Get 'em while they're young

One of the Atlantic City Hilton‘s most valued players was a 19-year-old from Brooklyn. This baby whale was sufficiently lucrative to the Colony C(r)apital property that he received a comped stay and qualified as a “rated player.”

Better still, A.C. Hilton execs allowed him to keep playing even after they’d been tipped off to his juniority. Nice work! Step right up, Colony, and collect your reward — a $115K fine from the New Jersey Casino Control Commission. Apparently the Hilton simply took the youngster’s word that he was old enough to gamble before handing him the keys to kingdom.

Colony may be able to buy casinos but it sure as shooting can’t run ’em. Frank Fertitta III may not have been the best monarch of Station Casinos but, compared to majority owners Colony, it’s another case where the one-eyed man is king in the land of the blind.

One sings, the other doesn’t (quite): Not only is Ali Spuck‘s new Liberace Museum show a real value proposition at $15/ticket but, hot damn, she’s Spucktastic. As for Charo in Concert: A Musical Sensation, at the Riviera, it’s something for everyone but not that much for anyone. Although Charo “goes to 11” on the Camp-o-Meter, gay audiences (and Baby Boomers, too) seem likelier to flock to Spuck.

Bleary blogger: My apologies for the disappointing blogorrhea of late. I’ve been immersed in a crash course on the crash-and-burn of Russia‘s casino industry (R.I.P.). Throw in some computer troubles and I’d conservatively estimate I’m three days behind the rest of the gaming world.

Posted in Atlantic City, Colony Capital, Entertainment, International, Regulation, Riviera, Station Casinos, The Strip | Comments Off on Get 'em while they're young

Boyd, Ameristar stable; CityCenter schedule revised

Second-quarter results from Boyd Gaming and Ameristar Casinos gave continued reason to be sanguine about each company. Both reported profits (12 cents per share at Boyd, double that at Ameristar) and both missed their revenue targets by an aggregate of only $8 million. A whopping (27%) jump in Colorado revenues for Ameristar last month was additional reason for confidence, offsetting weakness in Kansas City.

Cost control was credited with helping Boyd's performance, as was much-better-than-expected cash flow at Borgata. The Las Vegas locals market also ran ahead of expectations in that regard, while downtown and the Midwest/South casinos lagged. Bankruptcy filing or no, Boyd maintains that it continues to be a suitor for Station Casinos. Oh, and keeping Echelon mothballed — while the least expensive of alternatives — isn't cheap, costing Boyd $3 million a month.

MGM Mirage has sent LVA a revised, official list of dates for the debut of the various bits and pieces of CityCenter. (Excepted, of course, is the Harmon[ini] which, as of last Wednesday, had no firmer opening date than "late 2010.") The openings are as follows:

Vdara (Dec. 1); Crystals (Dec. 3); Mandarin Oriental (Dec. 4); Aria (Dec. 16), while condo closings in Veer Towers are set to "begin in January." When MGM gave a CityCenter dog-and-pony show to the Nevada Hospitality & Lodging Association last week, the computer graphics still showed Baldwin's Bump at its original, 48-story height. Also, the bluish tint that denoted CityCenter's acreage, by quirk or design, extended to embrace the Cosmopolitan. A portent?

Posted in Ameristar, Architecture, Atlantic City, Boyd Gaming, Colorado, Current, Downtown, MGM Mirage, Missouri, Station Casinos, The Strip, Wall Street | Comments Off on Boyd, Ameristar stable; CityCenter schedule revised

Donald Trump, comedian

This is a joke, right? Three Atlantic City casinos for a slim $100 million? Then again, if Trump Entertainment Resorts financial advisor Lazard only values unloved Trump Marina at $24 million, maybe exiled chairman Donald Trump isn’t so far out of the ballpark after all. What’s even more surprising than the measliness of Trump’s offer is the alacrity with which CEO Mark Juliano capitulated.

