A brilliant debut season of minor-league baseball and the dawn of modern professional sports in Las Vegas
mc-rj magazine
Avi Kwa Ame is Nevada’s fourth national monument. Photographer L.E. Baskow recently traveled there to witness its majesty and document its wildlife.
With memories of Muhammad Ali’s great Las Vegas fights, our reporter sets off on a journey to revisit the hero of his youth at the Ali Center in Louisville.
A Las Vegas architect heads for the hills, sketchpad in hand, in search of beauty, meaning and roots
Can’t get out of town but looking for some sweet staycation swag? Our low-fashion maven introduces you to the world’s greatest — or at least weirdest — array of Vegas T-shirts.
In her battle with cancer, Hanna Olivas discovered two passions — advocating for the right to die and inspiring other women to truly live.
Las Vegas, which now attracts 40 million visitors a year, was once just a way station for folks on their way someplace else. Here’s the backstory …
The host of the Paramount Network’s wildly popular Bar Rescue on spending 250 days a year on the road — and why Las Vegas is home sweet home.
In this issue of rjmagazine, we’re veering off the main roads and heading for places and experiences that leave us inspired, transformed, or newly aware of the world and our complex place in it.
Fearless predictions, wistful ideas and wishful thinking for the new year
After living and flourishing in Las Vegas for a decade, writer Soni Brown returned to Jamaica, where she’d spent the first 20 years of her life.
For more than 50 years, Dick Calvert’s signature voice has embodied UNLV athletics, most notably booming from the Thomas Mack Center speakers.
Kristopher West had a challenging childhood and a long road to career stability. But along the way he found salvation in two steady companions: a band called Tool, and the swag it inspired.
Latina Lifters founder Cinthia Martinez started weighlifting for her personal health and pride. Then it became a mission to help a community and change perceptions, one rep at a time.
A year ago, Jerry Nadal turned Las Vegas Ballpark into a winter dreamscape and drew more than 300,000 visitors. Now he’s adding a second festival—on the Strip, of course.