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<text id=94TT0020>
<link 94TO0143>
<title>
Jan. 10, 1994: Las Vegas, U.S.A.
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Jan. 10, 1994 Las Vegas:The New All-American City
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
COVER STORY, Page 42
Las Vegas, U.S.A.
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Booming with three new mega-hotel-casinos, the city now seems
mainstream. But that's only because the rest of America has
become a lot more like Vegas
</p>
<p>By Kurt Andersen--With reporting by Priscilla Painton/Las Vegas
</p>
<p> How can a large-spirited American not like Las Vegas, or at
least smile at the notion of it? On the other hand, how can
any civilized person not loathe Las Vegas, or at least recoil
at its relentlessness?
</p>
<p> How can you not love and hate a city so crazily go-go that three
different, colossally theme-park-like casino-hotels (the $375
million Luxor, Steve Wynn's $475 million Treasure Island and
now the $1 billion MGM Grand, the largest hotel on earth and
the venue last weekend for Barbra Streisand's multimillion-dollar
return to live, paid performing) have opened on the Strip in
just the past three months? How can you not love and hate a
city so freakishly democratic that at a hotel called the Mirage,
futuristic-looking infomercial star Susan Powter and a premodern
Mennonite family can pass in a corridor, neither taking note
of the other? How can you not love and hate a city where the
$100,000 paintings for sale at an art gallery appended to Caesars
Palace (Patron: "He's a genius." Gallery employee: "Yes, he's
so creative." Patron: "It gives me goose bumps") are the work
of Anthony Quinn?
</p>
<p> In no other peacetime locale are the metaphors and ironies so
impossibly juicy, so ripe for the plucking. And there are always
new crops of redolent, suggestive Vegas facts, of which any
several--for instance: the Mirage has a $500-a-pull slot-machine
salon; the lung-cancer death rate here is the second highest
in the country; the suicide rate and cellular-phone usage are
the highest--constitute a vivid, up-to-date sketch of the
place.
</p>
<p> But it used to be that while Las Vegas was unfailingly piquant
and over the top, it was sui generis, its own highly peculiar
self. Vegas in none of its various phases (ersatz Old West outpost
in the 1930s and '40s, gangsters-meet-Hollywood high-life oasis
in the '50s and '60s, uncool polyester dump in the '70s and
early '80s) was really an accurate prism through which to regard
the nation as a whole.
</p>
<p> Now, however, as the city ricochets through its biggest boom
since the Frank-and-Dino Rat Pack days of the '50s and '60s--the tourist inflow has nearly doubled over the past decade,
and the area remains among America's fastest growing--the
hypereclectic 24-hour-a-day fantasy-themed party machine no
longer seems so very exotic or extreme. High-tech spectacle,
convenience, classlessness, loose money, a Nikes-and-T-shirt
dress code: that's why immigrants flock to the U.S.; that's
why some 20 million Americans (and 2 million foreigners) went
to Vegas in 1992. "Las Vegas exists because it is a perfect
reflection of America," says Steve Wynn, the city's most important
and interesting resident. "You say `Las Vegas' in Osaka or Johannesburg,
anywhere in the world, and people smile, they understand. It
represents all the things people in every city in America like.
Here they can get it in one gulp." There is a Jorge Luis Borges
story called The Aleph that describes the magical point where
all places are seen from every angle. Las Vegas has become that
place in America, less because of its own transformation in
the past decade than because of the transformation of the nation.
Las Vegas has become Americanized, and, even more, America has
become Las Vegasized.
</p>
<p> With its ecologically pious displays of white tigers and dolphins--and no topless show girls--the almost tasteful Mirage has
profoundly enlarged and updated the notion of Vegas amusement
since it opened in 1989. The general Las Vegas marketing spin
today is that the city is fun for the whole family. It seems
to be an effective p.r. line, but it's an idea that the owners
of the new Luxor and MGM Grand may have taken too much to heart.
</p>
<p> Inside the Luxor is a fake river and barges, plus several huge
"participatory adventure" areas, an ersatz archaeological ride,
as well as a two-story Sega virtual-reality video-game arcade.
The joint has acres of casino space--but the slots and blackjack
tables are, astoundingly, quite separate from and mostly concealed
by the Disneyesque fun and games. The bells and whistles are
more prominent and accessible than the casino itself, and are
not merely a cute, quick way to divert people as they proceed
into the fleecing pen. The MGM Grand has gone further: it spent
hundreds of millions of dollars extra to build an adjacent but
entirely separate amusement park, cramming seven rides (three
involving fake rivers) and eight "themed areas" onto 33 acres,
less than a 10th the size of Disney World.