“My daughter Ivanka and I will work tirelessly to make this company great again,” pronounced The Donald, displaying yet again his peerless ability to deliver drop-dead laugh lines with a perfect deadpan. He added, “As I have done in the past, we will make Atlantic City hot once more.”

If anybody’s going to make Atlantic City “hot,” Donald Trump it’s not — especially since he’s still scheming to get a piece of the Philadelphia slot-parlor action. For those of you waiting until 2020 to redeem your Trump Entertainment debt, the good news is that you’ll (eventually) get 94 cents on the dollar. Holders of secured notes due in 2015 get wiped out, along with unsecured creditors. As usual, Trump gets the gold mine, the financiers get the shaft.

But the real winner is MyFox.com, which perhaps unwittingly filed this story under the perfect headline: “Cash for Clunkers.”

Posted in Atlantic City, Donald Trump, Pennsylvania, TV, Wall Street | Comments Off on Donald Trump, comedian

McKee vs. Lerner

Actually, the headline misstates what was a very collegial — if occasionally dissenting — exchange of views between Union Gaming Group's Bill Lerner and Yr. Humble Blogger on Jon Ralston's Face to Face show. It was only my second-ever gig as a talking head — and it shows. (Note to self: Consider Botox injections to paralyze overactive facial muscles.)

The ostensible subject of discussion was newly bankrupt Station Casinos, but it ranged as far afield as Singapore and Macao. Actually, we probably could have taped an entire week's worth of shows without exhausting the topic(s).

Lerner was a perfect gentleman, despite all the snarky things I've written about him in S&G (assuming he even reads it, which I doubt). I could certainly learn a thing or two from his poised on-air demeanor. I also found that, if you're in the middle seat on Face to Face, you need to "cheat" a little to your right and downstage or else you'll be masked in all the wide shots. And, as Ira David Sternberg taught me, don't ever look at the camera.

My ex cathedra pronouncements were, however, overshadowed by my alarmingly jowly appearance. When the video is posted, you will see that I look every one of my 200 lbs. — and quite a few more! Since the episode isn't available on the Las Vegas Sun Web site yet, here's a preview:

Oh, my brain and mouth parted company on at least one occasion. I thought I said MGM Mirage would probably offload The Mirage for "one and a half billion to two billion dollars." What emerged, though, was "a half-billion to two billion dollars." So Jim Murren, wherever you are, I do not think you'd part with The Mirage for a (comparatively) measly $500 million … just so we're good on that.

At least the high-angle shot at the end missed my bald spot. Thank God for small favors. The rebroadcast is starting; time to find out if I still know how to operate a VCR.

Posted in Atlantic City, Boulder Strip, Boyd Gaming, Colony Capital, Current, Economy, International, Kansas, Labor, M Resort, Macau, MGM Mirage, Sheldon Adelson, Singapore, Station Casinos, The Strip, TV, Wall Street | Comments Off on McKee vs. Lerner

Bare-knuckle Boardwalk brawl

Leaky windows. Broken air-conditioning. Missing kitchen equipment. A weather-beaten building … It also has missing kitchen equipment and broken air-conditioning units that have left guest rooms hot and unrentable. Further, it is plagued by a leaky roof, windows and skylights …

Is this the Tropicana Atlantic City we’re talking about? Heck no, it’s Trump Marina, as described the attorneys for all-hat, no-cattle buyer (wannabe) Richard Fields. His Coastal Marina LLC is accusing Trump Entertainment Resorts of blowing off Marina maintenance and siphoning away players. There’s more — much more. Fields’ suit charges Trump (the company) with doing a chop-shop job on the hotel-casino and The Associated Press’ story implies it may have been a Donald Trump “screw you” to Fields, a former courtroom adversary.

Assuming for a moment that the allegations are true (Trump’s CEO says they’re not) … that’s the way the game is played, dude. Just ask Ed Roski about his abortive Continue reading

Posted in Atlantic City, Donald Trump, Economy, Harrah's, MGM Mirage, Silverton, The Strip, Tropicana Entertainment | Comments Off on Bare-knuckle Boardwalk brawl

To Charo or not?

