Much has been speculated about the business model for SLS Las Vegas.
Business Columns
If Tim Poster’s suitability hearing in front of Nevada gaming regulators had been filmed for reality television, it might have saved that awful “The Casino” series he and business partner Tom Breitling had when they owned the Golden Nugget in 2004.
Anyone trying decipher subliminal messages from the early November policy address by Macau’s top government official would have an easier time determining whether the Beatles were secretly telling us Paul was dead through the “Abbey Road” album cover.
Earlier this summer, Sheldon Adelson told those nasty little Internet gaming punks to get off his lawn. Now, he thinks they egged his house.
Payoffs to government officials typically don’t show up on the balance sheets of U.S. gaming companies.
The marriage between lottery provider Scientific Games Corp. and slot machine manufacturer WMS Industries is still in the honeymoon phase.
The only Sin City video getting more hits on the Internet than the Culinary union’s recent taunting and name-calling of people entering The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas was the 2011 clip of Batman getting body-slammed on the Strip by a drunken tourist.
Two years ago, Massachusetts was considered a potentially lucrative gaming opportunity.
The Venetian and Palazzo on the Strip provided Las Vegas Sands Corp. with somewhat lackluster revenues in the third quarter.
Has there ever been a gaming company that suffered through a worse 72-hour period than Caesars Entertainment Corp.?
Caesars Entertainment Corp. has a bigger debt load than what Detroit owes its creditors.
Bob Faiss is considered one of the world’s leading gaming attorneys. His 40-year career could serve as a documentary on the history of Nevada gaming law and the expansion of the casino industry.
Gaming analysts were turned into film critics during last month’s Global Gaming Expo.
Gibraltar-based 888 Holdings has quietly carved out an extra-large share of the neophyte U.S. online gaming market.
Pinnacle Entertainment CEO Anthony Sanfilippo drew as much attention during last week’s Global Gaming Expo as the Na’Vi warriors, zombies, Beetlejuice and David Copperfield.