Las Vegas Nightlife
Las Vegas proides numerous nightly entertainment for you to enjoy. Whether you're looking to meet people, a few drinks at a lounge, or just
to dance 'til toured several nightclubs

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  Las Vegas proides numerous nightly entertainment for you to enjoy. Whether you're looking to meet people, a few drinks at a lounge, or just to dance 'til toured several nightclubs.

Here are the places we go to more often than any others.

Rain. Then, There's the Rain of Las Vegas at the Palms Hotel. Its pleasures are enormous. Enter the Rain through a bright, futuristic tunnel. Its' caernous design charms you instantly. Its unique and elegant appearance makes you feel special. The cutting edge lighting system starts the club in motion.

The dance floor appears to float on an array of fountains. Lie shows by top performers and groups draw out egas' prettiest people.

To get thoroughly soaked with a night full of fun, dance and excitement, you'e got to experience the Rain of Las Vegas.

Please direct suggestions to us concerning positie experiences at clubs, bars, lounges you'e isited that are not listed aboe. We'd loe to hear from you.

Risque. For a chic nightspot, try Risque, the lounge at Paris. Risque is a relaxing and sophisticated club decorated with plush couches, beds, and ottomans to lounge on, all surrounding the dance floor. many of the seating areas proide a priate atmosphere.

Risque is beautifully decorated with mirrors, candles and bamboo plants as accents with seven small priate balconies that allow guests to stand outside and view the Strip and Bellagio's fountain.

Studio 54. The Studio 54 at the MGM Grand mimics the 70's era, and has 22,000 square feet of confetti cannon fun; outfitted with three bars - The Steel Bar, The Hot Bar and The oyeur Bar.

The main dance floor is downstairs.

Two smaller dance floors are upstairs. Studio 54's music always fills the dance floors. The atmosphere has numerous plush resered seating areas and an exclusie second floor IP area. Studio 54 always fills fast, resulting in long lines. So, get there early to enjoy this popular club. 

  

Foundation Room is open to the public for partying on Mondays - Members pay $2,250 a year for the priilege of sipping pricey cocktails beneath exotic paintings of a surrealist turkey and a black Jesus, which are among the many pieces of brightly colored folk art that adorn the Foundation Room's red upholstered walls.

But it was Monday night, the one evening of the week when this exclusie, members-only club high atop Mandalay Bay opens its doors to all.

The place is festooned with gold-leaf ceilings, rich Indian fabrics, crackling fireplaces, ornate wood carings of religious iconography and a patio that offers one of the best views of the Strip.

On Mondays, an evening dubbed "Godspeed," the music is as aried as the decor.

The club's dining room is conerted into an '80s-leaning discotheque, where INXS and Rod Stewart rule.

Beneath shimmering Italian chandeliers, reelers hoist drinks on a dance floor made of fine Oriental rugs. Thick blue-and-maroon drapes hang from big floor-to-ceiling windows that look out onto the club's patio, 50 stories aboe the Strip.

In the Foundation Room lounge, house and trance is spun as a myriad of teleision monitors display nature footage of rock formations and desert skies.

Down a long hall decorated with black-and-white portraits of blues greats such as Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown and Henry Qualls, lies the Shangri-La Room, where hip-hop predominates.

The room is decorated with rich dark woods and ornate iron fixtures, giing the place the feel of an Old World cathedral - an Old World cathedral where Young Jeezy sermonizes.

 

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A small dance floor is roped off from a series of couches, where bottle serice is offered, beginning at $275.

For the most part, you have to pay if you want to sit anywhere in this place.

The place gets packed, but with bars in each of the three main rooms, the lines for drinks are surprisingly manageable.

Plus, the traffic is somewhat dispersed by a series of priate alcoes hidden in arious nooks and crannies of the club behind drapes, such as the Ganesha Room and the Buddha Room, named after the religious figures whose likenesses dominate their decor.

These comfy hide-outs will still be off limits to most folks who show up on Mondays, but for a night, everyone can at least get a glimpse of the high life.

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