It's a Very Sad Day for me ......

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Mike, when you going?

I'll be there July 10-14

Would like to buy you a drink or 6.... haha

Yeah I keep forgetting to call you... lol

My plans were going to be set for the first week in Aug.
I usually go at the end of July

Trying to catch a few shows that we want to see ... JoLo and whoopi goldberg ( Whoopi is only there on the 5th ) Jlo is there for a while
 

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Just go outside to smoke.

Wtf?!...they have elevators right?....
 

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Even when i smoked (almost 1 year now without) i would get a non smoking room. My girlfriend would hate a smoking room and i even admit in a casino hotel they really reek ! I am not anti smoking in the least and love smoking.
How bout the MGM? Good luck BAS.
Do you bring back a few cartons cuz they are so much cheaper?
 

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I knew this would happen sooner or later. Most Vegas hotel/casinos are down to 1 or 2 floors that are smoking.

Ive noticed many hotels across the nation are now completely non-smoking. And many, wont even let you smoke on the balcony if they have one. WTF??

Will fine you if they catch you. Dumb.
 

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No doubt things aren't the same absolute quality as back when Steve had it.

At least they didn't let it turn into just a total flashy, shitty, warehouse....... Like MGM.
 

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$500!!!. 30 years ago a friend and I bet $50 on who would quit smoking.I won and it was the best $50 bet I ever made. it wasn't easy because my wife smoked at the time. My wife ended up dying of lung cancer
 

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I swear you said the same thing last year too. I never understood what cigarettes do positive in the consumers eyes? Plus that new years resolution shit is just an excuse. Wait 7 months to quit then barely quit lol. Cigarettes suck on so many levels.

I smoke. You are correct. NOTHING good about it. Not one thing.
 
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$500!!!. 30 years ago a friend and I bet $50 on who would quit smoking.I won and it was the best $50 bet I ever made. it wasn't easy because my wife smoked at the time. My wife ended up dying of lung cancer

Sorry to hear that Joe..

Yeah it's a tough and Bad Habit.
 

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e. By J.D. Morris (contact)Wednesday, June 8, 2016 - 2 a.m.


The casino industry has evolved a lot since the Mirage’s transformational debut in 1989, but resorts still have room to grow to keep up with today’s customers.


That was one of the key messages delivered during a series of public discussions held Tuesday at the Mirage as part of a major weeklong academic conference on gambling-related issues.


It came up at various points throughout the first full day of the 16th International Conference on Gambling & Risk Taking, when industry and academic leaders weighed in on the past, present and future state of the so-called integrated resort model.


Related news


Wynn says he doesn’t understand nightclubs, loves nongaming revenue
Held once every three years, the last version of the conference took place at Caesars Palace. Organizers chose the Mirage this time because the resort had turned 25 years old since the last time the gathering was held, according to Bo Bernhard, executive director of UNLV’s International Gaming Institute, which organized the conference.


Steve Wynn at Gambling & Risk Taking


Steve Wynn listens to a question during his keynote speech opening the International Conference on Gambling & Risk Taking at the Mirage on Tuesday, June 7, 2016. Launch slideshow »
That milestone was of great significance in Bernhard’s eyes, because he said that when the Mirage opened, “it changed everything.”


“It transformed the product and the way in which it was consumed,” he said at the beginning of the day. “It directed attention away from the gambling act for the first time.”


Accordingly, casino mogul Steve Wynn, who developed the Mirage, started the historical part of the day in his morning keynote address. The numerous subject areas covered by Wynn included not only the importance of nongambling revenue, but also some of his personal perspective on how his vision for the Mirage came about.


And he almost made it sound like it was easy.


Wynn said that one day, he parked his “little Mercedes, two-seater convertible” at the Sands hotel, where he stared at the nearby property he had recently purchased: the Castaways, which was located on the site that would eventually become part of the Mirage. Thinking partly about the film “South Pacific,” Wynn said he was inspired by the notion of a tropical resort on the Strip because “that’s not supposed to be here.”


He said the Mirage’s opening to the tune of some $630 million, and its ensuing financial success, proved that amount of money could be spent safely in Las Vegas.


But it wasn’t the casino floor that attracted customers, Wynn said — it was the other, more creative aspects of the resort. For the Mirage, that included an erupting fake volcano, a domed glass atrium with vegetation inside, a Siegfried and Roy show and a dolphin habitat.


“The idea behind it is as simple as sunshine in the morning,” Wynn said. “It’s the noncasino thing that is the driver. There is no dynamism to a casino — they are passive places.”


