Vegas favorite Bruno Mars has booked six more shows at his favorite Vegas venue, Dolby Live.
John Katsilometes
John Katsilometes’ man-about-town column appears on daily on page 3A. Katsilometes moved to Las Vegas from Northern California in 1996 and spent two years with the RJ before moving to the Greenspun Media Group in 1998, where he served as an editor, magazine writer and columnist. He returned to the RJ in August 2016. He has won numerous state and regional awards, including the 2013 Nevada Press Association Journalist of the Year honor, and has been awarded three times for column writing by the Best of the West contest.
Mark Wahlberg has said he wants to make Las Vegas “Hollywood 2.0.” And he’s filming a hit movie here now.
The country hang Stoney’s North Forty is returning this summer to Santa Fe Station. The tavern will offer live entertainment, a mechanical bull.
Sea World in San Diego had loaned the dolphins to the Mirage years ago. Now they are heading back.
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.
“I think every Vegas show is built to take on these evolutions,” co-producer Baz Halpin said in a recent phone interview. “So this is our first step of an evolution. We’re quite pleased with it.”
Superstars Katy Perry and Luke Bryan have announced new dates this year at the Resorts World Theatre.
“U2: UV Achtung Baby Live At The Sphere” was revealed in superlative fashion, with a quick but dazzling commercial in the fourth quarter of Super Bowl LVII.
Beyoncé will play a twinbill at Allegiant Stadium in August.
Power of Love co-founder Larry Ruvo called Sammy Hagar in the middle of the night a few weeks ago. Today, we have a show.
Oscar Goodman needled his dinner-series crowd at Plaza, “If you want to talk while I’m talking, leave your name, leave your address.”
U2 is planning to do a splashy advertisement during Sunday’s Super Bowl LVII on Fox.
Vegas headliner Clint Holmes recalls that Burt Bacharach ‘drilled’ him on an all-time classic.
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.
Kevin Nealon’s offshoot projects have since included “Hiking With Kevin,” venturing through the canyons of Los Angeles with his comedy friends.
