Las Vegas Review-Journal

Bagans planning ‘Tiger King’ exhibit

- JOHN KATSILOMET­ES

Zkeeps digging — for spirits, for museum items and for TV ratings. Las Vegas’ king of the paranormal is adding “Tiger King” footage and artifacts to his multimedia empire. Brandishin­g cameras and ghost-tracking equipment, the “Ghost Adventurer­s” crew filmed for a week ending Saturday at the Greater Wynnewood Exotic Animal Park, aka the Tiger King Zoo, in Oklahoma.

Their activity is to be the center of a two-hour special on Travel Channel to air on Halloween, and Bagans plans a “Tiger King” exhibit at his Haunted Museum at 600 E. Charleston Blvd. He hopes to have the new space open for the public by the end of August.

“Some of those artifacts are personal effects that used to belong to Joe Exotic and his husband, Travis, who shot himself at the zoo,” Bagans said, referring to the late Travis Maldonado, whose suicide was chronicled in the Netflix series. “Other items will be pieces involving documented paranormal events during our investigat­ion.”

Items to be displayed include Exotic’s jewel-encrusted crown and some of his clothes; wedding effects from the three-way ceremony between Exotic, Maldonado and John Finlay; the Exotic Animal Park sign; Maldonado’s glass pipe; and a section of the wall with a bullet hole from Maldonado’s suicide.

“Some items are connected to hauntings, some are for a memorial for Travis, and others are just hysterical and gross,” said Bagans, who has collected additional pieces for when he’s ready to open the exhibit. He plans to reveal an item known as a “trigger object” of paranormal activity at the zoo.

“Lets just say the cast you’ve seen seen on ‘Tiger King’ has witnessed it move by itself on numerous occasions,” Bagans said. “It has ties to Travis.”

During his week in Oklahoma, Bagans was granted permission from Wynnewood Park owner Jeff Lowe to bring in a pair of highly trained “cadaver dogs” used in crime-scene investigat­ions to sniff around for human remains.

The macabre search was related to Exotic’s accusation­s that rival zoo owner Carole Baskin had killed her second husband, Don Lewis, possibly leaving his remains buried on the property (another theory is Lewis was fed to the tigers).

According to TMZ, no human bones were uncovered by the local sheriff ’s department, which used a backhoe to dig into the property. But the dogs did pick up the scent of human remains in the area. Some animal bones were found, in what seemed the form of a tail.

Exotic’s allegation­s against, and general disdain for, Baskin was a salacious subplot in the “Tiger King” Netflix documentar­y. The eight-part series was an early COVID shutdown sensation, and Las Vegan Nicolas Cage has since signed on to play Exotic in a TV miniseries.

Exotic, of course, wound up in prison on charges he’d conspired to have Baskin killed and also for a series of criminal violations against tigers at the zoo. Lowe has had his own legal issues; he is still to appear in court in Las Vegas to answer charges in a 2017 complaint that he was operating an exotic-animal attraction without a license. Animal control officers took a tiger, liliger and lemur from a mansion Lowe had been renting in Las Vegas.

Lowe’s scheduled court appearance at the Regional Justice Center on Tuesday was postponed.

In April, Lowe’s buddy and Laugh Factory at the Tropicana headliner Murray Sawchuck recorded footage for his Youtube channel from the park.

It was Sawchuck who connected Bagans and Lowe. It seems all sides have won something in this one. As Bagans tweeted Sunday, “I will never EVER forget the week I just had,” adding a tiny tiger, and little crown emoji.

King is queen

The Vegas Room has become an oasis in a city thirsty for live entertainm­ent.

Multitalen­ted singer Amanda King is back at The Vegas Room, the Commercial Center supper club that has figured out how to blend food and entertainm­ent in the COVID era. King performs for the dinner crowd Friday and Saturday night, with seatings at 6:30 p.m. for a full dinner, or 7:30 p.m. for a sampler plate. The club follows all Phase Two safety protocols.

Pianist/singer/songwriter Patrick Hogan’s brunch show will be back at 1 p.m. Sunday and July 26; Toscha Comeaux and guitarist Rene Toledo are to appear July 24-25; Broadway and Vegas stage star Brent Barrett (an original Phantom in “Phantom — The Las Vegas Spectacula­r” at

The Venetian) is slated for

July 31-Aug. 1; and Ian Ward of “Baz” at Palazzo Theater is scheduled for Aug. 7-8.

Barrett also serves as the room’s entertainm­ent director. Chef David James Robinson has developed a great menu, which satisfies the tastes of any Las Vegan (and any vegan). Again, find The Vegas Room behind the red doors. If you’re at the green doors, you’re in the wrong place.

The Review-journal is owned by the family of Las Vegas Sands Chairman and CEO Sheldon Adelson. Las Vegas Sands operates The Venetian and Palazzo.

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.

As of 9 p.m. Tuesday:

1. Las Vegas casino operators take steps to match visitor demand

Casinos’ moves have sent mixed messages on just how many rooms resorts are filling in mid-july.

2. Russell Westbrook partied at Wynn before COVID diagnosis

Exactly one month before announcing he’s tested positive for COVID-19, Russell Westbrook was hanging poolside at Encore Beach Club at Wynn Las Vegas.

3. Clark County adds more than 1,000 COVID-19 cases for first time

Clark County recorded its largest announced one-day jump of the outbreak.

4. School district behind controvers­ial funding bill

Superinten­dent Jesus

Jara continues to try to distance himself and the Clark County School District from a controvers­ial proposal that would have allowed the district to use local schools’ unspent funds for its own budget.

5. Clark County bars suing over latest closure order

Plaintiffs representi­ng 37 Clark County bars have gone to court to block Gov. Steve Sisolak’s latest order closing alcohol-serving establishm­ents to stem the spread of COVID-19, claiming they are being unfairly singled out.

As of 9 p.m. Tuesday:

1. Las Vegas bar workers frustrated, angry as restrictio­ns return

In Southern Highlands, the Italian restaurant Spaghetty Western, while remaining open, had to shut down its bar. Bartender Scarlett Brock, who is still waiting to receive unemployme­nt payments from the initial shutdown, calls the financial impact of being out of work again “a knock in the face.”

2. EX-MGM CEO Jim Murren lists mansion for sale for $10.5 million

Months after Jim

Murren left MGM Resorts Internatio­nal with a golden parachute, the former casino boss is trying to sell his Las Vegas mansion for $10.5 million.

3. With less than a month to go, Allegiant Stadium is 98 percent complete

With time ticking away in the “fourth quarter” of Allegiant Stadium’s constructi­on process, major signage installati­on in and around the stadium is wrapping up.

 ?? Zak Bagans ?? Jeff Lowe, left, owner of Greater Wynnewood Exotic Animal Park, and Zak Bagans canvass the Oklahoma zoo for exotic animals on Saturday.
Zak Bagans Jeff Lowe, left, owner of Greater Wynnewood Exotic Animal Park, and Zak Bagans canvass the Oklahoma zoo for exotic animals on Saturday.
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