As video cameras float from courtroom to courtroom, defense attorneys are growing more concerned about the crew of “Las Vegas D.A.” — a “docudrama” about the Clark County District Attorney’s Office — recording moments they shouldn’t.
TV
Twice now, southwest Las Vegas has served as a launching point for the return of the Vegas PBS program “Outdoor Nevada.”
When “The Bold and the Beautiful” actor Scott Turner Schofield found out on Twitter he had won the best actor award from Las Vegas TransPride, he decided to head to Las Vegas to pick it up.
Former Las Vegas firefighter George Tiaffay was convicted last month of having his estranged wife, Shauna Tiaffay, murdered. The story is being presented as “Vengeance in Vegas,” this week’s episode of “48 Hours.”
A television show about the Clark County District Attorney’s Office has been picked up by a cable network, and is expected to start filming this fall at the Regional Justice Center.
Clark County can’t seem to get enough of the small screen.
Between the dozens of conversations held Saturday night inside Atomic Liquors in downtown Las Vegas, some local tales about the city’s qualities were filmed for an upcoming episode of Comedy Central show “Drunk History.”
From the couch in your living room, imagine having the power to watch a basketball game or award show as if you were actually there, said Mandalay Entertainment CEO and President Peter Guber said Monday.
Outside interests have gone on an unprecedented buying spree, leaving most Las Vegas media outlets under new management.
Linda Cooney’s story played out in Las Vegas courts for more than three years. Her story gets another hearing Saturday in “48 Hours” on CBS in a segment titled “Mommy Dearest.”
John Locher, a former photographer for the Las Vegas Review-Journal, won an Emmy Award for his video “Double Helix” on Saturday.
Jim Rogers, the former chancellor of Nevada’s university system and owner of KSNV-DT, died on Saturday, according to a report from KSNV. Rogers had been battling cancer.
A Las Vegas man is hoping to get paid to have one of his testicles removed. In a trailer for the upcoming episode of TLC’s “Extreme Cheapskates,” Parisi says that he plans to participate in a medical trial in which one of his testicles will be removed in exchange for $35,000.
Just like Alan Thicke, the metric system and poutine, the staff of Binion’s is a much bigger deal in Canada.
For more than 60 years, local television stations have made a fortune by broadcasting news, sports and entertainment provided by national networks, supplemented by a limited array of local programs.