The Killers have shown love to the Plaza, Caesars Entertainment and MGM Resorts in their video and concert appearances. Add Pearl at the Palms to that list.
Arts & Culture
Pete Townshend is already talking of The Who extending its stay at Caesars, and the band has played just one show.
Killers manager Robert Reynolds says he and his brother Mac Reynolds, manager of Imagine Dragons, try to do whatever is best for each band, individually.
“Power of Peace” is filled with such classic covers as Stevie Wonder’s “Higher Ground,” Billie Holiday’s “God Bless the Child,” and Curtis Mayfield’s “Gypsy Woman.”
Robert Irvine says he wants guests at his new restaurant to feel like they are part of his family.
The Killers are playing Monday night outside Caesars Palace, reminiscent of the night they opened the Life is Beautiful festival four years ago.
“Circus 1903” is filled with lavish sets, employing 19 cast members and an 11-person crew. None of it is cheap. We know the performers will flip, but will audiences?
Gold & Silver Pawn owner and “Pawn Stars” star Rick Harrison says he thinks O.J. Simpson is “a disgusting person.”
In the second show in a four-show run at Cleopatra’s Barge, CeeLo Green took on Michael Jackson’s “The Way You Make me Feel,” and Morris Day & The Time’s dance classic “The Bird.”
“Opium,” a production featuring a comic host introducing a variety of wild side acts, is reportedly being planned for the venue on the second level of the Shoppes at the Palazzo entertainment and retail promenade.
Oscar Goodman, the former mayor of Las Vegas and city’s famed “Mob Lawyer,” was nearly a member of the so-called O.J. Simpson “Dream Team” of defense attorneys in his 1995 double-murder trial.
The real tug in “Circus 1903” is what Willy Whipsnade calls “the root of the circus.”
Palace Station’s marquee and hotel tower was splashed across national TV reports for several days following the O.J. Simpson incident of Sept. 12, 2007.
Master impressionist Gordie Brown is once more on the hunt for a venue as the Cabaret Show Lounge at the Mezzanine at Planet Hollywood is closing for ticketed shows, effective Aug. 15.
Louie Anderson won his first Emmy last year for Best Supporting Actor in a Comedy for his role as the mother of twins Chip and Dale Baskets, played by co-creator Zach Galifianakis.