Author: Casino Connection Staff

More Accusations, Lawsuits Dog Wynn

Accusations of sexual harassment and coercion continue to swirl around disgraced casino mogul Steve Wynn, with one woman claiming she had his child after he raped her and another claiming she was fired from her Las Vegas casino job for refusing to have sex with him.

It’s not certain what significance would be attached to the accusations, which refer to events allegedly dating back to the 1970s.

In the first instance, the woman told Las Vegas police Wynn raped her at least three times in her Chicago apartment and that she became pregnant as a result and gave birth to a girl in a gas station restroom.

The second woman said she had consensual sex with Wynn “several times” while she worked as a dealer at the Golden Nugget in Downtown Las Vegas, which Wynn owned at the time. She said she “felt coerced to perform the acts.” and after finally refusing him was accused of theft and forced to quit.

They allegations were published by The Associated Press from reports the women filed with Las Vegas police in the aftermath of a January Wall Street Journal story that contained explosive testimony from several women claiming they were sexually victimized by the billionaire

PA Municipalities React to Mini-Casino Awards

There has been mixed reaction among local municipal officials in Pennsylvania about the prospects of hosting one of the Category 4 mini-casinos created by last November’s gaming expansion law.

Greenwood Gaming, the Parx Casino owner which won the fourth Pennsylvania license to open a mini-casino in Cumberland County in the south-central part of the state, told the PennLive.com website that it has not yet chosen a location for its casino, authorized to have a maximum 750 slots and 30 table games (pending a $2.5 million fee).

The 15-mile radius identified by Greenwood in its winning $8.1 million bid includes the cities of Chambersburg and Carlisle along the Interstate 81 corridor. Tourism officials in the area are bullish on the idea, but some municipal officials want nothing to do with one of the satellite facilities.

“A use like this fits right into our mission of creating jobs, increasing the tax base for our local taxing bodies, and increasing visitor spending,” Cumberland Area Economic Development Corp. chief Jonathan Bowser told PennLive. “I think it would just further diversify our tourism economy, which I think is a good thing.”

A member of the Carlisle Borough Council had a different take in an email to PennLive. “I do not believe it is all the sunshine and rainbows some make it out to be,” Sean Schultz said. “Casino games will detract from the small games of chance upon which many local nonprofits rely. Finally, I have seen the ravages that gambling addictions have inflicted on families, and I am unwilling to even indirectly take part in that.”

Meanwhile, municipalities in Western Pennsylvania have begun to lobby Stadium Casino LLC, which won the mini-casino license for Westmoreland County, to host the new casino. Potential host communities in that one include Greensburg, Hempfield, Unity and Salem townships.

“They all want it,” Hempfield Supervisor Rob Ritson told the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. “We are more than willing to have a mini-casino in Greensburg,” that city’s planning director told the newspaper. And from Derry Township Supervisor David Slifka: “We have a good area. We feel it could work out for Derry Township and the casino people.

The communities all passed resolutions promoting hosting a Category 4 casino.

The next auction for a mini-casino will be held this Wednesday. The auctions are being held biweekly through May 16.

Sheldon Adelson Wants to Fund U.S. Embassy

Casino tycoon Sheldon Adelson has offered to fund some of building the U.S. Embassy in Israel’s actual capital of Jerusalem— and the Trump administration is considering taking him up on it.

State Department attorneys are researching the legality of accepting a private donation for such a purpose. The Department is planning to hold a ribbon-cutting for a temporary embassy in Israel’s capital May 14, the 70th anniversary of the creation of Israeli state.

The attorneys are mulling one possibility of soliciting not just donations from Adelson, but also from other donors of the Christian and American Jewish communities.

President Trump’s decision to move the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem is highly controversial, even among the State Department, despite the fact that the relocation is mandated by U.S. law passed several administrations ago.

Adelson, who built the Las Vegas Sands casino empire, is a major contributor to the Republican Party, and especially of Donald Trump. He contributed $5 million to the president’s inaugural committee.

Oneidas Open Third N.Y. Casino

New York’s Oneida Indian Nation is looking for another hot hand from its third gaming resort in the state, the $40 million Point Place Casino.

With its debut last Thursday, Point Place brings the number of gaming facilities in New York to 20, and it enters an increasingly crowded market that got a lot more crowded just three weeks earlier with the opening of the state’s fourth privately owned casino, Resorts World Catskills, a property of Las Vegas dimensions with a deep-pocketed backer in the Genting Group and a location that positions it advantageously for taking market share from the competition.

