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Category Archives: Las Vegas
Las Vegas named one of the worlds best cities – Las Vegas Review-Journal
Posted: October 7, 2021 at 3:32 pm
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Las Vegas named one of the worlds best cities - Las Vegas Review-Journal
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Houstons Hot Chicken to bring a Las Vegas team sports restaurant to the Arts District – Eater Vegas
Posted: at 3:32 pm
Houston Crosta is wasting no time expanding his hot chicken sandwich concept and new details confirm his scheduled move to the Arts District will create a family-friendly tribute to local sports teams. Houstons Hot Chicken takes over the prominent corner space at 1201 S. Main Street with a 2,464-square-foot sports bar that plans to display signed memorabilia from local athletes, plus decor celebrating Las Vegas sports teams including the Raiders, Aviators, Aces, Golden Knights, and Lights. Already equipped with a distinctive curved front entrance, one section of the restaurant will welcome families, while the adult lounge area features its own bar.
The sports bar sits between the Cream Me Ice Creamery on Main Street and Yu-Or-Mi Sushi Bar on California Avenue. Later this fall, local institution Freeds Bakery is on track to debut a retail-only outlet next door.
While Houstons hasnt revealed a potential menu or possible opening date, its Green Valley Parkway outpost in Henderson focuses on sandwiches and tenders. Prepared with heat levels ranging from zero to liftoff, waivers must be signed by diners attempting to eat its food challenge-worthy chicken pieces spiced with 2 million Scoville Heat Units of fieriness.
Still in the works, an announced expansion to West Ann Road and into Fashion Show mall on the Strip. Crosta is also co-owner of southwest sandwich restaurant Egg Sammie, currently closed while it undergoes a remodel.
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1203 S Main St, Las Vegas, NV 89104
7379 South Rainbow Boulevard, , NV 89113 (725) 204-8881
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Houstons Hot Chicken to bring a Las Vegas team sports restaurant to the Arts District - Eater Vegas
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1 dead, 1 injured after shooting in North Las Vegas – KTNV Las Vegas
Posted: at 3:32 pm
LAS VEGAS (KTNV) North Las Vegas Police Department is investigating a homicide in the 1800 block of Helen Avenue near Carey Avenue and Martin Luther King Boulevard that occurred at about 1:45 p.m.
Officers say they were dispatched to the area in reference to illegal shooting and on arrival they located a male and female, both believed to be in their 20s, suffering from a gunshot wound.
Medical personnel arrived and transported them to UMC trauma where the man died due to his injuries and the woman is in good condition, according to authorities.
NLVPD says this is not believed to be a random act of violence but to help protect the integrity of the case, no further information is available.
The coroner will release the cause and manner of death of the deceased after notifying the next of kin.
Anyone with information about the incident is asked to call NLVPD at 702-633-9111
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
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1 dead, 1 injured after shooting in North Las Vegas - KTNV Las Vegas
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For this Pahrump car enthusiast, the Mecum Las Vegas auction represents a chance to selland reunite with friends – Las Vegas Weekly
Posted: at 3:32 pm
In 2011, Roger Baggett retired from his 37-year career working in the oilfields of Northern Alaska with a couple of goals in mind. One was to explore his longtime interest in collecting and restoring cars, a hobby for which the icy Alaskan climate was anything but conducive. He also wanted to make a major lifestyle change after decades of performing industrial electrical maintenance in the oil production facilities at Prudhoe Bay, where temperatures could dip to 40-below zero.
One of my goals in retirement was to never wear long pants again, and Im doing a darn fine job of it, Baggett says.
Baggetts twin objectives led him to an extreme environment of a different type, but one that fit his needs perfectlythe Southern Nevada desert, where he has spent the past 10 years as a shorts-wearing car hobbyist in Pahrump. There, in a 1,050-square-foot shop equipped with a vehicle lift, he spends hours doing mechanical work on the small fleet of classic and vintage cars hes collected. The desert heat doesnt faze him, he says.
Weathers weather. I worked in the cold, and I can work in the shop when its 110 degrees. It sounds ridiculous, but I just figure, Yep, its hot. I just suck it up and do what I want.
His vehicles include a 1950s Willys Jeepster, a sort of mashup between a Jeep and a convertible sedan, and a 1929 Ford Model A delivery panel van. Both cars are modified with modern engines, automatic transmissions and special touches like electric bucket seats in the Jeepster.
Baggetts approach to collecting is to resurrect cars he can drive anytime he feels like it, not to create museum pieces. My cars are in the $20,000 range, he says. I dont have $100,000 cars that Id be afraid to drive.
