Steve Wynn drinks his own bathwater

Screen shot 2009-11-02 at 9.32.07 PMI’ll confess to having been sufficiently out of touch not to have heard about the “Wynncore” parody site on which blogger Chuck Monster was laboring. Anybody who’s used the sluggish Wynn Resorts Web site will appreciate the home page (“Loading 6%”). One who didn’t was a certain Steve Wynn. Or perhaps General Counsel Kenneth Tourek was the person with the dim grasp of a concept known for centuries as “satire.” (Then again, Wynn Resorts is a relative newcomer to “your internet” and all that other crazy kids’ stuff, too. How ’bout them newfangled horseless carriages?)

Anyway, having evidently nothing better to do with his time, Mr. Tourek, Esq. delivered himself of a pricelessly pompous letter, in which refers to his employer and its assets as “famous” no fewer than four times. (Defensive much?) Tourek even has the brass to demand that Chuck simply hand over the domain name he registered, sans compensation. Getting pretty full of themselves, those Wynn folks. First, they stop sharing room-rate data with J.P. Morgan, followed by Wynn’s “Grumpy Old Men” stint on Fox News, then the Garth Brooks ticket posturing and now this stunt.

As Mr. Monster explains to his readers: “Anyways, the Wynncore website is an unfinished parody website which was meant to be a part of this years Trippies awards for ‘Worst Casino Website’. Thank you Wynn Resorts for ruining the joke.” People who behave like Wynn Resorts is doing deserve to be made objects of fun. Chuck, since lawyers are expensive, I’ve got four letters for you: ACLU. As for Steve Wynn, if he really wants to jump the shark, he’s built up a good running start.

Sign of the Times: There may be no more telling indicator of the depth of the ditch into which the casino industry drove itself than the title of the leadoff panel in G2E‘s Finance Track … “Gaming Bankruptcy and Reorganization: Issues and Strategies.” Panelists include Tropicana Entertainment CFO Rich Baldwin, someone who’s in a position to write the book on Chapter 11.

Former Mirage Resorts exec Barry Shier pops up on a subsequent panel, now affiliated with something called The Partner House. Shier seemed on a path to big things at Mirage, particularly when he was charged with opening Beau Rivage, but he’s been off the radar screen quite a while now. Then again, who thought Alex Yemenidjian would re-emerge as a significant force on the Las Vegas Strip? There are plenty of second acts in casino-industry lives.

Posted in Alex Yemenidjian, Current, Economy, Encore, G2E, Marketing, Mississippi, Steve Wynn, Technology, The Strip, Transportation, Tropicana Entertainment, TV | 5 Comments

Quote of the Day

“We’ve been practicing for more than 30 years. I don’t think you need to remind anyone about that one any longer. Don’t let the dust from your vacant lot get in your eyes on your way out of town.” — New Jersey resident Steve Karaisz, in a letter to The Press of Atlantic City regarding the departure from town of Pinnacle Entertainment‘s Atlantic City CEO Kim Townsend. Mr. Karaisz is referring to premature Pinnacle billboards, one of which boasted, “All those other casinos are for practice.”

Posted in Atlantic City, Pinnacle Entertainment | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

The Dollar Bills strike again; caution at IGT

old man2Those masters of quality on a budget, Millennium Gaming CEOs William Paulos and William Wortman have found a new target of opportunity: New Hampshire. Using the Rockingham Park horse track as their base of operations, the Dollar Bills are helping to lead the movement to bring racinos to the Granite State (formerly symbolized by the now-vanished Old Man of the Mountain, left). Some reports place the number of slots proposed for Rockingham alone at 8,000 machines.

Speaking as someone who’s spent more summers in New Hampshire than I can offhand remember, there are many better things to do there than gamble. However, if that’s your recreational activity of choice, Granite State legislators have an excellent opportunity to steal a march on their indecisive Massachusetts colleagues (currently gravitating toward the racino option) — unless they study the matter to death. Perhaps by 2012 or ’13, the economy will have rebounded sufficiently that states are able to generate increased same-store casino revenues, instead of simply stealing market share from across the state line.

Analysts at J.P. Morgan have low expectation for IGT‘s fourth quarter (due in part to write-offs) and a generally cautious outlook for the year ahead. Unit sales for 4Q09 are forecast to be -39% from the same period last year, and the 2010 fiscal year is expected to see a 15% falloff from ’09.