</p>
<p> The smart operators, such as Wynn, understand the proper Vegas
meaning of family fun: people who won't take vacations without
their children now have places to stick the kids while Mom and
Dad pursue the essentially unwholesome act of squandering the
family savings on cards and dice. "It's one thing for the place
to be user-friendly to the whole family because the family travels
together," Wynn says. "It's quite a different thing to sit down
and dedicate creative design energy to build for children. I'm
not, ain't gonna, not interested. I'm after Mom and Dad." Wynn's
dolphins are just a '90s form of free Scotch and sodas, a cheap,
subtler means of inducing people to leave their room and lose
money.
</p>
<p> But even if Vegas is not squeaky clean, even if its raison d'etre
remains something other than provoking a childlike sense of
wonder, the place is no longer considered racy or naughty by
most people. It seems incredible today that a book in the '60s
about the city was called Las Vegas, City of Sin? The change
in perception is mainly because Americans' collective tolerance
for vulgarity has gone way, way up. Just a decade ago, "hell"
and "damn" were the most offensive words permitted on broadcast
TV; today the colloquialisms "butt" and "sucks" are in daily
currency on all major networks. Characters on Fox sitcoms and
MTV cartoon shows snicker about their erections, and the stars
of NYPD Blue can call each other "asshole." Look at Montel Williams
and Geraldo. Listen to Howard Stern.
</p>
<p> In Vegas, Wynn actually gets a little defensive about his nudity-free
shows ("Hey, I'm not afraid of boobies"), the streets are hookerless,
and the best-known Vegas strip club, the Palomino, lies discreetly
beyond the city limits. Meanwhile, at 116 Hooters restaurants
in 30 states, the whole point is the battalion of bosomy young
waitresses in tight-fitting tank tops who exist as fantasy objects
for a clientele of high-testosterone frat boys and young bubbas.
No wonder middle Americans find the idea of bringing kids along
to Vegas perfectly appropriate. How ironic that two decades
after Hunter Thompson's book Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas,
countercultural ripple effects have so raised the American prudishness
threshold that Las Vegas is considered no more unseemly than
any other big city.
</p>
<p> Sixteen years ago, Nevada was the only place in America where
one could legally go to a casino, and there were just fourteen
state lotteries. As recently as 1990, there were just three
states with casinos, not counting those on Indian reservations;
now there are nine. Lotteries have spread to 37 states. Indiana
and five Mississippi River states have talked themselves into
allowing gambling on riverboats--hey, it's not immoral, it's,
you know, historical--and such floating casinos may soon be
moored off Boston and in Philadelphia as well. Sensible, upright
Minnesota, of all places, now has more casinos than Atlantic
City. With only one state, Hawaii, retaining a ban on gambling,
and with cable-TV oligarch John Malone interested in offering
gambling on the information superhighway, Vegas doesn't seem
sinful, just more entertaining and shameless.
</p>
<p> And fortunate, especially in this age of taxophobia and budget
freezes. The state of Nevada now derives half its public funds
from gaming-related revenues--from voluntary consumption taxes,
nearly all paid by out-of-staters. Nevadans pay no state income
or inheritance tax. To craven political leaders elsewhere, this
looks pretty irresistible: no pain, all gain, vigorish as fiscal
policy. A new report from the Center for the Study of the States
concluded, however, that "gambling cannot generally produce
enough tax revenue to significantly reduce reliance on other
taxes or to solve a serious state fiscal problem."
</p>
<p> One of the defining features of Las Vegas has been its 24-hour
commercial culture, which arose as a corollary to 24-hour casinos.
Along with the University of Nevada's basketball team, it is
the great source of civic pride. It is the salient urban feature
first mentioned by Harvard-educated physician Mindy Shapiro
about her adopted city: "You can buy a Cuisinart or drop off
your dry cleaning at 4 in the morning!" The comic magician Penn
Jillette, who was performing at Bally's last week, marvels,
"There are no good restaurants, but at least they're open at
3 in the morning."
</p>
<p> But Las Vegas' retail ceaselessness is no longer singular. These
days around-the-clock restaurants and supermarkets are unremarkable
in hyperconvenient America, and the information superhighway,
even in its current embryonic state, permits people everywhere
to consume saucy entertainment--whether pay-per-view pornography
or dating by modem with strangers--at any time of the day
or night.
