Usher parked it with “Backstory Pass,” while Carrie Underwood summoned high tide at Resorts World.
Kats
John Katsilometes’ column runs daily on Page 3A. Email jkatsilometes@reviewjournal.com. Follow him at @johnnykats on Twitter and @JohnnyKats1 on Instagram. Listen to the latest episodes of his PodKats! podcast here.
Bob Anderson has achieved the improbable, bringing his Sinatra revue to New York City. Now he wants Broadway.
Wayne Newton is coming back to the Strip for the first time since March 2020.
Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak says the Super Bowl “puts other major events to shame” as the event is announced for Vegas.
Gus Mancuso’s contemporaries remember him as one of the greatest musicians ever to play Las Vegas.
Shania Twain has added 16 shows, and the Doobie Brothers have announced eight, at Zappos Theater.
Adele’s lowest-priced tickets are more than $300, topping out at more than $4,000, for her Caesars run.
The 54-year-old Pineda, who has taken over for Steve Perry with the Rock & Roll Hall of Famers, is tearing up Las Vegas as Journey wraps up an eight-show residency.
Michael Bublé is playing the Strip’s newest theater in its newest resort, and he’s bringing a mega-band.
Rev. Run performed at halftime at Allegiant Stadium on Sunday. A night earlier, Dave Grohl of the Foo Fighters talked of a Vegas residency.
Frank Marino has departed “Legends in Concert,” and “MJ Live is moving in next year.
We knew Delisco some time ago in Las Vegas, as a capable entertainer who won the TV show, “The Entertainer.” The country now knows Delisco not in a showroom, but a courtroom in Washington, D.C.
Cirque’s most lavish show, “Ka,” returns with a fourish to MGM Grand.
A COVID-forced shutdown, the loss of its original co-director and water damage to the theater threw this effort into peril. But “This Is Christmas,” something of a Las Vegas Christmas miracle, made it out the other side.
Carrot Top moved into the Luxor in 2005. He’s been a hit ever since.