However, what to our wondering eyes should appear but the news that Harrah’s Entertainment, which has been trash-talking IGT’s product for over year, has placed “a sizable order” for year’s end. Another glimmer of sunrise on the horizon is industry scuttlebutt that, after a year of austerity with regarding to reinvesting in their slot floors, casinos will be begin to budget for slot replacements again, hopefully setting off “some domino effect on those who deferred slot capex and now feel inclined to play catch up.”

The best-case scenario for IGT would be if customer acceptance of server-based gambling were to take off like a shot when Aria opens. Even so, the timing would still be fiendish for the cash-strapped industry, were it to try and play catch-up. Having put so many eggs in the SBG basket, IGT has been doubly disadvantaged by how long it has taken the technology to come to market and, once it did so, it was at the worst historical juncture imaginable. The slot gods definitely haven’t made life easy for IGT, though some of its competitors would chalk that up to karma.

Posted in Cannery Casino Resorts, CityCenter, Economy, Harrah's, IGT, Massachusetts, Racinos, Technology, Wall Street | 1 Comment

Quote of the Day

Penn [National Gaming] said it is still struggling with a consumer spending pullback prompted by the recession. Gamblers have spent less in the casino on non-gaming components such as food, drinks and hotels during the economic downturn as they look to limit their discretionary spending.” — from coverage of Penn’s 3Q09 profit statement. And against this backdrop Penn decided to acquire … Fontainebleau.

Posted in Economy, Fontainebleau, Pennsylvania, Wall Street | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

Dark days for the clown house?

During all the economic Sturm und Drang of the last two years, MGM Mirage has — to its great credit — not been shy about offering comps, discounts and promotions to keep people coming back. However, its latest promotional allowances at Circus Circus reek ever so slightly of sheer desperation. The include a 10% discount for AAA members, active-duty military personnel, seniors 62+, airline employees and travel agents. What, no discount for sanitation workers?

Also, Nevadans get 10% off for staying there two nights, 15% off for three. Is the citywide downdraft in room rates dragging the clown house over the edge? Or is a proliferation of empty land, projects in suspended animation (Fontainebleau, Echelon) and casinos in the ICU ward (Riviera) driving people away? Circus Circus was, the last time I visited, home to the most obnoxious timeshare pitchmen on the Strip, something else which never generates good word of mouth.

Posted in Boyd Gaming, Current, Economy, Fontainebleau, Marketing, MGM Mirage, Riviera, The Strip, Tourism | 1 Comment

Case Bets: CityCenter, Boyd odyssey, Massachusetts & the “Admiral”

CityCenterThere’s continued apprehension about MGM Mirage‘s $8.5 billion, 7,200-unit CityCenter, especially now that hotel rooms there are going for less than ones at either the Venetian or Encore. (Thinking positively: Who knew CityCenter was going to be so affordable?) Business Week also frets that the metaresort will cannibalize existing MGM business. Since the company does not believe in cross-property marketing, managers at Aria will have just as much incentive to siphon business from Bellagio as from Caesars Palace. Or perhaps MGM enjoys a speedier recovery while — as analyst Matthew Jacob hypothesizes — everyone else’s road back is made even longer.

There’s a certain irony in hearing people like MGM Mirage CEO Jim Murren touting the bargains available in present-day Vegas … because that sure wasn’t the sales pitch they had in mind when extolling condo canyons along the Strip. At least Murren has shown the pragmatism to swallow his pride about room rates and extol high occupancy levels instead. Your guess is as good as mine what he means by a throwaway reference to private equity firms. Let’s hope it’s not code for “leveraged buyout.” Because MGM needs more debt like it needs a hole in the head.

MGM could use fans like these. A Milford, Conn. couple is really racking up the miles in its cross-country quest to visit every Boyd Gaming property in existence.