But New York has been good to the Oneidas. Their flagship, Turning Stone Resort Casino, located off the New York State Thruway in Verona, has been a cash cow and the tribe’s principal economic engine for decades. And they’ve been strategic in expanding the brand’s reach ever deeper into the center of the state: first with the “Wizard of Oz”-themed Yellow Brick Road Casino, which opened in Chittenango in 2015 at a relatively modest investment of $20 million; and now with Point Place, a similarly boutique offering with 500 slot machines, 20 table games, a couple of casual, family-friendly eateries, two lounges and a confectionary and pastry shop.

“It’s got a whole different feel and vibe to it than our other casinos. It has that outdoor, Adirondack feel, and we’ve drawn from all the natural elements around us,” said Ray Halbritter, chief executive of Oneida Nation Enterprises, the tribe’s sprawling business arm whose holdings include branded retail, golf courses and other non-gaming leisure developments and companies engaged technology services and support and multimedia production.

Point Place places the tribe even closer to the region’s population hub of Syracuse, just 15 miles from downtown, and with a ready-made tourist backdrop on Oneida Lake in the town of Bridgeport.

“There’s plenty of market here,” Halbritter said. “We are very careful about our investments. It’s not just spontaneous. We wouldn’t build the property if we thought the market wasn’t there.”

Foxwoods Philadelphia Could Get Fee Back

A Pennsylvania appeals court has revived efforts of the partners in the doomed Foxwoods Philadelphia to recover a $50 million license fee paid to the state in 2007. The license ultimately was revoked, but the state kept the $50 million fee.

The 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals has reversed a lower court’s ruling that upheld a U.S. Bankruptcy Court ruling denying a claim for a refund of the fee by Philadelphia Entertainment & Development Partners, which included the Mashantucket Pequot Tribe.

The partnership was awarded one of the two casino licenses for Philadelphia, and the tribe was going to operate Foxwoods Casino Philadelphia on the Delaware River in South Philadelphia. The project ran into trouble early, with neighborhood opposition both in its original location and in the hastily re-chosen Gallery at Market East shopping center area ultimately leading the Gaming Control Board to revoke the license.

After the project was taken over and dropped by Harrah’s Entertainment and Steve Wynn, the Stadium Casino partnership of Cordish Companies and Greenwood Gaming eventually got the license for Philadelphia’s second casino.

The Foxwoods Philadelphia case now goes back to U.S. District Court, but could eventually end up back in U.S. Bankruptcy Court.

Massachusetts Casinos Move Forward

The Mohegan Tribal Gaming Authority, which controls Connecticut’s Mohegan Sun, and was passed over for the Boston area license, is continuing to press its lawsuit appealing that decision—and is using Steve Wynn’s fall from grace as new ammunition.

The license was granted to Wynn Resorts in September 2014. Not long after, the Mohegan tribe sued to reverse the license, arguing that the process was tainted from the beginning in favor of Wynn, a Massachusetts native.

That legal battle continues in Suffolk Superior Court, where the tribe’s lawyers have been pressing the accusation that the MGC overlooked the criminal backgrounds of two people who were formerly investors in the land that Wynn purchased in Everett for the site.

Commission attorneys argue that the tribe has been unable to offer any proof of favoritism and instead is trying to second-guess the commission.

The judge will hear oral arguments in April.

Nothing that has happened so far has slowed down the pace of the construction of the $2.4 billion Wynn Boston Harbor tower, which is rising on the banks of the Mystic River, across the water from the Boston skyline.

But it is also true that Wynn remains a major shareholder in the company, despite stepping down as chief executive officer and president.

Meanwhile, a $2 million donation that Wynn Resorts made to the Republican Governors Association in 2014 was not improper because it was made after the Massachusetts Gaming Commission awarded the license for the Boston metro casino to Wynn, the MGC ruled last week.

The commission’s chief enforcement counsel, Loretta Lillios, looked at the donation at the behest of the three Democrats who are running against GOP incumbent Charlie Baker: Jay Gonzalez, Bob Massie and Setti Warren.

Meanwhile, commission and its staff continues its investigation of Wynn Resorts. It is following up on the recent resignation of Steve Wynn from the organization due to multiple accusations of sexual improprieties, and the question whether his payoffs to one of the women who accused him was deliberately kept from the commission when the company was applying for its license.

 

MGM Springfield

The $960 million MGM Springfield has begun the long lope that will soon spring into a sprint toward the September opening. And the major part of that is hiring.

