Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Virus protocols leave venues guessing

- 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.

IN a pandemic, Entertainm­ent Capital of the World is a tough room.

Las Vegas businesses that serve up music along with food and drink are learning this the hard way. Last week, such wellknown Vegas hangs as the Saddle N Spurs Saloon on North Rancho Road and the E-String Poker Bar in Henderson have been told to knock off any live performanc­es.

This is sort of like being told to get out of the pool but without the horseplay. Neither business was cited for violating COVID-19 safety protocols. This is about live entertainm­ent and how it is presented and promoted.

“We have to define who is and isn’t a ‘headliner’ and what is and isn’t ‘ambient’ music,” Saddles N Spurs owner and musician Bobby Kingston said. “We need to know why we can’t promote what we are doing in our businesses when we have a singer or a duo onstage.”

Kingston was referring to an email from a city of Las Vegas business licensing official that states: “Live entertainm­ent which includes karaoke at this point is prohibited with a few allowances. You can have a singer, piano player, guitar player or small piece band that is there playing music at an ambiance level. There can’t be any ticket sales, admission fee or headliner advertisem­ent for the entertainm­ent & no dancing.”

Saddle N Spurs was following those orders, with the possible exception of promoting headliners with Facebook posts about their scheduled musicians. No offense to anyone, but the saloon was not exactly booking Lady Gaga or Bruno Mars.

The saloon has shut down twice during the pandemic, originally in the statewide shutdown in March and again when bars without food were ordered closed in July.

“We need to be able to tell people what we are doing, whether it’s offering food and a singer who is 15 to 20 feet from people eating, or if we’re selling cars,” Kingston said. “It’s no different than posting a menu on Facebook.”

The governor’s office has responded to an email for clarificat­ion with a reminder that COVID-19 sets the protocol and the time horizon for the state’s reopening.

Addressing public gatherings, the statement reads: “The current statewide baseline standards are the mitigation measures that every county must adhere to, regardless of risk level each county is experienci­ng. These statewide standards include limits on public and private gathering size, along with capacity limits for businesses.”

That does not explain the inconsiste­ncies in enforcemen­t of live entertainm­ent throughout Clark County. Saddle N Spurs and E-String are being ordered to take down live entertainm­ent that certainly can be described as both “nonheadlin­er”

and “ambient.”

Meanwhile, such businesses as Bobby Mao’s, just 3 miles from E String in Henderson, are allowed to provide entertainm­ent. This after owner Bobby

Grannet had been warned by the city of Henderson that his singers were off-limits. Grannet persuaded the city that he would be forced to close entirely if not allowed to proceed with his full dinner lineup. He’s now back in action.

The Vegas Room at Commercial Center, Don’t Tell Mama at Neonopolis, Chianti’s Italian restaurant (this weekend with Neil Diamond tribute artist (Rob Garrett) and Tuscany’s Piazza lounge are all providing ambient entertainm­ent. The county curbed karaoke at Ellis Island, where all live music has been turned off for now.

On the Strip, we’ve routinely name-checked Mayfair Supper Club at Bellagio and Rose. Rabbit. Lie. at The Cosmopolit­an of Las Vegas for their live performanc­es. Caesars Entertainm­ent’s Bally’s, Paris and Harrah’s have reopened lounges, with food boxes offered and unbilled soloists or duos playing in the background.

Yet E-String booker and performer Jonny Bird was informed Wednesday to knock down its scheduled series of soloists and duos in the dining

room, including Vinny Adinolfi and his son Vinny “Vin A.” Adinolfi of Bronx Wanderers.

The elder Adinolfi was about to vent on Facebook, where you can find a logjam of complaints about COVID-19 reopening inconsiste­ncies, but settled down and started hustling.

“So we’re out of work again,” Adinolfi said. “I’m scrambling, calling agents all over to see if they’ll take Vinny and I. We’ll travel.”

E-String had been promoting the Adinolfis’ acoustic shows, which were also livestream­ed, and charging a cover at the door. That is a no-no. Bird, too, is a showman and had been prepping for his “Schmoozin’ & Boozin’” Vegas-themed one-man show when the track machine was shut down.

In all, the respective entertaine­rs, most of whom have not seen any unemployme­nt insurance financial support, lost between $15,000 and $20,000.

But Bird is investigat­ing options, including a remote livestream of performanc­es broadcast in that same dining room but without the performers. In other words, the same sort of entertainm­ent scene you can find at a Las Vegas movie theater, which, performers are fast to note, are about as big as Vegas live-entertainm­ent venues.

“We’ll have the same number of people in the room, except for the one or two people performing, broadcast on the wall,” Bird said. “I’m looking at every way I can get around this, not in a sneaky way but proactive. We need to find a way to solve this, and we will. I’m an eternal optimist.”

 ?? L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-Journal @Left_Eye_Images ?? Saddle N Spurs Saloon owner Bobby Kingston, right, summed up the frustratio­n of vague COVID-19 directives regarding musical performanc­es. “We need to know why we can’t promote what we are doing in our businesses when we have a singer or a duo onstage,” he said.
L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-Journal @Left_Eye_Images Saddle N Spurs Saloon owner Bobby Kingston, right, summed up the frustratio­n of vague COVID-19 directives regarding musical performanc­es. “We need to know why we can’t promote what we are doing in our businesses when we have a singer or a duo onstage,” he said.
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