Are you wondering whether it's worth forking over 50 or more of your increasingly hard-earned dollars to see Charo in Concert: A Musical Sensation at the Riviera? This video (or "bideo" in Charo's Castillian lisp) is sufficiently representative that it tells you more than could any review:

The show's second half is given over to a five-song set with Charo on guitar. Does she have mad guitar skillz? Is she a Guitar Heroine? The twin "bideo" screens in the showroom maintain a constant closeup of her fingerwork, allowing you to decide for yourself. One might hope that cute little Manolo puts in an appearance, but alas … no bull.

Posted in Animals, Entertainment, Riviera, The Strip | Comments Off on To Charo or not?

Fasolt

As I write this, LVA mascot Mojo is sunning herself on my office balcony (and doing #2, I fear), turning my mind to the animal kingdom. S&G readers are sometimes so kind as to ask after the health of my gargantuan Maine Coon cat, Fasolt, who briefly went missing last winter while the Significant Other and I were engrossed in an episode of The L Word.

I’m happy to report that Fasolt is in fine fettle, although sufficiently arthritic as to require “pet steps” (pictured) to get onto the bed. He continues to tolerate his stepbrother, Mr. Bit, and to spat with his stepsister, Shadow. He’s also growing more neurotic with age, to the point where avoids the litter box like the plague. Some stopgap solutions have been devised, through trial and error, but the occasional father-son chat about “inappropriate elimination” still has to be conducted.

When it’s dinner time, he sits (sometimes) patiently at my right knee, awaiting the table scraps that are his due as Senior Cat in Residence. He also likes to “watch” TV with me and, if I’m working at home, he’s usually just to the right of my desk chair or — more problematically — in my lap. And if he feels there’s been too much Internet surfing, Fasolt sits on the mouse pad to put a stop to it.

What’s this to do with gambling … well, nothing. But in my not-impartial opinion, Fasolt’s native smarts exceed those of certain gaming-sector CEOs.

Posted in Animals, Pets, TV | 1 Comment

Quote of the Day

"Privé. Gibbons. Ensign. Rampant foreclosure. Half-built, hubristic casinos. Record unemployment. UFC. Mob Museum. Maybe Las Vegas 2009 is just Tom Wolfe's next novel." — Las Vegas Weekly Editor Scott Dickensheets, from Facebook.

Posted in Current, Downtown, Economy, Labor, Politics, Sports, Station Casinos, The Mob, The Strip | Comments Off on Quote of the Day

Case Bets: Hard Rock, Puck, Station, Greek Isles

Morgans Hotel Group has never seemed able to make up its mind about what to do with the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino (one of the stranger acquisitions of recent years). Then-CEO Ed Scheetz came in talking big about classing the place up and raising ADRs. Fast-forward to ’09 and the HRH is staking everything on its skanky Rehab parties (does the staff have to don hazmat suits when cleaning up afterwards?) and going for the mid-price market midweek.

One can’t fault the latter half of that strategy, especially if you’re in an off-Strip location and could use the traffic. However, if Morgans goal was to increase Hard Rock ADRs, perhaps it shouldn’t have embarked on a ginormous expansion that practically obliterates Peter Morton‘s original hotel and dilutes the asking price per room. Also, I don’t know whether to praise Morgans for doing the impossible and completing (sort of) its Paradise Tower well ahead of schedule … or criticize it for being in such a hurry to churn some EBITDA that it’s opening it in an unfinished state.

But here’s hoping the business model works. The HRH is one of the few places in town that’s hiring, not downsizing. At lot of people’s jobs are riding on its success.