MGM plans to hiring 3,000 employees, including 450 table dealers. The average salary, including benefits, will be $45,000. About 200 staffers are already at work while another 2,000 are fully involved in construction.

MGC estimates that the number of applicants for jobs of all kinds at all three of the planned casino authorized by the 2011 gaming expansion legislation will range from 7,000-12,000. The great majority of those jobs will go to high school grads or those with a GED—or higher.

The jobs include barbers, hair stylists, massage therapists for the spa, staff for the luxury cinema, pastry chefs and even butchers.

Wanda Gispert, who is in charge of “talent and workforce development” for MGM, has been contacting colleges and high schools for many months now as part of her recruitment efforts.

She told the Daily Hampshire Gazette: “We have a lot of positions people might not be aware of. Any profession except for medical, we have it here.”

A few blocks from the casino itself is the Career Center, in Springfield’s South End, where computers are available on-site, so applicants can learn about jobs that are available and hiring and submit applications. Professionals are there to answer questions. There is even an on-site drug testing facility—although MGM does not test for marijuana use.

The Center will soon be open seven days a week. Currently 600 potential employees have used the Center and 150 ended up employed by MGM.

Holyoke Community College and Springfield Technical Community College are working in association with MGM and the Massachusetts Gaming Commission to provide training for casino and casino-related jobs through the Massachusetts Casino Career Training Institute. The Institute held its first classes in downtown Springfield last week. It offers classes in blackjack, roulette, craps, poker and other games.

Anyone who completes these courses is guaranteed an interview with MGM.

Holyoke and MGM also worked together to open the $6.43 million HCC MGM Culinary Institute last month. The 20,000 square foot facility has five European style kitchens.

MGM Springfield’s Vice President of Table Games, Robert Westerfield, told the Gazette, “I went to school just like these guys. I didn’t know a kitchen table from a craps table.” He worked as a dealer for a year before becoming a supervisor. “All positions have a career path,” he said.

The University of Massachusetts Amherst’s Isenberg School of Management also offers a casino management certificate program.

MGM is also busy filling positions at the very top rungs of the company. President and COO Mike Mathis likes to brag about the diversity of his leadership team. He’s been conducting interviews among finalists for the team—he calls department heads “number ones”— for the last few months.

Nine of the team’s 16 members are minorities or female or both, one of the best examples of diversity in the industry, he says.

He told BusinessWest, “The résumé gives me good insight into what their technical experience is. But I’m looking for personality and cultural fit, and you can usually get to that through them talking about their experiences.”

For Mathis “diversity” includes gender, age, race, point of origin and experience in the gaming field as well as with MGM itself.

He explained, “We have some who are internal MGM and others who are external to our company but in the industry.” He added, “We have a combination of young and those not as young, as I like to say, those with a little more experience. And we have a few from outside the industry; the company took a chance on me, and we’ve continued to take some of those chances on others.”

Now that he has the top positions nearly filled, “The number ones hire number twos, and the number twos hire number threes. And then, from there, you start building out your business plan and prepare for mass hiring.”

Mathis was legal counsel for the Venetian Las Vegas in 1999 and helped open Echelon Place in Las Vegas, but this is his first experience putting together a team from scratch.

He told BusinessWest, “What’s really nice is how, organically, this team reflects the personality of the community and our original vision. For me, as a day-one employee, I feel I’m a steward of the original vision of our president, Bill Hornbuckle, and of the mayor and the different community-group stakeholders I originally met with. And I want to reflect all that in the team we put together.”

Mathis thinks one reason he put together such a good team is because he was new at it—and in fact he had not worked with most of the team members before. “I came at it without some of those preconceived notions about who the team members should be. The group is really eclectic, and we make each other better.”

Virginia Senate Considers Historical Racing Machines

The Virginia House of Delegates approved legislation sponsored by state Delegate Michael Webert that would allow historical horse racing machines at the shuttered Colonial Downs and satellite locations. The measure is now being reviewed in the state Senate.

Supporters said the legislation would help revive the state’s equine industry and lead to reopening Colonial Downs, which closed in 2014. Chicago-based Revolutionary Racing is negotiating to buy the track; officials there have said allowing historical racing must be part of the deal.

The make-up of the legislature could help the bill’s chances. Since last year’s election, Republicans control fewer seats. And some lawmakers who previously voted against pro-gambling bills said they may change their minds. For example, staunch social conservative state Senator Dick Black said, “I guess for the first time ever, I’m going to make an exception.”

