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American TV serial

Las Vegas
Vegas Title Card.jpg

Title logo

Genre Comedy drama
Created by Gary Scott Thompson
Starring
  • James Caan
  • Josh Duhamel
  • Nikki Cox
  • James Lesure
  • Vanessa Marcil
  • Molly Sims
  • Marsha Thomason
  • Tom Selleck
Opening theme "A Picayune Less Conversation" by Elvis Presley on U.s.a. Boob tube broadcasts ("Permit Information technology Ride" past Charlie Clouser was used in international and DVD versions)
Composer Charlie Clouser
Land of origin United States
Original language English
No. of seasons v
No. of episodes 106 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
  • Gary Scott Thompson
  • Justin Falvey
  • Darryl Frank
  • Matt Pyken
  • Gardner Stern
  • Kim Newton
  • Scott Steindorff
Producers
  • Stephen Sassen
  • Jill Cargerman
  • Daniel Arkin
  • Howard Grigsby
Running time 40-43 minutes
Product companies
  • Gary Scott Thompson Productions
  • DreamWorks Television
  • NBC Studios
Distributor
  • NBCUniversal Goggle box Distribution
  • MGM Worldwide Television Distribution
Release
Original network NBC
Original release September 22, 2003 (2003-09-22) –
February 15, 2008 (2008-02-15)
Chronology
Related shows Crossing Jordan

Las Vegas is an American one-act-drama tv series created by Gary Scott Thompson. It was broadcast past NBC from September 22, 2003, to February xv, 2008, airing for five seasons. It focuses on a squad of people working at the Montecito, a fictional hotel and casino on the Las Vegas Strip. The employees deal with various issues that arise inside the working surround, ranging from casino security to eating house direction and valet parking. Las Vegas starred James Caan, Josh Duhamel, Nikki Cox, James Lesure, Vanessa Marcil, Molly Sims, Marsha Thomason, and eventually Tom Selleck. The serial originally centered on Ed Deline (Caan), a strict ex-CIA officer who serves as the president of operations for the Montecito. Onetime Marine Danny McCoy (Duhamel), who is Ed's protégé, afterwards becomes the Montecito'south new president.

The airplane pilot episode began filming in March 2003, and was produced for $v one thousand thousand, making information technology the most expensive pilot in NBC history. Product for a full season began later on that year. Much of the series filming occurred at Culver Studios in California, where a ready was constructed to correspond the Montecito. Some filming also occasionally took place in Las Vegas. The Mandalay Bay and Green Valley Ranch, two hotel-casinos in the Las Vegas Valley, were sometimes used to portray the Montecito.

Las Vegas marked Caan's first starring function in a television series. Thomason left the series subsequently the second season to pursue other projects, and Caan and Cox departed in 2007, after completing season four. Caan wanted to resume his moving picture career, and Cox was let go due to budget cuts, which were needed in lodge to greenlight a fifth season. Subsequently Caan'due south departure, Selleck was added to the cast as a new character. The serial originally aired on Mon nights, earlier being moved to Friday nights in 2006. Ratings declined following the movement, and Las Vegas was eventually canceled on February 20, 2008, ending the series with several cliffhangers.

Premise [edit]

Las Vegas is a comedy drama that focuses primarily on Danny McCoy and his dominate Ed Deline. They and others work at the Montecito, a fictional hotel-casino located on the Las Vegas Strip. The employees deal with a diversity of issues, such as casino security, eatery management, and valet parking. Danny, a sometime U.S. Marine, initially works under the resort's head of security,Ed, a former CIA officeholder. Early on in the first flavor, Ed is promoted to president of operations. Danny has on-and-off relationships with Mary, a childhood friend; and Delinda, who is Ed's daughter.

The Montecito undergoes several ownership changes during the form of the series. The resort is demolished in the season-2 finale in favor of a new Montecito, which opens in the third season under the ownership of Monica Mancuso. Following the end of season four, Ed and Mary go into hiding after killing her begetter, who sexually driveling her every bit a child. In the fifth flavour, the Montecito is purchased by A.J. Cooper, a billionaire and former Marine. Danny becomes the new president of operations, and he moves in with Delinda, who is meaning with their offset child.

