California, by the numbers

Capitol Weekly breaks down the vital statistics of California’s tribal-casino industry, in case you were curious. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) needn’t worry about additional slot capacity causing traffic jams and more crime: Golden State tribal casinos are mired in a two-year slump. If Schwarzenegger’s successor and his/her legislative confreres don’t like the composition of the compact now in effect, not to worry … they’re only stuck with it for another 20 years.

Posted in California, Economy, Politics, Tribal | 2 Comments

Quote of the Day

reid“I don’t think it’s anything he should resign over at all. I’m just hoping at some point we take one of these things that’s made into this huge racial divide and use it as an opportunity to have some meaningful conversation.” — Verita Black-Prothro, former staffer for Nevada’s GOP congressional delegation, on the newest Sen. Harry Reid (D-NV) flap.

Posted in Current, Harry Reid, Politics | 2 Comments

Big payoff for Pennsylvania

Gov. Ed Rendell (D) and other state leaders have got to be feeling the love for the Keystone State‘s budding casino industry, which generated over $1 billion in tax revenue last year. That boffo return was achieved without table games even with state leader Philadelphia Park offline for a week. December alone was up 28%, even if same-store growth was miniscule. (Rendell, incidentally, comes out a big winner in the Great Table Game War, having applied a swift kick to the Lege’s posterior at the moment it was most needed.)

Sands Beth

The opening of Sands Bethlehem (above) put a beat-down on Mount Airy Casino Resort, which was off 7% for the year. But there’s a silver lining even there, as hotel and F&B numbers at Mount Airy rose somewhere around Continue reading

Posted in Boyd Gaming, Cannery Casino Resorts, Economy, Harrah's, IGT, Indiana, Kentucky, MGM Mirage, Neil Bluhm, Ohio, Penn National, Pennsylvania, Politics, Racinos, Reno, Sheldon Adelson, Taxes, Technology, Tribal, Tropicana Entertainment, TV | 2 Comments

Back to normal

PD*12587144For starters, let’s just write off 2006-7 as an aberration. While dancing in the streets is premature, Nevada‘s casino revenues from November ($873 million) at least give us an excuse to breathe a sigh of relief — especially when other jurisdictions, including Illinois, Indiana, Missouri and Atlantic City, remain locked in the grip of the Great Recession.

Compared to November 2008’s 15% plunge, Nevada gambling joints notched a 4% gain in 11/09. This is the first statewide and Strip uptick in 23 months, despite a slightly unfavorable calendar (fewer weekend days). It’s a demi-recovery, as it was driven by the Strip (+8%) and an unexpected resurgence in the locals market, with Boulder Strip and North Las Vegas up 19% and 21%, respectively.

Nearly every other jurisdiction is in the minus column. Downtown‘s trajectory is the flattest: down 2% in November ’08 and -1% a year later. The mercurial Lake Tahoe market (in which Harrah’s Entertainment is overexposed) was the Debbie Downer of the month, going from 2008’s -5% to a -27% dive year/year (and bringing in a measly $16 million; heck, Elko did better than that).

Considering that Nevada has gone from posting $1 billion-plus monthly revenues on a routine basis to a 2009 that bottomed out at $800 million last October (with December numbers still pending), the Era of Diminished Expectations appears here to stay. Despite ratcheting up the hold still further, Strip slot revenues continued to slip (-4%). Luckily, table play was “robust,” as J.P. Morgan analysts put it, with table drop up 20% and 84% in baccarat. Players lost big, as the house’s baccarat take was 136% up and its table win leapt 24% despite only a miniscule increase in hold.

One swallow doesn’t make a Spring and a terrific November for the Las Vegas and Boulder strips still leaves much of the state lagging far behind. Still, if those two markets have finally bottomed out and are on their way back up, we can indulge in optimism awhile.

