Frank Shunock Casino

  • Elsewhere, column friend Mark Shunock continues to excel in his role as on-ice emcee. Look for Shunock, whom we met as Lonny in “Rock of Ages” and who went on to develop The Space.
  • He and Frank Sinatra were good friends, and in an interview, Vic admitted that he tried to mimic Sinatra. As he became better known, and sorta joined a list of Italian singers who dominated the air-waves, Sinatra praised Damone as one of the purest singers in the business; “He has the best pipes in the business,” Frank is quoted as saying.
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The Joint

The Joint serves as a sophisticated, intimate and unparalleled entertainment destination. It features seven luxury suites, a VIP level, a state-of-the-art sound system, a superior video system and a production package that surpasses all expectations to make The Joint the most dynamic, sophisticated and authentic venue in Las Vegas.

Tickets can be purchased at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino box office or online at www.hardrockhotel.com. For VIP ticket packages including premium seating options, please contact jointvip@hrhvegas.com. For groups of 12 or more, please call 702.693.4017 or contact darnson@hrhvegas.com.

Mike Epps

Further to that, Frank Shunock became involved, expressing an interest in relocating the local casino into the project. As we all know, casinos involve many millions of dollars in revenue. Even the local YMCA was considering a move down into the site, which again, would have involved millions of dollars. FRANK - The Man. Palazzo: January 27, 2015 - June 30, 2015.

Friday, Oct. 19 at 9 p.m.

Tickets start at $39

Nancy Ajram & Hussam Al Rassam

Saturday, Nov. 3 at 8:30 p.m.

Frank Shunock Casino No Deposit

Tickets start at $54.50

Generation Axe Featuring Steve Vai, Zakk Wylde, Yngwie Malmsteen, Nuno Bettencourt and Tosin Abasi

Friday, Nov. 9 at 8 p.m.

Tickets start at $49.50

SiriusXM presents Goo Goo Dolls – Dizzy Up The Girl 20th Anniversary Tour

Saturday, Nov. 10 at 8 p.m.

Tickets start at $35

Nine Inch Nails with special guests The Jesus and Mary Chain and HMLTD

Friday, Nov. 30 and Saturday, Dec. 1 at 7 p.m.

Tickets start at $79.50

Ghost

Saturday, Nov. 17 at 9 p.m.

Tickets start at $29.50

Gary Allan

Friday, Dec. 14 and Saturday, Dec. 15 at 9:30 p.m.

Tickets start at $39.50

Mondays Dark with Mark Shunock – 5th Anniversary Show

Monday, Dec. 17 at 8 p.m.

Tickets start at $20

Tenacious D – The Best New Year’s Parties in The World with Wynchester

Sunday, Dec. 30 at 8 p.m.

Monday, Dec. 31 at 10 p.m.

Tickets start at $49.50

Bring Me The Horizon

Saturday, Feb. 16, 2018 at 7 p.m.

Tickets start at $35

The 1975 with special guests Pale Waves and No Rome *Just Added*

Tuesday, April 16, 2019 at 7 p.m.

Tickets start at $29.50 and go on sale Friday, Oct. 26 at 10 a.m.

Vinyl
Vinyl delivers the iconic rock ‘n’ roll feel that Hard Rock Hotel & Casino is known for. The multi-functional room hosts genres including rock, jazz, blues, pop, country and even comedy. It not only brings fans up-close-and-personal with top acts, but it also allows bands to come within arm’s reach of its loyal supporters.


Tickets can be purchased at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino box office or online at
www.hardrockhotel.com. Locals can purchase tickets with no service fees by presenting a valid form of Nevada identification at the box office.

We the Beat presents SG Lewis

Tuesday, Oct. 16 at 9 p.m.

Tickets start at $20

Must be 18 years of age or older with a valid form of identification to attend

Chase Atlantic with Cherry Pools, R I L E Y
Friday, Oct. 19 at 8 p.m.

Tickets start at $12

After the Burial / The Acacia Strain w/ special guests TBA

Thursday, Oct. 25 at 6 p.m.

Tickets start at $20

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Colin Kane: The Wolf

Friday, Oct. 26 at 8:30 p.m.