</p>
<p> Las Vegas was created as the world's first experiential duty-free
zone, a place dedicated to the anti-Puritan pursuit of instant
gratification--no waiting, no muss, no fuss. In the '30s,
Nevada was famous for its uniquely quick and easy marriage (and
divorce) laws. And although a certain kind of demented Barbie
and Ken still make it a point to stage their weddings in Las
Vegas (158,470 people married there in 1992, a majority of them
out-of-staters), it is now an atavistic impulse, since the marriage
and divorce laws in the rest of the U.S. have long since caught
up with Nevada's pioneering looseness.
</p>
<p> When instant gratification becomes a supreme virtue, pop culture
follows. Siegfried and Roy, the ur-Vegas magicians (imagine,
if you dare, a hybrid of Liberace, Arnold Schwarzenegger, David
Copperfield and Marlin Perkins) who perform 480 shows a year
in their own theater at the Mirage, don't seem satisfied unless
every trick is a show-stopper and every moment has the feel
of a finale. In front of the new Treasure Island is a Caribbean-cum-Mediterranean
faux village fronting a 65-ft.-deep "lagoon" in which a full-scale
British man-of-war and pirate vessel every 90 minutes stage
a battle with serious fires, major explosions, 22 actors, stirring
music, a sinking ship. It is very impressive, completely satisfying--and gives spectators pretty much everything in 15 minutes,
for free, that they go to certain two-hour, $65-a-seat Broadway
musicals for.
</p>
<p> In the '50s and '60s Vegas impresarios took a dying strain of
vaudeville and turned it into a highly particular Vegas style.
Gamblers from Duluth and Atlanta came to see only-in-Vegas entertainments:
Sinatra, Streisand, stand-up comedians, the trash rococo of
Liberace, both flaunting and denying his gayness; hot-ticket
singer-dancers like Ann-Margret; and shows with whiffy themes
that existed as mere pretexts for bringing out brigades of suggestively
costumed young women jiggling through clouds of pastel-colored
smoke as overamped pop tunes blared. It was cheesy glamour,
to be sure, but it was rare and one of a kind.
</p>
<p> Precisely when did Vegas values start leaching deep into the
American entertainment mainstream? Was it when Sammy Davis Jr.
got his own prime-time variety show on NBC in 1966, or a year
later, when both Jerry Lewis and Joey Bishop had network shows
running? Or in the summer of 1969, when Elvis Presley staged
his famous 14-show-a-week comeback gig in Vegas?
</p>
<p> Whenever the change began, American show business is today so
pervasively Vegasy that we hardly notice anymore. The arty,
sexy French-Canadian circus Cirque du Soleil had its breakthrough
run in Manhattan before decamping this year to Las Vegas, and
neither venue seemed unnatural. Big rock-'n'-roll concerts nowadays
are often as much about wowie-kazowie production values--giant
video walls, neon, fireworks, suggestively costumed young men
and women, clouds of pastel-colored smoke--as music. Michael
Jackson's highly stylized shtick--the cosmetics, the wardrobe,
the not-quite-dirty bumps and grinds, the Liberace-like gender-preference
coyness--is so Vegas that the city embraced him at every turn:
a Jackson impersonator is a star of the Riviera's long-running
show Splash; Jackson plays a spaceship commander in one of Sega's
new virtual-reality video games at the Luxor; and Siegfried
and Roy got the real Jackson to compose and sing their show-closing
theme song, Mind Is the Magic. And Madonna? Her just finished
Girlie Show world tour, with its Vegas-style dancers and meretricious
Vegas-style lighting, is precisely as pseudosexy in 1993 as
shows at the Flamingo were in 1963--decadence lite.
</p>
<p> Back when the Rat Pack ruled, Jackie Mason played Vegas and
Edward Albee was on Broadway. Today essentially idea-free spectacle--The Phantom of the Opera, Cats--dominates New York City's
so-called legitimate theater, and stand-up comedy is ubiquitous.
In the '90s, Friars Club comedians like Mason have hit Broadway
shows, and Andrew Lloyd Webber's Broadway musical Starlight
Express has been permanently installed in the showroom of the
Las Vegas Hilton. The crossbreeding seems complete.
