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News The Fly-By

Fly on the Wall

Verbatim

Last week, WMC’s bulldog reporter Jason Miles was thrown a bone. (Dramatic pause). A human bone. (Dramatic pause). But the most memorable line was delivered by Memphis developer Garland Sullivan, who, according to reports, found the bone a year-and-a-half ago while collecting junk down by the river. “You find all kinds of things on the river,” said Sullivan, who had been storing the bone in his closet, like you do. “I’ve found fossils, now a bone. I found a goat skull. Lots of rock and good treasure like that.”

Memphis Moments

Not to be outdone by Miles’ bone story, WMC reporter Janice Broach filed a report slugged “Man named ‘Peg Leg’ arrested after karaoke fight” about a man named James “Peg Leg” Adams who was charged with attempted murder after a fight broke out in Barbie’s Sports Bar over who was the best karaoke singer. Linda Wyman and her friend Possum were singing the Kid Rock/Sheryl Crow song “Picture” when things got ugly. Wyman told Broach that she continued to sing but heard the victim hollering that he’d been stabbed and saw blood coming. “They were all drunk,” the witness was quoted as saying.

Neverending Elvis

The Huffington Post reports that some of Las Vegas’ Elvis-themed wedding chapels are embracing same-sex marriage while others have yet to comply with Nevada’s new laws. Huffpo spoke to an unidentified employee of the “world famous” A Elvis Chapel, where $275 buys the “Hound Dog” special. According to the Elvis-industry worker, “Our ministers are unable to do [same-sex unions] at this time, and we do not believe in that.” For an additional $150, you can get the “Show Girl” package.

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News The Fly-By

How to Go On Vacation

I can say with pride my wife Lisa is a “professional vacationer.” It’s not enough the woman works long hours at her regular job, but say the word “vacation,” and her fingers start flying all over the keyboard, checking out websites, looking for the best available deals at various destinations.

You see, the problem with using a travel agency is they basically suggest to you all the ways you can have leisurely fun. There are no guarantees that once you get there you’ll actually participate in things like para-sailing, hang gliding or horseback riding. They look good in the pictures, but I like to come back home alive. It’s why I take so much stock in the activities Lisa plans for a trip. A lot of places, she’s already been. She knows the lay of the land. But, most importantly, she takes great pains to ensure we’re going to take advantage of vacation pursuits both of us will enjoy.

This has not been the case in most of my life. Even the prospect of embarking on a vacation scared me so profoundly that when the National Lampoon’s Vacation movies came out, I was the only one in the theater who never laughed. The scripted family chaos was too close to home to be funny. We were the black Griswalds! Taking a vacation conjured up visions of some “death march” to get there before hotel check-in time. My usually affable grandpa, rather than stopping at highway rest stops, sternly enforced the “urinate in a can” rule until we got to our location. His kind eyes would morph into those of a steely eyed Transformer as he and the steering wheel melded into one determined machine.

Even after arriving at a chosen vacation spot, we were never guaranteed we would find peace and serenity. I have only my brother Larry as personal witness to the family’s annual two-week treks from Fulton, Missouri, to Las Vegas. The prospect of six people riding shoulder to shoulder in one car going across the desert never appealed to me, so I’d come up with some lame excuse not to go. Besides, everybody going knew there was one place in all of Vegas that couldn’t be avoided. It was some off-the-Strip lounge where my mother, yearly mind you, wanted to see a comedian named “Cookie Jar.” He was touted as a poor man’s Redd Foxx. Larry says his jokes were so off-color and downright obscene people started heading for the exits within the first five minutes of his act. But apparently my mother would laugh so hard tears would come to her eyes. She also raved about him because after his shows he’d come to her table and remember her name. Wow! When you’re playing to an audience of 10 people that’s pretty amazing, alright.

