The people behind the app say it can be hard for those 40 and older to make friends in Las Vegas, since many of the people who live here were not born here.
Sean Hemmersmeier
Sean Hemmersmeier joined the Review-Journal in July 2022 as a general assignment business reporter. Before moving to Las Vegas, Sean covered government and development news in Southern Utah for The Spectrum & Daily News. He is a native of Salt Lake City and graduated from Loyola University Chicago in 2021 with a degree in multimedia journalism.
This is the second Las Vegas location for the local franchise owner of the neighborhood pet store.
Known for its eye-catching pink elephant, the property could sell for millions in an online auction.
Another big name office tenant has signed on to the UnCommons mixed-used development in Southwest Las Vegas.
A law firm and luxury real estate firm are the newest tenants of a Downtown Summerlin office building developed by Howard Hughes Holdings.
The takeout pizza chain has one location open in Las Vegas, is opening another one in the southwest valley in February and has plans for more.
Rumors were swirling that the Sphere was damaged. Here’s what the company said.
A distillery is looking to relocate to downtown Las Vegas while another business is expanding by adding a bar.
The new leader of the Nevada Film Office talks about the potential for filming more television shows and movies in the state and what it will take to get there.
Planned new additions to the Arts District and to Fashion Show mall, topped the list of the best stories from the year.
Its location near the Sphere and the Strip could be driving tenants away as the owner stops paying on a loan.
Beverly Theater is having a successful first year. It has a unique strategy for the holiday season.
After a major construction milestone, BLVD could now open to the public in early 2025.
The outdoor recreation economy is worth billions in Nevada and businesses around Las Vegas are optimistic it could keep growing in the future thanks to the city’s location in the Southwest U.S.
A bankruptcy court approved the sale of most of Yellow’s real estate assets.