Tickets start at $35

Must be 18 years of age or older with a valid form of identification to attend

Pink Talking Fish

Thursday, Nov. 1 and Friday, Nov. 2 at 11:30 p.m.

Tickets start at $20

Khruangbin
Wednesday, Nov. 7 at 9 p.m.

Tickets start at $20

Noodles with Jess Connelly

Thursday, Nov. 8 at 8 p.m.

Tickets start at $15

The Interrupters with Bedouin Soundclash, The Bar Stool Preachers

Friday, Nov. 9 at 8 p.m.

Tickets start at $20

Joywave

Thursday, Nov. 15 at 8 p.m.

Tickets start at $17

P.O.D. with Nonpoint, Islander

Friday, Nov. 16 at 8 p.m.

Tickets start at $29.50 and go on sale Friday, Oct. 5 at 10 a.m.

Dermot Kennedy

Sunday, Nov. 18 at 9 p.m.

Tickets start at $20

Winger with special guest Foundry

Friday, Nov. 23 at 9 p.m.

Tickets start at $34

Vegas Rock Revolution presents John Garcia & the Band of Gold with Nick Oliveri, Luna Sol, Death in Pretty Wrapping

Thursday, Nov. 29 at 8 p.m.

Tickets start at $49

The Devil Wears Prada with Fit For A King and ’68

Friday, Nov. 30 at 8 p.m.

Tickets start at $22.35

Dom Kennedy: Win or Lose Tour

Wednesday, Dec. 5 at 8 p.m.

Tickets start at $26

Koo Koo Kanga Roo with Kitty Kat Fan Club

Monday, Dec. 10 at 6 p.m.

Tickets start at $15

Queen Naija *SOLD OUT*

Thursday, Dec. 13 at 8 p.m.

Tickets start at $20

Poolside Concerts

Hard Rock Hotel’s dynamic music vibe and infamous tropical oasis collide to host poolside concerts throughout the summer. The venue offers an unforgettable experience where guests can enjoy the music and party scene in front of The JBL Sound Stage or in a VIP, poolside cabana.

Smash Bar

Frank Shunock Casino Entertainment

Located in the center of HRH Tower, Smash Bar is illuminated by cast iron chandeliers and provides an upscale rock ‘n’ roll ambiance.

Acoustic performance by Arrow

Every Thursday and Saturday at 8 p.m.

No cover

Must be 21 years of age or older with a valid form of identification to attend

Raiding The Rock Vault

Monticello

Raiding The Rock Vault brings the history of rock ‘n’ roll to life inside Vinyl, featuring classic anthems by the biggest acts in music including The Rolling Stones, The Who, The Doors, Jimi Hendrix, Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple, Boston, U2, Foreigner, Bon Jovi, Whitesnake and many more. The show tells the story of classic rock from the 1960s to the 1980s and is performed by members of some of the greatest rock bands in history.

Ticket prices start at $39 (plus applicable taxes and service fees) and are available at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino box office or online at www.hardrockhotel.com. A $100 Rock Star Package add-on is available with any ticket purchase and includes a show program, a meet & greet and photo opportunity with the rock stars prior to the show.

Raiding The Rock Vault

Frank Shunock Casino

Every Saturday – Wednesday at 8:30 p.m.

Dark dates: Oct. 16, 24, 27-29; Nov. 7, 13-14, 18; Dec. 1-5, 8-19, 24, 31

Tickets start at $39 (plus applicable taxes and service fees)

MAGIC MIKE LIVE LAS VEGAS

MAGIC MIKE LIVE LAS VEGASis an allnew, first-class entertainment experience based on the hit films Magic Mike and Magic Mike XXL. The show will recreate the mythic Club Domina as a cabaret nightclub space inside the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino that is being fully redesigned to capture the magnetism of the Magic Mike franchise. The state-of-the-art venue is designed with the capabilities to house a show that features 13 of the hottest and most talented men in the country performing in front of, behind, above and all around the audience. Conceived by Channing Tatum and co-directed by Tatum and film franchise choreographer Alison Faulk, the show features sexy and daring themed dance and strip routines punctuated by one of a kind acts from a wildly diverse cast of performers. MAGIC MIKE LIVE LAS VEGAS is a sizzling 360 degree dance and acrobatic strip tease spectacular guaranteed to bring on the heat.