Posted in Atlantic City, Boulder Strip, Current, Downtown, Economy, Harrah's, Illinois, Indiana, Lake Tahoe, Missouri, North Las Vegas, The Strip, Wall Street | 1 Comment

There’s life after Midler

Being a member of the troupe in The Showgirl Must Go On was good while it lasted but a “Caesars Salad Girl”‘s gotta eat. In the case of CSGs Kamilah Marshall and Shayna Steele that means cutting a solo CD apiece and then recruiting members of the Showgirl band to back you in a few sets at the Freakin’ Frog (1,650 whiskeys, beers and tequilas!) tomorrow night at 10. The price is right (i.e., free), leaving you that much more to splurge on booze. Can’t find a better deal in Vegas than that.

Posted in Current, Entertainment | Comments Off on There’s life after Midler

That casino smell

As you step through the front doors of Aria‘s check-in foyer, a too-heavy musk is jammed up your nostrils. It smells like the same suffocating attar that’s employed in Venelazzo, except maybe heavier. The good news is that if you get a bit away from the front desk, the choking perfume is no longer present. (The bad news is that the airy North Foyer has a distinct eau de ashtray, redolent of an ineffective HVAC system.)

Anyway, the Las Vegas Sun has sniffed out the company that conjures up these polecat odors, AromaSys. The best part of the story is when the company’s president admits that Sheldon Adelson lays it on too thickly at Venelazzo but that AromaSys was told to bugger off when Continue reading

Posted in Archon Corp., Atlantic City, Baseball, CityCenter, Current, Economy, Florida, Harry Reid, Marketing, MGM Mirage, Politics, Sheldon Adelson, Sports | 4 Comments

Sheldon the Barbarian & other news

Amid reports of vastly improved attendance at this year’s Consumer Electronics Show comes news of a typical overreaction by Las Vegas Sands. I know of one company that was doing off-site demos and fortunately wasn’t among the vendors turfed out by Venelazzo management. The company’s rationale for doing demonstrations away from the show floor was that its extremely high-end audio equipment was difficult to display to advantage among all the competing noises that a convention floor entails.

adelson_t200For all of Sheldon Adelson‘s crowing about the return of convention business, his people really stepped in it by evicting 30 or so companies from the Venelazzo premises. (“And packing up was not enough to satisfy the CES staff and hotel security — they were not allowed to hold business meetings in their suite either.”) Some of the blame obviously accrues to CES itself. But after Sands’ pogrom against small exhibitors, perhaps the evicted parties should take their business to competing hotels in 2011 … ones that will be more grateful for the traffic and less persnickety toward their guests.

The question in Singapore, on which Adelson has placed a huge bet, is not whether casinos will stimulate the economy. It’s whether they will do so in significant fashion. Official projections of a “sluggish” 2010 do not augur well for the city-state’s $10 billion in aggregate casino-resort projects.

Serving two masters. Its two-year stint as a ward of the State of New Jersey has brought about an odd pickle for the Tropicana Atlantic City. Specifically, New Jersey Casino Control Commission Chairwoman Linda Kassekert has been wearing the chapeaux of both Trop audit committee and NJCCC boss. This schizoid situation has, not surprisingly, led to situations such as Kassekert having to preside over the licensing of someone she hired while wearing her Trop hat.

Now, Kassekert is 100% more of an audit committee than the Trop possessed during the farcical Bill Yung regime. However, both Frank Catania and former NJCCC member Brad Smith have it exactly right. Kassekert should have retained an independent auditor. For that matter, even though he’s a creature of Yung, Trop President Mark Giannantonio could have been allowed the discretion to appoint his own audit committee. Since he’s working under a microscope, the prospect of more Yungian hanky-panky should have been nil. Given the ethical morass that the Trop has become, one can only say that the new Carl Icahn regime could not arrive a day too soon.

Hurrah for Loveman. The CEO of Harrah’s Entertainment penned a well-phrased blast (in unmistakably Lovemanian language) at the New York Times for reflexively slamming tribal casinos and gambling per se. Gary Loveman didn’t have to come to the tribe’s defense but good on him for so doing. We’d urge him and fellow Democrats to think twice before writing campaign checks to Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, leading candidate to replace Sen. Christopher Dodd (D). Blumenthal’s attitudes in re tribal sovereignty are a throwback to the dark days of Bush II or, worse yet, the benighted regime of Pete Wilson in California. That “plantation mentality” needs to be retired permanently.

