July 26, 2009
Casino Mogul Steve Wynn's Midas Touch
60 Minutes: Charlie Rose Interviews The Man Who Helped Reinvent Las Vegas
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Play CBS Video Video Steve Wynn The casino mogul most responsible for taking Las Vegas to new heights of gaming and glitter talks to Charlie Rose about his spectacular success.
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Charlie Rose, left, and Steve Wynn (CBS)
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But he says he doesn't feel sorry for himself and continues to enjoy his extraordinary art collection, including Picasso's "La Reve."
In 2006 Wynn had a contract to sell it for $139 million, a record price for a painting.
He was showing it off to some friends when an unfortunate mishap occurred. "In gesturing to the picture I turned to the right and caught her right on the arm, and poked a hole in the picture the size of the end of my thumb. We stood there in shock. I can't believe I'd done it. Oh no. Oh no. And then I said, 'Thank God it was me and not someone else.'"
He had the picture restored and it's no longer for sale. "But the fact of the matter is, what stands historically is that the painting, the painting was damaged by its owner, 'the Clouseau of collectors, Wynn,'" he joked. "But look, people make mistakes."
Wynn has made few mistakes in his business career. He grew up in the gambling business. His father, Michael Wynn, owned a string of bingo parlors. When Steve was 10, his father took him to Las Vegas for the first time. It was 1952 and Nevada was the only state in America where gambling was legal.
Wynn told Rose his father was a compulsive gambler.
"And you're in the gambling business. That's one of many ironies about you," Rose remarked.
"It is, and it's accidental, but it is an irony," Wynn acknowledged. "My father had a terrible problem with gambling. He was a guy that enjoyed that activity so much that he lost control of it."
Michael Wynn died during heart surgery at age 47, leaving the family with a gambling debt of $350,000. Steve Wynn took over the family business, made a success of it, and paid back the money his father owed.
"I would give anything for half hour, or 15 minutes with my father to walk him through anything that good fortune has allowed to come my way these past 40 years," Wynn told Rose.
"And have him stand outside and look on the building and it says…," Rose said.
"…Wynn," Wynn said. "He changed his name when he was a kid, he was Weinberg."
Wynn was in fact born Weinberg, but the name was changed when he was just several months old.
Produced by Catherine Olian
© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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- I absolutely seethed while watching your so-called news story on Steve Wynn. It was nothing but a glorified promotion, by a personal friend of his (no less). In an episode that contained a commentary/tribute to Walter Cronkite, you choose to re-air this commercial for gambling. Gambling is an addiction that destroys lives. Why don't you just do a story to promote the CEO and products of R.J. Reynolds? Steve Wynn, as shown in your tribute to him, is nothing more than a cheap huckster out to make a buck. So he's made millions and millions. And how? on the backs of workers he short changes and gambling addicts. Really something to be proud of.
Walter Cronkite must be spinning in his grave. - Reply to this comment
- Where was the "meat" of this segment? Where was the focus on current issues?
Since August 21, 2006, approximately 600 full-time/200 part-time casino dealers working at Wynn Las Vegas have been in a financial struggle with their employer. Breaking the industry standard, and also the condition of employment, Steve Wynn along with Wynn Las Vegas President Andrew Pascal (his nephew by marriage) decided to subsidize the dealers' floor supervisors' income by cutting them into the dealers' toke (tip) pool. The company claimed there was a "disparity" between the pay of the supervisors and the dealers. So, we the dealers said, "Then pay them with the hundreds of millions in record profits." You see, the casino pays the dealers close to minimum wage and then we earn tips ourselves. Dealers work hard to earn our tip income, which is about 85% to 90% of our total income. Supervisors were already earning over $30 p/hr, but the casino said that they should get more money. Let me also mention that the dealers' Toke Committee (made up of dealers we vote for during an election), which collects and counts the tokes, was dissolved by Wynn. So, not only are we paying our own supervisors, but we do not even have a clue as to how much tip income we collect daily. We cannot collect, count, verify or dispense the tokes! Have you ever heard of a tipped employee not handling their own tips?
Previously, there was a class action lawsuit, and now the dealers are looking forward to a hearing with the Nevada Labor Commissioner's Office on July 7, 2009. Nevada law clearly states that the employees must have an "agreement amongst themselves," which we clearly never agreed amongst ourselves to pay Wynn's management with our tip income.
This leads me to the other current issue - unionism. Although Las Vegas is considered a union town with tens of thousands of union employees working at major strip casinos, dealers have always been "discouraged" or perhaps taboo to unionize for political reasons. After barely being opened for 1 1/2 years, the dealers at Wynn Las Vegas were determined to unionize. With a 3-to-1 overwhelming majority, on May 13, 2007 we did and never looked back. Contrary to false news reports, we did not unionize only because of the tips being taken from us; that was just the final straw.