When Baggett isnt wrenching in the shop, hes often traveling with his wife, Jennifer, to car auctions. The two are planning to attend the Mecum Las Vegas auction October 7-9 at the Las Vegas Convention Center, where Baggett is selling three vehiclesa 1954 Chevrolet Bel Air coupe, a 1964 Ford Thunderbird and a 1991 Mercedes-Benz 350SDL sedan that was Jennifers daily ride until she recently got a GMC Yukon SUV with a custom interior and exterior panels that make it resemble a classic woodie-style wagon.
Shed had the Mercedes since 2015 but didnt like it anymore since it didnt have good cupholders, Baggett says, laughing.
The couple are partial to Mecum eventsBaggett says the company provides exceptionally cordial and professional customer service to bidders and sellers. He also likes Mecums approach of offering vehicles at a broad range of prices, as opposed to catering exclusively to the high-end collector market.
Then theres the social aspect of being around other car enthusiasts. I have friends in Erie, Pennsylvania, who go mostly to [Mecums] East Coast auctions. We have friends down in Texas who we see all the time, people in Canada, friends in Australia, he says. You start chit-chatting and you strike up a friendship.
At the Las Vegas auction, Baggett will set up in his normal seat, near the front by the stage, where hell be wearing his standard outfit of a tie-dyed shirt and Birkenstock sandals.
And shorts, of course. Always shorts.
Mecum Las VegasAbout 1,000 vehicles, including muscle cars, customs and exotics, will go on the block during Mecums fifth-annual Las Vegas auction, scheduled for October 7-9 at the Las Vegas Convention Center. Gates open daily at 8 a.m., with auctioning starting at 10 a.m.
The general public is invited, and bidding isnt required. Tickets cost $20 in advance and $30 at the gate once auctioning begins.
For more information, visit mecum.com.
ClickHEREto subscribe for free to the Weekly Fix, the digital edition of Las Vegas Weekly! Stay up to date with the latest on Las Vegas concerts, shows, restaurants, bars and more, sent directly to your inbox!
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Nevada authorities involved in deadly shooting northeast of Las Vegas – KTNV Las Vegas
Posted: at 3:32 pm
LAS VEGAS (KTNV) The Nevada Highway Patrol is leading an investigation on a deadly shooting that involved authorities on Sunday morning northeast of Las Vegas.
Trooper Travis Smaka, public information officer with the NHP, said authorities were called about a rolling domestic battery happening in a gray Toyota Corolla just before 8 a.m. near Lake Mead Boulevard and Los Feliz Street.
Witnesses informed police that a man was seen hitting a female in the car.
Troopers were then able to locate the Carolla and make contact with the occupants on Lake Mead Boulevard near mile marker 14 but that's when a shooting occurred that killed the man who was reportedly part of the couple in question.
Trooper Smaka did not share any further immediate details but said the incident remains under investigation with multiple agencies looking into the situation.
The Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada reported a road closure at the scene from Sunday morning.
Stay with 13 Action News for further updates when available
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Bicyclist killed in collision with vehicle in North Las Vegas – KLAS – 8 News Now
Posted: October 1, 2021 at 7:45 am
LAS VEGAS (KLAS) North Las Vegas police are investigating a fatal crash involving a vehicle and a woman on a bicycle Thursday morning at Donna Street and Washburn Avenue, just east of Mojave High School.
The bicyclist, a woman believed to be in her 50s, has died at UMC, according to police.
Preliminary investigation revealed that a Mercedes SUV was traveling eastbound on Washburn approaching Donna and failed to stop for a stop sign. The female bicyclist was in the intersection after making a complete stop while traveling northbound on Donna where she was struck.
The driver remained on the scene and is cooperating with the investigation.
Speed is considered a factor in the investigation, according to police.
The crash was reported at about 7 a.m., and the driver stayed at the scene and is cooperating with the investigation.
Anyone with information about the incident is asked to call NLVPD at 702-633-9111.
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Sports Come Alive Through Art And Storytelling In Las Vegas – Forbes
Posted: at 7:45 am
Artist Carling Jackson, in her studio, works on a mural for Wynn Hotel depicting Adam Jones, ... [+] basketball player Jewel Lloyd and skier Gus Kenworthy.
If you are a rabid sports fan visiting the Wynn Hotel Las Vegas, get ready to be floored. The luxury resort and casino located on the Las Vegas Strip partnered this summer with sports podcasting company Blue Wire Pods, to serve up new sports content, while also commissioning a new collection of paintings and murals that honor athletes who inspire us.