Massachusetts can’t decide. Voters in the Bay State favor bringing in casinos (56% say “aye”), according to a Western New England College Polling Institute survey. But that number flips to 38% when the question is, “Would you like a casino in your town?” So the citizenry favors gambling — just so long as it’s Over Yonder someplace. The question of where Massachusetts casinos would go hasn’t been well addressed by legislators so far. They’d be well advised to temper NIMBY resistance by taking a page from states like Kansas and Ohio, where voters have a fairly clear idea where the slot palaces are likely to arise. Even Pennsylvania, where there’s been some loud local resistance (especially in Philadelphia) has never been coy about what the public could expect and where.

Admiral gets soaked again. One of the problems Pinnacle Entertainment faces in maintaining its minimally remunerative President casino (aboard the Admiral riverboat) is that the ship’s gangways are wont to be swamped by Mississippi River floodwaters. As happened again last weekend. So one sympathizes with Pinnacle’s desire to move the old gal to a new berth. However, while Missouri law may give Pinnacle thismuch wiggle room to do so, it still seems unfair to allow a splitting of the President/Lumiere Place license, giving Pinnacle yet another discrete casino when potential newcomers to the Show-Me State are barred, period.

Posted in Architecture, Boyd Gaming, CityCenter, Current, Economy, Encore, Harrah's, Kansas, Massachusetts, MGM Mirage, Missouri, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Pinnacle Entertainment, Sheldon Adelson, The Strip, Tourism, Wall Street | 8 Comments

From the mailbag #10

Riverboat

I’m no longer a regular viewer of CSI, but someone who is spotted a glaring anachronism in the most recent episode:

Did anyone else notice the old (aka early 90s) nighttime air shot of the Strip?  It showed the old Holiday Inn Riverboat* on the strip, adjacent to Casino Royale!  I wonder why they had to dig into old film archives when they have so much current footage?!!!

(* — now Harrah’s Las Vegas)

Good question. Perhaps CBS-TV budgetary pressures are causing the CSI showrunners to dip into the stock-footage vault but something as sloppy as what you describe is pretty inexcusable. Also, wouldn’t footage so old match poorly with the much higher resolution in which the various CSI shows are shot? ‘Tis a puzzlement.

Posted in Harrah's, The Strip, TV | 1 Comment

Quote of the Day

“What [Steve] Wynn forgets is that his tired old trickle-down-and-deregulate song-and-dance is exactly what got us into this fine mess in the first place.” — Las Vegas CityLife Managing Editor Andrew Kiraly, on Wynn’s reinvention as a political pundit. CityLife named Wynn, the Nevada Gaming Control Board, the ineffectual Nevada branch of OSHA, Holly Madison and either others to its “Web of Evil.”

Posted in Economy, Entertainment, Labor, Politics, Regulation, Steve Wynn | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

Go Phils!

photo

Since my sister practices law in the City of Brotherly Love, my rooting interest in the current World Series is with the Philadelphia Phillies. Besides, it’s difficult to warm up to the ruthless efficiency of the New York Yankees as opposed to the team with the best mascot in all of sports, the Philly Phanatic (seen here with my Mom). So here’s hoping for a three-game sweep in the friendly confines of Citizens Bank Park … not least because it would curtail the amount of time I have to listen to Tim McCarver‘s increasingly ridiculous bloviation. Whither art thou gone, Al Leiter?

It totally goes against the grain with me to bet on the outcome of baseball games (it would be like wagering in church). Football, however, is another matter. Since my better half has enlisted my input on 1/3 of her weekly Great Giveaway tickets, perhaps I should list my picks on S&G … if for no other reason than to give the readership a hearty Monday-morning laugh. Last weekend I went six-for-six on early Sunday games, then got totally skunked on the late-afternoon and evening ones. Neither on the field nor in the betting pool is there any room for error in the NFL.

Posted in Baseball, Current, New York, Pennsylvania, Sports, Station Casinos | 2 Comments

They’re just wild about Harry

Despite his (at best) tepid standing with the Nevada electorate — whether the right or the left — Sen. Harry Reid (D) has almost every important name in the casino industry in his corner. Sheldon Adelson may yet choose to be contrarian and throw his weight behind casino colleague Sue Lowden, but he’s definitely bucking the tide in that respect. Even Steve Wynn, in all his recent bluster about matters economic, has been careful to aim his blunderbuss away from Reid.