MAGIC MIKE LIVE LAS VEGAS is being created for guests 18 and older. Ticket prices start at $49 and are available by phone at 800.745.3000, or online at Ticketmaster.comor MagicMikeLiveLasVegas.com. A $40 VIP meet & greet add-on is available with any ticket purchase and includes a meet & greet with the cast and a souvenir photo. For group orders of 10 or more, call 1-866-633-0195 or email Sales@BASEentertainment.com.

MAGIC MIKE LIVE LAS VEGAS

Every Wednesday – Sunday at 8 and 10:30 p.m.

Tickets start at $49

Must be 18 years of age or older with a valid form of identification to attend

About Hard Rock Hotel & Casino

Hard Rock Hotel & Casino is Las Vegas’ off-strip playground, just minutes and less than three miles from McCarran International Airport. Hard Rock Hotel & Casino offers an energetic entertainment and gaming experience with the services and amenities associated with a boutique luxury resort hotel. The property is known for its innovative nightlife and music scene where acts such as The Rolling Stones, Bon Jovi, Paul McCartney, Incubus, Foo Fighters, Carlos Santana, Mötley Crüe, Guns N’ Roses and KISS have all performed. Features of the property include the renovated 11-story Casino Tower with 640 rooms and suites, 17-story Paradise Tower with 490 rooms and suites; the 15-story HRH All-Suite Tower with 359 suites, eight spa villas and seven penthouse suites, which has received the AAA Four Diamond Award; 60,000 square feet of casino space featuring high limit gaming and Asian gaming amenities; 110,000 square feet of flexible meeting and convention space, which was named a Smart Meetings 2016 Platinum Choice Award winner; more than $4 million in rare music memorabilia; Reliquary Spa; Kelly Cardenas Salon – a Paul Mitchell® Focus Salon; 4.8 acres of tropical pool paradise, which was voted as the No. 1 “Best Hotel Pool” in the 2015 USA Today 10Best Readers’ Choice contest; live music/entertainment venues The Joint, Vinyl and Club Domina, the home of Magic Mike Live Las Vegas; restaurants Culinary Dropout, Nobu, Pink Taco, Mr. Lucky’s Café, Goose Island Pub, Fú Asian Kitchen, Oyster Bar, Pizza Forte, Dunkin’ Donuts and MB Steak; a fitness center; trendsetting retailers John Varvatos, Affliction, Hart & Huntington Tattoo Co., Chill by Hudson, Hootenanny, Bezel, Day + Night and Shine. For room availability and additional information call 800.HRD.ROCK (800.473.7625) or visit hardrockhotel.com. Follow Hard Rock Hotel & Casino on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram for the latest news and updates.

Hard Rock International

With venues in 74 countries, including 185 cafes, 26 hotels and 12 casinos, Hard Rock International (HRI) is one of the most globally recognized companies. Beginning with an Eric Clapton guitar, Hard Rock owns the world's most valuable collection of music memorabilia, which is displayed at its locations around the globe. Hard Rock is also known for its collectible fashion and music-related merchandise, Hard Rock Live performance venues and an award-winning website. HRI owns the global trademark for all Hard Rock brands. The company owns, operates and franchises Cafes in iconic cities including London, New York, San Francisco, Sydney and Dubai. HRI also owns, licenses and/or manages hotel/casino properties worldwide. Destinations include the company’s two most successful Hotel and Casino properties in Tampa and Hollywood, FL., both owned and operated by HRI parent company The Seminole Tribe of Florida, as well as other exciting locations including Atlantic City, Bali, Cancun, Daytona Beach, Ibiza, Orlando, Shenzhen and San Diego. Upcoming new Hard Rock Cafe locations include, Maldives, Manila, Malaga, Georgetown, Fortaleza, Rosario and Chengdu. New Hard Rock Hotel, Casino or Hotel & Casinoprojects include Berlin, Budapest, Desaru Coast, Dublin, London, Los Cabos, Maldives, New York City, Ottawa, Sacramento, Dalian and Haikou in China. In 2018, Hard Rock International was recognized as a Forbes Magazine Top Employer for Women. For more information on Hard Rock International visit www.hardrock.com.

