
Rehab was featured on Travel Channel’s “21 Sexiest Beach Bars” and hosts called it “the must-see place on a Sunday afternoon.” The party was also deemed the “best known, biggest and craziest pool party” by the Los Angeles Times and is said to be “legendarily raucous” by Travel + Leisure. The legendary dayclub will also bring back DJ Pauly D for exclusive show engagements. This year, Rehab will add an influx of electronic dance music (EDM) artists to its lineup and will host exclusive DJ residencies with Bingo Players, Flux Pavilion, Knife Party and R3HAB*. Guests can expect another wild season of debauchery and never-before-seen experiences as we continue to set the standard for Las Vegas dayclubs.” “We wanted to refocus our programming to enhance the party. “Our goal is to always make Rehab better than it was the season before,” says Joe Bravo, director of nightlife/daylife at Hard Rock Hotel. As a recent article in the Las Vegas Weekly stated, “Rehab is still sizzling after 10 years.” Rehab rocks the Hard Rock each summer and still is as epic today as it was in its beginning a little over a decade ago. In general, there are admission fees for the parties and they are 21+ events.Īny guide to the Las Vegas pool scene pretty much has to start with Rehab, the party that started a new generation of entertainment in Las Vegas. Here is the Las Vegas Golf and Leisure guide to the best and biggest Vegas pool parties. World class DJs, fine cuisine, swim up bars, blackjack tables, bottle service and more are now the norm and not the exception in Las Vegas. Pool parties generate as much-or more-than nightclubs, and the party is on nearly as soon as the sun comes up. It goes without saying the pool area now improves the bottom line. These days, the pool areas of the resorts are still budget line items, but the revenue generated per square foot is among the best of the entire resort. Some had nice restaurants and bars, and there was limited entertainment at times, but the pool was basically a spot for relaxation to kill time between bets at the tables. The pool areas were nice, but were basically an afterthought and a necessary amenity.

Days spent by the pool earning tips while watching bikinis seemed like a dream come true.īack then (unfortunately several decades ago), the pools at the resorts were a budget line item that hurt the bottom line. It was as good a job as a teenage kid from Las Vegas could get in the summer. This writer is a veteran of several Las Vegas summers spent as a life guard at a variety of Las Vegas resorts including MGM Grand, the Hilton, Bally’s Las Vegas, the old Frontier and Dunes, and others. Perfecting the art of the Las Vegas pool party