Why? I’d been meaning to explain this for awhile but a bunch of casino bigshots called a press conference and did my work for me. In particular, listen to the audio clip that accompanies this Las Vegas Sun story. Harrah’s Entertainment and Station Casinos veeps Jan Jones and Scott Nielson lay out in very clear-cut terms why Harry’s their main man. (I could also link to a video interview with MGM Mirage CEO Jim Murren but that would mean subjecting you to a whiny, cliché-addicted Neil Cavuto, and I can’t have that on my conscience.)

The bottom line is that the casino companies have run the numbers and have decided that, as a dollars-and-cents proposition, they come out ahead with Majority Leader Reid rather than Freshman Senator X … especially now that Sen. John Ensign (R) has forfeited his clout on Capitol Hill. Which is why they’re dancing with the guy that brought them tax breaks. One might not share their enthusiasm but their calculus is difficult to fault.

Cotai Strip

Broken Record Dept. There’s nothing Macao needs like another 21,000 hotel rooms, says the $2 Million Man (aka Las Vegas Sands COO Michael Leven). The Adelson crony said the company’s next three hotels would be “a game changer … It’s key to our growth in Macao, and it’s key for Macao’s differentiation, to make Cotai a destination.” Which sounds a lot like what was said about Venetian Macao.

Also, Adelson continues to promise non-core asset sales, a tune so over-familiar it qualifies for Golden Oldie status (wake us when you actually sell something, sir) and it doesn’t sound like Marina Bay Sands is going to make its Feb. 15 opening date. Adelson’s peeps, meanwhile are holding completion of Sands Bethlehem hostage until table games are approved in Pennsylvania. As I thought, Sands’ revenue projections for Bethlehem have proven way over-optimistic.

There’s a grand farce playing out in Maryland. Basically, the Ann Arundel County Council has been chasing itself ’round a mulberry bush. Cordish Co. wants to build next to a popular shopping mall. The council, fearful of political backlash, has counter-proposed dumping Cordish’s casino into an industrial area. Failing that, the council lacks the will — and, for now, the votes — to rezone the mall area for gambling. Instead, it wants the state to license a Cordish casino in the abstract and let the county worry about where it goes. The state, understandably wary of signing off on Some Casino Someplace Undetermined, is demanding that Ann Arundel County get its act together by mid-December. This political game of chicken should be fun to watch.

If you prefer drama, there’s a mostly splendid revival of The Shawl by David Mamet this weekend at Las Vegas Little Theatre. How many shows in Vegas offer a $12 top ticket?

Posted in Archon Corp., Cordish Co., Economy, Election, Entertainment, Harrah's, Harry Reid, International, Macau, Maryland, MGM Mirage, Pennsylvania, Politics, Regulation, Sheldon Adelson, Singapore, Station Casinos, Steve Wynn, Taxes, TV, Wall Street | Comments Off on They’re just wild about Harry

Quote of the Day

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“What we’ve learned as a nation is that these casino monopoly licenses are incredibly lucrative. This is a cartel wanting to do business in Ohio for an unbelievably low price.” — TruthPAC spokeswoman Sandy Theis, making the usual baleful noises about bringing casinos to the Buckeye State. What may be more relevant to voters is whether inadequate salaries ≥ no salaries.

Posted in Economy, Election, Ohio | 1 Comment

Case Bets: Pinnacle, Pennsylvania, Harrah’s & Sands

Third quarter at PNK: 3Q09 numbers are out for Pinnacle Entertainment and the comparisons cover the spectrum from very good (Lumiere Place up 19%), good (+5% at L’Auberge du Lac) and lousy (-13% aboard Boomtown New Orleans). Once a free-spending company, Pinnacle is now demonstrating the virtues of thrift. The combined budgets for its River City (greater St. Louis), Sugarcane Bay (on Lake Charles) and Baton Rouge projects total $998 million … slightly more than Station Casinos spent on Red Rock Resort alone, which one S&G subscriber pithily dubbed, “a tourist property for locals.” Come to think of it, wouldn’t Station creditors be better served by a Pinnacle takeover than by further Fertitta Bros. stewardship? Pinnacle’s practices draw a rave review from J.P. Morgan‘s Joseph Greff: “We believe, at current levels, investors are getting River City (as well as its Sugarcane Bay and Baton Rouge projects, which we have not modeled) for free.”

