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Critics at Large | The New Yorker

The Irresistible Myth of Las Vegas

Critics at Large | The New Yorker

The New Yorker

Society & Culture

4.4679 Ratings

🗓️ 22 August 2024

⏱️ 45 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Cities have always been romanticized, but few of them have embraced—or actively engineered—their reputations as thoroughly as Las Vegas. On the second in a series of Critics at Large interview episodes, Alexandra Schwartz talks with her fellow staff writer Nick Paumgarten about how the desert town first branded itself as an entertainment capital, and how that image has been reified in pop culture ever since. The two consider seminal Vegas texts, from Hunter S. Thompson’s 1971 novel, “Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas,” to the bro comedy “The Hangover,” and Paumgarten reflects on his recent pilgrimage to see Dead & Company, the latest iteration of the Grateful Dead, during the band’s residency at the Sphere. In theory, a Vegas residency should be a career high—but the expectations around them can also leave an artist trapped in amber. It’s a danger that applies to places as much as people. “How do you reinvent yourself when you’ve achieved this cultural-icon status?” Schwartz asks. “In some ways, I wonder if that’s also a question for the city itself.”

Read, watch, and listen with the critics:


Reckoning with the Dead at the Sphere,” by Nick Paumgarten (The New Yorker)
“Swingers” (1996)
Double or Quits,” by Dave Hickey (Frieze)
Learning from Las Vegas,” by Robert Venturi, Steven Izenour, and Denise Scott Brown
“Viva Las Vegas” (1964)
“Leaving Las Vegas” (1995)
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas,” by Hunter S. Thompson
“The Hangover” (2009)
Viva Las Vegas: Elvis Returns to the Stage,” by Ellen Willis (The New Yorker)
“Elvis” (2022)
“Hacks” (2021—)
“Sex and the City” (1998-2004)
“Friends” (1994-2004)
“Seinfeld” (1989-1998)


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Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to Critics at Large, a podcast from The New Yorker.

0:07.5

I'm Nomi Fry.

0:08.5

I'm Vincent Cunningham.

0:09.6

And I'm Alex Schwartz.

0:11.4

Each week on this show, we make sense of what's happening in the culture right now and how we got here.

0:16.3

Hello, critics.

0:17.2

Hello, critics.

0:24.2

So I'm up next on our summer interview series where each of us has picked a colleague

0:29.3

of ours at The New Yorker to join the show for the day as a guest critic.

0:33.8

I wanted to talk with Nick Pam Garten.

0:37.0

One reason I wanted to talk with Nick is that he's one of my

0:39.2

favorite people at The New Yorker to talk to. This goes way back to when I was a fact checker and fact

0:43.8

checking his pieces. I always learn something, have some idea I want to discuss. It's a good time.

0:49.8

But more recently, Nick wrote this piece that I really loved called Reckoning with the Dead at the Sphere.

0:56.3

He went to see the Grateful Dead, a longtime passion of his, in its current iteration, in Las Vegas.

1:04.0

I know you are going to miss me when I'm gone.

1:17.0

So a lot of the piece is about Nick's relationship to the Grateful Dead and this current band called Dead and Co.

1:22.6

But what really stuck out to me in the piece were the parts about Las Vegas itself.

1:27.3

For me, it looms as this

1:29.2

mythological entity, this made-up, invented, sui-generous, pastiche weird vision of culture,

1:39.3

of other cities. Yeah, it's so true. I've never been there, and yet I feel that I have a deep spiritual

1:44.9

connection to the place because it's just part of the American imagination. It is the American

...

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