Episodes [edit]

Cast and characters [edit]

Main [edit]

  • Ed Deline (James Caan) is initially the head of security and surveillance for the Montecito, but is promoted to president of operations in the eighth episode. He is portrayed as a loving husband and father, as well as a father effigy to his employees, specially Danny. Yet, he is a tough man and does not hesitate to use violence to get what he wants. As the one-time director of counterintelligence for the CIA, his past has come up back to haunt him on several occasions. During flavor 3, Ed is briefly in retirement due to disagreements with the new Montecito owner, although he soon returns to his position. Caan and his character depart the serial in season five, when Ed becomes a wanted man for killing Mary Connell's begetter.[ane] Ed goes into hiding and resumes work for the CIA, being stationed in Paris.
  • Danny McCoy (Josh Duhamel) is initially Ed Deline's apprentice and good friend who is later promoted to head of security for the Montecito. During flavor 3, Danny briefly serves equally president of operations for the resort, after Ed resigns. Upon Ed's return, Danny is reinstated equally caput of security. Danny is officially named the new president in season 5. Danny was born and raised in Las Vegas. At the end of flavor two, his father Larry McCoy (John Terry) dies in an accident and Danny inherits his father's business firm and construction company. Danny sells the house and uses the money to purchase a condo. Danny is a quondam U.S. Marine, with guerrilla and counterintelligence training. He is recalled into military service in Republic of iraq at the end of flavor one. In flavor 2, he is awarded the Silver Star after calling in an air strike over his unit of measurement and himself when they were ambushed and overrun. Only he survives the strike. He is involved in an on-and-off human relationship with Ed'due south daughter, Delinda, in flavour one. Danny and Mary have known each other since babyhood, and they as well have an on-and-off human relationship. Danny proposes to Mary, but she calls off the appointment considering she feels that he has a lot of things to sort out for himself. He ultimately begins living with girlfriend Delinda, who is significant with their starting time child in the last season.
  • Mary Connell (Nikki Cox) is the special events manager at the casino. A Las Vegas native, her father sexually abused her when she was a child, and Danny always came to her rescue. She is sometimes involved in a relationship with Danny, who proposes to her in season two – she accepts, and so later calls off the engagement. In season iii, Mary is promoted to hotel manager. In season 4, she helps her stepmother and half sisters testify confronting her father – a instance which is lost considering of his connections. Near the cease of season four, she purchases a gun to shoot her begetter. Cox departed the series and did not return for the fifth season. Explaining her character's absence, Mary is hiding from the law for her part in her begetter's murder,[1] but is patently safe, as she sends Danny a photo with a firm and white picket debate (her dream house).
  • Mike Cannon (James Lesure) is Danny's friend who studied mechanical engineering science at MIT. He works as head valet for the starting time season, but is recruited past Ed to the security department to aid during Danny's military absence. He stays on every bit security personnel post-obit Danny'southward render. In season five, Mike is promoted to head of security and surveillance. In the pilot episode, Mike has a married woman and daughter; this plot line is seemingly abased thereafter. Mike and Nessa go close in season two, until she leaves to be with her father and sister. Mike and Piper get married in the concluding season.