Pinnacle is also patching up the hull of its President riverboat, hoping the old gal can eke out a few more years on the Big Muddy. (The President brings in so little revenue that Pinnacle’s we’re-staying-put-indefinitely explanation is difficult to accept at face value.) It’s a damn shame for would-be Missouri casino owners that they have to rely on Show-Me State regulators being able to wrest the President‘s license away in court — but that’s what was to be suspected when voters (unwittingly?) cast ballots that gave Pinnacle and Ameristar Casinos a protected oligopoly.

Do you write off your gambling losses on your income taxes? A proposal in Pennsylvania would have made that easier, in the form of monthly win-and-loss statements, issued at casino expense. Unfortunately, the idea’s backers are coming at it from a “pro-family”/anti-pathological gambling slant. Whereupon the casino industry got its dander up and raised all manner of semi-spurious privacy concerns. I strongly suspect the opposition is driven more by laziness and cheapness (imagine having to hire people to tally up and generate all those statements) than principle. Too bad, as it’s a practical idea that might make April 15 slightly less dread-ful.

Casino markers? Horrors! Keystone State moralists offer poorly reasoned opposition. That’s fine. Pennsylvania gamblers who can’t get casino credit can always go to Atlantic City instead. This is a rare win-win situation.

Harrah’s loses $1.6 billion and it’s just “another ho-hum event” to Forbes, even as it notes that Harrah’s Entertainment may soon be drawing down its cash reserves. It tells you how badly the casino sector is struggling when staying just one step ahead of the bill collector is a hailed as a triumph of ledger-demain. One of the beauties of being the CEO of a private equity-held casino company is you’re the only guy on the board of directors who knows where the car keys are kept. Thus, no matter how badly your LBO has turned out, you’ve got the Leon Blacks and David Bondermans of the world at your mercy.

Sands reports a loss. Missing analyst projections and losing $123 million was an unfortunate 0-for-2 for Las Vegas Sands. The company whined that it was impaired by $74 million in “increased income taxes.” Well, boo frigging hoo. When your two growth markets of choice are either steeply taxed (Macao) or usuriously so (Pennsylvania) and you seek even greater exposure there, this is inevitable. If Sheldon Adelson wants low taxes, maybe he should build in Atlantic City instead.

The upside of a recession. Following a doleful news bulletin about economic malaise at Caesars Windsor, here’s the flip side. The border-crossing hassles that have driven business away from Windsor are helping Detroit casinos ride out the recession. Value-oriented messages and new product don’t hurt, either. Given how badly the Michigan economy has been hammered, a 2% revenue decline constitutes a silver lining amidst a very dark cloud. When you consider the tax benefit to the state, then-Gov. John Engler‘s frenetic exertions to keep casinos out of Motown look doubly stupid in retrospect.

Posted in Ameristar, Atlantic City, Current, Detroit, Economy, Harrah's, Louisiana, Macau, Marketing, Missouri, Pennsylvania, Pinnacle Entertainment, Problem gambling, Sheldon Adelson, Taxes, Tribal, Wall Street | 2 Comments

Case Bets: ColSux, Wynn, Agassi, Lake LV, ‘Vega$’

Proverbial “flu-like symptoms” have me feeling light-headed and rather woozy (a delayed reaction to Wayne Newton?), for which the doctor prescribes a dosage of Case Bets …

Amelia Belle

Another ColSux sale: Struggling hotelier Columbia Sussex has, for the not-inconsiderable sum of $106.5 million, quietly unloaded its Amelia Belle riverboat. The buyer, Dubuque-based Peninsula Gaming, already owns a Louisiana racino and two Iowa-berthed riverboats. However, the Tri-Parish Times article raises more questions than it answers. No owner other than ColSux is mentioned. Wasn’t Amelia Belle supposed to have gone over to Tropicana Entertainment creditors? A wire service report attributes the sale to Tropicana Casinos & Resorts, which suggests that TropEnt CEO Scott Butera is the one peddling off assets (and not vigorously shoring up the TropEnt empire, as he has repeatedly promised). And whatever became of plans to switch Amelia Belle with TropEnt’s Belle of Baton Rouge?

The good news is Peninsula’s first move will be a vigorous makeover of the Belle, which sounds as if it’s been suffering from the let-it-slide ColSux modus operandi.

