Hip-hop superstar Megan Thee Stallion brought the Hot Girl Summer tour to the MGM Grand Garden Arena on Saturday.
Music
The lofty prices run counter to industry trends, where acts have cut prices to foster sales.
The famous downtown Las Vegas music festival is turning into a two-night affair in its first year of sole ownership by Rolling Stone.
On a Vegas weeknight, Lady Gaga’s “Jazz + Piano” show returned to Park MGM, and Flavor Flav joined Brian Newman on stage at NoMad Library.
Megan Thee Stallion, “Loud & Proud” wrestling, Las Vegas Restaurant Week and the Punk Rock Tattoo Expo top this week’s lineup.
“27” music director and guitarists Erik Himels says of his show, “We’ve found our groove, just as a band, over the past two months. We have made a statement that way. It is a real concert.”
Tao Nightclub at The Venetian is back in a socially distant setting beginning Saturday.
Butch Bradley has been in Vegas for three years, but he feels like a native.
The Greyhound bus station’s move out of downtown has cost a Plaza VIP guest his favorite means of transportation.
Andrew Dice Clay returns to the Vegas stage at Laugh Factory at the Tropicana.
Plaza is exclusively a home to stand-up comedy, with Nick Di Paolo reopening the venue Nov. 20-21.
Franky Perez, on his “Crossing The Great Divide” tour: “I played alleys, sidewalks, porches, venues, bridges, health-care facilities, corn fields, lobbies, parks, parking lots.”
Similar to the live show, “Marriage Can Be Murder” Zoom guests work with the cast to unravel clues and solve the murder
“Absinthe” producer Ross Mollison says, “Ultimately we think we can get 222 people in there, and that would be a third of our current capacity and it’s just a question of making the show work.”
It was a hot, sunny morning in VegasVille on Thursday. We know this because a tuxedoed, masked Phantom of the Opera sought shade under a palm tree near the “Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas” sign.