The Sault is still buzzing about the Algoma Public Health fiasco, the demise of Dr. Kim Barker, and the dazzling display of deception carried out by convicted fraudster Shaun Rootenberg, who spent six months as Chief Financial Officer at APH, posing as Shaun Rothberg

Local media luminaries have piped in on the scandal, local residents are speaking out on public forums, audits and investigations are underway, with results to follow. But one thing at least, is abundantly clear: people in this town are getting good and fed up with people blowing in from the ‘Big Smoke’, and blowing smoke up our butts. Does the name Philip Garforth ring any bells?

And the damage Rootenberg caused doesn’t end with Algoma Public Health. In recent days, at least two major projects, with huge economic impacts for our community, got tangled up in Rootenberg, and are now dead in the water. The Gateway Development, and a medical marijuana grow-op were on our horizon, but the major players have walked away.

Such a large swath of damage, over a single act of deception. What was Rootenberg thinking? What was he trying to accomplish? What would it have meant for the Sault, if he had been allowed to continue?

Frank Shunock Casino Monticello

To explore the possibilities, I need to side-step a bit, and employ a little creative writing. I need to introduce you to a concept called the ‘long con’. If you are an accomplished con-artist, or someone who has watched all six seasons of the show ‘Lost’, you can skip on down past this next bit.

The Long Con

A man with a troubled past takes a cleaning job at a strip mall. He used to be a highly paid executive, but since his release from prison, menial labor was all he could get, and only with the help of his parole officer. He spends his days sweeping up cigarette butts, changing light bulbs, trimming hedges, quietly smoldering inside as he watches the business world, the place where he once excelled, carry on without him. He decides that this new reality will not be his fate.

So, he starts paying closer attention to activity at the mall, and eventually gravitates towards a small jewelry shop. It is a mom-and-pop operation started in the 1970’s, still being run by the original owner, now an elderly widower, with a few staff to covering evenings and weekends.

After a few weeks of close scrutiny, the con realizes a few key points. The shop keeps a large inventory of merchandise on hand, and does some brisk business. But what intrigues him most, is the fact that the old man never seems to leave the shop with a deposit bag. The old guy is old-school, and probably keeps everything in a safe. As for the store itself, it has a modern alarm system, with closed-circuit cameras, and motion-detectors. Getting to that safe, to see if his hunch was right, seems out of reach.

But there is one flaw in the old man’s armor. The doors to the shop have aging lock systems on them that could be easily tampered with. Was this one thing enough for him to make a move? After a couple of days of mulling it over, our con has a plan

On a night when one of the part-time staff was scheduled to close up the jewelry store, our villain makes his move. While wandering around doing his normal duties, he rigs the lock on the back door of the shop. Then he goes home, and waits for nightfall.

The news stories the next day show video footage of a masked man entering the shop, smashing glass display cases, snatching gold chains and rings, stuffing them into a bag, and fleeing the store in under a minute. Local police report that the thief gained entrance through an unlocked rear entrance and was gone before officers could respond. The total value of the robbery is estimated at $10,000. No suspects have been identified, and the investigation is ongoing.

If the story ended here, this would be just a ‘straight con’, a simple heist. What happens next, turns it into what is called a ‘long con’.

A couple of days after the robbery, our con returns to work as usual. He does his normal routine for a few hours, then marches right into the jewelry shop, and places a bag on the counter in front of the elderly shop owner.

“I think this might belong to you,” he says, opening the bag to reveal the golden contents inside.

“My goodness, where did you find this?” the old guys asks.

“It was in one of the trash cans out back. I was emptying it into the dumpster, and something heavy thumped against the side, so I took a closer look, and found this.”

“Why would someone take all this, just to leave it in the trash?”

“Well, maybe he got spooked and dumped it, meaning to come back for it. And with the police hanging around, he probably didn’t get a chance, or…”

“Or what?” the old man asked.