Life’s good … if you’re Matt Maddox, CFO at Wynn Resorts, who pulled in just under $18 million last year. Big ups to Hunter Hillegas, who spotted this item. Also, local food critic John Curtas revisits Encore‘s one inarguable flop, Switch, and finds it much improved.

Andre Agassi used drugs? Why I’m shocked, totally shocked! (Not.) And since we’ve had an ex-stoner (George W. Bush) and a former cokehead (Barack Obama) in the White House, I fail to see how this should crimp Mr. Agassi’s political ambitions, nebulous though they are. Agassi for mayor? I could live with that. Many would prefer Agassi to lovable grouch Oscar Goodman, who’s been chillin’ in London of late.

In one of the more improbable marketing synergies, three Strip nightclubs (Tao, Tao Beach* and Lavo) are offering VIP admission to guests of the Ritz-Carlton at Lake Las Vegas (aka The Kingdom of Make Believe). “Private sedan transfers” will whisk you to and from the Strip if you spring for this $279/night package. The arrangement suggests two things: The nightclub scene is belatedly starting to feel recessionary pain and it’s finally sinking into some Lake LV noggins that the insta-resort is simply too damn far — 17 miles, to be precise — from where the action is. People don’t come to Las Vegas to get away from Las Vegas, a fallacy that has dogged the Kingdom of Make Believe since its inception.

* — WTF? It’s not exactly beach weather in Vegas during November, y’know.

Inspired by VEGA$. The show’s DVD debut prompted this reader comment: The show’s opening images featured the old flamboyant neon Golden Nugget Gambling Hall marquee. I loved that sign! I can understand Wynn’s wanting to “tone up” the place with the understated elegance of the current white & gold facade, but I still miss the old flashy one.

Which reminds me that I’ll be out of town for the Nov. 23 unveiling of Tilman Fertitta‘s new Rush Tower at the Nugget d’Or. Hopefully other Vegas-oriented bloggers will be there to chronicle the fun. I’ll admit to being skeptical of the “Strip views” that Fertitta is promising. Then again, if you wanted to see the Strip from your room, why would you stay anywhere north of the Stratosphere?

Way to go R-J! The best Web site of the 13th century accompanies a gaming-expansion story with a graphic that opens in a separate window that’s still too fucking small to read.

Wal-Mart now selling coffins. Between that and diapers, they’ve really got you covered on everything you need between the cradle and the grave.

Posted in Columbia Sussex, Current, Dining, Downtown, Encore, Iowa, Lake Las Vegas, Louisiana, Oscar Goodman, Politics, Sheldon Adelson, Steve Wynn, The Strip, Tilman Fertitta, Tropicana Entertainment, TV | 3 Comments

They lost it at the movies

Every so often, LVA gets a press release that deserves to be mocked. This is one of those times. In order to promote Gr88.com, the creators of the site have deigned to release a list of “Poker Films of All Times [sic].” For starters, any list which spells the most famous poker film ever made as “The Cincinatti [sic] Kid” deserves a spanking. To rank that movie only #3 adds insult to injury. Here’s the somewhat dubious list cobbled together by the great minds at Gr88.com:

1. Rounders

2. Maverick (as in Mel “I hate Jews” Gibson, not the classic James Garner series)

3. The Cincinnati Kid

4. Casino (in which no poker is played, to my recollection)

5. Ocean’s Eleven (Gr88.com chooses the George Clooney version over the Frank Sinatra one — your mileage may vary)

6. Casino Royale (the Daniel Craig remake, which dumbs down the game of choice from baccarat to Texas Hold ‘Em)

7. The Sting

8. Honeymoon in Vegas

That’s the best they could do? Surely there are good poker-centric films that were omitted. Any suggestions?

Posted in Internet gambling, Movies, TV | 8 Comments

Signs of the Times

Oh, how I wish I’d had the presence of mind to snap a photo of the Tropicana Las Vegas marquee last night. It reads, in part:

WAYNE

NEWTON

Once Before I Go

NOW

The concluding imperative makes the sign look like a plug for Flomax. The Wayner stars in a desperate struggle between a strong will and a weak bladder! Newton’s show is definitely not for the incontinent (even though its appeal will be scant for the under-65 set), running approximately 100 minutes and feeling much longer still.

