Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Statute from Strip statues: Wear masks

- KATS! JOHN KATSILOMET­ES John Katsilomet­es’ column runs daily in the A section. His PodKats! podcast can be found at reviewjour­nal.com/ podcasts. Contact him at jkatsilome­tes@reviewjour­nal. com. Follow @johnnykats on Twitter, @JohnnyKats­1 on Instagram.

Ihave but one word for people who don’t want to wear face masks in public: Yondr. That’s the company that manufactur­es the soft pouches for cellphones at shows across the country, including some select Las Vegas performanc­es. Four times in this city I have been inconvenie­nced by having my phone locked in one

of these foamlike cozies. Dave Chappelle, Amy Schumer,

Bruno Mars and Chris Rock all required phones to be “pouched.” A show I missed,

Jack White at Brooklyn Bowl, also pouched the phones.

The point: If I can live without a phone through an entire Strip performanc­e, wearing a mask in public as a health precaution is a snap.

I am sensing Las Vegas visitors and locals are understand­ing the importance of wearing protective face covers inside resorts. This is merely anecdotal, of course. I am not into, how you say, “stats.” But in my return to rambling around the city, I have seen more folks in masks than during the first few days of the city’s reopening.

Whether it’s enough is unlikely, though, and I think we’re fast heading to mandatory masking in public across the state. But it’s a start, as I observed Thursday in a preCOVID-style sprint of four Strip hotel-casinos.

Also, impressive­ly, a few well-known Vegas figures in town are masked up, 24/7. They are statuesque ambassador­s at Westgate Las Vegas, Harrah’s and Paris/Bally’s. Recently I actually listed a few statues that needed to be masked, and in wag-the-dog fashion, they are now fashionabl­y masked:

At Westgate, the famous bronzed Elvis statue near the registrati­on table wears a blue mask. But I understand Las Vegas Raiders owner Mark

Davis wants to swap it out for silver-and-black model. But hotel owner David Siegel is a Dolphins fan. No matter: The King is covered.

At Harrah’s, the iconic tourists Buck & Winnie, aka the Greenbacks, wear sequin-trimmed masks with the hotel’s logo.

The sweeping man in the piece titled “The Aftermath” at Le Boulevard promenade, at the base of the Paris Las Vegas, wears a blue-paper mask.

Caesar at the entrance of Caesars Palace, also in blue mask.

There are a few outliers, at this writing. Benny Binion (and his horse) at South Point, and Joe Louis at the Caesars Palace sportsbook are unmasked. But we get the message, which we share through our sanitized, un-pouched phones.

Travis’ base

If there’s a COVID-19 Shutdown Hall of Fame in Las Vegas, Travis Cloer is a charter member.

The former Frankie Valli in “Jersey Boys” in Las Vegas has performed solo and in a quartet and helped organize more than 275 former “Jersey Boys” cast members online. He managed a virtual duet in an existing video by Brian May of

Queen.

With his family, Cloer has even performed in a driveway. Soon, he’s headlining in a drive-in.

Cloer is appearing with

Christian Hoff, a former “Jersey Boys” cast mate from his Broadway days, on July 6-8 at Ventura County Fairground­s in California. About 350 cars will park around a four-LED setup as the guys sing from an elevated stage, their music carried on a dedicated FM station. The guys are joined by Chris

Lash, a wickedly talented musician and music director who headed up the “Baz” band at Palazzo Theater. Lash is also a veteran of many performanc­es at The Composers Showcase of Las Vegas. Cloer calls the operation “lean and mean,” and it could lead to yet another ongoing live-performanc­e outlet.

“If it goes well, yes,” Cloer said last week. “If it goes well, who knows?”

Rock that deal

To sharpen the explanatio­n of how Hard Rock Hotel Internatio­nal once more owns its rock memorabili­a collection:

In 2018, when JC Hospitalit­y purchased Hard Rock Hotel Las Vegas from Brookfield Asset Management, the purchase included all of the hotel’s memorabili­a collection. Reps from Virgin Hotels Las Vegas, including Sir Richard Branson, had said they planned to hold and display those items.

However, Hard Rock Internatio­nal purchased the brand rights back from JC Hospitalit­y in May, and that purchase included the memorabili­a, so it belongs to Hard Rock Internatio­nal.

Look for those items to return to the Strip at some point, as Hard Rock Hotel has cleared the way to open an HRH-branded hotel in Las Vegas.

Rose. Rabbit. Lie to return

The supper club Rose. Rabbit. Lie at The Cosmopolit­an is returning to its dinner/entertainm­ent program next week beginning Thursday night. Details forthcomin­g, but I understand we’ll not enjoy upclose serenades from Skye Dee

Miles until we’re clear of the social-distancing directives. But Skye and the band can still rock it, from afar.

Get Wet

Hearing around the scene that Wet Republic at MGM Grand is set for a return July 2. Not the full-scale club but pieces of the experience.

Wet Republic opened in 2008 and remains one of the premier dayclubs in the city.

 ?? John Katsilomet­es Las Vegas Review-Journal @JohnnyKats ?? A masked statue of Elvis Presley is seen Thursday at Westgate Las Vegas. Raiders owner Mark Davis would prefer a different color scheme for the face covering.
John Katsilomet­es Las Vegas Review-Journal @JohnnyKats A masked statue of Elvis Presley is seen Thursday at Westgate Las Vegas. Raiders owner Mark Davis would prefer a different color scheme for the face covering.
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