Lecture Notes: Las Vegas

Each of the five themes are numbered:
1) Cowboy Myth cowboy or frontier culture, at least in the movies, consists of

  • individualism -- self-sufficiency, taking the law into one's own hands
  • love of freedom -- not responsible to others or any community
  • restlessness -- always on the move
  • male bonding -- buddy, side kick; in work and play
  • wild times -- violence (fights & guns), drinking, sex, all nighters
  • boozing in saloons
  • gambling (cards) in saloons
  • "girls" -- bar maids, prostitutes

    sinning in Las Vegas ("sin city" & "kitsch capital of the world")
    the seven deadly sins of Christianity (medieval in origin) and "sinning" in Vegas:

    1. pride -- in winning at gambling, staying up all night, drinking too much, whoring
    2. envy -- of other winners when one looses
    3. greed -- wanting unearned, easy money, and lots of it
    4. anger -- at other winners or loosing oneself
    5. gluttony -- excessive amounts of food & booze
    6. sloth -- idleness, play all night; opposite of "work ethic"
    7. lust -- strip shows, pornography, prostitution
  • Vegas has institutionalized the myth of the frontier.

    2) Gambling: national cultural and moral values expressed: A) unearned money is justified, guilt-free, sign of success
    B) the more money won the better: provides the illusion of getting rich; many have to spend money for a very few to win "big" -- similar to Hollywood movie stars

    Vegas and gambling 
    By 2009, only 25 percent of revenues from the casinos in Las Vegas came from gambling; the rest came from ancillary activities including shows, dinning, and shopping.
    · gambling started in the 1930s
    · largest resort town in the US today
    · 22.4 million people visited Vegas in 1993; only 5% bring their children
    · 126,000 hotel rooms; Orlando for Disney World has only 79,000 rooms
    · 90% hotel occupancy rates -- one of the highest in the US -- although it droped to 86% in 1998
    · $2.4 billion from conventioneers
    · $4.2 billion from gamblers
    · average gambler: 5 hrs a day gambling, spends $500
    · one slot machine can make $250,000 profits per year

    casino gambling
    · first 2 states with casino gambling: NV and NJ, only in Atlantic City (1978)
    · 6 other states have approved casino gambling by 1993
    · another 15 states will approve casino gambling in 1994
    · 57 casinos on Indian reservations in 12 states (1993)
    Gambling in the U.S.
    · in 1995, 177 million Americans watched baseball, football, hockey and basketball;
    · 154 million gambled in casinos; wagering $550 billion on all forms of gambling;
    · with industry revenues of 44.4 billion -- 40% took place in casinos
    · 10% of bettors account for 80% of all money wagered
    · casino gambling has become the most popular leisure activity!
    · casinos employ 367,000 workers, more than half in Las Vegas
    · see a graph of types of gambling in the USA, by percentage

    Gambling has spread across the US
    · 30 states have state lotteries, first ones in 1963
    · 99.9 percent are losers -- lower odds than with illegal bookies because 40% of state lotteries support hospitals and schools
    · 30 states have horse track betting
    · 15 states have dog race betting

    3) famous entertainers in Las Vegas (1981 data)
    · Jerry Lewis: $75,000 a week for s show a night
    · Frank Sinatra: $50,000 for each 1-hour show
    · Wayne Newton: $10 million/year for year-round performances

    4) theme park hotels recently constructed in Las Vegas

    • 1) $1 billion MGM Grand Hotel: MGM lion as entrance; 33 acre theme park, Wizard of Oz, as big as the original Disneyland; 15,000 seat auditorium; 5,005 rooms; and earns $20 million a night! The hotel is booked until 1995; $750 million for upgrading its facilities in 1998
    • 2) $339 million Luxor (Circus Circus Enterprise): Egyptian pyramid of black glass enclosing world's largest atrium surrounded by 2,500 rooms
    • 3) $475 million Treasure Island · 18th century pirate village with galleons and lagoon
    • 4) $1 billion Sheraton Hotel on the old Desert Inn site: · 5,000 rooms
    • 5) $1.8 billion Bellagio ·  3,000 rooms, 8,600 staff and 250 master chefs; with an art gallery worth $300 million in masterpieces
      -- read about the art.
    • 6) $760 million Paris (Hilton Group) · with replicas of the Eiffel Tower and Arc de Triomphe
    • 7) $2.25 million Sand's Venetian · 3,036 suites with a 1,200-foot canal complete with serenading gondoliers, arched bridges, and a replica of the Piazza San Marco
    • 8) Rio Hotel is spending $200 million to upgrade its facilities
    • 9) The Paris, which cost $750 million to build, has 2,000 slot machines and 100 gaming tables spread out over 83,000-square-feet casino. It has cobblestone floors and street facades and a quaint statue of a worker in overalls reposing on a bench with a lunch pail and thermos outside a shop in perpetual twilight! It also has a two-acre swimming pool and 2,916 rooms. [Source: Joann Wypijewski, "Light and Shadow in the City of Illusion," The Progressive, 28 February 2002, pp. 26-29.]