  • Samantha Jane "Sam" Marquez (Vanessa Marcil) is the self-proclaimed best casino host in the world. She lives in a Montecito suite and is portrayed as a ruthless businessperson whose sole interest is to get high rollers to play at the Montecito. However, in the fourth flavor, she reveals that she is merely "cold and jaded because everyone expects information technology of her", and "underneath information technology all, she is weak and pathetic like everyone else."[2] She was married to billionaire Casey Manning, from whom she was estranged for seven years prior to divorcing. She is besides involved in an on-and-off relationship with Det. Woody Hoyt from Crossing Hashemite kingdom of jordan, until it ends in the fourth season. During this flavour, she is seen to be currently in love with and waiting for Jeremy, who fell into a 20-year coma after falling off a stool at a slot machine; he is the human being who starting time brought her to Las Vegas from Austin, Texas.[two] After Casey's death, Sam is left in command of the Montecito, just she fails to pay back taxes owed on the property. Her ownership lasts for a calendar week, until A.J. Cooper buys the Montecito by paying off the taxes. In the season-v finale, Casey'due south younger brother Vic Manning visits the Montecito to have over buying. At the terminate of the show, Sam and Vic plan to become married. When asked why Sam wants to marry Vic – she always stated she did not accept feelings for him, though he loved her – she says it is because Vic understands her and will not try to change her; plus, he reminds her of Casey.
  • Delinda Deline (Molly Sims) is Ed and Jillian'south daughter. She is the entertainment director for the Montecito'south clubs, and besides works as the nutrient and beverage manager for the resort. Delinda is shown to have a genius-level IQ, and once majored in psychology, but decided the human race's biggest problem is that they are boring. During season iii, Delinda leaves the Montecito to work for another casino. She returns at the asking of new Montecito owner Monica Mancuso, who is disappointed that social club earnings have dropped without her. Derek, an sometime college flame, asks Delinda to marry him in season iii. She accepts the proposal, but just earlier the ceremony, Ed is shot. In the fray of Ed's medical crunch, Delinda calls off the wedding. In season five, she becomes meaning with Danny'south child, and they begin a relationship. At the stop of the flavour-5 finale, Delinda becomes overwhelmed with pain later on just learning that Montecito owner A.J. Cooper is alive; he was supposedly killed in a airplane crash. Delinda begins bleeding, although the serial ends on a cliffhanger, leaving the fate of her unborn babe unknown.
  • Nessa Holt (Marsha Thomason), also known as "The Ice Queen", is the head pit dominate of the Montecito and is described every bit beingness the best in Las Vegas. She was built-in in Manchester, England, and has a shady past due to her father's connections with Ed Deline. Her male parent was a well-known gambler, cheater, and con artist, who was forcefully recruited into the CIA and faked his death. Nessa was raised by Ed and Jillian for some years, and is referred to as a sister to Delinda. At the opening of flavor three, Nessa is explained to have left Las Vegas and been given a new identity to be able to alive with her father and long-lost sister. She and Mike had been getting closer to a relationship, although she fails to say goodbye to him.
  • A.J. Cooper (Tom Selleck) becomes the latest possessor of the Montecito in flavour five. He is a one-time Marine and cattle rancher from Wyoming who stirs things up at the casino. His net worth is well-nigh $ii billion. Cooper was a blackness ops Marine in the Vietnam War and awarded the Bronze Star for his work. During his time in the Marines, he served in the Battle of Khe Sanh.[3] In the season-v finale, Cooper'south jet crashes during a business trip, and he is presumed expressionless. Nonetheless, during the final moments of the show, Cooper arrives at his memorial service and appears to be fine.