The wages of greed. “What do you get when you mix a protracted recession with a series of overly optimistic projections and a credit guarantee from a borderline insolvent bond insurer?”

While that question might seem to apply to any number of stalled resort projects or bankrupt casino developers, in fact it refers to the insolvent Las Vegas Monorail. Too-high ridership projections plus rapacious ticket prices have combined to cancel one another out and render the Monorail an unequivocal failure. The only way to rescue this misconceived project would be to extend it, as planned, to McCarran International Airport (which, in turn, might serve as a useful brake on the avarice of the taxicab companies). However, given the cost that this would entail, is the price of saving the monorail one that could ever be recouped or are we just throwing good (public) money after bad?

(Full disclosure: If pushed out to McCarran on the currently planned route, which would include a whistle stop at the Thomas & Mack Arena, the Monorail would pass a block from my house and ruin its Strip view. Thinking positively, we could add trainspotting to the planespotting among our spectator sports.)

Good ideas come and go but bad ideas have a half-life of forever. Indiana is prepared to follow the intrusive footsteps of Colorado and use casinos as collectors of delinquent child-support payments. Guvmint is forever trying to get the gambling bidness to do its dirty work, and this particular bad idea was floated — and rapidly shot down — during both the Clinton and Bush II administrations. With no state-level equivalent of Frank J. Fahrenkopf, however, the industry is in present danger of winning the battle in Washington, D.C., only to lose it over and over again on its home turf.

MGM FoxwoodsCityCenter’s problems are as nothing compared to those of Foxwoods Resort Casino. Its seemingly propitious alliance with MGM Mirage may have added to the latter’s coffers but acquisition of the MGM brand has become a millstone around Foxwoods’ neck.

Posted in Atlantic City, California, Carl Icahn, Colorado, Columbia Sussex, Current, Economy, Election, Harrah's, Indiana, Politics, Regulation, Sheldon Adelson, Singapore, Taxes, The Strip, Tourism, Transportation, Tribal, Tropicana Entertainment | 5 Comments

Quote of the Day

DSCN1751

“However, weekend room rates at Aria are equal to or great than those at Bellagio in only 6/13 periods (46% of the time).” — from a J.P. Morgan room-rate survey. You just can’t beat a classic.

Posted in CityCenter, Current, Economy, MGM Mirage, The Strip, Tourism | 1 Comment

It’s a miracle!

Riv stripYou’re looking at a photo that was imbedded in a new Riviera press release and — praise be! — Fontainebleau has disappeared. Yes, vanished, gone as though it were never there: like it was all a bad dream. Yes, yes, that’s what it must have been … a dream.

What’s that you say? It’s still there, more pockmarked by the day? [sigh] Too true. Riv President William Westerman is no sorcerer, alas, although some of his employees can obviously work wonders with Photoshop. How we wish he could wave a wand and actually cause F-bleau to dry up and blow away in the desert winds. The megaresort that was to have been a lifeline to the Riviera, Sahara and Circus Circus is now but the carcass of a sinking ship, dragging the first two properties down in its deadly undertow.

Still, you have to give Westerman credit for — even if by necessity — operating “in the now,” dealing for untold years with the economy as it actually exists. History will remember F-bleau overlords Jeffrey Soffer and Glenn Schaffer as being among those who operated in some mad, fantasy-fueled economy that never existed except on over-optimistic spread sheets. Local luminaries say, by gosh, we sure have learned our lesson this time. To those predicting a chastened future, I would reply with the old adage that history repeats itself, first as tragedy and then as farce … or does Vegas have it the other way ’round?

Posted in Economy, Fontainebleau, MGM Mirage, Riviera, Sahara | 5 Comments

It could be worse … couldn’t it?

That’s what passes for optimism these days when confronted by ledgers like those posted by casinos in Illinois and Indiana for December. While the former’s 5% decline hardly looks like cause for celebration, it at least suggests the Land of Lincoln can’t fall much farther than it did during the catastrophe that was 2008 (-21% for the year and -28% in December).

