Phelps Phans

November 27, 2008
From Norm’s Vegas Confidential column November 24, 2008:

Michael Phelps’ passion for poker isn’t the only reason he’s been showing up in Las Vegas.

The 14-time Olympic swimming gold medalist has been seen in the company of a fetching brunette who works at the Palms.

He was spotted at Moon nightclub on Saturday and having lunch earlier at Canyon Gate Country Club.

He’s definitely getting into the swim of things in the dating pool. Last month he was spotted arriving at a Baltimore airport in the company of Nicole Johnson, runner-up in the 2007 Miss California USA pageant.

Since winning a record eight gold medals in the Beijing Summer Olympics, Phelps has spent a considerable amount of time in Las Vegas, taking poker lessons from pros, so he can enter the World Series of Poker next year.


Weekend Media Hits for Sinsational

November 25, 2008

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Norm Clarke is the “Las Vegas guru of gossip” states Los Angeles Times writer Richard Abowitz in a Sunday Calendar piece. “His column doesn’t just trade in stupid gossip,” states fellow Vegas chronicler Robin Leach in the article. “Norm understands that in Vegas, buildings are the stars, architects are the stars, chefs are the stars, and the whole city is the star. And as a result, he is the No. 1 read person in Vegas.”

In an interview with Abowitz, Norm talks of the “gilded age” of Las Vegas in the past decade, where celebrity excesses and ridiculous spending have been tempered by economic reality. He said being a celebrity gossip columnist in Las Vegas was a daily embarrassment of riches. “The news for the past decade has been the exploding city and celebrity aura that has all made for this city’s success. Now the story is how that is going to be affected”.

Read the article here: Los Angeles Times

20080531_065047_dp_masthead_sm_08Sunday also saw Norm’s former Denver home announcing Sinsational Celebrity Tales. Columnist Bill Husted headlined Norm as the the “guy with all the luck”. Husted wrote “Even when things go wrong for Norm Clarke, they go right. The former Denver sportswriter and columnist lost his right eye as a child. Now his eye patch is his trademark.” He goes on to tell of a years-ago Colorado lottery ticket he wasn’t trying to buy . . . that won.

Read the article here: The Denver Post


Serving Up Sinatra

November 23, 2008
From Norm’s Vegas Confidential column November 23, 2008:

frank-sinatra-3156296One of the new restaurants at Steve Wynn’s Encore hotel will pay homage to Frank Sinatra and another will feature walls that lift up and down, transforming the room throughout the evening.

In a recent interview, Wynn revealed the Sinatra family has loaned him their father’s lone Academy Award, for best actor in a supporting role in 1953’s From Here to Eternity, and his Grammy awards.

The priceless memorabilia will be prominently featured in the Italian restaurant which will be named Sinatra. The family has so fiercely guarded the name that Wynn, a family friend, is the only person who was granted permission to use it. Among Wynn’s biggest coups was wooing Sinatra to the revitalized Golden Nugget as an exclusive headliner in the 1980s.

Wynn added that Paul Anka has promised the gold record he won for writing the English lyrics for My Way.  Anka wrote the hit song soon after Sinatra told him he was leaving show business.

“It won’t be a museum. It will be the most stunning restaurant in the country,” promised Wynn.

When Wynn recently unveiled his restaurant lineup for Encore, his $2.2 billion all-suites sister hotel to Wynn Las Vegas, the restaurant name was listed as Theo’s, after Theo Schoenegger, executive chef of Patina, a Los Angeles legend founded by Joachim Splichal.

Things change fast in Wynn’s world.

Switch, the other restaurant Wynn brought up in the interview, is so named because of the transformation diners will experience, from the changing walls and ceiling to the staff switching clothes.

Wynn’s national ad campaign, which has him standing atop Encore, is being launched today.


ESPN Inteviews Norm!

November 18, 2008


Rocking at Red Rock Casino Resort

November 17, 2008
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Red Rock Casino Resort Spa (Photo/bludgeoner86/)

Our first book signing got off to a strong start, with a spirited turnout Saturday at the Red Rock Casino Resort’s sport book.

One of the first couples in line bought 10 copies of Sinsational Celebrity Tales.

