Tiered tickets, room bookings on top, and sponsor fees.
The Strip has its convention. The people who actually build the drinks deserve their own weekend.
Thursday through Saturday — the three nights right after the Bar & Restaurant Expo (the old Nightclub & Bar Show) closes on Wednesday the 24th.
Every serious operator in the country — and a wave from Mexico — is already in town, badge still on. We don't fly them in. We just give them a reason to stay two more nights and see what Las Vegas looks like once you leave the Boulevard.
One hotel. Every suite is a different bar.
We take over a boutique off-Strip hotel top to bottom. Each suite on the floor already has its own built-in bar — so each one becomes a fully realized Las Vegas craft cocktail room, built and run by a different local venue. Guests move suite to suite, city to city in miniature, drink to drink.
Ticket holders get the run of the house: the suites, the pours, the pool, the programming — with the option to book a room and never leave.
The suites
Each participating bar dresses and runs a suite as their own room — their identity, their menu, their team behind the bar.
The ticket
One price, all access — amenities, drinks, programming. Room booking available on top for anyone who wants to stay in it.
The pours
Spirit sponsors anchor the cost of the liquor; each suite pours through a properly licensed team so the whole weekend stays clean.
Part competition, part classroom, part party.
Handcar races
Old railroad pump-carts out front — two-bartender teams, working in tandem, racing head to head. Loud, dumb, unforgettable. The thing people film and post before they've even had a drink.
Real education
Seminars that actually move a young bartender forward — menu costing, pricing metrics, how management reads a program, beer and wine and spirit fundamentals. The kind of thing that turns a shift into a career. Where we can, we pull the big visiting operators in to teach a session.
DJs, then a headliner
DJs every evening, building to a Saturday-night headliner — a name people know, maybe one that doesn't play out much anymore. The reunion-show energy: familiar, fun, worth staying for.
Put local Las Vegas on the map.
This is a marketing play at its core. For one weekend, operators from across the country — and beyond — stop thinking "Las Vegas" means only the Strip, and start seeing what the people who live and pour here actually make. It brings the community together and points a national spotlight at the rooms that usually work in the dark.
And because it's the first one, nobody has ever seen it before. That's the whole edge.
The rooms.
Early conversations are already warm. These are directional, not locked — but the shape of the lineup is there:
The model, in plain terms.
Full-hotel buyout, production and the headliner (the big variable), catering, staffing, security, permits and insurance.
Spirit brands fund product and marketing in exchange for branded, pouring suites — structured title / suite / product.
This isn't just an idea anymore.
Before it goes anywhere, a few things had to be true. Here's where they stand:
The show closes Wed, Mar 24, 2027 — our Thu–Sat window lands perfectly in the tail.
Full-hotel buyouts of a boutique off-Strip property are a real, established option.
The alcohol path is understood — licensed catering or a special-event permit, with a licensed local bar as the anchor.
Lock the venue and confirm its active liquor license.
Get two or three anchor spirit sponsors verbally in.
Confirm the participating-bar count, then start the permit clock.
This is the door. Walk through it?
This is your idea — here it is with the homework done and the shape drawn: a starting point, not a finished plan. Everything here is meant to be argued with.
Raise the tide for every local bar in this city, the whole scene wins — and that's the real scoreboard that matters.
Evan Hosaka
let's build the rest of it