
On a Budget or a Bankroll By Andrew
Collins
Las Vegas
has always been a terrific city for both bargain hunters and big spenders.
It's a land of extremes, an intensely glowing metropolis of lights
surrounded by a veritable black hole of barren desert. You can stay in
decent hotels that cost less than an economy rental car, or you can
splurge on a lavish dinner at a chichi French restaurant that costs more
than a plane ticket to Paris.
For gay travelers, Las Vegas has become increasingly popular - and not
only among gamblers. Queer folks from California, Arizona, and other
Western states have moved here in droves during the past decade, lured by
a mushrooming job market and the low cost of living. The gay nightlife
scene has flourished, offering not only conventional bars and discos, but
also outlandish drag and musical acts at casino nightclubs.
Deciding how to spend your money is an enjoyable dilemma in Las Vegas -
there's much to see and do, and it's easy to have a good time no matter
your economic situation. Here's the lowdown on the hot deals and decadent
delights of Sin City.
Las Vegas on a Budget
Casino hotels make their money on gaming rather than room revenue, keeping
rates low in hopes that guests will gamble more. If you wager a lot in the
casinos, you may have fun, but you're likely to leave Las Vegas with empty
pockets.
One reliable money-saving strategy is eating at the cheap buffets found at
nearly every casino. The popularity of these bargain meals has diminished
a bit over the years, but you can still score a major dining coup at
several places. Favorites include the six jointly owned casinos with
"station" in their name: Boulder Station, Sunset Station, Texas Station,
etc. These places offer cheap buffets as well as inexpensive rooms and
gaming tables with low minimums. Station Casinos, Inc., is also one of the
most gay-inclusive job recruiters in the city. Another spot that's a hit
with all-you-can-eaters is the Orleans Hotel and Casino, whose French
Market dinner buffet normally costs just $11 (or $16 for the grand
Monday-night seafood spread).
Reasonably priced a la carte restaurants are easy to find, too. The
Mediterranean Cafe, which serves cheap and tasty Greek and Middle Eastern
specialties, has a strong gay following, as does inexpensive Viva
Mercado's, a wonderful family-run Mexican restaurant - try the potent
margaritas, highly charged salsas, and perfectly cooked Mexican dishes,
many of them seafood or vegetarian. Even some of the fanciest casinos have
excellent eateries that won't set you back a ton; at the MGM Grand's
Coyote Cafe, a Santa Fe import, the Grill Room is pricey and somewhat
inconsistent, but the adjacent Cantina offers inventive and affordable
Southwestern chow (plus Nevada's largest selection of tequilas).
The city's bustling club scene is another easy place to score bargains -
many of the city's gay and lesbian bars offer tantalizing drink specials.
Favorites include Free Zone, one of the best mixed-gender queer clubs;
Cobalt disco, which draws a cruisy, social bunch, especially for its
Sunday tea dance; and Icon of Las Vegas, the city's classic cruise bar,
with diverse dance music, a fireplace, and comfy seating - it's where many
people go before heading next door to Gipsy, the main dance club for the
younger set. The Las Vegas Eagle is leather central and also serves pretty
cheap drinks.
The glitzy shows in Las Vegas can set you back a lot, but the gay show-bar
Sasha's, home to the city's longest-running drag revue, has reasonable
cover charges as well as a moderately priced restaurant. Campy Hamburger
Mary's, which is open 24/7, serves great burgers and American chow; the
dishy employees, some of whom dress in drag, are a hoot. Cool Cat Cafe is
a gay-popular coffeehouse, a nice option for sandwiches, desserts, and
coffee or tea.
As for hotels, the Riviera is a gay and lesbian fave. This centrally
located but slightly dated amalgam of towers and wings has spacious guest
rooms that cost as little as $29. The club La Cage features Frank Marino,
who stars as "Joan Rivers" and headlines a cast of female impersonators;
this long-running Vegas extravaganza costs $30. Nearby, the gay-friendly
Stratosphere offers special rates during Las Vegas Pride but is always a
bargain; the sleek rooms at this massive hotel-casino complex, which is
anchored by an 1,149-foot tower, start at an amazingly low $19 midweek.
The only drawback: you'll have to cab it or drive (albeit a short way) to
the more popular casinos.
For a slight splurge, stay at the Hard Rock Hotel, the domain of trendoids,
music junkies, and other scenesters. Except during busy times, you can
score a nice room here for under $75. Highlights include chic postmodern
rooms bathed in exotic colors, a 1,200-seat concert hall that hosts top
musicians, and a swimming lagoon fitted with an underwater sound system.
The Hard Rock has some great affordable eateries, including Mr. Lucky's
24/7, which serves tasty pub fare: fajitas, burgers, and thick milkshakes.
Las Vegas on a Bankroll
Most of the glamorous casinos in Las Vegas lie along the Strip, the
nickname for six-lane Las Vegas Boulevard south of downtown - near here,
too, is the small patch of gay bars and other businesses known as the Gay
Quarter (aka "the Fruit Loop").
A favorite haunt of high-rollers is the Bellagio Hotel and Casino. You
could stay here for days and never run out of ways to spend money. The
fancy rooms will set you back at least $150 (high for Vegas), as will
dinner for two at Olives, the restaurant owned by handsome chef Todd
English (once named one of _People_ magazine's "50 Most Beautiful
People"). At the same property you can sample sublime contemporary French
fare at Sirio Maccioni's Le Cirque or the very juiciest chops at
Jean-Georges Vongerichten's retro-chic Prime Steakhouse. And don't
overlook the fabulous shops, including Armani, Moschino, Prada, and
Tiffany.
One of the area's newest luxury retreat, with a January 2003 opening, is
the Ritz-Carlton Lake Las Vegas, a Mediterranean-inspired resort and
casino with a 36-hole golf course, a 30,000-square-foot spa, and 350 rooms
and suites. The most exclusive units are tucked inside a structure built
to resemble Florence's famous bridge, the Ponte Vecchio. Just 17 miles
from downtown, it's perfect if you prefer a more secluded setting.
With its guest rooms occupying the top five floors of the 39-story
Mandalay Bay Casino Resort, the ultraposh Four Seasons hotel has at ground
level a private lobby, pool, health club, and restaurants, plus access to
the Mandalay Bay's casino, eateries, and shops. Top dining picks include
Aureole, run by noted New York chef Charlie Palmer, and Border Grill,
helmed by TV chefs Mary Sue Milliken and Susan Feniger. Mandalay Bay is
also home to the gay-popular House of Blues restaurant and music club.
Another dazzling high-end hotel is The Venetian, whose fanciful exterior
artfully replicates the city for which it's named. Here you might dine at
branches of Manhattan's renowned French restaurant Lutece, the L.A.-based
Joachim Splichal eatery Pinot, or trendy Star Canyon, which has a gay
following in its hometown of Dallas.
Celebrity chefs are all the rage in Las Vegas these days, creating a
bounty of gastronomical temples that charge astronomical prices. Other
outstanding eateries charging the big bucks include the Hard Rock Hotel's
Nobu, which offers LV's ultimate sushi experience, and the MGM's New
Orleans import, Emeril's, which presents the kicky fare of TV superchef
Emeril Lagasse. If you don't mind paying a $20 cover, MGM's Studio 54
nightclub offers arguably the wildest night of reveling on the Strip. It's
touristy yet trendy, mainstream yet gay-popular. This Las Vegas take on
the notorious Manhattan disco of the 1970s is a memorable place to finish
off an over-the-top vacation.
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