Webert said his proposal is a considered approach that would not lead to expanded gambling in the state. He said unlike slot machines, historical racing machines require some skill. He explained bettors would not know the horse they are betting on, but would have data on odds and could place different types of bets, like win-place-show. “If you know something about horse racing, you’ll probably be a little bit better off,” Webert said.

But social conservative groups claim the legislation eventually would pave the way to casinos in Virginia. Reverend Eddy Aliff of the Virginia Assembly of Independent Baptists said, “Once we go down that road, it doesn’t stop.” They point to Maryland where 10 years ago voters approved legalizing video slot machines at five locations. Then that law was amended and the state’s gambling industry has exploded, leading to MGM Resorts International’s MGM National Harbor, a $1.4 billion, Las Vegas-style casino complex near Washington, D.C.

Florida House, Senate Advance Gambling Bills

In Florida, the House Commerce Committee recently approved in a 9-6 vote HB 7067, the 83-page gambling bill sponsored by Tourism & Gaming Control Chairman Mike LaRosa. The bill now will move to the House floor. Like the Senate bill, SB 840, it includes ratifying a 20-year compact with the Seminole Tribe of Florida, which would bring the state $3 billion over seven years. In return, the tribe would have exclusive rights to conduct banked card games, such as blackjack, at five of its casinos, and offer slots outside of Miami-Dade and Broward counties.

Also under the House bill, parimutuel facilities could not offer lucrative designated player card games. In addition, the bill does not address decoupling.

House Democrats oppose the provision in the bill that would direct Seminole funds to “schools that serve students from persistently failing schools”—referring to House Speaker Richard Corcoran’s plan for “Schools of Hope.” Democrats consider the plan a giveaway to privately-owned charter schools; state Rep. Joe Geller called it a “poison pill.” Corcoran also had said any House legislation must be “an absolute contraction” of gambling in the state.

State Rep. Mike Miller said the House legislation would provide “certainty” after years of disagreement regarding the gambling industry and legal battles between the state and the Seminole Tribe.

Certainty is especially important this year with the Voter Control of Gambling constitutional amendment set to appear on the November ballot, which would allow voters to determine all future gambling in Florida if it gets 60 percent approval. “This could be our last possible chance to regulate gaming as a legislative body,” state Senator Travis Hutson said.

The Senate bill includes authorization for slot machines in eight counties where voters approved them in local referendums. Senate President Joe Negron said the legislature should respect the will of the people. Galvano said, “I have always been clear those referendums that took place were not done pursuant to state law; in fact, they were done in spite of state law. Nonetheless, Negron has been a proponent of that, so we are putting that issue in play.”

The Senate measure also would allow greyhound racetracks to decouple live racing from other gambling, but it exempts thoroughbred horse racetracks and jai alai frontons.

Galvano also said future money from the Seminoles could be used to “backfill” recurring costs for public school safety “hardening” following the tragic shooting at Broward County’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

Galvano stated the Seminoles “continue to have an interest in getting something together. Their last offer was really not very impressive.” He added he and Speaker-designate José Oliva “continue to have conversations. We are, in concept, together on the idea that we need to solidify our relationship with the tribe.”

While the legislation is being negotiated, the Seminoles released a broadcast in the Tallahassee market that urges lawmakers to pass the compact. Tribal spokesman Gary Bitner said the ad “was in production prior to the most recent interactions with leaders of the legislature.”

In the 30-second ad, a narrator says, “For years, the Seminole compact has come through big for the people of Florida. With over 19,000 jobs and more than $2 billion already paid to fund vital services. Today, the Seminole Tribe is making one of the largest private investments in Florida, creating nearly 20,000 Florida jobs. The Florida compact is working. Let’s keep it going.”

The House and Senate must agree on a final bill before the legislative session ends Friday, March 9.

Credit Ban Hurts William Hill Australia Value

UK bookmaker William Hill said wagers at its Australian business fell 15 percent in the last half of 2017 as it prepared to implement a ban on offering credit lines to gamblers.

The company said wagers had been on the rise in 2017 until it started preparing for the ban.

William Hill recorded a pre-tax loss in 2017 after slashing the value of its Australian business, the company said.

“Offering credit or deferred settlement has been prohibited from 17 February 2018,” the company said in a press statement. “Approximately 30 per cent of William Hill Australia’s amounts wagered comes from customers using credit betting.”

William Hill’s Australian business has been placed under a “strategic review” and is now up for sale. The Sydney Morning Herald reported that several unnamed bookmakers have been interested and a deal could happen quickly.

