My wife and I went to Vegas just before Covid and crammed a lot into a week. I discussed this with her and we agreed that despite the excellent shows we saw and the nice dinners we had, the two things that really impressed us were the National Atomic Testing Museum and the Mob Museum.
On a slightly different note I was also impressed by a young women who was either an extremely high-priced call girl or the most provocatively dressed business executive ever.
I had a boyfriend who used to travel a lot inside the US for work, and he had some great tales of drinking laws in various places. I can’t remember them all, but I think Utah allows you to “join” a club and then drink somewhat normally while in that club. I seem to vaguely remember something about Toledo, but my memory is going. Too much booze?
Pennsylvania’s alcohol laws, unless they’ve changed recently, are the strangest to me. The idea that you can’t buy beer in a grocery store, but you can walk into a bar and order a six-pack to go, is just bewildering.
I usually am in Las Vegas for a week, but at least two days are taken up with business, so I guess that shortens things. Never mind; I can always find things to do on my free days: I’ve been to the Pinball Hall of Fame and the Atomic Testing Museum and the Mob Museum; and there is no shortage of music and comedy acts in the evenings. And somedays, it’s just nice to sit out by the pool with a gin-and-tonic for the afternoon.
Since this thread is full of people who have been to Vegas once 40 years ago and didn’t like it, I will post a contrarian opinion. I’ve been to Vegas several times and I enjoyed very much.
The high-end hotels that we stayed in (Wynn, Encore, Bellagio, Venetian) are fantastic: great amenities, excellent spa, and the restaurants are absolutely superb.
The Strip has an extremely wide range of hotel qualities, and if a person stayed in one of the run down ones I’d sure understand why they found Vegas a bit lousy. The difference in quality is enormous.
Interestingly, the first time I went to Vegas as an adult we stayed at the Bellagio and splurged for a fountain view room. It was a good room with nice amenities, but I was expecting a bit more. The view was excellent.
We ended up in one of these on our first visit. However, the room was pretty much the same as any other hotel room. I think a chocolate on the bed was about the only difference.
We found that we were kind of paying for the bottom floor to have posh shops and a high end casino. It also was quite far back from the strip too, so it took about 10 minutes from our room to the actual pavement. I’ve heard of others (who didn’t like vegas) be in an MGM suite where it took them about 20 minutes to get the pavement.
After this, I decided to go for the other side of the road, and chose the low end hotel now gone, The Imperial Palace. The room was about 1/5th of the price of the Bellagio, about twice the size, and the bathroom was massive. Plus is was about a minute to the pavement.
Now that its gone, we stick with the Flamingo or Harrahs (weirdly Linq has never been on the list, always been too expensive now). We also prefer the mid strip in itself for positioning among other hotels, down the south end it always seems to be quite a walk to get to even the next casino, and not a lot anything else apart from huuuuge hotels. Even the thought of staying in Ballys which is quite far back from the strip, and a larger hotel, strikes us as too far.
Whenever we’ve visited the Wynn for things (not sure been in Bellagio for a long time), it seemed the same as Bellagio, too much casino and too much walking to get to anywhere to stay.
Yeah, that’s kind of the deal with the Strip properties: they’re so massive, that to make a simple trip from your room to the casino across the street, you should probably pack a lunch.
Just returned from a couple of nights at Encore for my birthday. All the Swifties cleared out just in time for a massive Home Remodeling/Decoration convention. Good thing we had made reservations at the restaurants we wanted to hit months ago. For me walking in Vegas is A Good Thing. I think we walked more in 48 hours than I usually do in a couple of weeks at work! Our Uber back from Bootlegger was a Volvo Polestar. Nice car. Finally got to ride in an electric that wasn’t a POS Tesla. Looks like Fountainbleau will be finished just in time for Formula 1 in November. Wynn offered me a great deal for the race: basic room for a couple of days and a grandstand seat - $14K. Needless to say I won’t be taking them up on it.
IMO/IME there are two sorts of Vegas tourists. One sort are the 12-mile folks like you and me.
The other sort cover about 100 yards in the morning from hotel room to breakfast buffet to slot machine stool. Then 75 yards from slot machine stool to lunch buffet to slot machine stool. Then 75 yards from slot machine stool to dinner buffet to slot machine stool. Then 50 yards from slot machine stool to hotel room at bedtime.
300 yards per day and 3 ginormous carbo-tastic meals. Plus maybe a dozen watery drinks and 2 packs of smokes. Then get up and do it again tomorrow.
I don’t know how people afford the buffets on the Strip. The one in Bellagio is $50 for lunch, $70 for dinner. For $70 there is no fucking way I’m getting my own food. I don’t care how good it tastes.