Later in the day, the conference conversation advanced to the present day when six experts — each representing a different continent — spoke about integrated resorts in their parts of the world. They showed how integrated resorts have taken shape across the globe, and the unique challenges presented in each area.


One of the locations, naturally, was Macau. The special administrative region of China years ago surpassed Las Vegas in its annual gaming revenue, and developers are continuing to build big resorts there.


Las Vegas-based casino operators are among those: Wynn Resorts Ltd.’s $4.1 billion Wynn Palace is expected to open later this year, as is Las Vegas Sands Corp.’s $2.7 billion Parisian. MGM Resorts International’s $3 billion MGM Cotai should open next year.


The ongoing development activity comes despite two years of declines in monthly gaming revenue. Davis Fong of the University of Macau said that while the Chinese gambling hub once raked in some $4.8 billion in monthly gaming revenue, that figure is now closer to $2.4 billion.


But Fong was optimistic that the worst of Macau’s gaming revenue decline was over. The downturn has reportedly been driven by a government-led crackdown on corruption that hurt business from high rollers.


Fong said Macau’s future lies in repositioning itself beyond gambling, aiming to become “the true world tourism and leisure center.” Bernhard later said that Macau appeared to be “Las Vegas-izing” in terms of the levels of nongaming spending from customers there.


Even generally in North America outside Las Vegas, casino development has changed over the years, according to Kahlil Philander of the British Columbia Lottery Corporation. With the casino industry now expanded across the continent, Philander said resort developers are focusing on urban areas instead of more remote spots, noting Wynn’s proposed resort near Boston and another project in Vancouver as examples.


“Now, they’re moving into these urban environments where, all of a sudden, you’re not dealing with a 50,000-person town … you have to get 2 million people to all agree to let the facility in there,” he said.


Later on, the conference moved into the future of integrated resorts with a panel on innovations and reinventions within the industry. There, the conversation lingered on two oft-discussed areas: technology and young people.


UNLV hospitality lab director Robert Rippee talked a bit about robots, which he said are already having an impact on resorts — he even demonstrated one that he said can deliver items to guests. And he envisioned a future in which robotics only plays a larger role in hotel operations.


Rippee also talked a lot about millennials, whom he characterized as a younger, more digitally immersed and social generation than the ones who came before them. As they continue to age, Rippee suggested that resorts focus more on creating experiences that will appeal to the millennial customer, even if that means changing the way casino spaces are typically conceptualized.


Rippee said the so-called integrated resort could go a step further by blurring the separations among its gambling, entertainment and other areas. By way of example, he pointed to large festivals such as Electric Daisy Carnival, which he described as having “music, art, food, retail — all thrown together … and you’re immersed in all of it simultaneously.”


“Their world is a mash-up experience. It all happens hyperconnected, and it’s all happening at the same time,” Rippee said of younger customers. “The integrated resort is the sum of all of the experiences put together at the same time.”


Rippee’s UNLV colleague Mark Yoseloff, executive director of the university’s Center for Gaming Innovation, looked at the same issue from a game-focused perspective. After going through a number of key milestones in gambling product history, Yoseloff said gambling was in great need of another groundbreaking moment.


Yoseloff said the creation of new areas — such as slot machines and electronic table games — has historically broadened audience for gambling. But gambling has not seen a new category or “meaningful innovation in an existing category” for at least a decade, he said.


“This is not about millennials. It’s not about knitting grannies. It’s not about left-handed Baby Boomers. It’s not about any single group,” Yoseloff said.


In Nevada, regulators and industry leaders have already tried to make progress in that area with new rules designed to usher in casino games that are more like arcade or video games. Yoseloff said there’s an opportunity to make skill-based games that “appeal to the intellect a little” by offering puzzle games, for instance.


Discussions about technology and young people, among numerous other gambling topics, should continue as the conference progresses. It lasts through Friday afternoon.


Section: Gaming
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My Plan is to quit Jan. 1st 2017

I know I should just quit now .. but when I have a "Plan" I usually follow it. So I know it will work ... or i will try my very best.

I really don't want to use comps on Smoking Fees !!

She's getting back to me tonight to see what they can do.

if not, maybe I go to MGM Grand ... But I hate to lose this Host
My friend smoked heavily all his life. He told me that he would quit at the first sign of lung problems. He died of throat cancer. I suggest you don't put off quitting.
 
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My friend smoked heavily all his life. He told me that he would quit at the first sign of lung problems. He died of throat cancer. I suggest you don't put off quitting.

Well I'm not making an excuse, but every year I do a full check up, and every 3 years a lung scan.
Which includes a test on age vs. The age of your lungs
I am currently 11 years under.
 

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