A scene that brings to light Celine Dion’s battle with Stiff Person Syndrome is in her “I Am” documentary,
Music
Penn & Teller have had their TV series “Fool Us” renewed for an 11th season, and they’re inviting people to watch tapings for free in Las Vegas.
Morrissey promises, “Expect a night of thrust and parry — no-show tunes,” at House of Blues.
Among those confirmed for iHeartRadio Music Festival, Gwen Stefani and Keith Urban have headlined residencies on the Strip.
Lainey Wilson is set to perform at MGM Grand Garden, side-saddle with the National Finals Rodeo at nearby Thomas & Mack Center.
Celine Dion has road dates scheduled in February, and Resorts World is holding May for her premiere.
Frankie Moreno opened at Kaos on Friday, as former backing singer Crystal Robinson-Welsley took the stage.
“I still can’t believe, to be very honest, we are in Las Vegas, because of the way that the league has viewed and everything that this city offers to anybody who wants to gamble,” Eisen says.
When asked who he wanted to meet on the “SNL” set, Nathaniel Rateliff said, “Lorne Michaels.”
Lionel Richie caught James Corden dead center at Encore Theater, calling the talk-show host out on a rare night off.
Bryan Cranson was asked whose idea it was to start a mezcal company: “Aaron’s, of course.”
Sting owned this show, a completely confident and stylish Vegas headline production.
George Wallace guests and B.J. Novak hosts “The Premise,” along with Lucas Hedges, Beau Bridges, Ben Platt, Tracee Ellis Ross, Daniel Dae Kim and O’Shea Jackson Jr.
Dennis Rodman spent two days during the 1998 NBA Finals in Las Vegas. Predictably, it was a party.
Zak Bagans says he nearly died when he saw a surviving part from James Dean’s Porche Spyder was available at auction.