Recurring [edit]

  • Monica Mancuso (Lara Flynn Boyle) becomes the new possessor of the Montecito in flavor three. She is portrayed as cocky-centered and bull-headed, and is generally disliked by the staff. At age 25, she married an 83-year-old billionaire. Upon his death at age 93, she inherited his fortune and used it to purchase and upgrade the Montecito. Dedicated to proving that she is more than but a woman who inherited money, she is adamant to make the Montecito a success. She uses the resort as collateral to try purchasing other casinos in Las Vegas. Nine episodes into the 3rd flavour, Monica dies in a freak accident: a gust of wind blows her off the roof of the Montecito and downwards the Las Vegas Strip, before she crashes into a shoe store. Her outfit, with fly-like sleeves, contributed to her being blown off the roof. The scene was created to be humorous.[one] [iv] [5] In accordance with her terminal wishes, the Montecito staff affluent her cremated remains down a toilet in her suite at the resort.
  • Casey Manning (Dean Cain) is a shrewd and cunning man of affairs, and Sam Marquez's ex-husband. He buys the Montecito in the 3rd flavour, following Monica'southward death. In season four, Casey is killed in a line-fishing accident: a giant squid envelops him off the coast of New Zealand. The autopsy reveals that he was poisoned before the accident.[1] [6] He leaves the Montecito to Sam, who faces revenue enhancement issues he left. In the series finale, Sam plans to marry Casey'due south brother Vic, though she does non dear him, because Vic reminds her of Casey.
  • Piper Nielsen (Camille Guaty), the newest concierge of the Montecito, is introduced in flavor five. She is fired for letting an underage person gamble, but Cooper pays a $1 one thousand thousand fine to hire her dorsum, raising speculation amid the casino staff about their human relationship. Piper never knew who her male parent was, until Cooper reveals that they served together in the Marines. Before her father died, Cooper promised that he would keep an heart on Piper. As she moved to diverse states over the years, he did the same in club to exist there for her, though without her knowledge. Mike and Piper get married most the end of the flavour.
  • Mitch Sassen (Mitch Longley) is a regular member of the surveillance squad, and similar the actor who plays him, he is paraplegic and uses a wheelchair.
  • Jillian Deline (Cheryl Ladd) is Ed's married woman and Delinda's mother. Jillian expresses growing resentment of Ed's time on the job. In the season-four finale, Jillian says she volition get out Ed if he decides to purchase the Montecito. In the opening of season five, she is revealed to support Ed's conclusion for better or worse after learning of her time to come grandchild. She leaves Ed afterwards they motility away nether sketchy circumstances.
  • Luis Perez (Guy Ecker) is a Las Vegas police force detective who appears in the first two seasons. He is a babyhood friend of Danny and Mary, and friend of Ed Deline and his team. He also had served in the Marines, and his unit is later recalled for service in Iraq, where he dies in the beginning week there. A funeral is held in his honor with Ed and everyone attending, and he is discovered to have a child whose being was unknown to him.[7]
  • Kathy Berson (Rikki Klieman) is the Montecito'southward main legal adviser and lawyer, introduced in season two. If any legal issues arise, Kathy is the showtime person whom everyone asks.
  • Polly (Suzanne Whang) is a Korean manicurist in the Montecito'south spa. She is introduced in season three, and later forms a friendship with A.J. Cooper. Polly openly discusses her sexual experiences.
  • Sarasvati Kumar (Lakshmi Manchu) is an accountant for the casino. She appears in the first three seasons, and eventually begins a relationship with Mike, although this ends in the season-3 finale after she goes domicile with Delinda's bachelorette party strippers.
  • Gunther (Harry Groener), appearing in the first three seasons, is the temperamental executive chef at the Montecito's original eatery. He habitually has issues that require Delinda's attention, and develops a rivalry with Wolfgang Puck when the more famous chef opens a restaurant at the casino. Gunther somewhen quits afterward losing a melt-off to Puck; he sells his eatery to Charo.
  • Erika (Anna Pheil), appearing in seasons iii through five, is a hard-as-nails barmaid Danny hires on a lark when he sees her dealing with customers while tending bar at a strip guild.
  • Shannon (Malaya Drew) is a fellow member of the Montecito's security. She plays a small role in six episodes, spanning the third and fourth flavor. She briefly shows interest in Mike.

Notable guest stars [edit]

Various guest stars take appeared on the prove, sometimes portraying themselves.[8] [9] [x] Notable invitee stars have included Alec Baldwin,[11] Little Richard,[12] Mark McGrath,[13] Sylvester Stallone,[xiv] Las Vegas mayor Oscar Goodman,[fifteen] [16] Norm Clarke,[17] Gem,[xviii] and Gladys Knight.[ten] Larry Manetti and Roger E. Mosley made a invitee appearance in season 5 as characters named Larry and Roger, who are friends of A.J. Cooper. Selleck, Manetti, and Mosley had previously starred on Magnum, P.I., and their appearance together in Las Vegas marked their kickoff reunion since the ending of Magnum, P.I. in 1988.[xix] [xx]

Production [edit]

Development [edit]

Las Vegas was created by Gary Scott Thompson, who also served as an executive producer.[21] The thought for the series dates back to Las Vegas vacations that Thompson would take in the belatedly 1980s. On 1 trip, Thompson developed a vision of a dead body laying in the desert, and then "we pan up and there's the Strip 50 yards away. That was what concluded up in the airplane pilot, that opening shot, but I couldn't ever effigy out what that went to. So I had that affair in my caput for 15 years." At diverse points, Thompson tried developing this idea into a novel or play.[22]

