
Disco Never Dies
It was called Disco Demolition Night. On July 12, 1979, a major league baseball promotion was spearheaded by Chicago radio announcer and anti-disco campaigner Steve Dahl. He encouraged spectators to turn up to Comiskey Park to add their disco vinyl records to a pile which Steve would blow up between games. The whole event exploded. After the stunt, thousands of people stormed the field and a riot ensued, fuelling a backlash against the disco era.
But disco never died, and now it’s fighting back with a vengeance. Spiegelworld’s Impresario Extraordinaire Ross Mollison took the first swing of a sledgehammer into the walls of the former Imperial Palace sports book, which has been dormant since 2014, to make way for the company’s eagerly anticipated DiscoShow.
Opening summer of 2024 at The LINQ Hotel + Experience, DiscoShow will feature a transformative live entertainment space, bars and a diner. DiscoShow’s team of creatives includes acclaimed director and choreographer Steven Hoggett (Harry Potter and The Cursed Child, Once – West End/Broadway).
The LINQ Hotel + Experience
3535 South Las Vegas Boulevard
Las Vegas, NV 89109

Disco Disco Disco
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Buzz
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This new Vegas show wants you out of your seat
News
Ross Mollison, who brought the “Absinthe” and “OPM” theater productions to Las Vegas, is tired of paying to sit at shows. He’s betting $40 million that other people are, too.
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Spiegelworld & Caesars Ink Epic Deal
News
Today, Spiegelworld announced its partnership with America’s largest gaming and entertainment company, Caesars Entertainment, to build three new theaters to house three all-new, permanent shows in three iconic entertainment hotspots: Las Vegas, Atlantic City and New Orleans.
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Disco Never Dies
News
It was called Disco Demolition Night. On July 12, 1979, a major league baseball promotion was spearheaded by Chicago radio announcer and anti-disco campaigner Steve Dahl.