Announcing its yearly results on Friday, William Hill revealed a £238 million write-down against its Australian business, which accounts for 7 percent of William Hill’s overall group revenue. The write-down pushed William Hill to a pre-tax loss of £74.6 million, the Herald report said.

In a later report on 2017, however, Chief Executive Philip Bowcock said that William Hill has been successful at delivering its three strategic priorities: rejuvenating its digital enterprise, bolstering its omni-channel proposition and gaining significant growth within the US. Bowcock said the company had also met its expectation to achieve £25 million in group cost savings.

However, William Hill also pointed to expected new Australian point-of-consumption taxes as a possible threat to the company in Australia. According to the Morning Herald, South Australia, Western Australia and Queensland have moved to introduce 15 percent taxes on digital gambling companies. Australia’s two biggest gambling jurisdictions, Victoria and New South Wales, are expected to announce similar taxes soon.

“While we remain one of the few profitable companies in the market, that profitability would be significantly impacted if, as is anticipated, further states introduce an additional 15 per cent point-of-consumption tax in the coming months and years,” William Hill said in its release.

Meanwhile, Australian betting exchange Betfair also warned that the new point of consumption taxes could harm the integrity of racing and sports if the cause Australian gamblers to move to unlicensed offshore sites.

In a report submitted to various state government officials, Betfair argued that the 15 percent rates are too high and would raise commission fees to unsustainable levels if the rates were applied nationwide.

Betfair Chief Executive Tim Moore-Barton said it would cause an integrity “black hole”, as betting activity through illegal offshore operators was un-trackable.

“We provide racing stewards and sporting bodies real-time access to our data to look for anomalies in betting patterns,” Moore-Barton said in the report. “This transparency is lost and not available when people bet offshore.”

Betfair said the loss of customers would also threaten revenue to Australian racing and sports bodies, as offshore operators do not pay fees.

EU Faults Hungary’s Online Gaming Laws

The European Union Court of Justice has ruled that Hungary’s regulations restricting online casino licenses to land-based casinos in the country violates the EU’s treaty for the free movement of services across member states.

The ruling comes in a case brought by UK online gambling company Sporting Odds. The Hungarian Tax Authority found in 2016 that Sporting Odds had breached the country’s regulations and levied a fine of about $13,600. The company, however, appealed to the country’s Administrative and Labor Court requesting annulment of the tax authority’s fine. The Hungarian court then asked the EU court to rule on the country’s online regulations.

The EU court found that the Hungarian online licensing law is a “radical restriction” of EU treaties for the free movement of services across Member States. The court also said that Hungary’s gambling law discriminated against international online casino operators without physical presence in the country and prevented them from entering the local market.

The court has previously issued a similar ruling in a case involving Unibet last year. Unibet had also been fined by Hungarian regulators for providing unlicensed gambling services to local players. The court ruled that the Hungarian Tax Authority could not impose fines due to the country’s restrictive gambling system.

Maxwell Annual Awards Gala

Maxwell Annual Awards Gala

FRIDAY, MARCH 9TH, 2018 @ TROPICANA.
Black Tie Cocktail Party – Cocktails at 4:30 pm-6:15 pm in the Tropicana Grand Events Center
MFC National Awards Dinner – 6:30pm-7:45pm in the Grand Ballroom
MFC Awards Show – 8:00pm-9:30pm in the Tropicana Showroom

Join us as the Maxwell Football Club celebrates the 2017 football season and presents the Club’s National Awards at the Professional, College and High School levels. Tickets include admission to the MFC Cocktail Party, Dinner in the Grand Ballroom and the National Awards Show in the Tropicana Showroom.
 
Tickets for this event are limited and are available on a first come first serve basis.The event features a cocktail party with open bar, stationed and passed Hors d’oeuvres followed by a full service plated dinner. After the conclusion of dinner guests will move to the Tropicana Showroom for the 2017 Maxwell Awards. Ticket will admit each guest to all three of the events.
 

Seashore Gardens 5K and Health Walk

The 8th Annual Seashore Gardens 5K Run and Health Walk will take place Sunday, April 29th, 2018 on the Boardwalk at Tropicana Casino & Resort in Atlantic City. The race starts at 9:00 AM, with day of registration starting at 7:15 AM. Net proceeds from this event will benefit the Alzheimer’s Outreach Services of Seashore Gardens Living Center, an independent nonprofit Home for the Aged.

Be a Superhero for Alzheimer’s! Run or walk in your best superhero costume during the race! Prizes will be awarded for Best Individual, Best Family or Group, and Best Children’s Costume. *Costumes not required, but we hear they make you run faster.