A very committed lady came directly from a nearby hospital to get one of the first books, her husband told us, as his wife moved gingerly in a back brace.

Two other early arrivals had a surprise for Norm: they were in town from Wolf Point, Montana, his home state, when they came upon signage for the event when they entered the Red Rock. They said they were in line to purchase books for Bud and Mary Helen Iwen of Helena. Bud, one of Montana’s finest sportscasters, was one of Norm’s best friends from his early sports writing days at the Helena Independent Record.

Karin Perozek, who moved to Las Vegas from Denver a year ago with her husband, Tim, said they were Rocky

Joan Collins <BR> (Courtesy Photo)

Joan Collins <BR> (Courtesy Photo)

Mountain News readers during Norm’s years in the Mile High City. She bought a couple books and presented Norm with a book she and her husband wrote. It was titled Up Your Aspirations By Thinking Like a Kid and Earning Like a CEO.

We even had a request to personalize a book for British film star Joan Collins, an eighties icon for her role as the vindictive Alexis Carrington in Dynasty. The request came from Joan’s good friend, and ours, Judy Bryer of Las Vegas.

Our thanks to all, especially Red Rock’s PR princess Lori Nelson for organizing the event on her busiest week of the year, the opening of the Fertittas’ latest resort, Aliante Station.

Norm!


NBC Channel 3 Covers Norm’s Book Launch Party at the Playboy Club

November 15, 2008

Gift Bags so Great, they’re ‘Sinsational’!

November 14, 2008

Guests of the book launch didn’t leave empty-handed either. Along with a signed copy of Sinsational Celebrity Tales (as well as juicy stories of the night’s festivities) guests took home a bag of goodies from the occasion.
Big thanks to all those who helped make the gift bags so Sinsational: ethel’s chocolate, N8B, Playboy Club, ObliqSound, Luxury Las Vegas, PR Plus, Chippendales, The Real Deal, Passion Parties, Hash House A Go Go, Postrio Restaurant, Randy Cassingham, Corporate Graffiti, Kirvin Doak Communications, and Ago Restaurant.
ethels-logoweb1        n8b_official_logoweb2


Posh Playboy Party Launches New Book

November 14, 2008
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Skippy (Photo by Tom Donoghue)

Hey all:

Well, we launched Sinsational Celebrity Tales last night at the Playboy Club at the Palms and what could be more appropriate, in the Land of Bunnies, than having a talking rabbit make the introduction?

Our thanks to Bruce Bloch, who brought Skippy ala King, who won America’s hearts with his appearances on NBC’s America’s Got Talent. We’ll have the video up and running very soon.

In two words, Skippy killed. Everyone came up to me raving about the Skipster. He was definitely a hit, Hef-esque even.

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Bunnies, bunnies, bunnies! (Photo by Tom Donoghue)

I told the crowd “the best word in my job description: bunnies.” They were everywhere, posing with Hef, who was in PJs, and George Clooney, who was near the bar passing out fake money with my face. Tom Jones was there too, exuding all his massive charm.

Did I mention that Hef, Clooney and Sir Tom were there, thanks to Madame Tussauds?

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Hef and Tom, Circa 1970s (Courtesy Photo)

Tom Donoghue, the gifted official photographer for Planet Hollywood Resort, felt right at home. Back in the early 1970s he was the photographer at the Playboy Club in Detroit. “I have a photo of Hef and I in 1972 in our leisure suits,” said Donoghue, who proved it by emailing it to me today.

My thanks to everyone involved in making it such a memorable evening, with a special bow to Flamingo headliner Donny Osmond. I was told I had a surprise guest so we temporarily suspended an interview with KVBC-TV, Channel 3 entertainment reporter Alicia Jacobs and headed off to Nove Italiano, with a pack of paparazzi following along.

Surprise guest Donny Osmond (Review-Journal/Duane Prokop)

Surprise guest Donny Osmond (Review-Journal/Duane Prokop)

On the way, there was buzz — wishful thinking would be more accurate — that Pamela Anderson was going to be waiting in a penthouse suite in her birthday suit, when she surprised Hef for his birthday.

We walked into Nove and there was Donny, pulling on an eyepatch. (By the way, he gave it to me later. Can you say “E-Bay?”