In 2002, Thompson had been working with NBC on a goggle box pilot for a unlike series; although this pilot was unsuccessful, NBC officials who worked with Thompson later asked him to create a Las Vegas-based series.[21] At the time, Thompson felt that there was a lack of "fun" and entertaining shows on television, telling NBC that at that place were besides many procedural dramas such equally CSI and Constabulary & Order.[22] For Las Vegas, Thompson was inspired by the city's evolving history and its megaresorts,[21] saying, "If there are 127,000 (hotel) rooms in the city, that means I've got a potential 127,000 stories every week, because everybody's got a story, and so do all the people who live here."[23] The show would exist reminiscent of the 1970s series Vegas. Originally known nether the working title Casino Eye, the new series would also include Scott Steindorff equally producer.[24] Initially, Don Johnson was likewise going to serve every bit an executive producer, although he ultimately had no involvement in the final project.[25] [26]

Casting and graphic symbol changes [edit]

James Caan was among several actors considered for the role of Ed Deline, although the producers were initially unsure that they could get Caan to sign on.[27] [28] Johnson was considered for the role, but turned it downward.[29] Caan was cast at the terminal minute,[27] marking his starting time starring role in a television series.[thirty] Caan later said that he took the telly function due to a lack of film offers.[31] He too said in 2005 that he had never watched the series.[32] Caan was initially doubtful about starring in a series;[27] [28] he insisted that his role require endeavour on his part,[xi] and that the character be "multidimensional and circuitous."[27] Every bit originally written, the graphic symbol would spend much of his time in a surveillance room looking at camera footage. Caan disliked this idea and considered the role limited, saying that Ed Deline should be "more rubberband, and then there could be some humor." Caan had the office rewritten, allowing his grapheme to spend fourth dimension exterior of the surveillance room. Extra Molly Sims said about Caan, "If the writing's non adept, or he doesn't like it, he'south very picky, but that'south what makes it practiced. He adds clout to our prove."[11] Caan and Sims did not go along for the first two seasons.[33] Approximately 350 women auditioned for the role of Delinda Deline, before it eventually went to Sims.[34]

The graphic symbol of Danny McCoy was developed past Thompson to be a Las Vegas resident, like himself. He said, "It's a city of almost ii million people. We wanted to capture non simply the Strip. People alive hither and information technology's their dwelling, and we wanted to capture that."[35] Nikki Cox's character, Mary, was originally an escort in the airplane pilot episode, although her title was changed to events planner for the residue of the series. According to Sims, "I believe the network felt that information technology would be 'unseemly' to take your protagonist'southward girl-adjacent-door sweetheart and the ultimate love of his life be an escort."[36] The role of Nessa was originally written every bit a threescore-year-former human, although Thompson was impressed enough with Marsha Thomason's audition that he rewrote the role for her.[35] Thomason signed a 7-year contract,[37] merely later departed the series after the second season, in order to pursue other projects.[38]

Filming [edit]

Filming for the pilot episode began on March 17, 2003, in the Las Vegas Valley. Filming locations included the Mandalay Bay resort, the Fremont Street Experience,[21] [39] [xl] [34] and a warehouse that the product crew used to build a surveillance room set.[21] The pilot toll $5 1000000,[41] making it the near expensive in NBC history.[42] [43] Filming lasted almost 3 weeks,[21] [42] and the pilot was picked upwards shortly thereafter.[43] Series production began in July 2003, with an viii-mean solar day shooting schedule for each hour-long episode.[44] Each episode initially cost $2.3 million to produce,[13] although the budget was gradually raised to $two.vii million equally the series progressed.[45] [46]

Although most of the product occurred in California, some filming also occasionally took place in Las Vegas.[47] [48] Filming primarily occurred at Culver Studios in California.[48] [14] [27] Steindorff said that the writers would make regular visits to Las Vegas to "immerse themselves in that globe".[14] Thompson said that during these trips, the team would ask real security guards "if it's too far-fetched if we do X, Y and Z. They say, 'Are you crazy? That happens all of the time'".[8]