One less Wolfgang Puck restaurant on the Strip? That’s hardly a culinary tragedy, given that Continue reading

Posted in Architecture, Colony Capital, Current, Dining, Economy, Entertainment, Harrah's, Marketing, Morgans Hotel Group, Station Casinos, The Strip, Tourism, Wall Street | Comments Off on Case Bets: Hard Rock, Puck, Station, Greek Isles

Strange happenings at Penn Nat'l, Harrah's

While everybody's been focusing on the implosion of Station Casinos, the analysts at J.P. Morgan snuck out one of the more unusual (and entertaining) reports I've ever come across. They pored over Penn's 2Q09 filing and had some tales to tell.

The lead was that Penn was falling short of its cash-flow targets for the quarter. That musn't have been a complete surprise, given the incapacitation of Empress Joliet and the swapping out of one Lawrenceburg riverboat for another. However, there was trouble in River City, with Morgan analysts noting "an unexpected spike in large employee medical catastrophic claims at that [Lawrenceburg] property (bizarre), and 4) a less than productive new marketing program at Charlestown (marketing at Charlestown?) that did not produce incremental revs, but increased costs." The medical claims alone were a $1 million black eye.

They counseled against heading for the lifeboats, though, and pointed out that Penn has $795 million in cash in the till. (Do I hear an offer for Beau Rivage?) Morgan is also bullish on Penn's expansion prospects in Kansas (really?), Ohio and Maryland.

There was even some good news for competitor Ameristar Casinos, thanks to continued troubles at Harrah's Entertainment. Wrote the Morgans team: "Harrah's has not increased its promotional activity (comps, spending, reinvestment)," boding well for everyone else.

As Morgan reported earlier this month, Harrah's was -18% in Louisiana in June, by far the worst decline of any operator in the market — while Boyd Gaming notched a slight gain (but a major victory in that context). Just as I've expected from the start, Texas Pacific and Apollo (Mis)Management are nickel-and-diming Harrah's into the poorhouse.

Posted in Ameristar, Boyd Gaming, Current, Economy, Harrah's, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Marketing, MGM Mirage, Ohio, Penn National, Station Casinos, Wall Street | Comments Off on Strange happenings at Penn Nat'l, Harrah's

Aztar deal the worst ever: it's quantifiable

When he acquired Aztar Corp., back in 2006, Columbia Sussex CEO William J. Yung III also became one of the company’s debtors. So what’s his $36 million worth today? According to the Wall Street Journal, 100 grand or less. If that weren’t enough to make the ColSux/Aztar deal the all-time biggest casino-sector wipeout of the last 15 years, consider that Carl Icahn’s “$200 million” credit bid (i.e., no money down) was placed with debt acquired at 27 cents on the dollar. So Icahn has himself a new casino for a tidy $54 million outlay.

In a less-reported development, Icahn also gained a controlling position in Tropicana Entertainment. Without either its Atlantic City or Las Vegas Trops, it’d be a car without an engine, a gaggle of riverboats and motels. Exactly where this leaves CEO Scott Butera and what role he’ll play remains an open question. Hopefully, either his or Icahn’s first move in Atlantic City will be to replace floundering Trop General Manager Mark Giannantonio (a Yung crony) with someone more up to the job.

Movement at Cosmo: The GM of Caesars Palace, John Unwin, has resigned. He’ll become CEO of the stalled Cosmopolitan in October. While it’s still unclear under whose aegis the casino will be run, Unwin’s hiring is the first concrete move to get some gaming expertise on board since Deutsche Bank seized the property.

Whining in Macao: Those two “integrated resorts” in Singapore haven’t even opened yet and won’t for another half a year, but Stanley Ho (whose venerable Hotel Lisboa is seen above) already has his panties in a bunch. According to Bloomberg News, the ancient casino oligarch has been wringing his hands about the burdensome, “serious issue” posed by Macao‘s 39% tax rate.