Cheetah Girl in the house! If you don’t subscribe to the S&G Twitter feed, here’s a mini-chronicle of last night’s opening …

Wayne Newton’s “Once Before I Go” is once too often. Worse than [Matt] Goss, Zowie Bowie & Gordie Brown combined. No Kym Johnson sighting … Sight of the night: Robin Leach, tummy protruding like the prow of a zeppelin, his sweater front covered in stains. Stay classy, Robin … Also present: Drew Carey, Wayne Brady, Sabrina Bryan, DWTS’ Cheryl, Edyta, Alec, Anna & Jonathan, Wink F. Martindale & sundry lesser lights [Zowie Bowie, Holly Madison, Alicia Jacobs’ dog, accompanied by Jacobs, etc.]

After the show, media and other invitees noshed on finger foods in a white-carpeted area at the center of which was a roped-off sort of VIP room-cum-goldfish bowl. Thus, the Red Carpeteers could hobnob in semi-seclusion, while everyone was tacitly invited to stand around and gape.

Random observation: Cheryl Burke must bathe in spray-tan, although even her not-found-in-nature ruddiness paled next to Mr. Martindale’s hair dye. The assembled glitterati afforded some visual relief from the sorry spectacle onstage but nothing, alas, could efface the sounds emerging from Newton’s tortured throat. He’s not resting on his laurels so much as actively demolishing them.

All Caesars’ horses and all Caesars’ men can’t improve a grim outlook for Harrah’s Entertainment‘s Canadian flagship.

Posted in Alex Yemenidjian, Current, Economy, Entertainment, Harrah's, International, The Strip, TV | 6 Comments

Critiqued by Tomlin

When conducting interviews, I rarely think about how I’m doing them other than thinking that the questions are tumbling out sounding stupid or that I’m blathering on like the dreaded Charlie Rose (an excellent example of how not to interview someone, IMO). So it’s quite an experience to have my technique analyzed by no less a personage than Lily Tomlin, who’s doing a nine-show run at MGM Grand next month:

I loved Homicide and in the old days … you know what you make me think of? At the telephone company, if you’re a bill collector or something, they tell people, ‘You don’t say too much.’ You just respond every now and then. The person’ll keep talking til they hang themselves.’ [laughs] Is that your technique? You say, ‘Hmm. Ah. When?’ And you just keep talking. The people feel like, ‘Oh, I have to keep talking. It’s my responsibility. Or ‘I must not be saying anything that’s good,’ so they just keep talking and eventually they probably just keep talking themselves into a big hole.’ [chuckles]”

The Lily Tomlin interview will appear in the Nov. 5 issue of Las Vegas CityLife. I’m just sayin’.

Posted in Current, Entertainment, MGM Mirage, The Strip | 1 Comment

Quote of the Day

“It’s not legal, and anyone who thinks this is legal is wrong. They are guilty of a misdemeanor if they do this.” — Steve Wynn, who’s not a lawyer but plays one in the newspapers. If he’d read a little, he’d be better informed on the whole “secondary market” issue. Heck, the scalpers held a convention right next door, in ’07, at the Venetian.

Posted in Current, Economy, Entertainment, Regulation, Sheldon Adelson, Steve Wynn, The Strip | 3 Comments

“Don’t panic”

Most of you will recognize that as a critical maxim from The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. It’s also what to do if you comments don’t appear straightaway on the S&G site. In our new setup they won’t post immediately — not because of the Comment-Eating Server — due to one of the security protocols on WordPress. All comments go into a “moderation” holding pattern and then are approved, one by one.

While this may result in a loss of immediate gratification, it does guarantee one thing: Spammers will now be barred at the door. Just think of WordPress as a nightclub bouncer and spam messages as so many douchebags wearing Christian Audigier apparel.

Also: We’ve received “pro” and “con” votes on the new typeface, which I’ll admit to liking because I don’t have to squint to read it. As for opening pictures at full size in new windows or tabs, I’ll look into that. It depends on A) whether it’s feasible with WordPress and B) how much more coding that will entail, especially if it’s me who has to input it. What we’ve got now isn’t ideal but it’s shaping up as a huge improvement on what we had before.

wayne-pic

The show we’ll be seeing tonight.

The show we wish we’ll be seeing.