      With the recent building activities, Las Vegas will have 126,000 rooms and the total investment in gambling firms will rise to $20 billion. In 2002, Las Vegas had some 50 million visitors, who spent $650, losing close to $200 at casinos on average. Just two corporations own fourteen of the 15 casinos. Read Sally Denton and Roger Morris, The Money and the Power -- a superb book on money and power in Vegas.

    Las Vegas has become a major convention site

    Gambling impact on Nevada's socio-economic characteristics
    · gambling provides taxes: half of the state's total revenues
    · 65% of all jobs, directly and indirectly, related to gambling in state
    · median family income: top ten of the US
    · highest men to women ratio as heads of households, also AL and HI
    · 1 in 9 women between the ages of 15-39 are prostitutes (estimated 10,000 in 1980s)
    · alcoholism rate: highest in the US
    · suicide rate: twice the US average

    5) legalized prostitution: the Nevada experience

    • women are registered as prostitutes -- they are fingerprinted by police
    • they can't leave brothel while working -- they work 12 hour shifts for 3 weeks at a time
    • then one week vacation and back to work
    • they average 150-men each 3 weeks or 7 men per day (Mustang Ranch)

    Prostitution, pornography, and sexism
    A) prostitution, a feminist view (Susan Brownmiller)

    • does not deter rape
    • institutionalizes men's monetary right to women's bodies
    • mass psychology of rape
    • should be made illegal in Nevada and never legalized

    B) legalizing prostitution, a ACLU view

    • victimless crime, harmless (recreational) activity
    • private agreement between consenting adults
    • enforcement of prostitution laws:
      - wasteful of law enforcement and courts
      - 70% of prostitutes arrested are found guilty
      - 10% only serve jail time; others are fined
      - wasteful of public funds: $600-1,200 to bring one prostitute to jail e.g. Seattle, WA spent $1 million for street-to-jail prosecution

    C) legalizing prostitution

    • COYOTE (Cast Off Your Old Tired Ethics), union of prostitutes
    • advantages of legal prostitution: reduces crime, increases disease control and, if taxed, increase state revenues

    illegal U.S. prostitution

    • 200,000 - 250,000 prostitutes; 100,000 cited in one 2007 report
    • full-time prostitutes earn $70,000 -- highest paid women (Gail Sheely)
    • $10 billion/year industry
    • almost always only women are arrested but not always the men customers
    • with illegal gambling: every one is arrested -- dealers and customers
       
    • Optional:
      Read about prostitution in Chicago and in Ecuador; don't forget to read the article in your reading packet on prostitution in San Diego.
      Read how various countries in the West are dealing with prostitution.

    pornography (Susan Brownmiller)
    · distinctions: political and sexual freedom, sex education, ugly smut
    · buyers of pornography: white, middle-class, middle-aged, married males
    · women shown as virgins and nymphomaniacs (sexual stereotypes)
    · male invention; dehumanize women, objects of sexual access
    · staple of porn: naked women, breasts and genitals exposed
    · anti-women propaganda
    · anti-Jewish, anti-racial minority images are rejected by those liberals who argue for pornography as sexual freedom
    [Source: Susan Brownmiller, Prostitution, Pornography, and Women.]

    Does pornography and prostitution reflect and/or cause sexism? Here are three examples to think about.
    1) one Playboy centerfold received $10,000 for her naked body but only $500 to write the story with the photos
    2) LaGuardia airport, NY: waitress uniforms and tips
    - waitress received $500/week tips when they wore uniforms with ruffled dance leotards, stockings, high-heels, and push-up bras; later, uniforms were changed to peasant-style knee-length dress and tips dropped!
    3) NY Times Square Sex Landscape:

    • sex Mecca of the US in the 1980s and early 1990s
    • 23 adult bookstores -- 15 X-rated movie houses (only about 750 in US)
    • 28 message parlors (with sex service)
    • 18 hotels with prostitutes in 1996
    • In the late 1990s, Times Square was 'cleaned' up, including a new Disney Store!

    Created by Ingolf Vogeler on 5 December 1997; last revised on 12 June 2009.