Boy, Singapore must be a more serious threat than I’d given it credit, if it’s got a Communist Party suck-up like Dr. Ho all a-twitter and taking issue with the government. He’s still in better shape than his American rivals; the attempt to graft Vegas-style megaresorts onto Macao has left them badly exposed to anemic market conditions. Ho’s gambling-centric strategy gives him less cause for worry.

Today Singapore, tomorrow the U.S.? Even while lender’s remorse has paralyzed American banks and stalled any hopes of “unbundling” the U.S. casino industry, diversification may be coming from an unlikely corner. Malaysia’s Genting Bhd, riding a sustained runup in its stock, has $2 billion in the kitty, is raising more and could pump $7 billion into casino acquisitions.

That isn’t to say there aren’t a lot of “ifs” and “buts.” Still, Genting’s fundamentals appear far more sound than those of say, Las Vegas Sands. It’s also in a position to deal a serious blow to Sands in Singapore. Not only will its Sentosa Island casino-resort open before Marina Bay Sands, but customers who “subscribe” to a $1,388/year entrance fee to one casino or another must play exclusively at that casino for the year. Once again, Sheldon Adelson‘s inability to finish a megaresort on schedule threatens to bite him in the butt.

Posted in Atlantic City, Carl Icahn, Columbia Sussex, Cosmopolitan, Current, Economy, Genting, Harrah's, International, Macau, Sheldon Adelson, Singapore, Stanley Ho, The Strip, Tropicana Entertainment | Comments Off on Aztar deal the worst ever: it's quantifiable

'Show Me' no stinkin' IDs

"We don't want them in there," huffs Ameristar Casinos' Troy Stremming (left) with regard to pathological gamblers. Stremming's high dudgeon rings a mite hollow now that the Missouri ballot initiative he crafted and shepherded to victory last fall is providing a free pass for problem gamblers. Once boarding requirements were repealed, away went the mechanism for screening self-banned gamblers. Whoops.

It's not like they still can't be caught on-property, though. Woe betide the player who hits a sufficiently big jackpot for his slot machine to go into "IRS lockdown." His identity has to be verified — which means he can kiss those winnings goodbye and prepare to be handcuffed. To quote Geena Davis in Thelma & Louise, "The law is some tricky shit."

But Missouri's got nothing on Illinois, where casino employees double as "bounty hunters." If you're a self-banned player who's shooting dice at Alton Belle or Casino Queen, there's literally a price on your head.

Posted in Ameristar, Missouri, Penn National, Problem gambling, Regulation, Taxes | Comments Off on 'Show Me' no stinkin' IDs

A Trop by any other name

Icahn Capital, which purchased the Tropicana Atlantic City for $54 million, effectively, is projecting a conservative course for the property. Any sort of expansion is being ruled out for now, due to skepticism about “green shoots” of economic recovery.

Speaking of distrust, the New Jersey Casino Commission still needs to be convinced that Icahn’s preferred operator, Tropicana Entertainment, isn’t a stalking horse for Columbia Sussex CEO William J. Yung III. (Both companies employ the same corporate mouthpiece, for instance.) Besides, if ties between TropEnt and Icahn are severed, what becomes of the “Tropicana” name?

(Also, calling TropEnt’s eight raggle-taggle, non-Vegas/Atlantic City casinos an “empire” is pretty generous. A series of minor duchies and prinicipalities? Yeah, that’s more like it.)

It doesn’t look like a standalone A.C. Trop would have ownership of its name, as that remains with the “OpCo,” that “empire” under which all the miscellaneous former Aztar Corp. and ColSux casinos are bunched. Tropicana Las Vegas boss Alex Yemenidjian apparently didn’t read the fine print and may have to shell out $2 million a year to keep the name that is, along with its land, the LV Trop’s main equity.

Would a Trop by any other name be just as marketable? One highly doubts it.

The Wild, Wild Midwest. Back in Illinois, the guvmint continues to take a “Ready, Fire, Aim!” approach to its management of the casino business. In his zeal to get slot routes up and running, Gov. Pat Quinn didn’t appropriate extra moolah or manpower to ride herd on the influx of new gambling devices.