I’ve been getting e-mails about Australian terpsichorean phenom Kym Johnson ever since her red-carpet appearance at Wayne Newton‘s Once Before I Go opening (tonight) was announced. Ms. Johnson, for those of you who have been watching Monday Night Football or the CBS comedy block, is Donny Osmond‘s partner on Dancing with the Stars. The duo seems — knock wood — exceptionally likely to make it to the final round and probably win. (Kym is very popular and has never taken home the Mirrorball Trophy, so sentiment is in her corner.) Now, I could post bikini photos of Kym, but that would be cruel, so instead …

cherylburkekym1… here’s a foretaste of what we hope to see on the red carpet tonight. That, obviously, is Cheryl “The Body” Burke on the right, though Kym’s none too shabby in the curvature department, is she?

Tonight will also provide an opportunity to check out the new bells and whistles at the Tropicana Las Vegas‘ Tiffany Theater. It was already looking pretty spiffed up when the Wayner held his press conference. Now we’ll find out how good the revamped audio and video systems are. Sam Nazarian, up at the Sahara, might take a hint or two from Alex Yemenidjian and spring for — at the very least — a new showroom curtain. The one I saw last week was so tattered and frayed it would embarrass a high school.

Posted in Alex Yemenidjian, Current, Entertainment, Sahara, The Strip, TV | 1 Comment

Boyd: A waiting game

That’s the economic forecast of J.P. Morgan analysts after Boyd Gaming came in slightly under its cash-flow projections for the third quarter. Borgata remained a bright spot, reaching record levels of market share in Atlantic City (a staggering 19%) in September. The gaming/non-gaming revenue balance is 55/45 (though that’s soon to change) and Boyd execs promised to stick to a “best product in the market” business model.

sugar-house-800 That’s clearly the best (and boldest) course of action when faced with a threefold threat: table games in Pennsylvania, work finally underway at SugarHouse (left) in Philadelphia, and slow-but-steady movement toward opening a racino at Aqueduct, near New York City. By the time the first of that trifecta comes into play, it will be too soon for some of Boyd’s Las Vegas properties to take up any slack from Borgata. Cash flow in the locals sector was -31% and net revenue -17%, driven down by decreased consumer spending, which had a concomitant effect on room rates, with August described as “incredibly slow.” Morgan expects an “elongated” recovery in this sector, whch translates as: not in 2010.

Morgan analysts drastically reduced their cash-flow projections for the Las Vegas locals market through 2012, while posting a flat set of 2010-12 predictions for Downtown. Continued softness was also anticipated in the Midwest and deep South.

Revenue was basically flat (-1%) in Downtown, although business from Hawaii stayed strong. Among outlying markets, Louisiana is betraying signs of saturation, although the Treasure Chest riverboat was up 2% in gross revenues and Delta Downs a massive +21%, posting record amounts of cash flow. Sam’s Town Shreveport (-1%) remains a little under the weather. In the Midwest, Blue Chip (-1%) is starting to betray the effects of new tribal competition from Michigan — a sharp decline in August was softened by a partial rebound last month — while Par-A-Dice (-2%) is going south again, following a summer quarter in which it appeared to be recovering from terrible market conditions.

Echelon_640

At Echelon, the forecast for resumption is can be summarized in three words, “Not anytime soon.” The more optimistic timeline has work restarting in 2012, but postponement until 2014 is not out of the question. Boyd waved bye-bye to a management contract with Shangri-La Hotels & Resorts and wrote off over $13 million in costs related to its dysfunctional partnership with Morgans Hotel Group. Since it’s costing Boyd less than $20 million/year to keep the site mothballed, it can afford to take the long view.

Posted in Atlantic City, Boulder Strip, Boyd Gaming, Current, Downtown, Economy, Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Morgans Hotel Group, Neil Bluhm, New York, Pennsylvania, Racinos, The Strip, Tourism, Wall Street | 6 Comments

Loveman’s Folly

Gary_loveman_Cropped_fmt Back when Harrah’s Entertainment was surrendering to the cold, clammy embrace of Texas Pacific Group and Apollo Management, the bean counters assured CEO Gary Loveman that Harrah’s could carry almost $30 billion in debt and sustain a 20% revenue decrease. They lied, Gary.

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