Visual Entertainment is Not Only Nice — It’s Now a Necessity By Howard Riell
The eyecandy sound lounge & bar in Las Vegas’ Mandalay Bay Ho- tel & Casino delivers a visual
feast for patrons. The 13,000-
square-foot classic cocktail
lounge offers a technology-lover’s dream: interactive
touch tables, innovative sound
stations and a dance floor
with constantly changing images.
Using the table’s circular touch screen,
guests can create images and messages
that appear on an adjacent touch table,
whether it’s a pre-selected visual that
pulsates to the music or a creation of a
guest’s own imagination. The club
also features stationary and mo-
torized cameras in the booths,
so guests can take a discreet
peek at everything happening
around them.
Nightclub patrons and bar-go-
ers want to be dazzled visually, and
cutting-edge venues like eyecandy are
increasingly tapping into a new generation
of technology with video screens, signage,