The K-pop superstars’ four-show run begins at Allegiant Stadium Friday — here’s how the South Korean band became a phenomenon.
Jason Bracelin
Jason Bracelin once went on tour with Kid Rock so you don’t have to. Prior to first being named the R-J’s music writer in 2006, Bracelin was the music editor for the Cleveland Scene alt-weekly. He is a graduate of the University of Illinois. A Decatur, Ill. native, Bracelin has lived in Las Vegas since 2006.
Ticket prices for BTS shows at Allegiant Stadium shows are trending down on the secondary market.
Hybe, the conglomerate that’s guided BTS to superstardom, will hold auditions on the same days as BTS concerts at Allegiant. Plus, see the band’s Las Vegas welcome video.
“Permission to Dance — The City,” a two-week-long celebration of all things BTS starts next week ahead of the four planned concerts.
The 64th edition of the music awards show takes place at the MGM Grand Garden at 5 p.m. on Sunday, but there are no tickets available to the public.
Upon landing in Las Vegas for their upcoming performances at the Grammy Awards and Allegiant Stadium, another member of K-pop superstar group BTS has tested positive for COVID-19.
The pieces are normally confined to museums and art galleries and can go for hundreds of thousands of dollars in some cases. Now, anyone can see them free of charge, just by strolling through one of these casinos.
A new pairing between two DJ superstars will make its live debut at the Electric Daisy Carnival at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.
The three-day heavy music, indie rock and hip-hop fest is relocating to a new location on the Las Vegas Strip.
Griffin Haddill heads VRTCL, a company that has become a leader in the burgeoning industry of generating TikTok virality for artists and record labels.
The three-day festival returns to downtown Las Vegas Sept. 16-18.
From hosting Broadway hits to Neil deGrasse Tyson, the performing art center has become a cultural hub of Las Vegas.
“Some of my most difficult conversations with the design team early on had to do with Cabaret Jazz,” Myron Martin acknowledges.
When people ask if college is necessary anymore, DeRionne Pollard — the first Black woman to run a college campus in Nevada — can point to her life as an answer
“We try to stay together; we try to support each other,” says aerialist Dmitry Deyneko, who’s performed in Las Vegas since 2017. “That’s what we can do from here.”