The serial premiered in September 2003, and its success prompted NBC to greenlight nine boosted episodes for the season.[49] The prove went over budget in its first season, necessitating the need for an inexpensive episode that would keep the bandage on the Montecito set in California. As a result, an episode was written in which a blackout and a murder occur simultaneously at the Montecito, keeping the characters at the resort. Thompson said, "We were not allowed to take whatever invitee appearances. I thought, 'How exercise nosotros trap them all in the casino.'" The episode received some criticism from people who doubted that a casino coma was possible, although such an event occurred at the Bellagio resort a few months later the episode aired.[50]

To refresh the series, Thompson wrote in the demolition of the Montecito for the end of season ii, with a new version of the resort existence opened in the third season.[22] In addition, Lara Flynn Boyle was bandage as Monica Mancuso, the new owner of the Montecito, in July 2005.[22] [51] For the role, Boyle took inspiration from Shirley MacLaine: "I always daydreamed almost being one of the Rat Pack. Shirley MacLaine could really concur her own with [Frank Sinatra and] the boys. I feel the same style — never let them run into you lot sweat or cry."[52]

Montecito [edit]

Early on, the Culver Studios complex had eight sets that depicted the Montecito resort, including a 20,000 sq ft (1,900 yard2) casino set.[48] [47] Other sets depicted hotel rooms, hallways, elevators, a trip the light fantastic toe club,[48] and the Montecito's surveillance room.[30] A java shop ready was added for the 2nd season.[48] Some Montecito scenes were besides filmed at the Mandalay Bay,[53] particularly in the casino and at the resort'due south wave pool.[54] Glenn Schaeffer, the president of Mandalay Resort Group, too fabricated several appearances in early episodes.[53] During flavor one, the Green Valley Ranch, a hotel-casino in Henderson, Nevada, was also used to portray the Montecito.[55] [56] [57]

A new Montecito ready was created for the third season, measuring 40,000 sq ft (iii,700 thouii) and occupying three stories across six sound stages.[45] [54] The production team incorporated product placement into the set up to alleviate its high cost. Among the brands featured in the third season was Aston Martin, which is shown to have a dealership at the Montecito. This was done following the opening of a Ferrari dealership at the new Wynn resort. Thompson wanted the series to feel current with the latest attractions in Las Vegas.[58] A Wolfgang Puck restaurant was also added to the set, and Puck appeared as himself in the series.[59] [60]

Equally of season 4, the Montecito set included 146 slot machines and 24 table games. This set went $2 million over upkeep, but was built in eight weeks to meet the borderline for the start of filming.[46] Exterior shots show the Montecito at the south end of the Las Vegas Strip, across the street from the Luxor resort, although the views from interior shots imply unlike and contradictory locations on the Strip.[54] [61] [62] Ahead of the 5th season premiere, Thompson joked about the Montecito's location, "We're just going to keep moving it around, merely to piss people off."[61]

Concluding seasons and cancellation [edit]

Flavour 3 saw a driblet in ratings, and Las Vegas was only renewed for 17 episodes in its next flavor, instead of the standard 22. The series was facing counterfoil subsequently the premiere of its fourth season. For the flavor finale, Thompson told NBC, "I'm gonna make this the biggest cliffhanger anyone'southward always seen. And if y'all cancel us, you're gonna have 15 million fans pissed off at you, not me."[63] The fate of a fifth season was contingent on budget cuts.[64] NBC announced a fifth season in Feb 2007, while stating that Caan and Nikki Cox would depart the series. Caan had wanted to resume film acting; he previously had to pass on several film opportunities due to conflicts with the Las Vegas production schedule.[63] [65] [66] Cox was permit get from the product due to budget cuts.[32] [66] Although she was upset and surprised by the conclusion,[66] she had likewise suggested during flavor iv that information technology may be time for her to move on from the series.[63] Like Cox, Caan's difference would as well allow for budget cuts.[67] The writers were caught off-guard by the cast departures, which were announced at the terminal infinitesimal.[68]

Tom Selleck was bandage in April 2007, as the Montecito's new possessor, A.J. Cooper.[64] [69] [70] Las Vegas marked Selleck's showtime master role on a television series since Magnum, P.I. [64] Selleck was Thompson'southward first choice for the role.[12] To prepare, Selleck watched the previous season on DVD.[71] Selleck's character would make full the void left by Caan, while a new female concierge (ultimately played past Camille Guaty) would serve as a replacement for Cox'due south character.[64] [72] Filming for the 5th season began at the end of April 2007, 3 months earlier than usual. Production began early to avoid a potential writers strike.[73] [74] 3 episodes ultimately went unproduced because of the strike, leaving the season with nineteen episodes.[sixteen] [75]