I’ve chatted with Donny on the red carpet and by telephone and he’s truly one of the most accommodating celebrities I’ve met over the years. It was incredibly kind of him to take the time to come to the event. He couldn’t join us at the Playboy Club — that would be a no-no — but he was one floor away and nobody got hit by lightning, so we’re all happy about that.

It was an off-the-charts party that I’ll never forget. Thanks again to everybody who made it such a special night.

Norm!


Get Your Dose of Lunchtime Gossip

November 12, 2008

Norm discusses his new book this week during an appearance on “Lunchtime with Ira, Live from the Las Vegas Hilton.” The popular weekly television/radio/Internet show, hosted by Hilton executive Ira Sternberg, promotes the many sides of Las Vegas.
Watch your favorite columnist on-air this Thursday, November 13th at noon and 8pm on Cox Cable Channel 4, also to be aired the following Friday and Saturday, same times. The radio broadcast of the interview will air on KUNV-FM 91.5 at 6 pm on Thursday, as well as on KDWN AM 720 Talk Radio at 9 pm on Saturday. Or you can even catch the show via Internet here – look for the November 10, 2008 show and click to download or listen.


Forbes Footnote

November 12, 2008

Norm was quoted in the October 27, 2008 issue of Forbes Magazine headlined “Wages of Sin,” a feature about Eric Langan, chief executive of Rick’s Cabaret International. The article details a lunch at the Wynn between Langan and Norm, who is depicted as the “Sin City gossip columnist” as well as “the eye-patch-wearing columnist at the Las Vegas Review Journal”. During the lunch Langan confirmed to Norm that in 2000 Caesars Palace made a deal with Langan to open a Rick’s Cabaret at the casino – no gaming joint along the Strip had ever had a strip joint – but the deal fell through after Caesars’ owner, Arthur M. Goldberg, died two months later. Norm lead with the story in his column the next day, also announcing that Langan has indeed arrived in Vegas – not at Caesars Palace, but at the former Scores strip club, which Langan bought in September, paying $12 million in cash.

Read Norm’s article . . .
Read Forbes article . . .


“I’m Alive” claims legendary Tom Jones

November 12, 2008
 Rumors of the death of Tom Jones, shown at MGM Grand with the violinist group Alizma, have been greatly exaggerated. Photo by Norm Clarke/Review-Journal

Rumors of the death of Tom Jones, shown at MGM Grand with the violinist group Alizma, have been greatly exaggerated. Photo by Norm Clarke/Review-Journal

Superstar Tom Jones has incorporated a recent bogus Internet report about his death into his act.

He opens his show these days with “I’m Alive,” which is on his upcoming first U.S. album in 15 years.

Jones, playing the MGM Grand’s Hollywood Theatre, learned about the Internet report earlier this month when a friend asked him how he was feeling.

Then the friend showed him the Internet story.

“I read my own obituary,” he told the audience during Monday’s first show.

Backstage, he told me one of the first calls he received came from Las Vegas lounge legend Cook E. Jarr, his longtime late-night running mate.

When Jones checked his voicemail, a distressed Jarr had left a tell-me-it’s-not-true message. The stress in Jarr’s voice was the opposite of his usual high-energy, dog-barking persona.

“He said, ‘I don’t want to stay on this planet if something’s happened to you,’ ” said Jones, who was touched.

Jones co-wrote much of the new album, “24 Hours,” because “I wasn’t getting any good material coming my way,” he said.

His 2000 album, “Reload,” featuring the club hit “Sex Bomb,” wasn’t released in the United States.

The new album comes out Nov. 25 on S-Curve Records, and he has high hopes after a strong start in Europe. It features two covers, Bruce Springsteen’s “The Hitter” and “I’m Alive” by Tommy James and the Shondells. Bono and Edge of U2 join him for the song “Sugar Daddy.”


Whitney & Britney: The Come Back Kids?

November 11, 2008
From Norm’s Vegas Confidential column November 10, 2008:

While Whitney Houston nears completion of a comeback album, we hear talk of a Las Vegas headliner deal. She’s reportedly been clean and sober for about three years. With Britney Spears and Houston working on returns, 2009 is shaping up as the Year of the Comeback.


