The grand room, led by a globally celebrated chef who actually cooked on site, once hung with $100 million in art and starred in “Ocean’s Eleven.”
Travel website Tripadvisor is predicting a busy summer season in Las Vegas this year.
This was to be the third installment of the annual hip-hop and R&B festival.
Super Bowl 58’s capacity was the smallest in the event’s history,
Carrie Ann Inaba of “Dancing with the Stars” is to be honored at the next gala
President Joe Biden told supporters in Las Vegas that he is “just getting started” with his presidency and urged Nevadans to elect Democrats up and down the ballot in 2024.
If you’re looking to add sparkle to your exercise routine and brighten your holiday spirit, a trek down the Las Vegas Strip could be a step — make that several thousand steps — in the right direction.
Las Vegas police have accused a woman arrested of severely beating a man in his hotel room and stealing money from him at the end of October.
Shaquille O’Neal kicked it up (for real) with DJ Pee .Wee, aka Anderson .Paak. Imagine Dragons raised more than $3 million, with one of their starters sidelined.
A man accused of posing as one of the owners of Circa and swindling the casino out of more than $1 million pleaded guilty to theft this week.
Review-Journal entertainment columnist John Katsilometes recaps the entertainment that went on during the weekend.
Trees near the Bellagio fountains have been removed for F1 preparations.
Two strip resorts have announced that parking fees are returning.
Tens of thousands of resort corridor workers are vital to the success of any weekend in Las Vegas, and they will be especially important during the Las Vegas Grand Prix.
Flooding sweeps through the Las Vegas valley with cars attempting to drive through floods at Las Vegas Boulevard.
Visitation to Southern Nevada continued its steady climb, but convention traffic in July was down by double-digit percentages.
Robot tours are coming to the sphere during F1 to showcase the venue’s technological capabilities.
Lisa Vanderpump is planning on opening a restaurant at the Flamingo on the Las Vegas strip.
Some Las Vegas Strip restaurants are adding a COVID-19 surcharge to their bills to help offset the additional costs of reopening. (Las Vegas Review-Journal)
MGM Resorts International and Caesars Entertainment Corp. on Tuesday announced reopening plans that will expand hotel and casino capacity in the city.
At a media event during UFC 250 fight week, UFC president Dana White spoke about how the UFC is faring amid the coronavirus pandemic, what it was like to see Las Vegas reopen after being closed for 78 days and his thoughts on the George Floyd protests. (Heidi Fang/Las Vegas Review-Journal)
When casinos shut down, not only were tourists unseen on the Las Vegas Strip, but jobs were temporarily lost. Treasure Island took the months off to remodel and fix the property, adjusting the casino for COVID-19 norms. Now that they’re open again, management is slowly hiring back staff as guests return. (Rachel Aston/Las Vegas Review-Journal)
When casinos shut down, not only were tourists unseen on the Las Vegas Strip, but jobs were temporarily lost. Treasure Island took the months off to remodel and fix the property, adjusting the casino for COVID-19 norms. Now that they’re open again, management is slowly hiring back staff as guests return. (Rachel Aston/Las Vegas Review-Journal)
George Floyd protesters march on the Las Vegas Strip
A look at Las Vegas openings downtown and on The Strip after 78 days of closure due to the pandemic.
A tour of the Bellagio highlights new casino procudures that will be in place upon reopening. (Renee Summerour/Las Vegas Review-Journal)
Las Vegas police used tear gas and nonlethal rubber bullets to break up a Black Lives Matter protest on the Las Vegas Strip shortly before 9 p.m. on Sunday.
Las Vegas police said they arrested 80 people Friday night during a protest on the Strip. Twelve officers were injured, the department said Saturday, although the extent of the officers’ injuries was unclear.
Las Vegas police arrested two photojournalists, including a Review-Journal staff photographer, while they were photographing a Friday night protest on the Strip. The demonstrators were protesting the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis police custody. Similar protests have broken out across the U.S. Review-Journal photographer Ellen Schmidt was arrested, along with photographer and former Review-Journal employee Bridget Bennett. Both were booked into the Clark County Detention Center and face misdemeanor charges.