The stunt comedian who went viral on “America’s Got Talent” comes to roost in a no-budget showcase at Hooters.
Mike Weatherford
Australian vocal quartet covers songs from ’50s through ‘Hotline Bling’ in new show debuting Tuesday.
Last week’s hullabaloo over George Strait playing at least four Las Vegas arena concerts next year got me wondering: Has any other superstar kept getting more and more popular over the years without doing one thing different?
Some entertainers may be delusional about their audiences. Not Rich Little.
Boyz II Men hope “Collide” will fight oldies-act perception, while other stars care less about tying new music to Vegas live shows.
There comes a point in every Celine Dion show where the waterworks open and you can’t stop a tear from running down your face.
The short-term forecast calls for it raining men. But if you fear these girls’ nights are getting out of hand, Holly Madison will be back in the burlesque business soon.
I’m not sure how to feel about this: There is so much going on in “X Rocks,” I would forget from time to time that I was looking at topless women.
“America’s Got Talent” always promises its winner will become “a Las Vegas headliner.” But this year it looks as though the fourth-place TV finisher will be the first to play Las Vegas solo billed.
After interviewing David Copperfield for a feature you can read next week, talk drifted to Las Vegas showrooms — the physical venues themselves.
Give me a minute to adjust expectations here.