Low overhead and word-of-mouth marketing help “B shows’ thrive.
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Comedian with history of personal loan troubles jumps from Hooters to Westgate with a better offer and no complaints by management.
Post-“Mike & Molly,” the comedian heads to Memphis to play Elvis’ manager in an upcoming TV miniseries.
Janis McKay follows the musicians who backed the stars in “Played Out on the Strip.”
The show is called “Spoofical — A Musical,” and this crude, crazy, try-anything “kitchen sink” of a musical spoof is all producer David Saxe’s idea.
Would you rather be a rock star in the era of a mature city or a mature record industry? It wasn’t a choice for either the band Slaughter or Imagine Dragons.
Performers Bob Anderson and John Payne launched new vehicles for themselves with different outcomes.
There’s still a certain sizzle to having “Las Vegas” in your name. Maybe less so for pavers or locksmiths, but definitely for three singers trying to sell tickets to people who haven’t heard of them.
Big shoes to fill, that Frank Sinatra. But Bob Anderson has been sizing them up for, oh, 40 years or so now.
Tom Green is doing OK in his transition from TV prankster to agitated stand-up comedian, but he’s not going to turn down any extra help. On certain nights, that helps comes in the form of a visit from Andrew Dice Clay, who usually follows Green with a separately ticketed show in the Hard Rock Hotel’s Vinyl club.