The pace of the city

Las Vegas runs on its own calendar — not by day of the week, but by event. An ordinary Friday on the Strip looks like a Moscow Saturday, but the real peaks come in waves: the last week of November (F1 Las Vegas Grand Prix, the headline weekend of the year since 2023), the first half of January (CES, 170,000 guests, hotels at 200% occupancy), Super Bowl weekend in February (if the game is at Allegiant Stadium — that's the peak of peaks), championship fights at T-Mobile Arena, EDC in May, the last night of December.

On ordinary Thursday-through-Sunday the pace is dense too — Las Vegas is a 24/7 city, and our meetings start at 20:00 and run through 06:00. Morning scenarios are rare — guests sleep off the Strip. The manager on Telegram holds round the clock, model matched in 60-120 minutes on ordinary days; on peak event weekends — booked 7-10 days ahead, because the premium-segment models thin out and suites at Bellagio and Wynn go even earlier.

Wednesday and Monday in the off-season are quieter — 30-60 minutes for a match, suites available at the better rates, restaurants book a day ahead. That's a good window for business trips and for clients who aren't tied to a specific event.

Event season and peak weekends

F1 Las Vegas Grand Prix — last week of November, race Saturday night right on the Strip. Paddock Club, Wynn Grid Club, Bellagio Fountain Club — these are the locations where the high-end crowd gathers. Suite prices on these days run 4x-6x the normal rate, premium-tier restaurants book two months out, and our accompaniment rates are individual and above baseline because the model goes out for four days and works the paddock-club, dinners at Picasso/SW Steakhouse and after-parties at Wynn.

CES in January — a different client profile, 170,000 people, technology companies, private receptions in suites at Aria, The Cosmopolitan, Resorts World. The scenario is business + dinner: the model in business code at the corporate evening, then dinner at Carbone or Catch, suite at the client's hotel. Championship boxing/MMA at T-Mobile Arena — Friday weigh-in, Saturday fight, after-party. Super Bowl weekend, if the game is at Allegiant Stadium — its own calendar, bookings close half a year out. EDC in May — APEX works this scenario selectively: only "after the festival" format, suite + late dinner, not the festival itself.

Where we work

The Strip is the main contour. Bellagio, Wynn, Encore, Aria, The Cosmopolitan, Waldorf Astoria, Four Seasons (the third-floor-up no-casino-floor luxury inside Mandalay Bay), Resorts World — that's six or seven hotels we have working relationships with. In each one we know how a guest checks in, which suites fit our format, who on the concierge team handles our clients. Joël Robuchon at MGM Grand, Picasso and Le Cirque at Bellagio, SW Steakhouse and Mizumi at Wynn, Sinatra at Encore, Carbone and Catch at Aria, Beauty & Essex at The Cosmopolitan, Mr Chow at Caesars — the core restaurant list.

Off-Strip we work selectively: Summerlin (Red Rock Resort, private villas), Henderson (Lake Las Vegas, for weekends off the Strip), Downtown — very rarely, not our segment. Harry Reid airport is five minutes from the south end of the Strip, so a private-jet scenario with check-in straight into Four Seasons or Aria is ordinary, not a rarity.

Paddock Club at the F1 Grand Prix Plaza, Allegiant Stadium for Super Bowl and Raiders home games, T-Mobile Arena for boxing/MMA championships — these are the event locations where the model works in premium suites and hospitality boxes. Not the general bowl — that's a different format from ours.

Etiquette, dress code and what we don't do

Suites at Bellagio, Wynn and Four Seasons receive guests calmly, no questions at reception, provided everything is done right. Right means cocktail or evening attire on the model, no loud scenes, and the visit time agreed in advance. Joël Robuchon, Picasso, Le Cirque — formal dress code: full-length or cocktail dress on the model, no jeans, sneakers excluded. SW Steakhouse, Carbone, Mr Chow — business or cocktail code, more relaxed, but "Strip casino casual" is not it.

For the F1 Paddock Club and Wynn Grid Club the code is closer to cocktail with a "yacht-chic" lean — bare shoulders, light fabrics, low heel (you walk a lot through the paddock). For the Allegiant Stadium VIP suites — smart casual, no team jerseys, that's the baseline rule. For championship fights at T-Mobile — cocktail dress or an elegant jumpsuit, fight-night dressing.

What we don't do in Las Vegas, on principle: we don't work the club scenario at XS, Hakkasan, LIV, Omnia, Drai's. That's a different industry and different people — not our models and not our format. We're about dinner at Joël Robuchon and a suite at Bellagio, not table service at a poolside day club. Bachelor parties with a crowd and pool-party hostess functions — also no. Las Vegas strip-show formats — no. APEX is premium accompaniment: an individual client, a specific scenario, dinner and event.

Things we say plainly

The standard rate in Las Vegas runs from $1,200 for two hours to $6,000 for two days. Media-tier — from $3,500 for two hours, $5,000 for four hours, access opens to returning clients after several successful meetings. But in this city it's worth saying separately: on peak event weekends — F1 Grand Prix, Super Bowl weekend, championship boxing — pricing is individual and above baseline. The model goes out for 3-5 days and works a dense schedule of paddock club and after-events; the standard grid doesn't apply.

Payment — cash USD on meeting, bank transfer (international wire), USDT (TRC-20/ERC-20), Bitcoin less often. Returning clients have deposit arrangements and flexible terms. On F1 weekend and Super Bowl, a 50% deposit two weeks ahead is the standard condition, because a cancellation on those dates means an empty slot for us that we won't refill.

We don't take meetings under two hours. Sharing a model's photos with third parties is not allowed, and that's not just words: photos go to lawyers, and we make this clear at the coordination stage. Haggling after the meeting isn't practiced. Thirteen years in the industry — built on exactly these simple things.

The APEX team

Names stay private — this is what our clients value. What we can show is roles, scope and the work each person does in your scenario.

APEX expert for Las Vegas

Local specifics · venues · routes

Knows the Las Vegas hotel and restaurant scene firsthand: which reception will be discreet, which maître d' to call directly, which dress code holds for which venue. Brief any new model joining the Las Vegas pool.

Direction manager

Telegram · WhatsApp · 24/7

On shift in chat. Replies within the first three minutes. Holds the full picture of the day: who is free, who fits the scenario, what is booked at which venue. The first person you talk to.

VIP client curator

Returning clients · long-form scenarios

Works with returning clients on a personal basis. Holds preferences, scenario history, the small details that make the second meeting easier than the first. Manages weekend and travel formats.

Cultural programme coordinator

Theatre · opera · receptions

Holds the box-office contacts for the city, knows the dress codes by venue and by event class. Briefs the model when the scenario includes a premiere or a closed reception.

Travel and event specialist

Out-of-city · weekend · international

Coordinates trips beyond the city: visa timing, transfer logistics, accommodation, on-site fixers when needed. Plans 2-7 day formats and inter-city moves.

Where we are

Building
APEX Liaison — The Strip
Address
3960 Las Vegas Blvd S (Aria area), Las Vegas, 89109
Hours
24/7

This address houses the APEX coordination office on the south end of The Strip. Meetings happen in suites at Bellagio, Wynn, Four Seasons, in premium-tier restaurants and in event paddock zones — not at this address. Communication runs through the Telegram manager.

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