So, if you’re a bar owner in the Land of Lincoln, it’s a free for all. The state’s casino owners, meanwhile, will probably have to wait until at least early next year before any financial relief makes its way through the Lege. Illinois isn’t just killing the golden goose; it’s serving it for lunch at the governor’s mansion.

Suing the Chairman. One of the many interesting revelations in the Terrance K. Watanabe lawsuit is that Harrah’s Entertainment created a special “Chairman” tier of players in his honor. (Take that, you Seven Stars members!) Watanabe’s counterfilings against Harrah’s also allege confidential agreements between the company and the high roller whereby he had a two-month (or greater) window of time to make good on his markers.

The documents further allege that Harrah’s violated the agreement by cashing in the markers early. It sounds more and more like Watanabe has Harrah’s CEO Gary Loveman by the short hairs. If the covenants can be substantiated, then Harrah’s made a loan — which is unenforceable — and may have been in breach of contract. The company better get ready to eat $14.75 million. Compared to the nearly $300 million Loveman just wrote off, that’s walking-around money.

Not that Watanabe is a pitiable victim in this drama. Seems he was rather a prima donna, dictating which employees would and would not dance attendance upon him. He was also able to have gambling tables and slot machines moved into special curtained alcoves, the bettter to squander his wealth in seclusion. To paraphrase Fitzgerald and Hemingway, the rich are not like you and I; they have more neuroses.

Posted in Alex Yemenidjian, Atlantic City, Carl Icahn, Columbia Sussex, Current, Economy, Harrah's, Illinois, Problem gambling, The Strip, Tropicana Entertainment | Comments Off on A Trop by any other name

'Show Me' no stinkin' IDs

"We don't want them in there," huffs Ameristar Casinos' Troy Stremming (left) with regard to pathological gamblers. Stremming's high dudgeon rings a mite hollow now that the Missouri ballot initiative he crafted and shepherded to victory last fall is providing a free pass for problem gamblers. Once boarding requirements were repealed, away went the mechanism for screening self-banned gamblers. Whoops.

It's not like they still can't be caught on-property, though. Woe betide the player who hits a sufficiently big jackpot for his slot machine to go into "IRS lockdown." His identity has to be verified — which means he can kiss those winnings goodbye and prepare to be handcuffed. To quote Geena Davis in Thelma & Louise, "The law is some tricky shit."

But Missouri's got nothing on Illinois, where casino employees double as "bounty hunters." If you're a self-banned player who's shooting dice at Alton Belle or Casino Queen, there's literally a price on your head.

Posted in Ameristar, Missouri, Penn National, Problem gambling, Regulation, Taxes | Comments Off on 'Show Me' no stinkin' IDs

God, save the Queen!

Another victim of the Comment-Eating Server, Jeff in OKC, writes:

Isn't the Queen of Hearts property part of what is to become the new City Hall? I know the Nevada Hotel and Casino isn't pretty, but it is the first casino built by Sam Boyd as owner, I think I read, and was owned for many years by Downtown icon Jackie Gaughan. That would be enough to give it preservable cachet in most cities. 

IMO, Tamares has been a bad landowner in Las Vegas, having done nothing to enhance their properties, and barely doing any maintenance. I recall reading that they let the unrestricted gaming license on the Nevada lapse. I think the City should pressure them to sell out (The Stevens family's Desert Rock holdings that owns half the Golden Gate could tie the Nevada Hotel tastefully into a complex with the Golden Gate) to others who have a desire to invest in the City. The Siegels have done a miraculous transformation of the Gold Spike, showing that it is possible to do business in the City of Las Vegas.

The Plaza [Hotel] and Las Vegas Club are two properties that have beautiful 1970's and 1980's charm, which are rapidly disappearing in Las Vegas. Their time in the sun is coming, and a fiscally responsible touch up would be in the best interest of the operators and the City. I wish the Mayor was as interested in appropriately keeping what is 30 years old as much as instilling his vision of 30 years into the future.

