Sin City has another New Year's Eve planned with celebrity-studded
bashes, exclusive concerts and a rooftop fireworks display billed as the
nation's largest. Big-name celebrity acts including The Black
Keys, The Killers and Pitbull will help hundreds of thousands of
partiers ring in the new year Monday under the watchful eyes of a legion
of law enforcement officers concerned with keeping the celebration
peaceful and eager casino bosses concerned with ending 2012 with a
profitable bang.
The Red Hot Chili Peppers are performing a
sold-out show at the Cosmopolitan's Chelsea Ballroom that will be
broadcast live on the casino's 65-foot (19-meter) marquee to partiers on
the Strip below. Beyonce will give an invitation-only performance in
the Wynn's 1,500-seat-amphitheater. Other casino are touting
pricey nightclub bashes with $3,000 bottle service and open bars, hosted
by reality TV and music celebrities including Kim Kardashian, Nicki
Minaj and Brandy.
Revelers can also party celebrity-free on the
Brooklyn Bridge at the New York-New York Hotel, where tickets start at
$170, or inside the replica Eiffel Tower at Paris Las Vegas, where
couples packages start at $300. Those unimpressed with the ersatz
offerings on the Strip can head 15 minutes south to a Great Gatsby
soirée set inside a private airplane hangar. Organizers say the
aviation-themed bash will recall a time "when the parties were bigger,
the morals were looser and the liquor was cheaper."
Las Vegas' New
Year's eve festivities, dubbed "America's Party," have doubled in size
since 1990. The Las Vegas Convention and Visitor's Authority expects
332,000 visitors Monday, equal to the record-breaking number that
flocked to last year's celebration. That number has hoteliers
happy, but does not rival other New Year's Eve celebrations. The ball
drop at New York City's Times Square draws more than 1 million
spectators, and some 2 million people flock to the shores of Copacabana
beach in Rio de Janeiro for music and fireworks.
Still, Las Vegas
is dealing a full house this weekend, with hotel occupancy approaching
100 percent, according to Dawn Christensen of the visitor's authority,
and rooms going for several times the normal price. The city room
suite at the Cosmopolitan can be had for $210 on Tuesday, but costs $650
Monday. The deluxe king room at Caesars Palace is going for $519 on
Monday, compared with $139 Tuesday. With gambling revenue still
down 20 percent in the Las Vegas area and visitor levels only recently
returning to pre-recession levels this year, New Year's Eve is a crucial
night for the casino industry.
It's the biggest money-maker of the
year, projected to bring in $210 million on Monday alone, not counting
gambling revenue. Spectators will be treated to more than eight
minutes of coordinated pyrotechnics costing $500,000. The fireworks will
be shot from the rooftops of seven hotel-casinos, from the MGM Grand
toward the south end of the Strip to the Stratosphere in the north. The show will feature a medley of bubblegum pop, including The Wanted's "Glad You Came" and Pink's "Raise Your Glass."
Grucci,
the so-called "first family of fireworks," is bringing some extra flash
to the city of lights for the eighth year in a row. CFO Felix Grucci
said he chooses the score first and then establishes his choreography,
as a nightclub or Broadway musical director might. "It's a combination of science and art; mainly art," he said. A
few miles north, the downtown Fremont Street Experience pedestrian mall
will stage its fifth annual TributePalooza, with cover bands playing to
an adults-only crowd.
Virtual fireworks will light up the mall's blocks-long metal canopy, which boasts the world's largest video screen. "I've
been to a lot of places, and this is the best," said Las Vegas Mayor
Carolyn Goodman, who will lead the Fremont countdown. "One hotel after
another, one place to go after another. It's all happening." Police
plan to shut down Strip traffic six hours before midnight so that
revelers can spill into the four-mile stretch of road normally packed
with cars at night. Casinos will lock their doors to all but paying
guests.
The city's 2,700 metro police officers will be visible on
horses and bicycles, and will also blend into the crowd and watch for
bad behavior and more serious offenses. Police made 114 arrests for drunken driving during last year's festivities. "Our
primary mission is crowd safety," said Lt. Jason Letkiewicz, who will
be overseeing the command center on the Strip. "It's usually a real good
crowd. They want to party, they want to have a good time." About
300 Nevada National Guard troops will also take up stations around town,
where they will be on the lookout for possible terrorist threats.
Street
sweepers will move in around 2 a.m. and finish up by dawn. They
typically collect 50 cubic yards (meters) of trash, enough to fill the
10,000-gallon (38,000-liter) double archway aquarium at the MGM Grand's
Rainforest Cafe.
source : the jakarta post
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