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Tuesday, July 11, 2006

Looking in on: Gaming

It's the thick of summer in Las Vegas, which means pool parties amid
bikini-clad servers, afternoon boozing at extended happy hours and ¦ free
kiddie movies and video games at the Four Seasons? Bucking the Sin City
image, the upscale, nongaming hotel has entered its fourth year of a family
promotion that includes reduced rates for kids staying in a separate room
and a package of perks to keep the young 'uns happy while Mom and Dad
gamble. Other Strip operators say they're not interested in luring families
and won't be offering similar deals anytime soon. "We are operating an
entertainment business that is oriented toward adults," Harrah's
Entertainment spokesman David Strow said. "We're pretty adamant about that."

The Four Seasons is attached to Mandalay Bay but doesn't have its own
casino. The hotel has a following among business travelers who bring their
families along on business trips that carry over into long weekends. The
chain is known for being family-friendly year-round, greeting the little
ones with M&Ms and other gifts.

Family bookings are already ahead of last year, roping in new customers with
regulars, Director of Marketing Kathy Van Vechten said.

"We indoctrinate the little people early," she said.

. . .

The results from Harrah's annual survey of casino gamblers are in, and they
suggest that, by some measure, gamblers are a bit more sophisticated - and
less religious - than nongamblers.

People who said they gambled in casinos last year are richer, better
educated and more trendy than their nongambling counterparts, according to
data collected from telephone polls and interviews with more than 16,000
people by two research firms. The polling had a margin of error of about 2
percent. The survey, one of two major industry-funded gambler profiles, is
intended to dispel myths about gamblers and has been a longstanding irritant
to casino foes nationwide.

This year's survey says gamblers are more likely to have tasted various
ethnic foods, used new technology, redecorated their homes and taken long
trips, among other consumer-friendly activities.

Gamblers aren't much more heathen or hedonistic than the rest of the
population, Harrah's contends.

Forty-four percent of gamblers said being a good parent coincided with their
personal expression of success, compared to 40 percent of nongamblers.

Both gamblers and nongamblers volunteered time for social causes at the same
rate, though a greater percentage of gamblers said they donated money to a
social good.

Religion has always been a sticking point for the casino industry, whose
most vocal critics are those who believe gambling - no matter how fancily it
is packaged - is a sin. Harrah's didn't emphasize the results of several
religion questions in their survey, which could be construed negatively.

About 24 percent of casino gamblers polled said "being true to God"
coincided with success versus 38 percent of nongamblers.

Nongamblers seem more religious than gamblers. About 39 percent of gamblers
said religion was very important in their lives, and 41 percent said it was
fairly important. Among nongamblers, 49 percent said religion was very
important and 32 percent said it was fairly important. One-fourth of U.S.
adults - some 52.8 million people - visited casinos to gamble last year, the
survey said. That's down from the estimate of 53.4 million people who
visited casinos in 2003.

. . .

The shutdown of Atlantic City's 12 casinos last week wasn't the first time
New Jersey casinos have closed.

When Atlantic City casinos were legalized in 1976 and opened in 1978, they
were required to shut down their floors in the wee hours of the morning to
discourage binge gambling. New Jersey didn't introduce 24-hour gambling
until 1991. By then, Nevada was ushering in a wave of modern megaresorts.

Dan Heneghan, the spokesman for the New Jersey Casino Control Commission,
was then a casino reporter at the Press of Atlantic City when he wrote that
New Jersey's casinos "may never have to close their doors again."

Ironically, Heneghan was looking up that very article for a reporter just
before he was furloughed from his job Wednesday morning - one of tens of
thousands of public and private employees who aren't getting paid during the
budget impasse.

posted by Jerry "Jet" Whittaker at 7/11/2006 10:04:00 AM

 

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