Other News: Vegas Living Not So Cheap Anymore
Hidden Facts Of Man Who Bet It All
Model/actress Rebecca Romijn-Stamos recently appeared on "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" and spent much of the publicly begging officials with Bellagio to contact her. Seems Romijn-Stamos (who will soon, presumably be just Romijn, since she's getting a divorce) and a friend want to choreograph the water fountain show in front of the luxe hotel but can't get anyone to return their calls. She even threatened to wear diapers to get someone's attention.
Quick, someone lend me $2.9 million. See, I want to buy Siegfried's house. Wouldn't that be cool? Spanish Trail is the name of 5-bedroom estate just off Tropicana, not too far from the Orleans Hotel and Casino. According to reports, Seigfried has been spending more time at Jungle Palace (aka Roy's House) to help him recover from injuries sustained in a tiger mauling last October. Come on! We can open it up for tours at $10 a pop and make that $2.9 million back in no time!
In theory I should be really happy for the British guy who sold everything he owned and bet everything he had on a single spin of the roulette wheel and won. And I would be if the whole thing hadn't been an enormous publicity stunt being filmed for a British television documentary. To be clear, 32-year-old Ashley Revell apparently really did sell off his belongings and really did bet more than $135,000 of his own money on the roulette wheel at the Plaza Hotel in Vegas. But a couple facts that were left out of most news reports include these: Revell is (or was at one point) a professional gambler, and intends to use at least some of his $270,000 windfall to enter the World Series of Poker; secondly, the whole thing received a huge media buildup in Britain, turning Revell into a mini-celebrity of sorts even before we'd ever heard of him. It got to the point where a poll was conducted to see what the public thought he should bet on the roulette wheel: red or black. The public voted red, he bet red, and he won. The whole thing smacks as a bid for fame to me. What? Were all the reality shows full?
This Week's Trivia
Q: Of the six major casino companies that operate in Las Vegas -- MGM Mirage, Caesars Entertainment, Mandalay Resorts Group, Harrah's Entertainment, Station Casinos and the Boyd Gaming Group -- which one owns the most casinos in the Las Vegas area? ANSWER The Weekly Trivia Question is sponsored by the Online Memorabilia Museum at Vegas4Visitors.comThe Full Story
-
New Casinos Planned In Las Vegas, U.K.
What New Shows, Attractions Coming To Vegas?
Other News: Vegas Living Not So Cheap Anymore
Vegas Q&A: What's The Best Golf Course?
Vegas Q&A: How Can We Just Relax?

















Several bobcat sightings have a Central Florida beach community on edge.
The woman who was killed while walking into work on Monday in a murder-suicide had been stalked by her killer, a customer from when she worked at Hooters, for years.
The body of a woman is discovered inside a room of a Central Florida extended-stay hotel, according to deputies.
A woman who had just dropped off a friend's child at a Central Florida high school was struck and killed when a vehicle ran a red light, the FHP says.
Watch this amazing time-lapse video of the storm that dumped more than a foot-and-a-half of snow on the nation's capital Feb. 5 and 6.
A car crash involving a fatality has occurred near a Central Florida high school.
Several bobcat sightings have a Central Florida beach community on edge.
Academy Award nominee Sandra Bullock trash talks her Oscar competition, Meryl Streep, and discusses her Razzie nomination for Worst Actress.
In an incredible tale of survival, a Haitian man is found alive under earthquake rubble.
Check out these lookers who ran into the law.
It's something for everyone: A slideshow of wild stories where you have the choice of watching the video clip at your workstation -- or not! 