Course is certified, 100% on boardwalk, with professional race timing by JB Sports Timing and AKSTS. Certification Code NJ16005LMB. All pre-registered participants will receive a t-shirt. Post-race refreshments provided. Day of race registration will be $40. 

Preregistration ends Friday, April 27th at 5pm.

Visit: https://runsignup.com/Race/NJ/AtlanticCity/SeashoreGardens5KRunHealthWalk

Top Headliners in Atlantic City in March 2018

Borgata Hotel Casino & SPA

Tiffany Haddish
The Music Box, Borgata Hotel Casino & SPA, Atlantic City, NJ
Friday, March 9, 2018 9:00 p.m. & 11:30 p.m.

You don’t want to miss actress and comedian, Tiffany Haddish in Atlantic City. Best known for her film breakthrough on Girls Trip from which she received critical acclaim, and the new Showtime comedy special She Ready! From the Hood to Hollywood, Tiffany Haddish is a performance you don’t want to miss. Catch her live in the The Music Box. Second show added by popular demand.
Tickets:  $39.00
Visit:  https://www.theborgata.com/shows/events/all-events

 

Foreigner
The Event Center, Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa, Atlantic City, NJ
Saturday, March 10, 2018 ● 8:00 p.m.

Foreigner is an English-American rock band, originally formed in New York City in 1976 by veteran English musician Mick Jones and fellow Briton and ex-King Crimson member Ian McDonald along with American vocalist Lou Gramm. Their biggest hit single “I want to Know What Love Is” topped the U.S. charts. They are one of the world’s best-selling bands of all time.
Tickets:  $55.00 – $79.00
Visit:  https://www.theborgata.com/shows/events/all-events

 

Lewis Black: The Jokes on Us Tour
The Music Box, Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa
Friday, March 16 & Saturday, March 17, 2018 ● 9:00 p.m.

Comedian Lewis Black returns to Borgata this March.  Don’t miss this funny hothead and his outspoken rants, well known for his Comedy Central series, Lewis Black’s Root of All Evil.
Tickets:  $65.00 – $75.00
Visit:  https://www.theborgata.com/shows/events/all-events

 

Tropicana Hotel Casino Atlantic City

Gran Concierto Ednita Nazario Una
Tropicana Showroom
Saturday, March 10, 2018 ● 8:00 p.m.

Ednita Nazario Figueroa is a Puerto Rican musician, singer, songwriter and actress who has achieved stardom both at home and abroad. She has been in the music business from a young age, and has released over 28 albums throughout her career.
Tickets:  $85.00 – $165.00
Visit: https://tropicana.net/entertainment/entertainment-calendar/

 

Golden Nugget Hotel Casino, Atlantic City

The Spinners
Golden Nugget Hotel Casino, Atlantic City
Saturday March 10, 2018 ● 9:00 p.m.

Sophisticated up-tempo R&B with precision choreography defines a Spinners show. With over 60 million records sold in their illustrious career, the mighty Spinners have performed for presidents, received 6 Grammy nominations, and have appeared on TV too many times to count.
Tickets:  $25.00 – $45.00
Visit:  https://www.goldennugget.com/atlantic-city/entertainment/entertainers/the-spinners/

 

Caesar Hotel Casino, Atlantic City NJ

“Weird Al” Yankovic
Caesars Maximus Theater
Friday March 16, 2018 ● 9:00 p.m.

“Weird Al” Yankovic burst onto the scene over three decades ago and never looked back. For the first time in his storied career, the world’s foremost musical satirist and four-time Grammy-winner foregoes his usual high-octane, big-production show for an intimate evening of music. “The Ridiculously Self-Indulgent, Ill-Advised Vanity Tour” focuses on original (non-parody) songs from his 14-album catalog.
Tickets:  $39.00 – $171.00
Visit:  https://www.caesars.com/caesars-ac/shows

 

Daughtry
Caesars Maximus Theater, Caesars Hotel Casino, Atlantic City NJ
Friday March 23, 2018  9:00 p.m.