The multimillion-dollar Wynn-Blue Wire project kicked off the 2021 NFL season by unveiling a 1,700 sq. ft. state-of-the-art media space to be used year-round to create thousands of hours of sports-related audio, video and social content from Blue Wire's network of more than 175 podcasts.
Currently, Blue Wire boasts over 50 million annual downloads that contain a wide variety of podcasts. Some of Blue Wires sports titles include The Dane Moore NBA Podcast and A Touch More, hosted by Megan Rapinoe and WNBA legend Sue Bird.
Ahead of the Wynn partnership news, Blue Wire also announced this summer that longtime NFL starsChris LongandCris Carterwere signed as part of their platform's growing roster of talent.
A glimpse of Blue Wire's state of the art podcast studio at the Wynn Hotel Las Vegas
Carter, a Pro Football Hall of Fame member and legendary wide receiver, hosts WR1, where he interviews top receivers in football.Long, a retired defensive end and two-time Super Bowl champion, hosts Green Light With Chris Long. Wynns betting platform, WynnBET will serve as title sponsor for both programs.
"The production and distribution of engaging our 'only at Wynn' content is an important part of our strategy to build the WynnBET brand," said Craig Billings, CEO of Wynn Interactive, in a press statement in June. "Our partnership with Blue Wire will create unique storytelling-based sports content, much of it produced at Wynn Las Vegas."
Art and a submersive sports experience
Another major goal of the Blue Wire-Wynn project was to honor athletes from all over the world, both from major team sports leagues as well as individual sports.
In doing so, Wynn commissioned artist Carling Jackson, who is known for her extensive work in sports art and human rights-related art. To showcase the projects spirit of inclusion, Jackson created pieces for the exhibit titled When Champions Rise: Amplifying Underrepresented Voices In Sports.
Jackson, a Vancouver-based painter, specializes in portraits for professional athletes, and says that the project is a perfect marriage of sports and art. But she also hints that many of the athletes were chosen for their own inspirational personal stories, not just their fame.
Related story: This photographer captures MMA women and boxers
The individual stories of each of these remarkable humans are incredible, and to have them painted together as a collective is something super special, Jackson said about the project.
Visitors to Wynn Hotel Las Vegas will see a parade of athletes such as tennis star Coco Gauff, ... [+] gymnast Lisa Mason and NBA center Enes Kanter, painted by sports artist Carling Jackson
She adds that the athletes showcased in the work are ones who use their own platforms to promote human rights, social justice, womens rights and equality.
Some of the athletes visitors will see first consist of Olympians, WTA stars, soccer players, and stars of Major League Baseball, the NBA, NHL and NFL.
Related Story: Billie Jean King says sports sponsors creating good change
Among them are 17-year-old tennis phenom Cori "Coco" Gauff, and the late Justin Fashanu, a British footballer who became the first openly gay player to play within Englands Football Association.
Other athletes, all of whom are depicted in oil painted on wood, include outfielder Adam Jones, alpine skier Gus Kenworthy, former hoops star and broadcaster Renee Montgomery, and Turkish-born NBA center Enes Kanter and others.
The exhibit consists of four 4.5x5 foot paintings, spanning 20 feet in length, inside the main floor of the Wynn Las Vegas. Jackson said that the athletes that she and organizers of the project worked with had input on what photos should be used of them in crafting the murals.
These individual athletes are champions of diversity. Many are close friends of mine who have faced, sacrificed and overcome seemingly insurmountable odds, Jackson said.
The When Champions Rise exhibit opened on September 7.
*****
Read Fryes recent interviews with Billie Jean King andShaquille ONeal.
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Sports Come Alive Through Art And Storytelling In Las Vegas - Forbes
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VICTOR JOECKS: Las Vegas water situation shows why theres no need to panic over global warming – Las Vegas Review-Journal
Posted: at 7:45 am
If you want to worry less about global warming, think about Las Vegas water situation.
That sounds counterintuitive. Two decades of drought have significantly reduced the water level at Lake Mead. The worlds biggest bathtub ring is there for all to see. Things arent any better up the Colorado River.
In August, federal officials issued Lake Meads first-ever water shortage declaration. That meant cuts in water allocation and more cuts are likely in coming years.
Many people, including Southern Nevada Water Authority General Manager John Entsminger, blame global warming for contributing to the failing water levels.
For the sake of argument, leave aside any doubts you may have about the connection between human activity and global warming. Decades of failed predictions and the demonization of those who dare to disagree tends to leave one skeptical.
Assume the most recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report accurately foretells the future. Many people do, and some of them are panicking. At the Youth4Climate summit on Tuesday, activist Greta Thunberg said, Our leaders intentional lack of action is a betrayal toward all present and future generations.