As I became a parent, mapping out summer camp for the children was just as challenging as mulling over the family vacation. While living in Florida, we chose to send the boys off to a four-week Bible camp. It’s not that we were all that religious, but we figured there’d be plenty of healthy physical activities to occupy their minds and bodies. Week one went really well. We visited them just to make sure all was good. They chattered about canoeing and hiking. We couldn’t have been more pleased. But, just before the start of the final week, they came home for a brief respite. At dinner, they were strangely silent, until we started to chow down. Then, as if in some Children of the Corn cult-like trance, they rose to announce: “If you and mom don’t change your ways, you will be part of the heathen savages that will be engulfed in the fiery pit of Hell, where Satan will eternally torture you until your heads fall off and they’ll be eaten by rats!”

No, we didn’t send them back for the final week of camp.

All of which brings me back to Lisa’s marvelous plans for a trip to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, where we will be when you read this article. It’s one of those all-expenses pre-paid trips where you eat and drink to your heart’s content. There are blue skies and lovely Pacific Ocean beaches. However, just before we left, I caught my wife staring off into space. I asked what was wrong. She said, “Ah, nothing. It’s just that I’ve got a lot of work to do to take you on vacation,” and I said, “It’ll be fine. I checked. Cookie Jar is still in Vegas.”

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News

Timberlake/Timbaland Free Concert

No, not in Memphis. Sorry for the tease, but we couldn’t help ourselves. JT and Timbaland surprised Vegas partygoers at the Jet nightclub, showing up at about 1 a.m. and rocking the DJ booth until roughly 4:30.

Not only that, JT’s parents were there, partying on till the wee hours as well. (When was the last time your partied with your mom till dawn?)

With no sign of current fling Jessica Biel, JT made some time with the sexy cocktail waitresses at the club. Read more about the late night Vegas action at Perez Hilton.com.

And remember, when you’re a celeb, what you do in Vegas doesn’t stay there. It ends up here.

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News The Fly-By

High Stakes

I know. What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas. But I’m sorry, that’s one mantra I can’t keep.

Honestly, I didn’t know what to expect when I traveled to Las Vegas earlier this month. I thought I’d soak up some sun, drop a few dollars in the slots, and basically relax.

But two things occurred to me. The first is that other cities could learn a lot from Vegas, the country’s premier convention city. While I was there, I heard that the city had three conventions in town, and every single one of their 150,000-plus hotel rooms was booked.

To be fair, other cities don’t have the luxury of living off gamblers and casinos, but there are other things the city has done that could be in the cards.

If Vegas did anything successfully, it was taking a patch of desert and creating a place that people want to experience, even if that means experiencing 3,000-degree heat, dust from ongoing construction sites in their eyes and mouths, and strange men flicking pictures of nude women at them.

Last week, during a nationwide heat wave, the mercury in Vegas hit 116, just a degree below its record. But people were still on the Strip in droves.

What is it? Despite the nudie-picture people, tourists feel safe. Maybe not in New York, New York, where a recent shooting gave the casino’s theme a bit more realism, but I digress.

And even though most things in Vegas costs an arm and a leg, the Strip is a free show.

We found ourselves walking down it one night and, although we missed seeing the ship sink at Treasure Island, we chanced upon a volcano erupting at the Mirage, fountains dancing at the Bellagio, and nightly fireworks exploding above Caesars Palace that put Memphis’ July 4th celebrations to shame.

Yes, erupting volcanoes, dancing fountains, and exploding fireworks take money, and the gaming industry — with its $85 billion in annual revenue — has it in spades. But think about what they’ve gotten in return.

I will say, I thought the volcano was a bit ridiculous. But when a fountain set to music can make people crowd together in record-breaking heat, maybe it’s something to consider when looking at local public spaces.

A lot of people have cited Vegas’ successful marketing campaign, but having something so marketable raises the odds. They’ve mined their image very successfully, not just the Rat Pack image from the past but the idea that everyone can find a little bit of excitement in Vegas.

And that happens — literally — even at street level.

The second thing that occurred to me has a lot more riding on it locally. Tunica might be dismissed in Ocean’s Thirteen as the place old games go to die, but Memphis can’t overlook Tunica.

