On April 18, 1939, Marcus Joy “M.J.” Christensen opened his first jewelry shop inside a drugstore on First and Fremont.
Bailey Schulz
Bailey joined the Las Vegas-Review Journal’s business desk in April 2018. She previously worked with the paper in the summer of 2017 as an intern. Prior to her return, she was an intern on Bloomberg News’ energy team. She grew up in Iowa and graduated from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln with a bachelor of journalism degree in 2017.
Tax Day hit the U.S. on Monday, leaving many Nevadans scrambling to get in their tax returns filed on time.
Walmart plans to invest $16.3 million in innovations in Nevada this year, which means some shoppers will be accompanied by robots as they pick up their online order or wander through select stores.
Back in the late ‘60s, Jonathan Fine’s grandfather was the valley’s second largest billboard owner. Today, Fine and his partner Jonathan Gudai are working to change the out-of-home advertising space.
The Public Utilities Commission of Nevada on Wednesday approved MSG Sphere’s request to leave NV Energy and use an alternative power provider — with no exit fee.
Switch has filed a lawsuit against the Public Utilities Commission of Nevada, claiming the agency is retaliating against the data center company for leaving NV Energy.
After launching inside Jeff Bezos’ garage in 1994 as strictly an online bookstore, Amazon has since become a household name, earning more than $230 billion in net sales last year.
More than 8,000 Nevadans now work in energy storage, the third most of any state.
Henderson is transforming from a bedroom community to an employment center with under-construction developments like the Google data center and the Raiders practice facility.
Starting today, Smith’s shoppers no longer have the option to use their Visa credit cards at the grocery store
Las Vegas data center company Switch does more than just house data centers; the Public Utilities Commission of Nevada argues it also acts as a public utility.
Technology was once the arcade industry’s greatest asset. But it also helped lead to the industry’s downfall. Rohit Joshi, the owner of Neonopolis downtown, believes virtual reality’s immersive technology is the next big thing for the arcade industry.
Las Vegas ranks seventh in the U.S. among cities for the number of escape room facilities, according to data from Room Escape Artist.
A group of members from Pahrump-based utility Valley Electric Association say the cooperative is refusing to let them oust the current board.
After years of watching some of its largest customers drop off one by one, NV Energy is fighting back. Twenty Nevadan entities have taken steps to leave the utility for another energy provider since 2005, with various entities searching for lower costs and more renewable resources.