Posted in Architecture, Boyd Gaming, Downtown, Oscar Goodman, Tamares Group | Comments Off on God, save the Queen!

Packer steps in it again

After frequent demurrals, the Victoria government has ‘fessed up that it was on the receiving end of ham-fisted lobbying by Crown Casino owner James Packer. A delicate quid pro quo (higher taxes in return for more table games) was being negotiated. But, not wanting to leave anything to chance, Packer personally besieged both Victoria’s premier and treasurer in re Crown.

The state comes out of this looking worse than Packer, though, as witnessed by this weaselly attempt at damage control: “The Government is adamant that any expansion of Crown’s gaming tables was under discussion for a long time and that poker was a less addictive form of gambling than poker machines.” [Emphasis added] So I guess that makes it all copacetic, right?

Lawrence Ho & James Packer: less to smile about these days

Hammered in Macao. Packer’s new City of Dreams is getting stomped by nearby Venetian Macao. VIP baccarat play for Melco Crown Entertainment properties was off 19% — which is even worse than its sounds when you count on it for 60% of your total gambling revenues. Mass-market baccarat play was 12% up, so there’s some consolidation. (Meanwhile, in some parallel universe, the Wall Street Journal is nattering on about a “brighter outlook” for Macao, even as revenue continues to decline and City of Dreams flops. Visitation was -16% in June and the Mainland China subset of that was -22%.)

A good thing for Sheldon Adelson that Venetian Macao’s play is so strong. Bloomberg News reports that 85% of Las Vegas Sands‘ Macanese revenue is casino-derived … which ought to raise serious questions about Adelson’s hotel-, retail- and convention-premised Cotai Strip™ business model.

Posted in Australia, Economy, James Packer, Lawrence Ho, Macau, Melco Crown Entertainment, Problem gambling, Regulation, Sheldon Adelson | Comments Off on Packer steps in it again

Double-whammy for Planet Ho

True, Planet Hollywood is feeling some pain in the wallet after the Nevada Gaming Commission approved a $500,000 fine. But it's Clark County Department of Business License which fired the shot across the bow that will really get the casino industry's attention. By scotching the liquor licenses of both Planet Ho's Privé and Living Room clubs, it signed their death warrant. That, more than anything, ought to get scofflaw club owners and laissez-faire casino owners to clean up their act.

It's hardly an excessive move when you consider that the bill of particulars against Planet Ho's clubs included "drug use, prostitution, underage drinking and assault." Besides, if you want those things, perhaps you should patronize one of Las Vegas' many "gentlemen's clubs." Nevada regulators' concern about on-Strip prostitution is laudable, if tardy. When it was rampant at the Tropicana, gaming's policemen snoozed at their posts, otherwise known as "monitoring the situation."

If the message still hasn't sunk in, the Nevada Gaming Control Board's Randall Sayre sent out an "invitation" for casino executives and middle management to discuss a wide range of potential concerns. Gov. Jim Gibbons appointed Sayre to the NGCB with a mandate to beef up its law-enforcement role and Sayre's made good on it. (Even Midnight Jim has his moments of perspicacity.) It's good to see the spirit of Bobby Siller living on in Carson City.

"Damn those customers!" What do you do when business takes a not-unpredictable nosedive during a recession? Blame the customers, of course. At least, if you're Golden Nugget owner Tilman Fertitta, that's what you do. When times were good, Fertitta was bullish on gaming (which was essentially propping up his Landry's Restaurants empire).

Oh, what transformation a few bad quarters brings! Moans the Texas tycoon, “I feel very good about restaurant hospitality, I do not feel very good about gaming.” Hmmm, maybe you should have pondered that change of heart when you were proceeding with a new $150 million hotel tower (opening Aug. 1 Nov. 20) in the teeth of an economic tailspin?

