Influx
of Orange, Here Comes Hooters
With the scheduled opening tonight
of the first Hooters Hotel -- a $130 million
transformation of the former Hotel San Remo
-- the inevitable comparison will be made with
other restaurant-dominated companies making
the transition into gaming.
Last
year, Houston-based Landry's Restaurants bought
the Golden Nugget and Planet Hollywood expects
to recast the Aladdin in its own image sometime
this summer.
However,
Ed Droste, one of the original founders of the
Hooters restaurant chain, doesn't think it's
a fair analogy. He said he believes Hooters,
which has 410 restaurants in 47 states and 16
countries, all staffed with the recognizable
Hooters Girls, is known more for its personality
than other restaurants.
"We're
really our own culture, and I think that's going
to set us apart from the other purely restaurant
connected casino concepts that are emerging,"
Droste said. "We have a very loyal following;
millions go through our stores in a monthly
basis. I just don't think they (other restaurant
operators) have the culture and the following
that we have because of our sports involvement
and the Hooters Girls."
Droste's
prediction will be put to the test this week
when the thoroughly remodeled hotel-casino on
East Tropicana Avenue begins its new life as
the privately held restaurant chain's first
gaming property.
Like
the company's ventures into NASCAR, a regionalized
professional golf tour and a stint as the owners
of an Arena Football League team, Droste said
the Hooters Hotel is another way to capitalize
on a recognizable brand.
In
the same manner that the original Hooters, which
opened in Clearwater, Fla., in 1983, thumbed
its nose at trendy restaurant chains, Droste
said the entry into gaming is meant to offer
an alternative to the Strip's largest hotel-casino
resorts.
"I
think history is going to repeat itself,"
Droste said. "We brought a little of the
beach-into-the-casual dining concept and now
we're doing the same thing amongst all the marble
with our wood floors. We have 25,000 rooms within
a couple of blocks of us, so we're right there
nestled amongst the big guys."
Other
than the outside walls -- which have been painted
to reflect the Hooters color scheme -- and a
couple of casino chandeliers, nothing remains
from the building's 17-year-run as the Hotel
San Remo.
The
30,000-square-foot casino now resembles a giant
Hooters restaurant, with a bar right at the
main lobby entrance and an all-encompassing
beach-themed, Florida-casual decor with tin
ceilings, orange highlights and cedar wood throughout
the property. The casino will open with 700
slot machines and 32 table games.
Even
the hotel's 696 hotel rooms have been remodeled
with a Hooters look and accents, including orange
lamps and high-top cocktail tables with bar
stools.
Out
of the 1,100 employees -- double the number
at the former Hotel San Remo -- the staffing
will include 250 orange shorts-and-white tank-top-clad
Hooters Girls. The Girls will work as servers
inside the property's signature restaurant,
as casino and poolside cocktail servers, bartenders
and even as dealers in a specially themed gaming
pit area.
"Ultimately,
we think this property will have a fun, festive
and casual atmosphere that will appeal to our
core audience," said Richard Langlois,
Hooters' senior vice president of marketing
who spent 10 years at Caesars Palace. "We
think this will be the place to be for NASCAR,
the rodeo, Super Bowl and any special events."
National
branding consultant and author Rob Frankel believes
Hooters and Las Vegas are a good match.
"It's
a great idea with great potential if they don't
screw it up," said Frankel, who is based
in Los Angeles. "I've seen some marriages
that were seemingly made in heaven fail. Hooters
is all about having a good time and great looking
women, and both fit nicely with gambling. There's
good brand compatibility there; it's not as
if Hooters is running a day care center."
Langlois
said the property is targeting Middle America;
most of the hotel rooms will be available in
the $100 a night price range. He said the casino
will resemble a 24-hour party while the property
is dotted with icons that playfully mimic Hooters'
somewhat-sexually-suggestive personality. For
example, Nippers Pool Bar is a knock-off of
a similarly named lounge in the Bahamas.
"I
think our audience's familiarity with Hooters
will play a big part in our success," Langlois
said.
Hooters
will offer entertainment with live music at
Porch Dogs, a Caribbean-themed indoor-outdoor
club, and at 13, a martini bar. Throughout the
casino, a loud sound system will blare rock
'n' roll and country music.
Also
in the casino, a replica of the Hooters Ford
Thunderbird, driven by 1992 Winston Cup champion
Alan Kulwicki, will be displayed.
In
addition to a large Hooters restaurant, the
first in the restaurant chain to offer a full
bar and slot machines, the property will have
several other low-cost eateries, including The
Dam Restaurant, a 24-hour coffee shop and buffet.
Hooters
will also mark the debut of Dan Marino's Fine
Foods and Spirits, a seafood and steakhouse
which is part-owned by the former Miami Dolphins
Hall of Fame quarterback. Marino's has five
locations in Florida; Hooters will be its first
establishment outside that state.
Droste
said the company began looking for a Las Vegas
casino site about 10 years ago.
"Over
the last three or four years I drove every inch
of Vegas and we walked into every casino,"
Droste said. "We even had some deals that
went into agreements, but for one reason or
another, it wasn't right. But this one was absolutely
perfect."
He
added that expansion opportunities for the Hooters
site are still available; low-rise bungalows
could be demolished for another hotel tower
and the property controls another three acres
to the east.
"If
we're as successful as we think we will be,
we might do some expansion down the road,"
Droste said.
For
the immediate future, however, Hooters isn't
looking at taking the casino brand around the
country into riverboat gambling jurisdictions,
as Landry's has said it would like to do with
the Golden Nugget.
"It's
not inconceivable but our main thought is to
keep the eye on the ball here," Droste
said.
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