How to reach APEX in Las Vegas
Las Vegas runs to an event calendar, not days of the week: F1 Grand Prix in November, CES in January, Super Bowl, championship boxing, EDC in May, New Year's Eve. The APEX manager is on @Apex_concierge Telegram or WhatsApp on the same number, on shift 24/7. Reply in 1 to 3 minutes. On an ordinary evening the booking flows quietly: a suite at Bellagio or Wynn, a table at Joël Robuchon or Picasso, a paddock at T-Mobile Arena after a championship fight agreed — all in one chat. On peak event weekends (F1, Super Bowl, CES) the tempo is its own: suite rates run x4-x6, premium restaurants book two months ahead, our rates are individual and above baseline. Don't call — communication runs through encrypted messengers only. Don't come to the office on the Strip: it's a coordination point, not reception.
Time zone and operating hours
Las Vegas runs on America/Los_Angeles, PST/GMT-8 in winter and PDT/GMT-7 in summer (second Sunday of March to first Sunday of November). The APEX manager replies 24/7 against local time. Peak load — Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday from 20:00 to 06:00 (Vegas is a 24/7 city; our bookings run until morning). Model match on ordinary days — 30 to 60 minutes; in low season (Wednesday, Monday) — 30 to 60. On peak event weekends — 7 to 10 days ahead, because premium-segment availability narrows. Morning scenarios are rare — guests sleep off the Strip. The headline peaks of the year: F1 Las Vegas Grand Prix (last week of November, Saturday-night race on the Strip); CES (January, 170,000 guests, hotels at x2 capacity); Super Bowl weekend at Allegiant Stadium (February, bookings six months out); championship boxing/MMA at T-Mobile Arena; EDC (May, only the "after the festival" format); New Year's Eve. For guests from Moscow (GMT+3) the gap is 11 hours in winter, 10 in summer.
Languages
The manager handles Russian and English at equal level. Among Las Vegas-base models English is held by all at native American or fluent international. Russian — held by a notable share (the Russian-speaking audience in Las Vegas is significant, especially in the Bellagio and Wynn high-end segment). Spanish — held by a portion (proximity to California and Mexico). For F1 paddock or the CES tech segment we hold a separate pool of models with industry literacy. If language matters (F1 paddock with European teams, CES with Asian tech investors, a championship-fight VIP with international guests) — state the level: small talk, business, native.
Channels
- Telegram @Apex_concierge — primary channel, reply within 3 minutes, 24/7.
- WhatsApp — same number, for those who don't use Telegram.
- No calls, no SMS, no email — only end-to-end encrypted messengers. The Las Vegas premium client is particularly sensitive on privacy: high-rollers, F1 paddock, CES tech delegations — the correspondence stays fixed between client and manager, with no trace on third-party platforms.
- Coordination office — APEX Liaison, 3960 Las Vegas Blvd S (Aria area). No meetings happen there — it's the technical floor for the manager rotation.
What to write in the first message
The sharper the brief, the faster the match. An ideal opening message contains: meeting format (dinner at Joël Robuchon at MGM or Picasso at Bellagio or SW Steakhouse at Wynn or Carbone at Aria or Catch at Aria / a suite at Bellagio or Wynn or Four Seasons / F1 Paddock Club / Bellagio Fountain Club / Wynn Grid Club / a championship-fight VIP at T-Mobile Arena / a suite at Cosmopolitan or Resorts World during CES), date and time, location (zone — the Strip from Mandalay Bay to Sahara, Aria area, Bellagio area, Wynn area), duration, and model preferences (type, height, languages, experience for the format). For F1 — which day (practice/qualifying/race), paddock or fountain club. For CES — which tech sectors (semi, AI, automotive). For a championship fight — which fight and format. Without these details the match still happens, just with an extra 60 to 120 minutes built in.