Katy Perry’s music is premiering at Fremont Street Experience on this weekend. So is Perry, in person.
Arts & Culture
A total of 12,000 fans have snapped up tickets to Thusdsay’s Historic Commercial Center block party.
Chris Brown and Usher have been friends for years, but were reportedly in a Vegas altercation on Friday night.
You can see Marco Antonio Solis, Miranda Lambert, Maroon 5 and “Ru Paul’s Drag Race Live!” for just $25. Not all together, mind you.
“BattleBots — Destruct-A-Thon” extension is an explosive development, robot-wise, on the Vegas entertainment scene.
The “Hot Blooded” rock band is winding down its career, though its members admit a final 2024 run in Las Vegas is not out of the question.
Sammy Hagar and the Circle — bassist Michael Anthony, guitarist Vic Johnson and drummer Jason Bonham — are reviving Van Halen favorites at Pearl at the Palms.
Kenny Davidsen opted for Las Vegas over Florida. After 10 years crushing it at Tuscany, it was the right call.
The Rogers Foundation chair Beverly Rogers says of her namesake theater, “We want to know what we can add. We want you to tell us if we could live without something.”
Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band are not scheduled to visit Southern Nevada on their current tour, but that needle could still be threaded.
The Lowden family’s latest venture, an 8,650-square-foot jazz club and restaurant, shares the same neighborhood (artistically and geographically) as The Smith Center.
Rene-Claude LaMarre’s theater concept sprouted from the writer-director’s “Chocolate City” movie franchise.
Cindy Funkhouser was an achitect of the Arts District, and co-founder of First Friday.
A few weeks ago at Opportunity Village’s annual gala, organization CEO Bob Brown motioned toward a table mate and said, “There’s the man who saved Opportunity Village during COVID.”
James Trees of Esther’s Kitchen says, “I’m super-surprised that the city jumped on the paid parking so fast. I thought it was in very poor taste.”