Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

LV comic shops get creative

Some shift to delivery; others fear for futures

- By Christophe­r Lawrence

THE thing about declaring certain businesses nonessenti­al is that every business is essential to someone. “I know comic books aren’t the most important thing right now,” said Brian Fudge, owner of Cosmic Comics, “but in my world, how I make my living, it is.”

Fudge and other owners of Las Vegas comic shops have had to adapt to quarantine life and find new ways to get their product to customers.

Maximum Comics owner Jay Bosworth introduced curbside delivery and even a home delivery service, though he had to halt the former when customers still wanted to hang out, talk and high-five employees at his three stores across the valley.

Even Maximum’s contactles­s home delivery — staffers seal the comics, leave them outside the customer’s home and text them when they’re done — encountere­d a few issues.

COMICS

dead at Nevada sportsbook­s with MLB, the NBA and the NHL dormant during the COVID-19 crisis, some books offer wagering on sports that even the most avid sports fan has never heard of.

William Hill, the dominant sportsbook management company in the state, is taking bets on table tennis, the Belarus Extraleagu­e Hockey Finals, chess and European soccer.

Sportsbook­s across the state are hyping futures bets on the NFL draft, the 2020-21 NFL regular season win total and even the 2020-21 college basketball championsh­ip.

Last week the Nevada Gaming Control Board authorized wagering on Counter-Strike, ESL Pro League season 11: North America, a video game tournament.

Gamblers exhibiting addictive behavior may migrate online and continue to lose their money. Or as one of my friends, a recovering gambling addict, told me, “If there’s a gambling game out there on the internet, they’ll find it.” That includes legal offerings in states (Nevada has legalized online poker), social games and illegal offshore gambling operations.

Alan Feldman, the distinguis­hed fellow in responsibl­e gaming at UNLV’s Internatio­nal Gaming Institute, said it’s possible some problem gamblers will exhibit their addictive behavior elsewhere.

“On the one hand, to the extent that there are people who are triggered by casinos, there are no casinos to be triggered by at the moment, so if you view that as a good thing, then that may be a good thing,” Feldman said.

“But the reality is that they’re probably out there looking for

whatever else is going to give them that rush. That could be alcohol, that could be drugs, that could be any other number of potentiall­y dangerous activities,” he said.

Just as internet outlets may provide more problems for problem gamblers, there may be new solutions online as well.

Whyte and Feldman noted that the shutdown has moved some treatment providers to work toward teletherap­y or telehealth, although there are some in-person sessions.

Feldman said the Robert Hunter Internatio­nal Problem Gambling Center in Las Vegas is still conducting group sessions with no more than 10 people in a room and everyone at least 6 feet apart.

The Hunter Center and Mental Health Counseling and Consulting in Las Vegas are two of the five treatment facilities participat­ing in Project Worth, which connects individual­s and families to the resources they need for treatment, starting through redefiniti­on of a person’s worth.

While Gamblers Anonymous meetings across the valley have been stopped as a result of the state’s social distancing guidelines, several groups are now offering call-in or videoconfe­renced meetings to continue the therapeuti­c value of the organizati­on’s 12-step recovery program.

Feldman is hopeful that individual­s who need help will discover they need it during the coronaviru­s shutdown.

“Frankly, I’m hoping that in this pause, there are people who have been experienci­ng problems who are going to use this pause as a moment to reflect and maybe reach out and get some help,” he said.

 ?? Ellen Schmidt Las Vegas Review-Journal ?? Brian Fudge, owner of Cosmic Comics, in his store on Tuesday. He has had to lay off two of the store’s five employees.
Ellen Schmidt Las Vegas Review-Journal Brian Fudge, owner of Cosmic Comics, in his store on Tuesday. He has had to lay off two of the store’s five employees.

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