Las Vegas is going through a major building boom, one said to be fed by smaller gambling venues across the United States whetting Americans’ appetites. I don’t see the trend stopping any time soon.

According to Hoover’s online industry profiles, 50 to 60 percent of a hotel casino’s revenue comes from gaming. The other roughly 50 percent comes from food and beverages, guest rooms, shows, and other entertainment.

I don’t know how much of Vegas’ profits ride on high rollers, but I saw a lot of people in cargo shorts, T-shirts, and fanny packs … people who would not be out of place in Tunica.

We don’t need to worry just about DeSoto County becoming the place to live, we need to think about DeSoto County becoming the area’s leading tourist destination. What would it take? A Cirque du Soleil? A water park? More golf courses?

Ideally, Graceland and Stax could benefit from Tunica the same way the Grand Canyon benefits from Vegas — as a place for visiting gamblers to go on day trips.

How can you compete with a place that comps buffets and is designed to attract people … and keep them there?

If I were a betting woman, I’d say we need to find a way to get in on the action.

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Film Features Film/TV

Looking for a Spidey alternative? Lucky you.

Here’s counterprogramming at its finest: Opening the same weekend as Spider-Man 3, the Las Vegas gambling drama Lucky You pumps pure oxygen into a multiplex sucked dry by the CGI-first/ask-questions-later superhero sequel. So what if my Lucky You theater was a third full and Spider-Man 3 was sold out all weekend, all over the world? When it comes to movies worth camping out for, make mine Curtis Hanson’s.

Lucky You: Huck (Eric Bana) is a Vegas poker marvel who can quadruple $1,000 in a jolt by uncannily reading other people but who can’t get his act together when the stakes are personal. Billie Offer (Drew Barrymore) is a Vegas neophyte who sings country songs much lonelier than she is to drunks staring at computer poker at a bar. Huck meets Billie, and they strike up a relationship that in any other movie would be the focal point. Instead, that honor goes to L.C. (Robert Duvall), Huck’s estranged, two-timing, two-time-poker-champion dad. Every time Huck and Billie seem to find a groove, in walks L.C., and Huck’s eyes go distracted. What Huck makes L.C. out to be and what Billie is act as the devil and angel on Huck’s shoulders.

The whole ménage à trois plays out over the backdrop of the 2003 World Series of Poker tournament, famous for its winner (Tennessee amateur Chris Moneymaker) and its consequence (the game’s boom in popularity). The setting gives Lucky You a bittersweet end-of-an-age feel perfectly in-tune with its characters’ dramas.

Lucky You is not perfect: Bana and Barrymore’s chemistry only gurgles even when it’s supposed to be roaring, and there’s a surfeit of gambling puns, beginning with the title, middling with the name Huck (sounds like “hock,” which he does at pawn shops to raise funds), and ending with groaner lines like Billie’s “making a good fold” when she breaks up with Huck.

And then, instant redemption, with another casino pun, no less: “Everyone over 21 gets what they deserve.” And Bana and Duvall’s chemistry flows like the loosest slots in town. (The acting duel during a one-on-one gambling jag between Huck and L.C. in a coffee shop is worth the price of admission.)

Director Hanson (L.A. Confidential, Wonder Boys) wastes no movement in Lucky You. He makes the poker games personal and intimate with directing that’s all business. Like the new Casino Royale, the poker in Lucky You is credible: Instead of a series of swapped haymakers, it’s a measured process that builds toward resolution in calculated turns. (Gambling great Doyle Brunson is the film’s poker consultant.)

Lucky You is littered with character actors and ESPN-poker familiars to the point where it sometimes feels more like Celebrity Poker Showdown than a movie. But even this works in the Lucky You‘s favor. One is reminded that all successful poker players are good actors. In a film set in the most contrived, false, overacted town on earth, Lucky You says, don’t let the poker face fool you. The real show here is human, and it is substantial, and it won’t let you go. What happens in Vegas stays with you. What happens in Lucky You is another Curtis Hanson winning hand.

Lucky You

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