TV Reality Show Aims Its Cameras at Las Vegas Strippers

TV Reality Show Aims Its Cameras at Las Vegas Strippers

Truth show producers desire to capture the gritty life of Las Vegas strippers in a fresh series that is planned TLC

Reality TV ‘s been around for the number of years now; after the day-to-day lives of bored, rich housewives, teen moms, New Jersey guidos and guidettes, and ridiculously rich and talentless celebutantes. We have seen women into the act of offering birth, showing up, at least, to have sex, and people getting arrested. But we haven’t seen the actual backstage life of the women who strip for a living in nevada, Nevada; a lifestyle that is glamorous or demeaning, depending on whom you talk to about it.

Capturing the Stripper Life Style

Until now, that is. Two reality show producers state they desire to enter The Horse (formerly known as The Crazy Horse Too) a well-known strip joint located near enough to the vegas Strip to be known to many of the bachelor and Asian tourist crowd and produce a show for the epicenter of things reality, TLC, in the next few months. TLC, you’ll recall, may be the home base for shows like ‘Toddlers and Tiaras,’ ‘Honey Boo Boo,’ ‘Hoarders Buried Alive,’ and their entry that is latest in the crazy to crazier market, ‘Extreme Cougar Wives.’ A real possibility show about the lives of Las Vegas strippers would appear to blend perfectly with that roster.

Darren Maddern, whose credits include the long-defunct ‘The Gossip Show with Downtown Julie Brown,’ and Edward Barbini of ‘Dirty work’ fame are the two producers hoping making it rain with what they refer to as a ‘reality docudrama.’ They will should produce A las that is new vegas in a town that has obviously lent itself to reality television the way in which politicians lend themselves to sex scandals these days. Continue reading

Nevada Taverns or Slots Parlors: The Gaming War for the Roses

Nevada Taverns or Slots Parlors: The Gaming War for the Roses

Nevada Gaming Commissioner John Moran Jr. concerns legal counsel during a commission conference

Your whole point of gaming regulation is to provide a solid, dependable and framework that is clear which those in the gaming industry can run. So Nevada Gaming Commission members were none too happy when regulations they put set up only 2 yrs ago, in 2011, regarding exactly how slots can operate in Nevada’s tavern environment, had been back front of them at a meeting that is recent.

Regulation 3.015 had been home to roost, and laying some eggs.

Not Happy to Revisit Guidelines and Regs

Gaming Commission Chairman Pete Bernhard let it be known he had been none too happy to see the regulatory issue straight back in front of the commission.

‘ We don’t desire to see the rules changed every two years. One of the worst things regulators can do would be to provide uncertainty. I thought we resolved this presssing issue in 2011,’ Bernhard reiterated.

Creating the revisitation were two different sets of laws from two various regulatory figures, each overlapping the other and creating a set that is murky of for tavern owners to abide by.

Regarding the one hand, Regulation 3.015 ( seems like a James Bond operative code name) was created by the Commission to make slot parlors illegal; the kind exemplified by the plethora of Dottie’s chains found throughout the Las Vegas valley. Competing business operators, as well since the Nevada Resort Association a lobbying team that pushes for its casino clients came back saying that Dottie’s and their ilk weren’t actually ‘taverns,’ but small video slot parlors that offered a smattering of snack food and a minimal bar just so they could pass muster with regulators. Continue reading