Neon Lights, Mega Dispensaries & The Future of Entertainment

November in Las Vegas feels like a soft launch of winter — warm sun during the day, cool air at night, and nonstop movement across the Strip. Like every NYC Weed News trip, this wasn’t just vacation — it was research. How does a fully mature tourism city integrate entertainment, hospitality, and cannabis into one ecosystem?

A NYC Weed News Editorial from Las Vegas

November in Las Vegas feels like a soft launch of winter — warm sun during the day, cool air at night, and nonstop movement across the Strip. Like every NYC Weed News trip, this wasn’t just vacation — it was research. How does a fully mature tourism city integrate entertainment, hospitality, and cannabis into one ecosystem?


Arrival: The City Starts at the Airport

Before even reaching the hotel, Las Vegas sets the tone.

At Harry Reid International Airport, slot machines sit directly inside the terminal. You land — and Vegas begins immediately. No transition period. The city’s identity is consistent from runway to resort.


Staying at the Luxor — Tower Upgrade Worth It

We stayed at Luxor Hotel & Casino and paid about $15 extra for a tower room upgrade — completely worth it.

Large clean room, comfortable beds, quiet compared to the pyramid floors, and a perfect base to walk the Strip endlessly. During our stay the city was preparing for the Formula 1 race, which meant barricades everywhere and partially blocked fountain areas — but the experience still delivered.

Sunny days in the low 70s°F made it perfect walking weather. Once temperatures dropped later in the week, pools closed — classic November Vegas timing.


Strip Walking Culture & Casino Reality

Vegas is a walking city disguised as a driving city. We walked the Strip back and forth more times than we could count.

  • $5 beers across properties

  • $3 margaritas inside Luxor & MGM resorts

  • Turned $30 into $100… then lost it all

  • Free drinks while playing (Vegas tradition preserved)

We spent time inside Excalibur Hotel and Casino and visited classics like Golden Nugget Las Vegas — still legendary atmospheres.

We were also on the Strip when LA won the World Series — spontaneous celebration energy everywhere.


Fremont Street — Where Vegas Feels Raw

Downtown might actually be the most fun part of the city.

At Fremont Street Experience the scale shrinks and the personality grows — music, street performers, unpredictable energy.

We stopped at Tony Roma’s for the famous late-night steak and lobster deal (around $17 after 10–11pm) — still one of the best value meals in Vegas.

Then entered Circa Resort & Casino — its massive sportsbook viewing setup may be the most impressive sports-watching venue in the U.S.


The Sphere — Cinema Rewritten

We visited the Sphere to watch The Wizard of Oz immersive presentation — and it’s important to understand what this actually is.

It’s not a movie screening.
It’s not a remaster.

It’s a hybrid:

  • Original film elements

  • AI-assisted visual reconstruction

  • Environmental immersion

Some moments feel modern and hyper-real. Others preserve the vintage film texture. The result feels closer to a museum installation or simulation than traditional cinema.

Prices reflect flagship attraction status — similar to major city theater pricing — but the technology explains why.

Inside: breathtaking.
Outside: still feels unfinished, like the surrounding district hasn’t caught up to the building yet.

We also heard concerts inside the Sphere feel completely different — less like watching a performance and more like being inside the visuals.


Food Marathon Across the Strip

Vegas is an eating city as much as a gaming city.

Stops included:

  • Bacchanal Buffet — arguably the most complete buffet in America

  • Mon Ami Gabi — patio dining facing the fountains

  • Beer Park — rooftop sports vibe

  • Diablo’s Cantina — casual Strip energy

  • Spago — drinks with a view

Also added:

  • Gordon Ramsay Burger

  • Gordon Ramsay Fish & Chips

  • In-N-Out Burger

Dessert while watching the fountains and espresso martinis at the The Chandelier Bar ended multiple nights perfectly.


Cannabis Research — Planet 13

What Vegas Teaches About Legal Cannabis

Nevada legalized adult-use cannabis in 2017, and the industry evolved into tourism retail:

  • Designed for visitors, not neighborhoods

  • Massive store formats

  • Heavy brand merchandising

  • Higher average transaction size

Unlike New York’s local community rollout, Vegas integrates cannabis into entertainment infrastructure — closer to an attraction than an errand.


The Little Things That Make Vegas Unique

  • Driverless taxis felt futuristic but smooth

  • Perfect walking weather in November

  • Cheap drinks coexist with luxury dining

  • City energy changes every block

Vegas isn’t trying to feel authentic — it’s trying to feel everything at once.


Final Thoughts

Las Vegas showed how cannabis fits inside a tourism economy:
sports, shows, food, nightlife, and retail all orbit the same visitor experience.

New York is building a culture market.
Vegas built an attraction market.

Both work — but they follow completely different rules.

And like every good Vegas trip:

Win a little.
Lose it all.
Leave happy.

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