“Or maybe he was worried that someone might recognize him, without a mask on.”

“It’s funny you should mention that. The police were asking me about the fellow I had working that night. Thought he might have had something to do with this. They figure he did it himself, or left the door unlocked for somebody. Either way, I had to let him go. It’s a real shame, he was a nice kid.”

“Sorry to hear that. Anyway, I should be getting back to work, so…”

“Hold up a minute. Please don’t take it personal, but I just have to ask.. why did you return these things to me? You could have sold it all, and kept the money for yourself.”

“Well, sir, the truth is, I’ve had some trouble in the past. Trying to make a clean start. Keeping your property just didn’t sit right with me.”

The old man nodded, and started to turn, then paused. “You got any business experience?”

“Sure, plenty, but bad business is what landed me in jail.”

“Well, as it turns out, I have an opening just come up. It doesn’t pay a whole lot more than minimum wage, but it would be a step up from where you are now.”

“I’m flattered, sir, but with all due respect, you barely know me. You really going to offer me a job here?”

“Well, what did you get in trouble for, exactly?”

“Writing bad cheques.”

“Then we’re in luck, because we don’t write checks, and we no longer take them, either.”

“You serious about all this?”

“As a heart-attack. Every man deserves a second chance at life, and you came in here and showed me everything I need to see. You brought me back this merchandise, and were honest with me about your history. So yeah, I’m good to go, if you are.”

So, our con starts working at the jewelry shop. He does a stellar job, generates great sales figures, and gradually gains the complete confidence of the shop owner.

A few months later, local news covers another story about this jewelry store. The old man returned to his store one morning, to find his safe completely cleaned out, and most of his inventory gone. All told, just under a million dollars in cash and merchandise went missing, along with the man with the troubled past. Police had no leads on his whereabouts, but suspect he is either living under an assumed identity, or gone to Mexico. Their investigation continues. The elderly man is now facing bankruptcy.

Welcome, ladies and gentlemen, to the ‘long con’.

Thus, the moral of the story. Can you ever really trust a con man again? How do you know they have genuinely changed their ways? Are you going to put someone like that in a position of trust, just so they can verify what you would like to believe about them? How much are you willing to risk, to find out?

This takes us back full circle to Shaun Rootenberg, and the Algoma Public Health Unit. You see, they never got the chance to ask themselves these questions, because Shaun Rootenberg, with the assistance of his consultant friend Ron Hulse, changed his name to Shaun Rothberg, to avoid that very scrutiny.

But what was Shaun Rootenberg attempting to accomplish, exactly? Was it a straight con, or a long con? In an interview with David Helwig of Sootoday.com, Ron Hulse spoke passionately about Mr. Rootenberg’s desire to live a ‘positive, reformed life’. How you accomplish such a thing while hiding your identity and living under false pretenses is a mystery to me, but let’s take that on face value, and have a closer look.

If Mr. Rootenberg was just trying to prove himself as trustworthy, re-establish his credibility as a good executive and provide for his family, as Mr. Hulse alleges, then what he did at APH should be just a straight con, right? Get in, do a good job for six months, get your name legally changed, and move on with your life. The world would have opened right up for Mr. Rootenberg, and Ron Hulse could be lining him up for another position with his consulting firm, Mindspan Recruiting, Inc. No one would be the wiser, and it would have prevented Mr. Rootenberg from the sad fate of ‘flipping burgers his whole life.”

This story doesn’t have a happy ending. Mr. Rootenberg, for reasons only he could explain, if he was willing to tell his side of the story, took things further – a lot further. Instead of cashing-in while he was well up on the ‘game’, he kept his chips in the middle, and went for a potentially much larger jackpot. (Mr. Rootenberg was a pro poker player prior to his run-in with the law, so this analogy is apt.)

Instead of waiting until his name was legally changed, so he could put some distance between his deception at APH and his future, Mr. Rootenberg started working on much more lucrative projects that could have put him somewhere in the middle of many millions of dollars. This is where the potential for the ‘long con’ becomes a distinct reality, and quite frankly, more probable.