A quarter of childless adults said climate change factored into why they didnt currently have any children, according to a 2020 Morning Consult poll.
Now if anyone has reason to worry about global warming, its Las Vegas residents. This is a desert. We are enduring a seemingly never-ending drought. The river that supplies 90 percent of our water is wasting away.
So why are people moving here? If global warming were the only consideration, residents would be fleeing. But weather conditions arent the only variable in human outcomes. Adaptation can mitigate many of the harms caused by adverse climate events, even drought.
For two decades, the Southern Nevada Water Authority has done just that. It paid homeowners to get rid of their grass. A ban prohibited lawns in the front yards of new homes.
It worked. The authority says theres been a 47 percent reduction in per capita water usage since 2002. Despite having around 800,000 more residents than in 2002, the Las Vegas area uses less water today than it did then.
The water authority has also built infrastructure to stretch Las Vegas water. It built a new intake tunnel under Lake Mead. It oversees a system where 99 percent of indoor water is treated and returned to Lake Mead. That earns credits allowing us to take more water in the future. This is why new housing doesnt strain the regions limited water supply.
Thanks to wise planning and mitigation, for most Las Vegas residents, the most tangible impact of a two-decade-long drought is less grass. Thats a real downside, but its a far cry from a world-ending crisis.
Adaptations such as this have happened all over the world and climate-related deaths have plummeted accordingly. Hoover Institution visiting fellow Bjorn Lomborg found climate-related deaths dropped by 96 percent over the past 100 years.
The next time you feel panic over global warming, look at Lake Mead. Its an object lesson in how humans can adapt and thrive despite changes in the climate.
Contact Victor Joecks at vjoecks@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-4698. Follow @victorjoecks on Twitter.
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Stressed supply chain underscores the need to repatriate manufacturing – Las Vegas Sun
Posted: at 7:45 am
Damian Dovarganes / AP
In this Wednesday, March 3, 2021 photo, a tree stands at Point Fermin Park, as a high number of container ships dot the coast of Long Beach waiting to dock at the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach off the CaliforniaCoast.
Friday, Oct. 1, 2021 | 2 a.m.
Off the West Coast, an armada of container ships wait for weeks to unload their cargo. In the Midwest, trains loaded with goods sit in miles-long lines. Across the nation, overworked truck drivers slog it out in a game of hurry-up-and-wait.
And all the while, businesses are disrupted and consumers are facing higher prices for some products due to a breakdown in the global supply chain that no one knows how to resolve.
Its going to get worse again before it gets better, said Brian Bourke, chief growth officer at SEKO Logistics, to The Washington Post. Global supply chains are not built for this. Everything is breaking down.
Thats alarming news, and it puts an exclamation point on the need for the U.S. to bring back manufacturing jobs to our nation and our hemisphere.
The supply chain problem has several roots, including production slowdowns of certain products due to the pandemic and a spike in demand for shipped-in products from American consumers while cooped up during the pandemic.
But well after the world economy began stabilizing from the disruptions of COVID-19, the supply chain remains in turmoil. As reported by The Post in a story based on interviews with more than 50 people associated with every link in the chain, the pandemic disruptions exposed weaknesses in the nations transport plumbing: investment shortfalls at key ports, controversial railroad industry labor cuts, and a chronic failure by key players to collaborate among them.
And as Bourke said, its getting worse. Businesses are preordering items at an accelerated rate in hopes of stockpiling supplies, which is putting more pressure on the broken system.
Shortages are occurring elsewhere, too, including in Britain, where theyre driven by Brexit and the logistical problems snarling the system worldwide.
Last month, President Joe Biden initiated a 100-day, government-wide review on the issue, but the best way to resolve it is by creating policies that would help repatriate manufacturing jobs.
This would reduce reliance on goods shipped from overseas, particularly China, and would also have significant environmental benefits by cutting greenhouse gases used in shipping products over wide expanses of ocean. Repatriating manufacturing also protects consumers our global shipping system relies upon unrealistically inexpensive oil, something that cant continue. All it would take would be a significant jump in oil prices and those formerly cheap goods from China could become more expensive than producing them at home. Offshoring so much manufacturing to Asia is neither sustainable nor wise.
Moving manufacturing back home also would help Americas battered working class and middle class, while putting pressure on China to check its aggressive behavior by squeezing its economy. Gaining some geopolitical leverage over China to become a better global citizen would benefit U.S. security and possibly prevent a war down the road.
While American jobs should be the main focus of this effort, the U.S. should go about it with an eye toward also strengthening the economies of our neighboring countries and the entire hemisphere.
