Oscar Goodman asks, “How are you still alive?” Michael Franzese answers, “Because most of the people who want to see me dead are dead, or they’re in prison.” The show is on.
Entertainment Columns
A Waldorf Astoria spokeswoman said, “We are currently conducting an investigation into the cause and working to repair the outer pane.”
A day after the stage show “Frank Marino’s Divas Las Vegas” announced it was closing at The Linq Hotel, an investigation into the show’s charitable activity has been reported.
Richard Harrison, the patriarch of the Harrison family and the driving force behind the popular History program “Pawn Stars,” has died.
Las Vegas resident Vinnie Paul, a heavy-metal icon and drumming force with Pantera and Hellyeah, has died in Las Vegas, multiple sources have confirmed.
Wayne Newton is bolstering his home security system and adding armed guards after a pair of burglers broke into his Las Vegas estate late Thursday night.
As always, the Keep Memory Alive Power of Love gala raises operating funds for the Cleveland Clinic Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health. Michael Buble is the star entertainer,
“Inferno” will deliver as much fire and brimstone as any production show we’ve seen on the Strip.
The Chainsmokers rocked XS Nightclub at Wynn Las Vegas. This was expected.
Mel Brooks twice filled Encore Theater on June 30-July 1. He had just turned 91 when he made his Strip debut.
Country star Jason Aldean says he hopes that healing can start for those affected by a mass shooting at a Las Vegas music festival in his first interview since the October shooting.
Zak Bagans, the host of the Travel Channel paranormal series “Ghost Adventurers,” had planned to open his Haunted Museum on Monday afternoon, but delayed a day to swiftly assemble Tuesday’s vigil.
The sign company Yesco actually owns the Hard Rock Cafe sign, in an agreement with Hard Rock Cafe’s parent company dating to the restaurant’s opening in 1990.
Barry Manilow headlined the Las Vegas Hilton and Paris Las Vegas from 2004-2012.
The real tug in “Circus 1903” is what Willy Whipsnade calls “the root of the circus.”