Spend an evening rocking out with multi-platinum Daughtry to hits like “Over You,” “Waiting for Superman,” “It’s Not Over” and many more. Frontman Chris Daughtry is popular for his run on “American Idol” and had tremendous success with his namesake band shortly after. The self-titled debut album released in 2006 reached No. 1 on the Billboard 200. It spawned the hits “It’s Not Over” and “Home.” The album sold more than a million copies in less than six weeks. The song “It’s Not Over” was nominated for a Grammy in 2008. The band’s sophomore album, 2009’s “Leave This Town” followed in the footsteps of the first release, debuting at No. 1 on the Billboard 200. It included the lead single, “No Surprise.” Daughtry released its third album “Break The Spell” in 2011 and “Baptized” in 2013.
Tickets:  $40.00 – $60.00
Visit:  https://www.caesars.com/caesars-ac/shows

New Jersey State High School Wrestling Championships

Atlantic City’s Boardwalk Hall will host the New Jersey State High School Wrestling Championships, Friday, March 2-Sunday March 4, 2018.

Continuing what has become a tradition for the sport since 2002, the top high school wrestlers from across the state will be at Boardwalk Hall on March 2, 3, and 4 to compete in the NJSIAA (New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association) State Wrestling Championships.

All-session tickets will be priced at $40, single sessions $10, seniors and students $2.00, through the Boardwalk Hall Box Office, Ticketmaster Outlets, or by phone (800-745-3000). For more information, visit www.boardwalkhall.com

Atlantic City Ballet Presents Midsummer Night’s Dream

Atlantic City Ballet Presents Midsummer Night Dream at Caesars Atlantic City, Saturday April 14, 2018 at 7:00pm.

One of Shakespeare’s best-known comedies, A Midsummer Night’s Dream blurs the line between magic and reality, leading to a night so fantastical you have to dream it to believe it. Throw in feuding fairies and a troupe of bumbling actors, and you’ve got a sparkling comedy with something for everyone.

Tickets:  $45.00 Adults $25.00 Students other discounts apply

Visit:  http://www.acballet.org/attend

Jazz in the Park

Chicken Bone Beach Historical Foundation presents The Winter Spring Jazz series at Atlantic City’s Claridge Hotel selected Friday evenings from 7:00 – 10:00pm through May 25, 2018.

Some of Atlantic City’s top rated musicians will be featured at the Chicken Bone Beach’s Winter Spring Jazz Series at The Club on the 3rd floor of the Claridge. The concert series runs the second and fourth Fridays in March, April and May 2018 from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. The cost will be a $10 donation at the door. 

CBB believes Jazz represents more than just musical entertainment; it is a progressive, gathering force of inclusion. Turning the memory of an unfortunate chapter of American history into a positive force of good through Jazz is what the Chicken Bone Beach Historical Foundation stands for!

Visit:  https://www.chickenbonebeach.org

Mother’s Day Music Festival in Atlantic City

The Mothers Day Music Festival is returning to Boardwalk Hall on Saturday, May 12 at 7pm for its 10th annual concert. 

This year concert features two iconic artists, Maxwell and Gladys Knight. This will mark the first time that they will be performing together on the Mothers Day Music Festival. This concert will also feature one of the up and coming stars of the music industry, Vivian Green.

Ticket price range from $55.00 – $150.
Visit: http://www.boardwalkhall.com

Showboat Atlantic City Owner Seeks Casino Eligibility

Philadelphia developer Bart Blatstein re-opened the closed Showboat casino as a non-casino hotel in 2016 saying he had no plans to operate a casino at the site.

But now, Blatstein has petitioned the New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement for a statement of compliance, a determination that he controls a property that could be used as a casino. The division will also investigate if Blatstein meets the criteria for casino licensing. Seeking the statement is the first step in applying for a casino license.

Blatstein told the local Press of Atlantic City that he is just “starting the process” for licensing, but is keeping his options open for the property.

The Showboat is part of a former four-casino cluster on Atlantic City’s Boardwalk that saw three casinos close. This summer, however, two of the three casinos are scheduled to re-open with casino gaming. The former Trump Taj Mahal is scheduled to re-open as a Hard Rock casino and the former Revel casino is set to re-open as Ocean Resort. Resorts casino also sits in the cluster, though that casino has never closed.

The re-openings would leave the Showboat as a non-casino hotel in the midst of three casinos. Blatstein did acknowledge that the area is seeing an economic rebirth.

“There is over a billion dollars worth of investment in that part of the town, that should not be ignored,” Blatstein told the paper.

New Jersey Encouraging Early Licensing for Sports Betting

New Jersey has been waiting to offer sports betting for years and as a decision on the state’s latest sports betting law from the U.S. Supreme Court draws near officials are advising sports-betting firms to move quickly to apply for licensing.