</p>
<p> Penn and Teller are ultra-show-biz-savvy New York intellectuals
whose act is an ironic deconstruction of magic shows in addition
to being a very impressive magic show (see box). They first
played Vegas a year ago. Penn Jillette's fondness for Vegas,
like every hip baby boomer's, is sweet-and-sour, simultaneously
bemused and fond. Of a traditional Vegas variety show at Bally's
called Jubilee, he rants, "In the first five minutes they destroy
temples and sink a giant model of the Titanic--there are 80
topless dancing women while the Titanic sinks, blast furnaces
spewing fire. You look around you, and every single person in
the crowd perceives it ironically. Every single person in the
show perceives it ironically. It seems like everybody in Vegas
nowadays is too hip to be in Vegas."
</p>
<p> Serious connoisseurs of the surrealistically kitschy visit Graceland
Wedding Chapel, where Norm Jones, the Elvis impersonator in
residence, is both pleased and bewildered by the sudden popularity
of the wedding ceremonies he performs for $250. Heavy-metal
star Jon Bon Jovi got married there in 1989; Phil Joanou, director
of the U2's concert film Rattle and Hum, was not only married
at the Graceland Chapel but played a tape of his wedding onstage
every night of the band's last American tour. In December 1992
three members of Def Leppard showed up at the door, one to get
married and two to renew their vows.
</p>
<p> Last year 8 million of the city's 22 million visitors were under
40, and nearly half of those were under 30. When Soul Asylum,
as part of the MTV-sponsored 1993 Alternative Nation tour, landed
at its last U.S. stop in Las Vegas, the band deviated from its
song list to belt out Vegasy tunes like Mandy and Rhinestone
Cowboy. Luke Perry and Jason Priestley of Beverly Hills, 90210,
huge Tom Jones fans, recently flew to Vegas to see their hero
sing, and members of the Red Hot Chili Peppers went to Las Vegas
to see and meet Julio Iglesias. "Suddenly the same things I
was doing five years ago that were considered pure corn are
now perceived to be in," says Wayne Newton. "It's a wonderful
satisfaction to finally be hip."
</p>
<p> Long before this generation of young hipsters started reveling
in the Vegas gestalt, certain intellectuals were taking seriously
the city's no-holds-barred urban style. It was 25 years ago
that a little-known architect and professor, Robert Venturi,
returned to Yale with his two dozen student acolytes after a
remarkable 10-day expedition to Las Vegas, where they stayed
at the Stardust. His influential 1972 book, Learning from Las
Vegas, immediately made Venturi famous as a heretical high-culture
proponent for the ad hoc, populist design of the Strip--the
giant neon signs, the kitschy architectural allusions to ancient
Rome and the Old West, any zany kind of skin-deep picturesqueness.
And a decade later, the fringe tendency became a full-fledged
movement: Post-Modernism.
</p>
<p> Today almost every big-city downtown has new skyscrapers that
endeavor to look like old skyscrapers. Almost every suburb has
a shopping center decorated with phony arches, phony pediments,
phony columns. Two decades after Venturi proposed, with the
intellectual's standard perverse quasi-affection, that Vegas
could be a beacon for the nation's architecture, his manifesto
had transformed America. Forget the Bauhaus and your house--it is the Vegas aesthetic, architecture as grandiose cartoon,
that has become the American Establishment style. And so the
splendidly pyramidal new Luxor and cubist new MGM Grand (both
the work of local architect Veldon Simpson) do not seem so weird,
since equally odd buildings now exist all over the place.
</p>
<p> As it was being created in the '50s, Vegas' Strip was a mutant
kind of American main drag, an absurdly overscaled Main Street
for cars instead of people. Everywhere else in the country the
shopping mall was replacing the traditional downtown. But now
the Strip in Las Vegas has come full circle, its vacant stretches
filling in with so many new hotels and casinos that what had
been the ultimate expression of car culture has masses of tourists
walking from Bally's to Caesars to Treasure Island, and from
the Luxor to the Excalibur to the MGM Grand. The Strip is virtually
an old-fashioned Main Street.
</p>
<p> Meanwhile malls, the fin-de-siecle scourge of genuine Main Streets,
have become preposterous Vegasy extravaganzas themselves--themed, entertainment driven, all-inclusive, overwhelming. The
West Edmonton Mall in Alberta, with its 119 acres of stores
and restaurants and the world's largest indoor amusement park,
pulled in 22 million people in 1992, as many as visited Las
Vegas; and the 16-month-old Mall of America outside Minneapolis,
with only 96 acres of money-spending opportunity and America's
largest indoor amusement park, claimed 40 million visitors in
its first year.
