Nevada's gaming industry doesn't take any chances; the first casinos
straddle the state line on the main (only?) highway from Southern
California to Las Vegas. (What did they think: that we'd turn around
and head back into California?) At first there were two: the
Primadonna for people heading north and Whiskey Pete's for those
heading south. (I guess Primadonna is a pun on the Primm Valley where
they're located. And what's with Whiskey Pete's? A castle motif?
Isn't that mixing metaphors?)
Now there's a third one called Buffalo Bill's, home to the most
vicious rollercoaster I've ever had the misfortune to ride. My
comment to another rider: "I can see my breakfast from up here!"
You have to travel almost thirty miles before your next chance to gamble. Nevada Landing which claims to be in the town of Jean, although if there's a town, I certainly didn't see it. There's something surreal about a giant riverboat surrounded by scrub and hills. But it sets the tone nicely for what's to come. We aren't talking major supplies of subtlety here.
To be fair, not all the hotel designs are quite so anachronistic: a
few like the Boomtown actually seem to belong to their
surroundings. There's something awfully refreshing about that.
When I first started visiting Las Vegas the hotels mostly looked like
hotels anywhere else, at least if you ignored their size and the
infinitude of lights. Things have changed in recent years. Now the
entertainment begins before you get in the door. Treasure Island is a
case in point: every ninety minutes the hotel stages a battle between
a British frigate and a pirate brig. This being Vegas the pirates get
to win! In fact, they send the Brits to Davey Jones' locker. That
can't be good for the crew's self image!
New York, New York is probably my favorite and certainly the most
elaborate of the hotels on the Strip. The exterior is a collection of
Manhattan's major landmarks, looking better than they do in real
life. (The addition of a rollercoaster that winds around the
buildings doesn't hurt either.) Inside the bars and restaurants
attempt to reproduce New York streets, although without the dirt,
crime and other elements that would lend versimilitude. (There's such
a thing as being too realistic.) The place is quite an
accomplishment, all the more after my encounter with
EuroDisney's version a month
earlier.
Las Vegas at night has to be seen to be appreciated. The more modern
hotels like Excalibur miss out by just lighting up the same impressive
structures we see by day. It's the older hotels that have the right
idea: millions of sequencing lights creating a kind of sensory
overload. It's a good thing that they provide good, thick curtains in
the rooms in the city that never sleeps. Otherwise I wouldn't either.
Surrounded by so much excess, I guess everyone has to shout to get a
little attention. Caesar's Palace has the best looking Warner
Brothers store I've ever seen. (Fortunately no one noticed me taking
a picture in the casino. They frown on that sort of thing.
Forcefully.) And then there's M&M's World: four floors of
chocolate excess shared with Ethel M Chocolates. Trust me: the
storefront is the best part.
For those of you who haven't been to Comdex, imagine a computer show
you have seen and multiply by a factor of five or more.
(Attendees of CeBit in Hannover should divide by three.) Lucky for me
that my exhibitor badge gets me into the hall before the rabble.
Those few moments before the crush of humanity arrives are the last
bits of calm I'll experience until I crawl back to my room at night.
And to think I used to do this for fun!
In a year where technical innovation was in short supply, exhibitors
get increasingly elaborate (desperate?) in their presentations.
Movies, magic acts, dancers, showgirls, giveaways, parties: everyone
tries their hardest for a little attention. By the third day the
booth presentations are pretty well attended, if only because people are
glad of a chance to rest their feet. It seems so appropriate that Dilbert has
become an unofficial mascot to the show. (Actually, the official
mascot: the Comdex show's store had a line of official Dilbert shirts
with the Comdex logo on the sleeve.) But what does it say about this
consulting firm that puts a giant inflated Dilbert in its booth?
I'm not much of a gambler; eventually, the sight of all those slot machines starts to get to me. Boulder City, an hour's drive down the road from Vegas, has the honor of being the only town in Nevada where gambling is illegal. That goes back to the thirties and the construction of Hoover Dam on the Colorado River. (Even in those days, Federal funds came with strings attached.) The dam is a remarkable achievement that came in ahead of schedule and under budget. One hundred fifty million dollars? Hell, that's one medium size dot-com IPO!
The original purpose of the dam was to reduce the ruinous effects of flooding. Late in the process someone had the thought that all that rushing water might be turned to some purpose. The result were these huge hydroelectric generators, each capable of providing the electric needs of a community of 100,000 people. (Is this community pre- or post-Internet?) Impressive stuff, especially for those of us more familiar with science and engineering on a microscopic scale.
Thirty years ago, this was an undifferentiated section of the Colorado River near Nevada's southeastern tip. But where you and I might see cool water in
the desert, some enterprising souls saw a chance to separate a few more gamblers from their wallets. Laughlin is a low key Vegas, a bit more working class perhaps and certainly less relentless in its glitz. A dozen casinos line the river, including the Colorado Belle, a mock riverboat that's nearly wider than the river itself! The town is so centrally located; an hour or so from the bustling metropolises (metropoli?) of Kingman, Arizona and Needles, California. (I read somewhere that the some people park on the Arizona side of the river and come to the casinos by bus. What a great idea for a state motto: Arizona: Nevada's Parking Lot!)
You have to be a hardy soul to leave the air conditioned comfort of the casinos during the day, at least when I was there in mid-July. But people do, braving 115 degree temperatures to sit by the river or race up and down on jetskis. A dam just north of town separates boaters above from the jetskiers below, as well as keeping the Colorado from washing the whole mess down to Mexico. That would be a terrible thing. Wouldn't it?
Comments to: Hank Shiffman, Mountain View, California