The court is expected to rule on the state’s challenge to a federal sports betting ban in the next few months, and could rule on the issue in early March. New Jersey wants to allow sports betting at its Atlantic City casinos and also at the state’s racetracks.

Ahead of the decision, the New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement is encouraging businesses and individuals interested in sports betting to apply for a casino service industry license.

“The Division of Gaming Enforcement recognizes it needs to be prepared to investigate and license businesses and individuals seeking to enter the New Jersey gaming market should the Supreme Court issue a favorable decision authorizing the state to legalize and regulate sports wagering,” David Rebuck, director of the Division of Gaming Enforcement, said in a statement to ESPN. “Under existing law, any business or individual anticipating entering into a commercial transaction with a casino must be licensed or approved by the division. Many companies have inquired as to the State’s licensing requirements in the event they are able to engage in sports wagering operations with our casino industry. The division has encouraged these companies to commence the application process.”

New Jersey has been trying to overturn the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act—which bans sports betting in all but four states—for more than five years. This is actually the second time the state has challenged the ban after a first attempt was blocked in federal court. The Supreme Court did not hear the state’s first challenge.

In its second attempt, the state sought to bypass the federal restriction by allowing self-regulated sports betting at casinos and racetracks. Federal courts blocked that bill as well, but the Supreme Court then decided to hear the case. The Court could back New Jersey’s second sports betting law, but could also choose to strike down PASPA completely.

Still, the current state law being reviewed by the Court allows sports betting without licensing, but did restrict that sports betting to already licensed casinos and racetracks. That would mean that businesses working with casinos would need casino service licensing.

Operators already licensed in New Jersey are also preparing for the ruling. Monmouth Park racetrack has partnered with UK bookmaker William Hill and plans add a Las Vegas-style sportsbook on the grounds. The Borgata casino in Atlantic City has also named a location for a sportsbook in its casino.

Hard Rock Atlantic City Emphasizes Community

Hard Rock Atlantic City—which is scheduled to open this summer on Atlantic City’s Boardwalk—has been making an effort to engage the resort’s largely minority community through hiring programs and other forms of outreach.

The city’s predominantly black community has long felt excluded from the economic benefits casino gambling has brought to the region.

Hard Rock officials, however, have begun holding community meetings—scheduled to be held every three months—for residents in the area around the casino and implemented programs to hire more locals for casino jobs.

The casino has also announced programs to train local youth children for careers in the industry, set aside free or discounted concert tickets for city residents and hire people who graduate from a drug offense court diversion and treatment program.

More than 100 people attended an initial community meeting with the company’s top management and discovered they will receive free coffee for the rest of the year once the casino opens, according to a report by the Associated Press.

“It’s extremely important to dispel the perception of the casinos living on their own island, isolated from the community,” said Jim Allen, CEO of Hard Rock International. “We want to reach out to our neighbors and make sure they know who we are. We believe it’s important to make sure there’s a true partnership.”

For many Atlantic City residents, there has been a perception that casinos in the resort care only about their own bottom lines and not in benefitting the community as a whole.

 “There was a time when the casino industry, our primary industry, was isolated from the community,” said Bishop James Washington, of the New Shiloh Baptist Church, which hosted the meeting with Hard Rock. “Each one was concerned about their individual business interest. The interest of the community may have been secondary. What Hard Rock i s doing is fantastic. They’re looking to invest in our community and opening their property and giving employment to people.”

Hard Rock, its local investors and a community group have started a program to train young city residents for careers in the construction trades. Hard Rock is also in the process of hiring a needed 3,000 employees for its opening, which is now slated for June.

Allen is also proposing a citywide program in which executives from each Atlantic City casino would staff and fund a program to train high school students for careers in their city’s main industry.

“We want to create a curriculum to teach your children the business, just like I learned it,” Allen told residents. “We have to teach people the business from the ground up. There’s a way to clean a room and deal cards and greet a guest.

“Give us a chance,” Allen asked residents. “We have to make money. There can’t be animosity if the casino makes money. But we have to give back.”

The meeting also underscores how the Hard Rock, along with the neighboring Ocean Resort—scheduled to also open this summer on the site of the former Revel casino—will have to complete hiring in time for their announced openings. The Ocean Resort also needs to hire about 3,000 people.

The New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement has been working with both properties.

“The division is working closely with both operators as they go through the regulatory process in preparation for the expected casino openings this year,” David Rebuck, director of the DGE said in a press statement. “This includes actively working on licensing matters as well as ensuring operational systems such as floor layouts, gaming equipment, security, surveillance and staffing meet our regulatory standards.”