Michael Green In The News

CAL FUSSMAN
No city may be more vulnerable to the coronavirus than Las Vegas. Every year it was inviting 42 million people in for dinner. The city’s economy is dependent on those visitors, and Cal looks at the history of Las Vegas for a clue as to how the city might reinvent itself after the virus subsides. Entrepreneur Tom Breitling, author of the book Double or Nothing, and some of his friends explain why they’re betting on a big Vegas comeback. This podcast offers lessons in reinvention and hints at why Las Vegas may be the place to be in 2022.
Las Vegas Review Journal
If there ever was a year to celebrate Juneteenth, 2020 — a year in which marchers worldwide have taken to the streets to protest racial inequality and police violence against African Americans — would be it.
WCAU
Visitors from Philly and even Connecticut flocked to Atlantic City on Friday, the first day it was legal to consume alcohol in some public spots.
K.S.N.V. T.V. News 3
Preserve Nevada has come out with its annual list of endangered sites in the state.
Las Vegas Review Journal
While the Flamingo Hotel was not the first casino to open on what we now call the Strip, it was going to be different.
K.S.N.V. T.V. News 3
Nevada democratic Senator Catherine Cortez Masto announced Thursday that she is withdrawing her name for vice presidential considerations.
K.S.N.V. T.V. News 3
President Donald Trump gave the nation's governors an ultimatum Friday, telling them to open churches, synagogues and mosques -- or he will.
Las Vegas Sun
It came as no surprise to former Sen. Harry Reid when he heard that presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden was considering picking Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto for his running mate.