Cumpara de la elefant.ro

Grandissimo: The First Emperor of Las Vegas: How Jay Sarno Won a Casino Empire, Lost It, and Inspired Modern Las Vegas, Paperback/David G. Schwartz - Winchester Books


Grandissimo: The First Emperor of Las Vegas: How Jay Sarno Won a Casino Empire, Lost It, and Inspired Modern Las Vegas, Paperback/David G. Schwartz
114.99 Lei

Disponibil

(26-06-2024)
Cumpara de la elefant.ro

Produs vandut de elefant.ro

(0)

Review(s)

Verifica toate preturile pentru acest produs : click aici


Distribuie pe :


Descriere :

Cumpara grandissimo: the first winchester books de calitate.
Pe yeo poti sa gasesti cel mai bun pret pentru grandissimo: the first winchester books

Jay Sarno built two path-breaking Las Vegas casinos, Caesars Palace (1966) and Circus Circus (1968), and planned but did not build a third, the Grandissimo, which would have started the mega-resort era a decade before Steve Wynn built The Mirage.
He lives in Las Vegas with his wife and their two children..
Schwartz earned his bachelor\'s degree (a double major in anthropology and history) as well as his master\'s degree (American History) from the University of Pennsylvania before receiving his doctorate in US History from UCLA.
In addition to being an active consultant in the gaming field, Schwartz is Gaming and Hospitality editor for Vegas Seven magazine, where he writes the biweekly "Green Felt Journal" column as well as regular feature and long-form pieces about the Casino and tourism industries in Las Vegas and elsewhere.
An Atlantic City native with hands-on experience in the gaming industry, Schwartz has been at UNLV since 2001.
Schwartz, the Director of the Center for Gaming Research at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, is a writer, speaker, and consultant whose areas of specialty include the history of and current issues in gambling.
About the Author: David G.
In Grandissimo, you\'ll learn Jay\'s fascinating story, and also plenty of things you never knew about Las Vegas, including: - the true story about how Jimmy Hoffa\'s Teamsters Union First started funding Sarno projects -how Steve Wynn ended up answering the telephone in Hoffa\'s suite on the second day Caesars Palace was open - how Sarno, represented by Oscar Goodman, beat a seemingly-airtight case against him when he was accused of offering the largest bribe in IRS history to an undercover agent - how Sarno\'s unbuilt Grandissimo became the template for the 1990s "mega-resort" era in Las Vegas From start to finish, it\'s the story of the man who Inspired Modern Las Vegas.
Grandissimo is the story of how Jay Sarno won and Lost his Casino empire, inventing Modern Las Vegas along the way.
And that remains the template for Las Vegas today.
He saw Las Vegas as a place where ordinary people could leave their ordinary lives and have extraordinary adventures.
He taught the city how to dress up its hotels in fantasy, putting toga dresses on cocktail waitresses and making sure that even the stationery carried through with the theme.
Before him, Las Vegas meant dealers in string ties and bland, functional architecture.
Sarno\'s casinos--and his ideas about how to build casinos--created the template for Las Vegas today.
And though he guessed the formula that would open up Las Vegas to millions in the 1990s with the design of the Grandissimo, but he wasn\'t able to secure the financing for the casino, and when he died in 1984, it remained only a frustrating dream.
Though he ultimately walked out of court a free man, he never got Circus back.
Sarno sold out of Caesars Palace shortly after it opened-partially to get away from the bookies and gangsters who\'d taken over the casino-and he was forced to relinquish control of Circus Circus when the federal government indicted him on charges of offering the largest bribe in IRS history-a bribe he freely admitted paying, on the advice of his attorney, Oscar Goodman.
For all of his accomplishments, his Empire didn\'t last.
Sarno invented the Modern Las Vegas casino, but he was part of a dying breed-a back-pocket entrepreneur who\'d parlayed a jones for action and a few Teamster loans into a life as a Vegas Casino owner.
As mobsters and accountants battled for the soul of the last American frontier town, Las Vegas had endless possibilities-if you didn\'t mind high stakes and stiff odds.
Jay Sarno built two path-breaking Las Vegas casinos, Caesars Palace (1966) and Circus Circus (1968), and planned but did not build a third, the Grandissimo, which would have started the mega-resort era a decade before Steve Wynn built The Mirage


Uneori, aceste descrieri pot contine inadvertente. De asemenea, imaginea este informativa si poate contine accesorii neincluse in pachetele standard.
logo

  • Produsele tale vor fi disponibile pentru toti clientii nostri, in fiecare zi, pe yeo.ro
  • Vor fi promovate pe retele de socializare si bloguri
  • De asemenea, vom crea continut video pentru 20 de produse