As for the patrons, "discounted room rates appear to have attracted a clientele who are spending less on gaming and other amenities," harrumphs a company document. Yes, because in case you haven't noticed, we're on the verge of a depression. People have less money to spend. Period. Like many others like him, Fertitta needs to get hip to the fact that we're entering a period of diminished expectations. Shaking your fist at the rain isn't going to accomplish anything.

Other Fertitta scapegoats include MGM Mirage, for having the audacity to discount its rooms during the downturn. Sounding rather whiny, Fertitta utters, “You ought to go online and look at some of these rates and packages you can get. That is where we are just being murdered, trying to be competitive with the MGM and the Bellagio.”

Welcome to the NFL, man. And if you think — with all due respect to the downtown Nugget — that you're in the running against Bellagio or even the Green Monster, well, you're in a world of denial. I've not had time to read the last Landry's quarterly filing but, for once, it sounds like a real page-turner. 

Station wins one, albeit on a technicality. All parties involved will be back for a grudge match in local court.

Posted in Columbia Sussex, Current, Downtown, Economy, Labor, MGM Mirage, Regulation, Station Casinos, The Strip, Tilman Fertitta | Comments Off on Double-whammy for Planet Ho

Longoria meets CityCenter

A power outage really f-ed up our computers here and destroyed a finished S&G entry ("Save," my ass!). So, to lighten the atmosphere, here's actress Eva Longoria, who stars in a TV show I cannot stand, trying to look excited about a model of CityCenter:

The two gentlemen are CityCenter CEO Bobby Baldwin and Crystals at City Center prexy Frank Visconti. You've got to feel sorry for them because if Eva Longoria's in the photo, you might as well stay home. Ms. Longoria is tactfully posed to conceal the newly truncated Harmon, aka Baldwin's Bump. The actress was in town to tout the opening of a Strip branch of her Beso restaurant, which will be in Crystals. Yeah, I know, like you cared about that.

OK, so it's not another Carmen Electra picture, but I'm doing the best I can, guys. (Photo courtesy of Kirvin Doak)

Posted in Alaska, Dining, MGM Mirage, The Strip, TV | Comments Off on Longoria meets CityCenter

Tamares' crown jewels

Ian Sutton posted this today at GamingFloor.com and I couldn't resist snurching it. Sandwiched between footage of the Lady Luck and other Downtown detritus is a long, loving look at those two fine Tamares Group dereli … er, acquisitions: the Queen of Hearts and the Hotel Nevada. The latter has long been closed as was (supposedly) the QoH. But I saw some lights on at the old Queen when we drove past it Tuesday night, so who knows?

The bigger question is why Tamares continues to let these eyesores fester, especially with nearby development on Oscar Goodman's famous 61 acres proceeding apace. It's past time to knock this crap down. Even empty land would be an improvement. Ditto the Lady Luck. For a three-syllable solution to that gargantuan hulk, I defer to the time-honored wisdom of Jimmie J.J. Walker:

Posted in Architecture, Downtown, Economy, Oscar Goodman, Tamares Group, TV | Comments Off on Tamares' crown jewels

Quote of the Day

Sig Rogich’s choo-choo to nowhere. Some parts of Sig sold separately.

“Even with the Victorville-Palmdale link, which is not a dead certainty, a Las Vegas rider who wanted to see the Magic Kingdom would have to travel from Sin City to Victorville to Palmdale to Sylmar to Burbank to Los Angeles to Norwalk to Anaheim.

“Start early if you want to see the fireworks.” — CityLife Editor Steve Sebelius on the Harry Reid/Sig Rogich juice train. Speaking of “juice,” über-lobbyist (and Reid crony) Harvey Whittemore has prevailed again in one of the greasiest juice jobs I’ve ever seen. Poor John Ascuaga’s Nugget; it never stood a chance.

Posted in California, Current, Politics, Reno, Tourism, Transportation | Comments Off on Quote of the Day