However, it does not imply that this is an opportune moment for legalizing bar-top gambling, replacing existing riverboats with costly new onshore facilities, building out the 10th license (in Des Plaines) or — least of all — adding several new casino licenses, as the Lege is contemplating. Illinois’ $106 million in casino revenue was the lowest total posted in the last two years … hardly the most propitious climate for expansion.

ParadiceBrightest spot amidst the gloom was Boyd Gaming‘s Par-A-Dice riverboat, the sole casino to post an increase (2%). By contrast, the novelty factor finally wore off Casino Rock Island‘s new facility (-4%), which had been posting year/year growth as great as November’s +170%. Despite having to literally rebuild business at Empress Joliet, Penn National Gaming was the biggest aggregate earner for the month ($31 million), while Harrah’s Entertainment edged it out for the greatest aggregate decline (-7%).

The single most lucrative casino remains the MGM Mirage/Hyatt joint venture, Grand Victoria. Despite smoking bans and severe taxation, MGM continues to hang onto the Chicago market … and no wonder, when the choice is between half of $293 million last year vs. 100% of nothing, were MGM to evacuate Illinois. Grand Victoria and Harrah’s Joliet also continue disproportionately large shares of revenue (+9% and +8%, respectively) relative to their number of gambling positions.

The state-sanctioned decimation of casino revenue in Illinois has, oddly, never redounded greatly to the benefit of northern Indiana. Its tier of casinos has, at best, recorded modest gains this year and — more recently — seen the numbers go south (-11.5% in November, -4% last month). Boyd had the good-news story here, too, as Blue Chip continues to stave off new competition from Michigan, up 9.5% in December. It books nearly as much revenue, single-handed as Don Barden‘s two Majestic Star vessels manage combined.

The market leader, however, continues to be Harrah’s monstrously large Horseshoe Hammond, dwarfing all competitors with $39 million for the month and $527 million on the year. Its strength was diluted by Horseshoe Southern Indiana‘s subpar performance, giving Harrah’s a statewide 6% decline for the month.

Hollywood LawrenceburgOnly Penn’s Hollywood Casino Lawrenceburg comes within shouting distance of the Hammond numbers (with $35 million and $426 million, respectively). That was sufficient to give Penn 11% growth for December and bragging rights over everyone else.

The state’s two newish racinos, Indiana Live (+30% last month) and Hoosier Park, continue to bleed the southern riverboats. Privately owned Grand Victoria (-18% last year) is steadily slipping and threatens French Lick Casino‘s stranglehold on last place ($84 million last year but +1.5% in December). Sadly, Casino Aztar‘s comeback story seems to have peaked … but at least it was the lone southern riverboat to eke out a gain (1%) in 2009. We’ll mark that a victory.

Posted in Boyd Gaming, Current, Don Barden, Economy, Harrah's, Illinois, Indiana, MGM Mirage, Neil Bluhm, Penn National, Politics, Racinos, Regulation, Taxes, Tribal, Tropicana Entertainment | 1 Comment

Hard time for Carruthers

CarruthersFormer Betonsports PLC CEO David Carruthers drew 33 months in the slammer for racketeering. The law under which he was convicted, Slick Billy Frist‘s odious UIGEA, is ludicrous and overdue for repeal, but the recklessnss of Carruthers and company founder Gary Kaplan boggles the mind. In particular, S&G is still wondering — 3.5 years after the fact — just what the hell Carruthers was thinking when he elected to change planes at Dallas-Fort Worth (en route to Costa Rica) despite being aware that his company was beneath a Justice Department microscope. He says he was under the impression he was “outside” the laws of the U.S. No, Mr. Carruthers, you just thought you were above them. But don’t worry: The penal system offers myriad opportunities for study, meditation, learning a second career, making new friends and getting lots of tattoos.

