Vegas Voices recently caught up with Zoe Thrall to ask her what she enjoys about living here, where she loves to eat and where she hangs out when she’s not working on world-class albums.
Vegas Voices
Harry Basil, who manages the Tropicana’s Laugh Factory, was part of the opening lineup of the Comedy Store at the Dunes in 1984.
Ron Heezen, who heads the Las Vegas-Clark County Library District, notes the library can be the third part of your life, after home and work, to connect and belong.
Vegas Voices is a weekly question-and-answer series featuring notable Las Vegans.
Vegas Voices is a weekly question-and-answer series featuring notable Las Vegans.
Just in time for Women’s History Month, the Nevada Women’s Film Festival returns for its second year to acknowledge women who write, produce and direct films as well as movies with strong female characters.
Vegas Voices is a weekly question-and-answer series featuring notable Las Vegans.
Dr. Mitchell Forman came to Southern Nevada in 2004 to take a position as founding dean of Touro University Nevada College of Osteopathic Medicine.
For most of her life, Deirdre Clemente has been an East Coast girl.
Vegas Voices is a weekly question-and-answer series featuring notable Las Vegans.
Being in the nonprofit world in Las Vegas can have its challenges.
Las Vegas is a city of reinvention. And Teresa Kidder lives the theory that if nobody’s putting on the kind of entertainment you want to see, quit wishing you were some place else (in her case, New York) and do it yourself.
Since moving to Las Vegas in the mid ’90s, Tre’ Borders has been actively involved in the nightlife scene.
Before he was chief operating officer for the company that produces “Legends in Concert,” Brian Brigner lived and breathed race cars.
Aaron Goodwin moved to Las Vegas from his native Portland, Ore., in 1998. During a class at UNLV he met Nick Groff, who eventually introduced him to Zak Bagans. In 2004, the trio filmed the documentary that would lead to their Travel Channel series, “Ghost Adventures.”