Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Kimmel helps open his own comedy club

- 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.

THE brand showed up in human form Friday night at Jimmy Kimmel’s Comedy Club. Kimmel put his own consumer test on the new entertainm­ent venue at Linq Promenade, joined by comic and part-time club consultant Jeff Ross.

Harland Williams headlined the venue’s soft opening, crushing it both nights.

Kimmel’s close friend and former broadcast partner

Adam Carolla brought his podcast to Thursday’s soft opening, with Williams as the guest. “Everything needs to be perfect in this club,” Carolla said. “If anyone complains, Jimmy will go into a deep depression. Seriously. That’s how much this place means to him.”

Carolla also told the near-capacity audience, “I have known Jimmy since he was fat and poor. Now, he’s skinny and successful. It doesn’t make any sense to me.”

Ross performed at the close of the early and late shows, appearing onstage with Kimmel. The club operator arrived to a standing ovation and led with, “I am from Las Vegas. I went to Sammy Davis Jr. Junior High.”

Kimmel, who actually attended Kenny Guinn Junior High and Clark High, isn’t a stand-up, but he is funny. “I am from Las Vegas. I love it here. I have many memories here. I lost my virginity about a mile away from here, in the front seat of an Isuzu I-Mark in the parking lot of the Continenta­l hotel.”

The place feels like home to Kimmel. Specifical­ly, it feels like Kimmel’s real home. The venue is double-decked, with a bar and lounge downstairs and the comedy club upstairs. The lounge is open at 11 a.m. daily. The room’s big couches and soft-leather chairs, personal photos and even some puppets from Kimmel’s

days on the Comedy Central prank-call series “Crank Yankers” reflect Kimmel’s house decor in L.A.

“I wanted it to be very comfortabl­e and not your typical kind of Las Vegas bar environmen­t,” Kimmel said in his still-sparsely appointed green room between shows Friday. “They came up with some plans. I didn’t love the plans, and they said, ‘What kind of things do you like? I said, ‘Come to my house in L.A., I have a bar in it, I’ll show you what I like.

“Well, they liked it so much they basically duplicated my current home, a bigger version of it. It’s very odd to walk into a building that isn’t your house and see your house.”

Kimmel and Ross reviewed the venue’s opening, and one change might be to adjust the look of the stage. The club has a comparativ­ely high ceiling. The ceilings at Laugh Factory at Tropicana,

Brad Garrett’s Comedy Club and Comedy Cellar at the Rio are all far lower.

“Jeff was suggesting something that seems important, for whatever reason, to keep focus on the comic …,” Kimmel said. “We might go with a false lower ceiling, but keep the big, open room.”

The 8,000-square-foot venue seats 300 and has the feel of where a comedy club and showroom meet, with cocktail tables near the front, theater seats near the middle of the room, and high-top chairs and tables in the back.

Kimmel alludes to his Vegas upbringing with drink names. Jerry’s Towel, for Jerry Tarkanian’s sideline towel-chewing habit; the Cleto; Guillermo, Uncle Frank and Aunt Chippy from his talk show are all on the menu. The menu also offers pizza, chicken wings and fries served in the lounge and during the show.

Kimmel dismissed the suggestion of some sort of insider discount, for repeat customers or locals, such as the off-the-menu steak special at Lucky’s at the Hard Rock Hotel, or the password to get into the Speakeasy at the Mob Museum.

“You mean, some sort of fake exclusivit­y?” Kimmel said with a laugh. “Some sort of exclusivit­y that everyone knows about? No, not really. I want everyone to feel they are part of the VIP experience. ”

The club’s design allows for podcast and TV broadcasts.

“We want to shoot comedy and put it on our show from the club,” Kimmel said.

Kimmel has not even started to plan for any return of the “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” late-night show to the Strip. The show was staged at Zappos Theater from April 1-5, with ratings spiking on the Friday night when Celine

Dion was the lead guest. “Everyone is still recovering from the bronchitis we caught while we were here,” Kimmel said, laughing. “But to come back depends on money from ABC, if we’ve sold enough sponsorshi­ps to cover the costs. I’d love to come back, though.”

Kimmel’s contract with ABC is set to expire at the end of the year. “It’s unresolved, but there is a long time between now and then,” he said.

Kimmel does have a contingenc­y plan, should he not return to the network that has been his home since January 2003. “I’m going to make chicken fingers, here, at the comedy club.”

 ?? @JimmyKimme­l ?? Comic and part-time club consultant Jeff Ross and Jimmy Kimmel are shown Friday at Kimmel’s new comedy club at Linq Promenade.
@JimmyKimme­l Comic and part-time club consultant Jeff Ross and Jimmy Kimmel are shown Friday at Kimmel’s new comedy club at Linq Promenade.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States