In some sectors, jobs that have migrated overseas require lower wages than the standard for American workers, but the U.S. would benefit by helping draw them to the hemisphere. The result would be shortened supply lines and a boost to the economies of neighboring nations, which would improve their ability to trade with the U.S. and buy our goods.
As weve stated before, whats needed is for the Biden administration to create tax breaks for bringing manufacturing back home to the U.S. and develop smaller but meaningful tax incentives to draw lesser-paying jobs to Mexico, Central America and South America.
Biden floated measures aimed at job repatriation, such as the elimination of incentives for U.S. multinationals to shift investments overseas, and discontinuing expense deductions for domestic companies that offshore jobs.
Those are fine steps, but the real key is a package of attractive tax breaks that would incentivize companies to bring jobs back to the U.S. and the region. These breaks wouldnt hurt the federal budget, as an increase in high-paying domestic jobs would generate offsetting tax revenue.
This is a critical need, and one that is gaining urgency every day that ships sit idle, trains back up and trucks inch along in traffic jams.
With no end in sight to the current problem, and another one waiting right around the corner with the next pandemic or some other type of global disruption, we must get manufacturing jobs back on our soil and simplify the system.
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Stressed supply chain underscores the need to repatriate manufacturing - Las Vegas Sun
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Saints and sinners alike: My Catholic upbringing in Las Vegas – America Magazine
Posted: at 7:45 am
The title above promises probably way more scandal than I can deliver. But stillyoure intrigued, right? Growing up Catholic in Las Vegas is a defining characteristic of mine, right next to growing up Italian-American. What if I had been baptized in some Protestant denomination, in some normal city? I shudder to think. But it was also a major reason I became a writer.
What must have it been like, you wonder? To have grown up belting out On Eagles Wings every Friday morning at the school Mass less than a mile away from a stage where a showgirl performed wearing what appeared to be only eagles wings?
It was fabulous.
My Catholicism was intertwined with my Vegas upbringing right from the beginning. I was baptized at Guardian Angel Cathedral, located just off the Las Vegas strip. Some of the stained glass windows feature distinctly Las Vegas imagery woven into biblical tableaus, the beautiful creations of the artist Isabel Piczek. One window features Judas with his 30 pieces of silveror is it a man carrying poker chips? The same window shows Roman soldiers casting lots for Jesuss robeor are they gamblers down on their luck?
And of course, the lessons taught to me at Catholic school were more than supplemented by the examples in my very Catholic home. My parents were the best examples of forgiveness, of not judging, of loving your neighbor, of giving until it hurts and then giving more. And the fact that we were in Vegas made that all the more important, because what you might think are the terrible parts of being raised in that environment actually benefited me greatly in my development and in my career as a writer and a comic.
Everyone was welcome into our home, saints and sinners alike. We had all kinds of people sitting around our table: pimps and priests, prostitutes and nuns, rich and poor, addicts, gangsters. It was not an antiseptic world, not a world where I interacted only with the right people. The lessons I gleaned from the love my parents extended to the sinners was just as valuable to my spiritual development as my interactions with the saints.
I have spent my entire career attempting to pay homage to (and in a deeper sense, to keep alive) all the incredible characters of my Catholic-kid-in-Las Vegas life. In the sixth grade, captivated by time travel, my best friend Angela Mullins and I took several cracks at building a time machine. We were unsuccessful in building an actual machine that could go faster than the speed of light. But in my own weird way, my writing career has become my time travel vessel back to the world of my childhood.
My obsession with my parents moving their family from Brooklyn to Vegas, and then raising good Catholic kids right in the middle of Sin City, is the subject of several television projects of mine. It also features prominently in my satirical parenting book, Raising the Perfect Child Through Guilt and Manipulation, which in itself is an entire love letter to my parents. I told you. I am obsessed.
If I take a step back and look at my work, it appears that my primary focus as a writer has always been a desperate attempt to shine a light on my obsessions and hope that the world becomes obsessed with them too. In his autobiography, Born to Run, Bruce Springsteen (my fellow Italian-American Catholic kid!) describes what kind of artists he admired and wanted to emulate when he first started performing: Songwriters with their own voice, their own story to tell, who could draw you into a world they created and sustain your interest in the things that obsessed them.
So I guess Im not alone. Bruce gets it. Hes a guy who built an entire career writing songs about his hometown, about the colorful characters of his childhood, about the sacred amid the profane. While I havent earned a moniker as amazing as The Boss, Im certainly trying to do the same. And I am grateful to get to time travel to that uniquely outrageous time and place of my life again and again.
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Saints and sinners alike: My Catholic upbringing in Las Vegas - America Magazine
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