</p>
<p> Yet even as the rest of America has become more and more like
Las Vegas, life for Vegas residents as well as visitors is more
thoroughly sugar-frosted with fantasy than anywhere else. "Our
customers want a passive experience," says Wynn, "but romantic."
Such as his ersatz South Seas restaurant, Kokomos ("Kokomos--this is better than Hawaii. There's no place in the South
Pacific where the light is so perfect, so beautiful"). At the
Mediterranean-themed resort Wynn envisions for the new Dunes
site down the Strip, he has talked of creating a kind of raffish
virtual Nazism: at a casino-restaurant modeled on Rick's casino-restaurant
in Casablanca, scenes from the movie would seamlessly blend
with live actors playing Bogart and the movie's other characters
among the paying customers.
</p>
<p> The new Las Vegas has even fabricated a bit of ersatz old Las
Vegas: along with its Oriental- and Bahamian-themed suites,
the MGM offers rooms themed according to a decorator's Vegas
ideal. The Sands, one of the last intact artifacts of the Rat
Pack golden era, is being remodeled to within an inch of its
life. "We're going to theme, definitely," the hotel's p.r. spokeswoman
said as work was beginning late last year. "But we don't know
what the themes are yet."
</p>
<p> Even civilians must theme. At the Lakes, an upscale housing
complex, the developer has built a whole tract of Gothic minicastles,
one next to the other. Mountain Spa, a high-end resort and corporate
retreat now being plotted on 640 acres in the city's northwest,
will have a "Mediterranean feel--more of a St. Tropez feel
than a Mexican-American feel," says developer Jack Sommer. "I
have no trouble deviating from the established regional architecture.
This is Las Vegas."
</p>
<p> The standard Las Vegas development is, like so many others throughout
the country, fenced and gated--and each free-standing middle-class
house is in most cases walled off from its neighbors. Such fortress
domesticity, says University of Nevada at Las Vegas political
scientist Bill Thompson, "makes it hard to see your neighbors.
You don't even see your neighbors to say hi. A lot of people
came here to start over, to change, and they don't want people
attachments. Or rather they want to make their own people attachments,
not to be thrown in with people just because their house is
next door."
</p>
<p> The problem with immersing so completely into one's own virtual
reality is solipsism, a kind of holistic selfishness; other
people don't matter unless they are players in one's own themed
fantasy. It costs $150 a month just to keep a third of an acre
green, and so the per capita water usage in Las Vegas is a gluttonous
343 gal. per day, compared with 200 in Los Angeles. The 702
area code has a higher proportion of unlisted numbers than any
other. And although the per capita income is the 12th highest
in the U.S., the electorate last year voted against building
and improving parks. Officials say they need to build 12 new
schools a year through the end of the century to accommodate
the projected population influx, but they fear voters will decline
to pay for them. Such civic disengagement is now a national
phenomenon, but Las Vegas is at the cutting edge--and always
has been. Back during the city's first spurt of urban hypertrophy
in the '50s, when other new cities were grandly and confidently
expanding their schools and social-welfare systems, Las Vegas
was pointedly stingy.
</p>
<p> Today's casino-driven prosperity is a somewhat self-contained
bubble. The state's welfare case load has risen 54% just since
1991. "We currently have 10,500 new jobs coming online," says
welfare administrator Mila Florence, referring to the staffing
of the Luxor, Treasure Island and MGM Grand. "The number of
persons coming into the state seeking those jobs far exceeds
the number of jobs available, so our agency becomes the safety
net."
</p>
<p> Nor is it just social programs the locals are disinclined to
fund. Last year voters defeated a series of bond issues that
would have paid for 300 new police officers, seven new police
substations, 500 new jail beds and improved security in the
schools. Is the crime problem bad? Yes and no. Yes in the sense
that the rates for murder and other violent crimes are somewhat
higher than for the nation generally. But then they always have
been--as is typical of resort areas, where tourists skew the
figures. What's interesting is how even in its level of violence
the rest of America has come to resemble Las Vegas. The city's
homicide rate was 128% higher than the nation's as recently
as 1982; today the Las Vegas homicide figure is only 56% higher
than the national rate. In 1982 the local rate of violent crime--rapes, robberies, assaults, as well as homicides--was 90%
higher than the national figure; today it is only 17% higher.
</p>
<p> The theming; Liberace and Michael Jackson and Siegfried and
Roy; the water gluttony; the refusal to build schools and police
stations. It is fair to say that Las Vegas is in denial, which
probably explains the local predilection for smarmy euphemism.