Due to low ratings, NBC canceled the series on Feb 20, 2008, 5 days after the airing of the season 5 finale.[16] [76] [77] Thompson said, "I sold my soul to get a Season five, then I didn't have a soul left to sell. Nosotros fought an uphill boxing from day ane. Nosotros were the little big show that could."[75] Thompson said that the series did not receive adequate promotion,[12] and Caan subsequently said that some poor episode plots helped contribute to the show'southward downfall.[78]

The series concluded with several cliffhangers, including the fate of Delinda Deline's unborn baby.[79] In reaction to the cancellation, upset fans sent baby booties and dolls to NBC, demanding a proper ending.[16] [80] Discussions had been held about making a two-hour film to serve every bit a finale.[75] In the event that a proper resolution should not exist possible, Thompson had an alternate programme for Danny McCoy and Delinda Deline to cameo in an episode of Knight Passenger, carrying their newborn.[81] Due to Knight Rider 'due south counterfoil, yet, Danny and Delinda'southward cameo appearance never came to fruition.[82]

Music [edit]

A soundtrack for the series was released in September 2005.[83] [84]

Various theme songs take been used for the opening credits, depending on where, how, or when the show has aired. In French republic, Italy, Espana, Portugal, the Netherlands, the Britain, and other countries, the theme song is "Permit Information technology Ride" by Charlie Clouser and Jon Ingoldsby, while in other countries, such as the US and Canada, the theme vocal is "A Little Less Conversation" by Elvis Presley, off of the album Memories: The '68 Comeback Special.

For American DVD releases, episodes available for viewing on NBC's website and reruns shown on the cable network E!, Clouser's vocal is used (with the exception of the airplane pilot episode), almost likely because the original clearances for utilise of the Presley song did not extend to syndication and home video sales.

Release [edit]

Circulate [edit]

Las Vegas aired on NBC and premiered on September 22, 2003. It originally aired on Monday nights, but was moved to Friday nights starting on March 3, 2006. NBC had caused the rights to air NBC Sunday Dark Football game, through a contract with the National Football League (NFL). The NFL sought to distance itself from the city of Las Vegas, and a clause in the contract prohibited any mention of the city during Sunday Nighttime Football. This would include side by side-nighttime promotion of Las Vegas, prompting the change to Fridays.[16] [85]

The third season concluded with several cliffhangers, and the season 4 premiere was delayed twice, eventually premiering on Oct 27, 2006.[18] [86] This was done in gild to give 1 vs. 100, a popular new game show, another Fri dark in the timeslot, while providing more time to promote the season premiere of Las Vegas.[86]

The series aired its 100th episode on January 11, 2008.[34]

The American channel TNT purchased the rights to air reruns, get-go in 2007.[87] [88] E! subsequently started airing reruns, in 2020.[89]

Home media [edit]

All five seasons were released on DVD. The DVDs include extra scenes that were as well sexual for network television.[1] [22] These scenes were shot specifically for the DVDs, as Thompson said that extra features helped DVD sales.[22] Every bit of early 2008, the series had sold 500,000 DVD copies in North America, with 4 seasons available at the time.[1]

Proper name Episode # Region 1 Region two Region iv
Season One 23 January 4, 2005 March 14, 2005
November 28, 2005
Flavor Two 24 September xiii, 2005 Dec v, 2005
Nov 28, 2005
Flavor 3 23 September 12, 2006 November 30, 2006 November 15, 2006
Season Four 17 September xi, 2007 Oct 29, 2007 April 1, 2009
Season Five 19 July 22, 2008 October 13, 2008 Dec ii, 2009

Reception [edit]

Critical response [edit]

