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Our American Stories

The Neon Museum in Las Vegas: Inside the Signs That Built the Strip

Our American Stories

iHeartPodcasts

Society & Culture, Documentary

4.6817 Ratings

🗓️ 20 April 2026

⏱️ 11 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On this episode of Our American Stories, Las Vegas built its identity on spectacle, and few places capture that history quite like the Neon Museum. Tucked just off the Strip, it brings together the glowing signs that once defined the city and preserves them as part of its living story.

Aaron Berger shares how the museum grew from a simple idea into one of the most distinctive Las Vegas landmarks.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

This is an I-Heart podcast.

0:02.6

Guaranteed Human.

0:14.2

And we continue with our American stories.

0:17.5

And we've told stories from many of the museums across this great country,

0:21.8

from the Salt and Pepper Shaker Museum to the Museum of Bad Art and even the American Banjo

0:27.3

Museum. Today, we have Aaron Berger, executive director of the Neon Museum in Las Vegas,

0:33.5

the capital of Neon, to share the history of Las Vegas and the iconic signage associated with it.

0:44.3

So the story is actually pretty interesting.

0:48.3

It was officially founded in 1996.

0:50.3

I think one of the great things about Las Vegas is this constant evolution.

0:54.8

Every time you visit, if you come by once a year, you're going to see a different landscape

0:59.9

and a different cityscape.

1:01.3

But there were volunteers who were concerned about the signage that, especially since they

1:05.3

couldn't preserve some of the buildings that were being raised, they wanted to preserve

1:08.8

the signage that was out front. A unique aspect of signage is that in many cases, the building itself doesn't own the sign,

1:18.6

even if it's attached to the building. It's actually leased by the sign maker.

1:23.6

And so the sign maker actually owns that piece of property, and so you can raise a building, but the sign often goes back to the original sign maker.

1:32.9

And they, you know, have what's called a Boneyard, which is a place for them to pull parts,

1:38.5

pull neon tubing, pull lights, pull mechanics.

1:41.9

And so these concerned citizens in 96 started meeting with various sign makers and saying,

1:48.0

you know, we'd like to make sure that these parts of history don't necessarily get used to create new signage,

1:54.0

but we actually save the original pieces themselves.

...

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