Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Blake L. Sartini was born in Stockton, in the San Joaquin County of California. He is the son of Arthur Dennis Sartini and Sandra Louise Myers. The family moved to Las Vegas in 1964 when his father took a job as the assistant executive director of the Las Vegas Housing Authority.
Station also purchased several existing properties in the Las Vegas Valley, including the Santa Fe in 2000, [32] and the Fiesta and Reserve in 2001. [33] [34] Wildfire Gaming is a division of Station that operates small casinos around the Las Vegas Valley. [35] [36] Wildfire-branded casinos are smaller than Station's other properties and lack ...
In 2007, Whitehall Street Real Estate Funds, who owned 40% of the Las Vegas Hilton and was a passive investor in other casino properties, made an offer of $1.3 billion for the four properties. The appraisal assigned a value of $718 million to the land under the four properties. The buildings were worth $366 million.
Golden Entertainment, Inc. is an American gaming company based in Enterprise, Nevada that operates casinos and taverns. It was formed in 2015 by the merger of Golden Gaming (founded in 2001 by Blake Sartini ) and Lakes Entertainment .
The 4,700-seat theatre was designed by Scéno Plus, a world-renowned entertainment design firm based out of Montreal.The 13,550-square-foot stage is one of the largest on the Las Vegas Strip, measuring 64-foot deep by 196-foot wide.
TLC Casino Enterprises, Inc. is a holding company owned and controlled by Terry L. Caudill which through its subsidiaries, owns and operates casinos. [ 2 ] TLC Casinos, Inc. was founded in 2002 and is based in Downtown Las Vegas , Nevada.
A new subsidiary, Tropicana Entertainment LLC, was created to hold the combined company's casinos. After losing control of its largest property, the Tropicana Atlantic City, the new company was quickly forced into bankruptcy in May 2008. While in bankruptcy, the Tropicana Las Vegas was split off as a separate entity.
On April 22, 1987, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) issued an original construction permit to 4-A Communications to build a new full-power television station, on UHF channel 33, to serve the Las Vegas market. 4-A Communications, owned by Lawrence and Teri DePaulis, became Channel 33, Inc. (which remained the station's licensee until 2015) in August 1987.