Brandon Flowers says, “Every time someone makes a record, they say that they have 50 songs and they’re going to release another record. We really are.”
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During the week of Juneteenth, two businesses in the Las Vegas Arts District covered their walls with art installations and murals that support the current Black Lives Matter movement.
Nonprofit organization rids the industrial alley of trash bins, making way for murals, installations and gathering spots.
Kids’ science, outdoor jazz and burlesque top the downtown Las Vegas to-do list this week.
Area15 is putting out a call for young Las Vegas artists to design the walls of the soon-to-open experiential entertainment complex.
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.
The annual Pioneer Day took place Saturday at the Old Las Vegas Mormon Fort State Historic Park near downtown Las Vegas.
Tony Dovolani performed twice Saturday night but later learned that his cousin, Shkelzen Verzivoli, known as “Skalzy,” had died of a heart attack at age 42.
Avoid the malls and support local authors this Black Friday by doing some holiday shopping at The Mob Museum.
The Las Vegas Pride Festival wrapped up a weekend of activities held Saturday and Sunday at Sunset Park.
Opportunity Village hosted the inaugural Pumpkin Paws at HallOVeen in the Magical Forest this weekend in Las Vegas.
On Saturday, the Old Las Vegas Mormon Fort State Park held its annual “Pioneer Day,” a festival celebrating the lifestyle of the settlers who traveled west seeking better lives.
Neal Schon and Carlos Santana stormed through a three-song foray to open Sunday’s Santana show at House of Blues.
The Mob Museum, the National Museum of Organized Crime and Law Enforcement, plans to spend $6.5 million over the next year to add new, interactive exhibitions and a better dining experience as it seeks to draw in more tourists.
You don’t have to be German American to come to Jazz Night Tuesdays at the German-American Social Club of Nevada, 1110 E. Lake Mead Blvd., but it does raise the price of admission from the $2 members pay to a whopping $7, which really isn’t much for three hours of jazz by seasoned performers.