A few light showers fell on parts of the Las Vegas Valley on Wednesday. The monsoon season for the valley officially started June 15.
Taylor Lane
Taylor joined the Review-Journal in May 2022 and was named social media manager in April 2024. She is an Arizona State University graduate with a bachelor's degree in journalism and mass communication. Before joining the Review-Journal, Taylor interned at The Arizona Republic, Cronkite News (the news division of Arizona PBS) and worked for the State Press, ASU's student news organization. Taylor is a Las Vegas native and attended Silverado High School where she developed her love of local journalism by working for her school's newspaper, the Silverado Star.
The King of Rock and Roll only performed at two Vegas hotel-casinos over his career, but he left his mark on the city.
Customers will be able to shop more brands and third-party sellers than last year’s Prime Day.
Homeward Bound Cat Adoptions and The Animal Foundation are seeing an influx of pets coming through their doors.
The Community Cat Coalition of Clark County (C5) has trapped, neutered and returned their 50,000th free-roaming or feral cat in the Las Vegas Valley.
Some artifacts for sale were exhibited at the Las Vegas Mob Experience at the Tropicana.
Police investigated reports of trick driving events near U.S. Route 93 and Grand Valley Parkway, in the Apex area just outside Las Vegas.
Nevada state parks are planning to implement a reservation system that is expected to launch in spring 2023. This is an alternative to the parks’ current first-come, first-served system.
The garden features 28 animal sculptures and nearly 10,000 plants and flowers.
The U.S. Census Bureau has ranked North Las Vegas fifth on the list of cities with the greatest population increase since 2020.
Travelers visiting parks across Southern Nevada should expect fire restrictions and some area closures.
Lake Mead’s shoreline has receded over decades from dropping water levels.
The city of North Las Vegas broke ground on a new police station.
Lake Mead officials are warning visitors that the newly exposed shoreline caused by declining water levels can result in drivers getting stuck.