Alessandra Stanley of The New York Times reviewed the airplane pilot episode. She was critical of Caan'south interim, but wrote that the bear witness "manages to be slick, fast-paced and engaging", concluding that information technology "leaves enough mysteries open up to keep viewers coming dorsum for some other look".[xc] Robert Lloyd of the Los Angeles Times described Caan as the evidence'due south simply "sign of existent life", finding the other actors to be attractive only otherwise defective: "They are not so much characters -- not nevertheless, anyway -- equally extensions of their clothes, or cleavage. You don't relate to them so much as simply stare." Lloyd considered the production values to be "extremely loftier" and wrote, "This may be trash, but it comes in an attractive tin can."[91]

Phil Gallo of Diversity chosen the series a guilty pleasure and described the tone every bit "calorie-free and unforced", thank you to the actors and "some sharp editing".[92] Reviewing the first season, DVD Talk described Las Vegas every bit a "fast-paced, slick, and attractive idiot box series that rarely takes itself too seriously and never fails to entertain."[93]

In a review for the 2d flavour, Charlie McCollum of San Jose Mercury News/Contra Costa Times called Las Vegas a guilty pleasure and wrote, "Flashy, often trashy and slickly produced, the drama may be fluff, but it's skilful, sexy fluff with James Caan on mitt to provide a bit of gravitas."[94]

Television ratings [edit]

Originally, Las Vegas was not expected to succeed.[34] Yet, it proved to be a ratings success in its offset season,[11] [47] [48] despite contest from Mon Night Football, Everybody Loves Raymond, Joe Millionaire, Skin, and My Big Fat Obnoxious Fiance.[13] [95] Ratings dropped subsequently the series moved to Friday nights in 2006, with episodes averaging less than ix million viewers.[32] Caan said that the motion to Fridays was "like a capital punishment."[78]

As of early on 2008, the series aired in multiple counties. It was popular amidst viewers in Australia, France, and Spain, but received express viewership in Deutschland.[ane]

Below is a table of Las Vegas seasonal rankings in the U.South. television marketplace, based on average full viewers per episode. Each U.Due south. network television season starts in September and ends in late May, which coincides with the completion of May sweeps.

Season Episodes Timeslot (ET) Originally aired Nielsen Ratings
Flavour premiere Flavour finale TV season Rank Viewers 18-49 rank
i 23 Mon 9:00 PM September 22, 2003 May 17, 2004 2003–04 #27[96] eleven.83[96] #18[97]
2 24 September 13, 2004 May 23, 2005 2004–05 #33[98] 11.43[98] #30[97]
three 23
Monday 9:00 PM (Sept. 2005 – Feb. 2006)
Friday nine:00 PM (Mar. 2006 – May 2006)
September 19, 2005 May 12, 2006 2005–06 #46[99] 10.51[99] #43[100]
four 17 Friday 9:00 PM October 27, 2006 March 9, 2007 2006–07 #70[101] 9.02[101] #65[102]
five 19 Friday 10:00 PM September 28, 2007 February 15, 2008 2007–08 #66[103] 8.46[103] #83[104]

Other media [edit]

Las Vegas had several crossover episodes with the NBC series Crossing Jordan, starting in the second flavor.[105] [18] A total of viii crossover episodes were produced between the two shows.

The Montecito has appeared in several other shows — Heroes, Knight Passenger,[106] Medium,[107] Monk,[108] and Passions — when characters from those shows visited Las Vegas. Of these, only the daytime soap Passions included Las Vegas characters in cameo roles:[109] Nikki Cox appeared as Mary Connell.

The Las Vegas episode "The Story of Owe" mentions a Dunder-Mifflin convention, obliquely linking to The Function.[110]

In the episodes "Male parent of the Helpmate Redux" and "Died in Evidently Sight", when Ed Deline travels to Morocco to find and relocate a quondam CIA asset, the imitation passport he uses is in the name of Alan Bourdillion Traherne. This is the name of the character he played in the 1966 moving picture El Dorado.[111]

The Las Vegas tie-in novel High Stakes Game, by Jeff Mariotte, tells the tale of what could take occurred between the season-two finale and the flavor-iii premiere when the casino was destroyed and rebuilt and the characters briefly went their separate ways. A second novel called Sleight of Hand, besides by Mariotte, was launched in 2007.

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External links [edit]

  • Las Vegas at IMDb

jacksonhalke1964.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Las_Vegas_%28TV_series%29

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