Human Nature, Australia’s favorite sons, were at the center of a COVID controversy after playing Sydney Coliseum Theatre.
John Katsilometes
John Katsilometes’ man-about-town column appears on daily on page 3A. Katsilometes moved to Las Vegas from Northern California in 1996 and spent two years with the RJ before moving to the Greenspun Media Group in 1998, where he served as an editor, magazine writer and columnist. He returned to the RJ in August 2016. He has won numerous state and regional awards, including the 2013 Nevada Press Association Journalist of the Year honor, and has been awarded three times for column writing by the Best of the West contest.
Penn & Teller were early targets of Donald Trump’s hate tweets.
Photos show Jason Allen Alexander on U.S. Capitol grounds while wearing a Trump 45 cap.
“Kyle Martin’s Piano Man” is breaking, as “M.J. The Evolution” rehearses at Mosaic On The Strip.
Michael Ryan-Southern, who notified Hakkasan employees of layoffs, has left his position.
Charles M. Heers, a pioneering contractor who built the first tract homes in Las Vegas, died Saturday afternoon in Newport Beach, California. He was 94.
It’s clear Rose. Rabbit. Lie. can’t cover its costs with a 25 percent capacity directive in current COVID protocols.
The narrator, a robed geezer named Harry Harrahs, talks continually from stage left.
If Barry Manilow plays International Theater in February, I’ll lead the conga line myself.
Chris Phillips of Zowie Bowie said of his NYE show, “I’m just hoping to find that threshold in the night where it feels OK.”
Cole Duffy was born at 12:01 a.m. Jan. 1, 2000, a little more than a week early.
The newly minted Circa resort on Fremont Street has snuffed out plans to allow guests to attend the Zowie Bowie performance at Stadium Swim running through midnight New Year’s Eve.
Las Vegas resident Nick Carter says, “For me, as an entertainer and solo artist, I have always questioned who I am as an individual.”
Elvis’ and Ann-Margret’s feverish “C’mon Everybody” was filmed at what is now the UNLV Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art.
The multi-use Minidome opened in 1970, and for years was a haven for sports and enterertainment.