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LED zeppelin

Blimp equipped with light emitting diode display to advertise job openings for M Resort

Operators of new Las Vegas casinos have used such methods as regional and national print advertising campaigns and Internet banner messages to let prospective job applicants know they are hiring.

When the $1 billion M Resort begins its push to bring on more than 2,000 workers, prospective employees will just have to look skyward.


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  • M Resort has contracted with The Lightship Group of Orlando, Fla., to create a specially designed blimp that will soar high above the Las Vegas Valley, touting the 390-room hotel-casino. M Resort is expected to open next spring at the southeast corner of St. Rose Parkway and Las Vegas Boulevard.

    The first messages to be flashed along the blimp's 70-by-30-foot aerial television screen will advertise job openings at the resort.

    M Resort CEO Anthony Marnell III said the property has quietly started accepting job applications on the resort's Web site. The employment center will officially open in the middle of the month.

    The company signed a deal for the blimp about nine months ago because he thought it would grab people's attention.

    "It's a completely different tone," Marnell said. "It's much better than a stagnant billboard."

    The twin-engine A-170LS video airship is essentially an electronic sign on a blimp. The television screen uses LEDs -- light emitting diodes -- to broadcast a variety of full-color messages, including live television, streaming video, Web sites and static images.

    The blimp is expected to be in the air this month and will have the logo for M Resort on one side and the 2,100-square-foot advertising screen on the opposite side.

    M Resort will be seeking workers at a time when Las Vegas's unemployment rate is 6.8 percent, according to figures released for July by the state Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilitation. Layoffs and job attrition at some hotel-casinos have cut jobs in the gaming industry by 3 percent year to year for June.

    Meanwhile, other new casinos are also attempting to gather up employees.

    Eastside Cannery, which opened last week, hired 1,100 workers for the $250 million hotel-casino. Station Casinos is in the process of filling 1,200 positions for the $675 million Aliante Station, which opens Nov. 11. Wynn Resorts is hiring 5,300 workers for the $2.2 billion Encore at Wynn Las Vegas, which is expected to open in December.

    M Resort will also be competing for employees with the $2.9 billion Fontainebleau, which is scheduled to begin hiring early next year for the nearly 6,000 workers needed for when the property opens in late 2009. Also, the $9.2 billion CityCenter is also scheduled to be unveiled in late 2009 and MGM Mirage plans to hire 12,000 workers for the massive project.

    Marnell doesn't believe the M Resort will have trouble finding workers. His family built and operated the Rio before selling the resort to Harrah's Entertainment in 1999. He expects to be contacted by current and former Rio workers.

    "There is definitely a market out there for people who want to work in a family environment," Marnell said. "We've hired a lot of our senior staff but we will have a lot of positions available."

    Marnell said the M Resort airship will help market the resort throughout Las Vegas for at least a year.

    "The plan is to fly it all over Las Vegas," Marnell said. "It will be cool to look up at night and see what is happening at the M. It's something different."

    M Resort recently topped off its hotel tower. The casino is expected to be 92,000 square feet, and the property, situated on 90 acres, is expected to include several restaurants, a spa, 60,000 square feet of meeting space and 1 million square feet of retail to be built by Taubman Centers Inc.

    Contact reporter Howard Stutz at hstutz@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3871.

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    Sporty wrote on October 13, 2008 02:59 PM: CD. What do you mean when you say "Ray Shapiro is involved, watch your pocketbook?" I happen to know that Ray Shapiro is an intelligent and trustworthy businessman, and I would trust my money with him any day.


    JC wrote on October 09, 2008 12:54 AM: I moved here in 1966 I have seen this town grow and grow I have always heard good things about the people who are building this place all the way back in the 70s.But no one does business "Old Vegas style" anymore. Just ask the seniors that they got the land from for the strip mall OH I mean the mega Resort.doing business this way is a sad failure.


    CD wrote on September 04, 2008 10:44 AM: Ray Shapiro is involved watch your pocketbook.


    Royal Orleans wrote on September 01, 2008 09:19 AM: Cleverest headline of the year.


    Dr J wrote on September 01, 2008 08:57 AM: It will be a big success. People love to throw money away on the computerized slots (which you can never beat, only occasionally win). Give them a few drinks and they will give their money up to help pay for the new resort. If I had the means, I'd open a casino too! It's LEGAL robbery!


    ex gambler wrote on September 01, 2008 08:30 AM: I beg to differ Mauna Loa. Just ask the Eastside Cannery how their opening went.


    Mauna loa wrote on September 01, 2008 04:22 AM: Good luck on finding the people to come by and "DUMP" their hard earn money into your No-arm bandits. Most of these casinos were drawn up when gas was $1.86 a gallon. Most of the suckers just don't have the money to throw away anymore. The avg JOE is filling his tank for 60 dollars a pop, they just don't have it anymore. The people that do have it, would never throw it away in a stupid machine.