Mr. Rootenberg, along with Dr. Kim Barker, became involved with Amit Sofer, the developer who is currently turning the old hospital complex into condos. They were working on a project to build a licensed marijuana grow-op here in the Sault that could have resulted in some 100 jobs and untold revenue for the city. We can only speculate on what kind of money could be made from such an operation but it is safe to assume we are talking about millions of dollars in revenue

It is unclear what role Mr. Rootenberg intended to play in this project but what is clear is that his involvement contributed to the whole thing project going down the drain. Mr Sofer is a respected businessman, and although he cited government red-tape as his major reason for withdrawing from the project, it is reasonable to suggest that the scandal swirling around Mr. Rootenberg and Dr. Barker had a part to play in his decision.

But the damage isn’t limited to the marijuana grow-op alone. Mr. Rootenberg also got himself involved in the Gateway Development project while still waiting for his name to legally change. This time he tangled another respected businessman, Paolo Ravazzi, into the mix. Mr Ravazzi, from the North America Development Group, was interested in developing the land down by the casino that has sat vacant for decades now.

At some point, Mr. Rootenberg, Mr. Ravazzi, and another fellow, Henry Cole, were present at City Hall together as proponents of the Canal Village Development Project. Once again, it is unclear what role Mr. Rootenberg would have played in such a project, but it is safe to say that it would have involved millions of dollars. Further to that, Frank Shunock became involved, expressing an interest in relocating the local casino into the project. As we all know, casinos involve many millions of dollars in revenue. Even the local YMCA was considering a move down into the site, which again, would have involved millions of dollars.

But let’s backtrack for a minute, and talk about Henry Cole. Mr. Cole, according to the Financial Post website, was a financial adviser for RBC Dominion Securities, and was convicted of fraud, and sentenced to two and a half years of prison in 2012! Much like Mr Rootenberg, Henry Cole committed fraud to the tune of a couple of million dollars, but unlike Mr. Rootenberg, he had a lifetime ban placed on him from working in the finance industry.

So, how the heck did Mr. Cole get involved with this project? What role could he have possibly played? Even with good behavior, he would have just barely been released from prison, in time to show up for the meeting at City Hall. How did he get connected to Mr. Ravazzi, and what was his connection to Mr. Rootenberg?

Henry Cole completely disappeared from the radar, when the bombshell dropped down at City Hall. Someone finally discovered that Shaun Rothberg was actually Shaun Rootenberg, and this news got out into the media. So, who is the unsung hero down at City Hall? Who finally shined a light on Mr. Rootenberg? Was it Nuala Kenny, the City Solicitor? Or was it Joe Fratesi, the City’s CAO? To date, it is not clear who triggered the alarm, but the truth was finally out, and the fallout began.

In the end, Mr. Ravazzi is no longer interested in the Canal Village Development. Mr. Sofer is no longer interested in building a marijuana grow-op in the Sault. Dr. Barker’s career has been severely damaged, and her job at APH gone. Mr. Rootenberg is back to the drawing board, with his real name directly connected to his alias of Shaun Rothberg. All this damage done, because one man decided to hide his identity and didn’t quit, while he was ahead.

And to think, there are still some people in this town having a hard time understanding what all the hoopla is about. After all, Mr. Rothberg appears to have done a stellar job at APH, and chances are, no money will be found missing, when all this smoke clears. Well, if the ‘long con’ was what Mr. Rootenberg was really working on, I can almost guarantee that not a single dime will be found out of place, when the audits are complete.

It should be glaringly obvious, at the end of the day, that Mr. Rootenberg wasn’t simply interested in proving himself a capable employee, and securing a working future for himself and his family. He was actively moving toward bigger and better things, potentially far more lucrative than the $4,000 a week he was earning while pretending to be someone else. And he dragged a lot of other people along with him, a whole community for that matter, and took them all for the ride, that ended in a sudden crash down at City Hall. A lot of people have paid a heavy price, for this ‘simple’ deception.

How can you even begin to put a dollar value on this much damage? What can we do, the average citizens of this community, to prevent something like this from ever happening again? Do we have any real power, or do we need to continue to rely upon a system that is clearly flawed, if not completely broken, to protect our interests?