Posted in International, Internet gambling, Regulation, Texas | Comments Off on Hard time for Carruthers

Quote of the Day

Sands BethlehemWith table games, Sands Bethworks, which is an hour outside of Manhattan, should be able to draw a more lucrative customer. We believe Las Vegas Sands will now move forward with adding more nongaming amenities.” — Steven Wieczynski, of Stifel Nicolaus Capital Markets, basically telling Sheldon Adelson he’s run out of excuses for leaving the casino project unfinished and needs to complete the multifaceted resort his company is contractually obligated to deliver.

Posted in New York, Pennsylvania, Sheldon Adelson, Wall Street | 3 Comments

2.5 Cheers for Harrah’s

As erratically as it has been run since the departure of Phil Satre, they still get some things right at Harrah’s Entertainment … and not in the sense that a stopped watch is correct twice a day. For instance, Harrah’s was ahead of the curve (showing good business sense) in marketing to the LGBT crowd and took a lead role in pushing for domestic-partnership legislation in Nevada last year. That took both enlightenment and huevos.

In a similar vein, Harrah’s has done a clutch of things lately that may just be enlightened pragmatism but which are still worthy of mention. Restarting on-property sales of the Las Vegas Review-Journal is just good customer service. After all, why incentivize your guests to go somewhere else to get the local paper? I just hope that Harrah’s fatwa against the R-J was rescinded either A) due to customer pressure or B) because corporate leadership realized how petty it was and not C) because R-J Publisher Sherman”Facts Optional” Frederick hypothetically groveled at the feet of Gary Loveman.

While eschewing “resort fees” may not count as doing something, it’s laudable of Harrah’s to resist this odious trend and eminently sensible of them to publicize the fact. Considering that J.P. Morgan‘s data-crunching shows Harrah’s Strip ADRs locked in “dive” while everyone else’s level out (and the picture gets worse if you lump Planet Hollywood with the Harrah’s portfolio), it also must have taken some stones to resist the siren song of add-on fees.

Besides, they’re a chiseling irritation that customers are neither quick to forget or forgive. Station Casinos has become particularly despised for the practice and its fees have been documented as some of the most onerous in Vegas. If you want to see mild-mannered UNLV Institute for Gaming Research Director David G. Schwartz get good and angry, ask him about the time he was jammed up with a mandatory resort fee at Green Valley Ranch. Harrah’s has had customer-relations problems of its own and this is one way to rebuild good will.

Lastly, Harrah’s is making a big deal about an iPhone/GPS application that will — theoretically — allow the company to zap customers with marketing messages related to where they are on-property at any given point. Another feature would simplify the check-in process and enable one to circumvent the scrum at the front desk (although it requires jumping through a few preliminary hoops).

The tech-savvy community is less than orgasmic about this, especially since Harrah’s appears to have gone off half-cocked. “[C]ount me underwhelmed,” writes Vegas Mate inventor Hunter Hillegas. In Harrah’s defense, if this is really the first such Strip-specific iPhone application, that reinforces just how slow and lumbering the entire casino industry has been in taking advantage of the messaging and wireless-communication marketing opportunities available to it. In the land of the blind, Harrah’s is king.

Stupid lawsuit tricks. Considering that Mystic Lake Casino Hotel is the de facto entertainment capital of the Twin Cities area, it must be really hard up for publicity if it needs stoop to suing lowly Mystic Lodge Casino in Henderson (and shame on Lionel Sawyer Collins for whoring itself out to Mystic Lake). This is, if possible, even more of stretch than when Treasure Island Resort & Casino, also in Minnesota, sued MGM Mirage‘s Treasure Island for trademark infringement … and never you mind that both resorts owed their name to a book by Robert Louis Stevenson. The only tangible outcome of that litigation was that Las Vegas’ Treasure Island became T&A, er, “T.I.” (with busty “pirates” to match). Thanks a lot.