From Wayne Newton on down, every man in Vegas calls every woman
a lady. One of the local abortion clinics is called A Lady's
Needs. Signs all over McCarran Airport declare it a nonsmoking
building, yet just as noticeable as the banks of slot machines
is the reek of old cigarettes. It strikes almost no one as ironic
that the patron of the M.B. Dalitz Religious School is the late
Moe Dalitz, the celebrated gangster.
</p>
<p> It is understandable that the citizens are a bit embarrassed
by their criminal founding fathers (Steve Wynn calls the Dunes
"the original home of tinhorns and scumbags"), but the mixed
feelings go beyond the mob. Last year Davy-O Thompson got zoning-board
approvals to establish his haircutting salon, A Little Off the
Top, where the female stylists were dressed in frilly teddies
or paste-on breast caps and panties. But the board of cosmetology
denied him a license an hour before he was set to open, citing
concerns over "safety" and "hygiene." (He was eventually allowed
to operate.) A similar protest contributed to the demise recently
of a car wash featuring women in thong bikinis.
</p>
<p> "We Las Vegans have been living under the stigma of Sin City
for so long that we are desperate to prove that this is a very
conservative, God-fearing, average American community that just
happens to have gambling," explains Under Sheriff Eric Cooper,
who along with his boss, Sheriff John Moran, has been waging
a 10-year antivice campaign. "The best thing that ever happened
was when the Baptists had their convention here four years ago."
The category of "Escort Services" is no longer listed in the
local Yellow Pages.
</p>
<p> It isn't just sex. Las Vegans are even ambivalent about gambling.
Political discourse often revolves around keeping casinos away
from decent people's homes. The promotional video produced by
the Nevada Development Authority makes no mention at all of
casinos. Even when a casino is a part of a new development,
it is described as something else. Jack Sommer's Mountain Spa,
the posh pseudo-Mediterranean resort about to start construction,
will have a small "European-style" casino. But, says Sommer,
"it's not really a casino. I call it a gaming amenity."
</p>
<p> Semantic nuance, it turns out, is important. "They don't see
themselves as gamblers," says Steve Wynn of the new tourists
he is attracting. "They think of themselves as folks who are
on vacation, and while they are there--hey, let's put some
money in the slot machine." Wynn hired screenwriter Jim Hart
(Hook, Bram Stoker's Dracula) to write a one-hour family-adventure
TV movie (NBC, Jan. 23) set at Treasure Island, and while Hart
says the movie reaffirms family values and he flew his children
out during production, he understands the place has an intrinsically
dark edge. "You can come out for 24 hours and lose the tuition,"
he says. "There are a lot of desperate characters here."
</p>
<p> For while the city is no longer the "Genet vision of hell" that
John Gregory Dunne described in his book Vegas: A Memoir of
a Dark Season 20 years ago, it is still, for the moment, a stranger
place than Omaha or Sacramento or Worcester or even Atlantic
City, if only because there are so many cheerfully offered temptations
to lose the tuition and so many normal-looking people flirting
feverishly with that risk. The mobs on the casino floors are
in a kind of murmuring trance, each middle-aged housewife or
young lawyer at the slots or the poker tables mentally grappling
with a nonstop flow of insane hunches and wishful superstitions,
continuously driven to unworthy leaps of faith that result in
unwarranted bursts of self-esteem (Blackjack!) or self-loathing
(Craps!).
</p>
<p> Wynn understands the shadowy core of Las Vegas. "There will
never come a day when ((potential visitors)) say, `Should it
be Orlando or should it be Las Vegas?' Those are two different
moods. We think of our vacation in more romantic, personal terms.
We're looking for sensual, extended gratification." In other
words, Disney World is about tightly scripted smile-button fun
for the kids; Las Vegas, despite the new theme-park accessories,
remains the epicenter of the American id, still desperate to
overpay schmaltzy superstars like Barbra Streisand, still focused
on the darker stirrings of chance and liquor and sex.
</p>
<p> If it is now acceptable for the whole family to come along to
Las Vegas, that's because the values of America have changed,
not those of Las Vegas. Deviancy really has been defined down.
The new hang-loose all-American embrace of Las Vegas is either
a sign that Americans have liberated themselves from troublesome
old repressions and moralist hypocrisies, or else one more symptom
of the decline of Western civilization. Or maybe both.
</p>
</body>
</article>
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