given the dustup over access to tickets to see Brooks, I wonder how this new offer is going to play. Brooks does give the best show on the Strip, though.

Meanwhile, down at the Monte Carlo, magician Lance Burton and his show are both starting to show their age. (Anybody remember those goofy TV commercials where some woman enthused, “It’s phasmatastic!”? If you didn’t know better, you’d have thought it was a send-up.)

Posted in Current, Economy, Entertainment, Midnight Jim Gibbons, Steve Wynn, The Strip | 1 Comment

“Peepshow” conundrum

That once and (maybe) future Strip spectacle is probably going to be included in tomorrow’s “Best of the Valley” polls, in Las Vegas CityLife. This raises an interesting conundrum: Since there have been three distinct iterations of Peepshow since its opening, for which one are CityLife readers being asked to vote?

Perhaps Peepshow should rate a plebiscite of its own, something like ..

Which *version* of Peepshow do you like best?

SPL90759_022

A) Mark I, starring Mel B. (above) and Kelly Monaco

iq_29760957_thumb

B) Mark II, starring Shoshana Bean and Holly Madison, plus slightly more nudity

C) Mark III, starring Aubrey O’Day (above) and Madison, but with no live band and a smaller supporting ensemble

D) None of the above

S&G readers, how would you vote? Do it like Chicagoans: early and often.

Posted in Entertainment, Planet Hollywood | 1 Comment

Case Bets: Net Bets, Harrah’s money grab & why China matters

Mark Juliano, CEO of Trump Entertainment Resorts, has been all over the papers lately. First, he came out in support of a massive taxpayer subsidy (backed by two unions) that would forgive Revel 75% of its room and sales taxes for two decades. Yes, 20 years. As outrageous as the request seems on its face, S&G has long been of the opinion that megaresort development in Atlantic City — the former gambling capital’s sole hope of future success — isn’t going to be accomplished without government subventions on a grand scale.

That tax break isn’t the only item on the industry’s wish list as a new gubernatorial administration ensconces itself in Trenton. A fixed tax rate is another wished-for bauble as are unspecified “reforms” of the Garden State’s regulatory framework (uh-oh). New Jersey has the best casino-regulation system in the U.S. You can’t get away with any crap there — like 86-ing advantage players. It would be nice if Gov. Christie resisted the temptation to rejigger the scales of justice.

battle_of_trentonJuliano is less enthused with a devil’s bargain that would allow racinos into New Jersey in return for casino-run intra-state Internet gambling. The latter is a desperation move which might, just might, stabilize Atlantic City’s casino industry, perhaps even pull it out of its dive. That reliable reverse barometer, Mayor Lorenzo Langford, is in the “for” column and if Langford favors something you can be certain that if it’s not an outright stinker of an idea it ought to at least be approached with caution.

One must balance the possibility that Internet gambling can be made to work (and not create issues with the feds) with the inevitability that racinos will amplify the giant sucking sound that is Atlantic City circa 2008-2010. William Marsh, president of the A.C. city council, is particularly on point when he raises the question of whether Net betting would actually put more bodies in the casinos. Or is Atlantic City’s casino industry so battered and cynical that it doesn’t care how the revenue arrives anymore?

Caesars ProtestTo no one’s surprise, the endgame in Harrah’s Entertainment‘s sluggish negotiations with its dealers has been revealed. And, yes, Harrah’s is extending a grubby paw toward dealers’ tips. What’s more, if the Transport Workers Union is telling the truth, Harrah’s intends to renege on 401(k) matches and vacation days. That’d certainly be the kind of shabbiness S&G associates with the fiasco-prone leadership of CEO Gary Loveman, whose mistakes are amortized at players’ and employees’ expense.

In this instance, Loveman and Caesars Palace President Gary Selesner have played their cards very well. Harrah’s waterlogged financial condition puts the TWU in a poor bargaining position. Harrah’s need only go through the motions of negotiating in order to impose a contract upon the dealers. And if dealers don’t like it, they can either suck it up or strike … when Las Vegas is coming out of one of the lowest ebbs in its history. The odds of Caesars patrons honoring a picket line are closer to “none” than “slim,” and Selesner could have his pick of scabs, given the layoffs that have ravaged this town.

Harrah’s can show it has bargained with some degree of good faith: It took a proposal to change the 1 hour/20 minutes work-break ratio to 80/20 out of the discussion (even though it would have enabled Caesars to thin its dealer pool). However, the rationalization that robbing dealer Peter to pay pit boss Paul is a “cost-effective way to supplement employees’ earnings” is pure balderdash. It’s a means to give Paul a raise at Peter’s expense without Harrah’s being out one thin dime.

When a company is so hard up that it’s reduced to pitting its employees against one another in this fashion, maybe it’s time for a purge of the executive suite … unless Loveman and Selesner are willing to forfeit comparable amounts of their pay packets as a “cost effective way to supplement” those front-workers who are feeling the Great Recession the worst. But the Winter Olympics will likely be conducted in Hell before we see that kind of altruism at One Harrah’s Court.

GibbyDuring one of his frequent displays of ignorance, Nevada Gov. Jim Gibbons proclaimed it a waste of taxpayer money to market to China (potentially erasing one of the signature accomplishments of predecessor — and rival — Kenny Guinn). If Midnight Jim did his homework, he’d know that baccarat revenue is keeping the Strip afloat through some very tough times. What nation’s players are obsessed with baccarat? You guessed it … China.

Baccarat’s share of Strip action has grown and, as Liz Benston writes, “visitors from China probably make up fewer than 300,000 of Las Vegas’ annual visitor traffic of more than 30 million people,” citing MGM Mirage Chief Marketing Officer William Hornbuckle. “These visitors have to obtain travel visas from their government and those visas are hard to get. As a result, most of the tourists are members of China’s wealthy elite, and, Hornbuckle said, they have a significant effect on tourism disproportionate to their numbers.” [emphasis added] Casinos also get a bigger rake of the action here, since they don’t have to share it with VIP-junket impresarios, as is the case in Macao.

If I were Midnight Jim Gibbons and had a budget to balance, I’d be saying a little prayer of thanks for every Chinese “whale” who chose to bring his or her baccarat action to Nevada, especially when there’s so much casino action close to home. But that’s asking for a degree of perspicacity the Silver State’s sorry excuse for a chief executive has never shown.

Posted in Atlantic City, Current, Donald Trump, Economy, Harrah's, Horseracing, International, Internet gambling, Macau, MGM Mirage, Midnight Jim Gibbons, Politics, Racinos, Regulation, Taxes, The Strip | 3 Comments

Memo to George Maloof

Forget about hiring Lady Gaga for a Palms residency. Just hire Christopher Walken to give his inimitable interpretations of Ms. Gaga’s lyrics. It’ll be much funnier … and perhaps a scintilla more understandable.

Posted in Entertainment, George Maloof | 2 Comments