Posted in Boulder Strip, Harrah's, MGM Mirage, Minnesota, Planet Hollywood, Station Casinos, Technology, The Strip, Tourism, Tribal | 5 Comments

CityCenter’s original spore

bubble drawing

Here’s the “bubble drawing,” roughed out by Jim Murren and MGM Mirage Design Group head Bill Smith back in February 2004, the tiny acorn from which CityCenter sprouted. Our thanks to MGM Mirage for sharing it with us. It will also be featured in a forthcoming Question of the Day over who deserves the credit for conceiving CityCenter. There’s a brewing controversy over the prevalent narrative (that it was Murren’s baby), with Roger Gros and perhaps a few others insisting that then-CEO J. Terrence Lanni was the proud papa. Both sides of the dispute will be aired shortly. Stay tuned.

Posted in Architecture, CityCenter, MGM Mirage | 8 Comments

Garth Brooks, City Center’s art: the reviews

DSCN1755

Much has been made of the $40 million in art lavished upon CityCenter. Virtually all of it is stunning in isolation but how does it work in context? CityLife dispatched me on a mission to evaluate CC’s many installations. As with so many things about the metaresort, it’s a case of great concept, muddled execution.

If you can come to Las Vegas during one of Garth Brooks‘ residencies and if you can get a ticket (much easier said than done), the pudgy, guitar-wielding guy in the baseball cap is now the must-see attraction on the Strip. It took four tries but Steve Wynn has finally struck gold in the Encore Theatre. I wouldn’t say the extraordinary level of audience involvement is worth the ticket price alone … but it comes close. Their love for and rapport with this man is quite something to behold.

Those who have been stridently insisting that Wayne Newton‘s pipes are just a tad rusty ought to have their ears cleansed with Brooks’ wide-ranging and expressive voice. Semi-retired or no, he’s still in very fine fettle. And if you’re particularly fortunate, you’ll get not-inconsiderable added value in the form of Trisha Yearwood. Studio recordings do not do justice to the amplitude of her instrument. She mostly employs it with delicacy — a discretion made all the more effective by the obvious raise-the-rafters power that Yearwood is holding in abeyance.

If you’ve an interest in the politics of Nevada, there’s a new blog in town (Of Note Nevada) that promises to be worth reading. Penned by former Jim Gibbons aide-de-camp Josh Hicks, it takes a measured tone toward issues which normally prompt hysteria in these here parts. If you’re looking for a middle ground between, say, Hugh Jackson on the left and Chuck Muth on the right (the R-J bloggers and editorialists are too far off in Cloud Cuckoo Land to be relevant), Hicks looks like the man from headquarters.

DSCN0451A patient fellow: The sunbather pictured above is Mr. Bit, my surviving Norwegian Forest Cat (born 1993). He’s undergoing surgery today for gingivitis. The poor fellow could lose as many as six teeth. He’s also having some of his gum tissue sent out for a biopsy, so keep your fingers crossed. He’s a crotchety, profane, reclusive old cuss of a kitty and we love him all the more for it (perhaps because his cranky disposition mirrors my own). By the way, souvenirs of two Strip shows are visible in the photograph. Can you find them?

Posted in Animals, Architecture, CityCenter, Current, Entertainment, MGM Mirage, Pets, Politics, Steve Wynn, The Strip | 5 Comments

Quote of the Day

“PA table game approval a positive for PENN” — headline on this morning’s e-mail blast from J.P. Morgan. Who knew those Wall Street analysts would ever embed a jest like that within a stock recommendation?

Posted in Current, Penn National, Pennsylvania, Politics, Wall Street | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

Quote of the Day

Crystals 1252“Spacey, ethereal and sterile.” — a friend’s description of the Crystals shopping mall.

Posted in CityCenter, MGM Mirage, The Strip | 2 Comments

Isle of Capri is back

While I was taking a cat to the vet, Isle of Capri was throwing a spanner into the Boyd Gaming works. Its bold move complicates Boyd’s proposed takeover of Station Casinos … or does it? Should Boyd succeed, it will find itself with such an oligopoly on the Vegas locals market, it will be obliged to spin off several properties (unless Nevada regulators employ some creative math to dilute Boyd’s market share). If Isle doesn’t succeed in obtaining management contracts at Red Rock Resort, Sunset Station, Boulder Station and Palace Station (three “trophy assets” and one fixer-upper), it has decisively shown an interest in re-entering the Vegas market.