Jacko Turns Down Steve Wynn

November 11, 2008
Michael Jackson

Michael Jackson

From Norm’s Vegas Confidential Column November 3, 2008:

Michael Jackson was approached about performing for the opening of Steve Wynn’s Encore tower in December but declined, it has been learned.

Jackson, who last performed in 2002 at a concert for the “Every Vote Counts” campaign at the Apollo in Harlem, N.Y., has been recording in the Palms studios.

Encore is Wynn’s $2.2 billion project that adds a 2,034-room tower next to Wynn Las Vegas, which opened in 2005.

Jackson was back in the news in recent days when he announced he won’t be joining a Jackson 5 reunion tour set for 2009.


Sin City’s Mafia Days

November 11, 2008
George Knapp poses Wednesday in front of TV monitors showing footage of Frank "Lefty" Rosenthal after his car bombing. Photo by Duane Prokop/Review-Journal

George Knapp in front of TV monitors showing footage of Frank "Lefty" Rosenthal after his car bombing. Photo by Duane Prokop/Review-Journal

From Norm’s Vegas Confidential Column October 31, 2008:

As fashion statements go, George Knapp’s 1982 Halloween costume was definitely smoking hot.

He has Frank “Lefty” Rosenthal to thank for the inspiration. Their paths had crossed three years earlier.

Knapp, new in town and driving a cab to make ends meet, often stopped in to see his girlfriend, who served cocktails at Fred Glusman’s Oz. “The hottest nightclub in town,” Knapp recalled.

Glusman, who went on to own the at-times-infamous Piero’s Italian Cuisine, “knew all the wiseguys since he had a clothing store in the Stardust,” said Knapp, who months earlier had left the Bay Area and his position as a debate coach at UC Berkeley.

Knapp and his girlfriend were ready to move. After meeting some Las Vegas bartenders in East Bay, they decided to flip a coin — heads Hawaii, tails Las Vegas.

They headed for Sin City.

One night at Oz, Knapp’s girlfriend introduced him to one of the club’s more colorful patrons. One of them was “Lefty,” whose friends were Tony and Joey. Knapp didn’t know it, but Rosenthal, Tony Spilotro and Joey Cusumano were notorious for their mob associations. All three ended up in Nevada’s Black Book of persons excluded from entering casinos.

Knapp had just landed a part-time job at KLVX-TV, Channel 10, where he spent his time doing odd jobs and bugging the news department to give him a tryout as a cameraman/reporter for the station’s biweekly news shows.

Every so often, Knapp would wander back to the archives and flip through clippings.

“I was drawn to the mob stories and read everything I could since organized crime was still very much alive here,” Knapp said.

To his amazement, he quickly realized that some of the people he met — “I was introduced and that was about it” — were the same men mentioned in the news stories.

Later, when he joined KLAS-TV, Channel 8 in 1981, those introductions would serve him well.

“It gave me an ‘in’ with them, albeit on a very low level,” he said.

It wasn’t long before he was covering mob stories and casino stories, “which were often one and the same in those days,” Knapp said.

His mentors were Ned Day, the Review-Journal’s mob-baiting columnist who became an anchor at KLAS, and Bob Stoldal, who was running the station.

“This was a dramatic time,” for the Mafia, “the beginning of the end for them,” Knapp said.

Spilotro, the mob hit man who had turned into a loose cannon, “was under incredible pressure, along with his crew, and Rosenthal was at the center of the storm,” Knapp said. Both had annoyed the mob for bringing so much unwanted attention.

It didn’t help that the mob was hearing rumors that Spilotro was having an affair with Rosenthal’s wife, Geri. Her character was portrayed by Sharon Stone in the 1995 classic “Casino,” with Robert DeNiro cast as Rosenthal and Joe Pesci as Spilotro.

“It blew up,” Knapp said, when Geri “went crazy, caused a big scene outside her house in the Las Vegas Country Club, then went to the bank and carted off a pile of cash and jewelry.”

Publicity generated by that “very public scene was, in my mind, the final nail in the coffin,” he said.

