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Tropicana Casino Pursues Vegas's Middlebrow Market

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  • Tropicana Casino Pursues Vegas's Middlebrow Market

    June 16, 2011
    Tropicana Casino Pursues Vegas's Middlebrow Market

    CEO Alex Yemenidjian wants the Tropicana to be the best damn pretty good
    hotel on the Strip-and his bet on the middlebrow market seems to
    be paying off
    It's been a long time since anyone did anything in Las Vegas on purpose.
    Ever since the spring of 2008, casino investors have felt like
    characters from The Hangover, trying to figure out what they got
    themselves into and how the hell to get out of it. Deutsche Bank's loan
    to a real estate developer went so bad that the bank wound up owning a
    half-built casino. Unable to offload the project, it currently operates
    the Cosmopolitan Hotel. In 2009, Caesars Palace halted construction on
    its new Octavius tower and is only getting around to finishing the job
    now.

    After the fall, Alex Yemenidjian was the first person to actually invest
    in the Strip on purpose. He and Canadian private equity billionaire
    Gerald Schwartz bought the Rat Pack-era, once-classy Tropicana out of
    bankruptcy in 2009 after guaranteeing at least $75 million to update the
    property. It was actually their 24th-favorite available property in
    Vegas, but they'd looked at the first 23 before the crash and considered
    them overpriced. Then the company that owned the Tropicana went
    bankrupt, and Yemenidjian and Schwartz bought it in cash. By that point,
    though, Yemenidjian remembers that the hotel had duct tape holding the
    carpet together every few feet. And a note in the employee lounge
    offering a bounty for each bedbug brought back alive.

    Yemenidjian and Schwartz ended up spending $180 million to purchase the
    iconic brand, the resort's six acres of grounds, a great address on a
    crowded corner of the Strip, and a lot of duct tape. But instead of
    building a Gucci boutique, booking Cher, or importing a Mario Batali
    restaurant, the duo went full middlebrow. The new Tropicana, which
    reopened in late May, features nice rooms for $70, $5 blackjack tables,
    and Gladys Knight-on purpose. "Between the low end and the
    snob," says Yemenidjian, "is the vast majority of this country."

    Yemenidjian isn't content operating a really good pretty good hotel: He
    wants the Tropicana to be the best damn pretty good hotel on the Strip.
    After all, the chief executive officer is not a $70 room guy: He's
    friends with Kirk Kerkorian, has slicked-back hair, and wears pocket
    squares. A former studio head, Yemenidjian proudly displays Hannibal
    Lecter's mask on the coffee table in his office, where giant framed
    quotes line his walls-including Oscar Wilde's "Moderation is the
    last refuge of the unimaginative." In a Tropicana employee lounge, the
    walls are also lined with framed quotes, including some from Alex
    Yemenidjian.

    To let the hotel's employees know he was serious about change,
    Yemenidjian began the Tropicana's renovation by spending $1 million to
    upgrade its staff lounge and dining hall. Then he made everyone read
    Raving Fans: A Revolutionary Approach to Customer Service. Then he fired
    40 percent of them. "Our job is to keep employees out of their comfort
    zone," he says. "We act as if the whole company's existence depends on
    the employees taking advantage of the opportunity to pick something up
    from the floor."

    Yemenidjian and Schwartz spent many more millions developing a South
    Beach theme at the Tropicana, mainly because, they thought, regular
    people like Florida. The hotel also has some Cuban touches, since
    regular people think Cuba is exotic. "I made three trips to South Beach
    for research. I learned everybody loves casual elegance," Yemenidjian
    says. "I can't tell you where else I went, or I will go to jail." The
    rooms are nearly all white, with plantation shutters. "There must have
    been a time in the last 10 years when there was a sale on chocolate
    brown furniture," he says. "We managed to miss the sale."

    The hotel's non-Miami touches are simple mid-market plays: the
    25,000-square-foot Las Vegas Mob Experience interactive museum, a
    Starbucks, and Brad Garrett's Comedy Club. Garrett, who began his career
    by opening for Frank Sinatra at the Desert Inn, is best known to the
    middlebrow zeitgeist as "that guy from Everybody Loves Raymond." "What
    made this incredibly attractive to me was the mid-range clientele they
    were going for," says that guy from Everybody Loves Raymond. "Those
    people have been forgotten for the last 15 years in Vegas. The high
    rollers who stay at the other properties go see Cher, they go see Cirque
    du Soleil, or they go to Sapphire, the titty bar," he says. "The $150
    shows are more of a destination. You have to put a shirt on."


    At the Tropicana, Garrett walks through the hotel casino handing out
    free passes. "I'm not Chris Rock, but these people come from Des
    Moines," he says. "They watched Raymond for years. That's what Vegas
    used to be about." Gladys Knight has done so well that Yemenidjian
    recently extended her contract. The hotel's other showroom features
    junk-rock band Recycled Percussion, a runner-up on America's Got Talent.
    America's Got Talent winners are for snobs.

    So far, the middlebrow mind trick is working. The Tropicana's occupancy
    rate has gone from the mid-80-percents before the renovation to around
    90 percent. The hotel, which used to be ranked in the bottom fifth of
    Vegas properties on TripAdvisor, has now moved up to 20th place out of
    288. Perhaps the next decade in Vegas will be full of middlebrow
    investments, with John Tesh showrooms and 1,000-seat Olive Gardens. "The
    history of Las Vegas is the destruction of the old and the building of
    the new," says Jeremy Aguero, principal analyst at Vegas-based market
    research firm Applied Analysis. "But in the near term, there is no
    opportunity to build a new mousetrap. You have to fix an old mousetrap."
    It's a good plan, but no one else is doing it. Down the strip, the
    59-year-old Sahara is locking its doors. Sam Nazarian, who owns the
    successful SLS hotel in Los Angeles, tried to reinvent the property as a
    high-end destination for young clubgoers. Alas, despite the way it
    seems, there actually aren't enough Kardashians to fill a hotel every
    single night.

    The only outlier from the Tropicana's rebranding plan is its 1.8-acre
    Nikki Beach, a restaurant/bar/club/faux beach that has outposts in South
    Beach, St. Barts, St. Tropez, and Marrakech. This is because
    nightclubs-particularly daytime poolside ones-are
    Vegas's only growth industry, and everyone is trying to lure the
    chest-waxing set with more swim-up tables and strippers. On June 2, porn
    star Sasha Grey deejayed at Nikki Beach while people drank $3,500
    magnums of Cristal delivered by "wine angels" who arrived on an overhead
    swing. Outside, women in bikinis and orange see-through gowns danced
    near a blackjack table next to a stripper pole. "Of course there's a
    stripper pole," says Tropicana President and Chief Operating Officer Tom
    McCartney. "You'd be surprised if there weren't." That's a compromise
    the middlebrow just won't make.

    ©2011 Bloomberg L.P.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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