So perhaps Boyd and Isle ultimately divide the spoils. Whatever happens, Isle CEO James Perry has found a way to put his company in the spotlight again. And the proposed stewardship of four leading Station properties is a low-risk/high-reward scenario, especially given the talent Perry and his team of Argosy Gaming veterans have shown at maximizing the bottom line and attracting new business.

As for the lease-back arrangement whereby Station Casinos pays itself rent on its own property, that’s having a hard time passing the smell test. Overtopping that casino quartet with $2.5 billion in debt always looked like a way of thwarting an asset sale — which is why they were excluded from Boyd’s original offer for parts of the Station empire.

If one accepts the proposition that Station CEO Frank Fertitta III and his Colony Capital dupes have to go, it’s difficult to know for whom to root in this new Boyd vs. Isle scenario. Boyd would end up with so much on its plate — and the Las Vegas locals market has been its Achilles Heel in recent quarters — that Isle’s creative yet prudent bid to become a Vegas player once again would be the more interesting storyline of the two. It would also shake up the competitive dynamics in this town and that’s never a bad thing.

Posted in Boulder Strip, Boyd Gaming, Colony Capital, Current, Isle of Capri, Station Casinos | 5 Comments

From the S&G Twitter feed …

Whilst I try to decipher my notes from the New Year’s Day performance by Carlos Mencia, here’s what you’ve been missing if you don’t follow the S&G Twitter feed (Twitter handle: @stiffsgeorges):

Pittsburgh‘s Rivers Casino sacks exec team, brings [Harrah’s Entertainment] vets to rescue. Debt restructuring still looms ahead. http://tinyurl.com/yebob9k

“Peepshow” crisis: no co-headliner (opposite @HollyMadison), no band, smaller cast & now 2 mos. w/o shows. Is plug-pulling near?

• [Riviera‘s] LV Strip marquee still prominently advertises Scarlett, Princess of Magic, Charo & “Ice” … all of whom have closed. Earth to Riv…

• (RT) TheStripPodcast Well look at what Harrahs is selling again, more than a year after stopping: http://twitpic.com/wtjhw

• Court rescues imprisoned crew of Palm Beach Princess, the Flying Dutchman of the Florida coast.

• The Palm Beach Princess is what sailors call a “Jonah.” Its misfortunes continue: http://tinyurl.com/ydrczjw or http://tinyurl.com/y9jrqx8

marina-lvs

• High rollers may have reason to be leery of Singapore … as should stock analysts.  http://tinyurl.com/yhrkefs

Aria outpricing Bellagio? I doubt it. Two-night booking gets you 15% discount + $75 resort credit (AR15C75). “Ltd” offer w. no expiration.

• One [Maryland] casino secured, Cordish moving on Baltimore next. Ann Arundel casino will cost $300 million. http://tinyurl.com/yalzyw7

• Memo to Laurel Park: If the crux of your lawsuit is you think voters “assumed” you’d be the one getting slots, you’re s**t out of luck, pal.

Posted in CityCenter, Cordish Co., Current, Entertainment, Florida, Harrah's, International, Maryland, MGM Mirage, Neil Bluhm, Pennsylvania, Planet Hollywood, Racinos, Riviera, Singapore | Comments Off on From the S&G Twitter feed …

Crystals, the sequel

If this video segment gives you a strong sense of déja vu, it’s probably because the retailers in Pansy & Daisy Ho‘s new Macao mall are pretty much the same cast of characters you’ll find in Crystals at CityCenter. However, this retail adjunct to MGM Grand Macau is unlikely to be mistaken for the work of David Rockwell or Daniel Liebeskind, in terms of its undistinguished architecture. It looks more like the Ho sisters borrowed the façade of the Planet Hollywood casino.

Posted in Architecture, CityCenter, Current, Macau, MGM Mirage, Pansy Ho, Planet Hollywood | Comments Off on Crystals, the sequel