On Oct. 4, 1982, Rosenthal, the mob’s frontman for their string of casinos, stepped into his 1981 Cadillac Eldorado outside Tony Roma’s, 620 E. Sahara Ave. A bomb ripped through the car, leaving Rosenthal scorched, bruised and in shock. But he caught a lucky break: It was later theorized that a metal plate Cadillac placed under the driver’s seat of that model absorbed the brunt of the explosion.

Two nights after the assassination attempt, Rosenthal invited three reporters, including Day and Knapp, to his home.

“Lefty held court, and it was a weird little episode. He cruised in, bandaged up, with scrapes or burn marks on his face and hands. He spoke for a brief period, then took a few questions, but he didn’t say much of anything.”

When Knapp asked Rosenthal whether he had any ideas about who was behind it, he replied, “Well it certainly wasn’t the Boy Scouts of America.”

Someone asked whether he thought his lifelong friend, Spilotro, might be behind it. Rosenthal’s response, Knapp said, was something like “I hope not.”

Asked if the FBI had contacted him, Rosenthal said yes but emphasized he had no intention of cooperating with the government.

Day and Knapp left convinced they were invited to the mini-news conference because Rosenthal wanted to use the media “to assure his associates that he wasn’t going to rat them out.”

Rosenthal left Las Vegas and resurfaced in Boca Raton, Fla., where he eventually returned to his suit: sports handicapping for an online company.

Knapp called occasionally with a request to get Rosenthal in front of a camera. The last attempt, several years ago, was for a news series on “the bad old days.”

Rosenthal “responded — characteristically — in third-person vernacular: ‘Frank Rosenthal is not interested in participating in a local news series. Frank Rosenthal might be interested in a prime-time special, a two-hour program, something that would air on one of the major networks.’ “

It didn’t happen. The man who is credited with bringing sports betting to Las Vegas died October 13, 2008 in Florida. He was 79.

Four weeks after the Rosenthal car bombing, Knapp was invited to a Halloween party. He didn’t have a costume, but with the Rosenthal interview still on his mind, he had an idea.

“I took an old polyester suit — something Frank would never even think about wearing — and I tossed it into the fireplace, lit a match and let it burn a bit. Then I put a bandage around my head, some fake blood, and presto, I was ‘Lefty’ Rosenthal for the party.

“It wasn’t much of a costume, but I won some sort of prize. Maybe it was in the bad taste category.”


Jerry Seinfeld and George Wallace are Happy Voters!

November 11, 2008
Jerry Seinfield and George Wallace are happy voters!

Jerry Seinfeld and George Wallace are happy voters!

From Norm’s Vegas Confidential Column November 7, 2008:

The victory party at Jerry Seinfeld’s home in New York City on Election Day had a little something for everyone.

“We were all terribly happy,” said Flamingo headliner George Wallace, Seinfeld’s former roommate.

The celebration “was bigger than New Year’s Eve. We wanted fireworks,” said Wallace, after Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama was declared the winner over Sen. John McCain.

The gathering consisted of a number of old friends of Seinfeld and his wife, Jessica, including “Seinfeld” star Michael Richards.

Wallace said a celebratory voice was heard over the party din when Obama and his wife, Michelle, appeared on the runway with their children for his victory speech at Chicago’s jam-packed Grant Park.

“Oh, that’s my dress!” hollered Cuban-American fashion designer Narciso Rodriguez. The red and black ensemble from Rodriguez’s Spring 2009 Ready-to-Wear collection featured a criss-cross black satin detail, one of Rodriguez’s signature looks.

Another surprise came at the end of Obama’s speech.

“Jerry went ‘that’s my music,’” Wallace said.

It was the theme song from “The Bee Movie,” which was co-created by Seinfeld, who starred in the animated comedy about a bee who rebels against being forced to make honey and files a class action lawsuit against humans.

“This is big,” said Wallace. “It’s big for the world. Did you see how the world reacted? People rejoicing in Kenya, Australia, Hong Kong. To me, it had nothing to do with race. More non-African-Americans put him in office.

“It teaches everybody what an education can do,” said Wallace. “He got to Harvard because of his education. He became a senator through education.”

Wallace said he wouldn’t miss the inauguration for anything.

“Oh yes, I’m going,” he said.