It goes deeper than that - much deeper than this segment on 60 Minutes cared to dive.
Tune in next week to see "Dealers Fight for Just Cause (because all loyal employees ever want is a loyal company that respects its employees and treats them right, oh yeah, and doesn't dip in their tip cup)."
Tick, tock, tick, tock, tick, tock.... - Reply to this comment
- Since when to we admire wheelers and dealers, sports stars and movie stars, but neglect the scientists, engineers and teachers that create the future that we all enjoy? Let's get our priorities straight for once!
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- Wynn is losing. He is losing his wife, they are divorcing. He is losing his eyesight, he cannot see except very up close what brought him the greatest joy. And, ironically, the article title references Casino Mogul Steve Wynn as the man with the Midas Touch. But was not that mythical character one who discovered that the things he wished for were not things after all but were rather in fact actually costing him what mattered most?
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- 60 minutes has become extreme left wing liberals, constantly attacking everything right wing, especially republicans & promoting the left wing agenda, like socialized medicine. how ironic, there's Charlie Rose, a left wing liberal, interviewing his friend Steve Wynn who is a rich outstanding very successful entrepreneur who made Las Vegas what it is today, the very same people the liberals & Obama are going after, criticizing them for their so called excesses. Rose never asked the obvious key questions. what does Wynn think of the extreme left wing Obama administration. what does Wynn think of the left wing liberal democrats & Obama taking over this country & spending trillions. what does Wynn think of the payoffs to unions & how they're going to get stronger. what does Wynn think of the new negative attitude toward successful people like him by Obama & the democtats. what does he think of Obama's criticism of companies having conventions which caused the cancellation of many conventions in Las Vegas, creating layoffs. what does he think of Obam's tax increases. charlie what happened, you always ask such probing questions. could it be that you & 60 minutes didn't want to hear the answers. Wynn can't be very happy but we'll never hear his opinion. we live in a new age now. profit is bad & we have to share the wealth. company conventions, celebrations, parties & excesses are over. Las Vegas will have to find another source of income.
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- I LIKE CHARLIE ROSE & STEVE WYNN, BUT THIS INTERVIEW WAS REALLY BAD. IT WAS JUST FLUFF, NOTHING ABOUT LAS VEGAS TODAY, JUST MORE STEVE
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- Who gives us sight and who takes our sight? Ecclesiastes says "As he came forth of his mother's womb, naked shall he return to go as he came, and shall take nothing of his labour, which he may carry away in his hand." I hope whatever Mr. Wynn is doing here on Earth, he is doing with God in mind, for this life is but a breath and eternity is eternity.
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- To praise a casino mogul is stupid and one of the reasons why this country is in the mess it's in.
The entire debt market of 1.4 quadrillion in worthless derivatives and credit-default swaps is a casino.
Folks, unless we shut down the already dead financial system of worthless derivatives and credit-default swaps and stop praising idiots like this Las Vegas clown, this country will not survive.
Mark my words. - Reply to this comment
- Mr. Wynn is a genius... As a native Las Vegan...is. Taking children to Vegas (maybe one of the more dubious outcomes from the allure of his incredible casinos) became a routine for families, and I watched the kids marched with open mouths and shining eyes past the pirate displays and aquariums, join ing their parents in astonishment at the cirque acrobatic theaters and tiger show. His genius entertained millions, and I am personally thankful for having his gracious hotels and restaurants to entertain family and friends. Thank you Mr. Wynn.
Posted by olayitfair at 6:32 PM : Apr 12, 2009
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Genius? I don't think so. The word is used way too loosely these days. I don't think it takes genius to put up a glitzy luxury casino; it takes money.
By the way, did those families with kids walk by open-mouthed at the Mexicans with their young children shoving porn advertisements in your face at all hours of the day? I know the times I've been to Vegas, that always seems to bring much class to the Strip. - Reply to this comment
- The poor do have the freedom to do whatever they want within the confines of their financial limitations. The poor also have every opportunity and freedom to pursue and work for getting out of their state of being poor. I've been both poor and modestly wealthy. I was poor before the wealth. There is much truth in a poor type of freedom and a rich type of freedom. Of course expecting to have everything, as if one isn't poor is a problem with being unrealistic. Many poor want to be equal to those that have more than they without accepting the personal responsibility for working and expending effort to get out of their situation. Instead, preferring to complain and expect handouts; preferring to be government-reliant, versus self-reliant.
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- "...Asked if the money matters a lot, Elaine Wynn told Rose, "It enables him to have a kind of freedom. There's rich freedom and poor freedom, you know. You can be a ski bum and a beach bum." "That's poor freedom," Rose remarked. "That's poor freedom," she replied. "Steve is, Steve likes?" "Rich freedom!" both Elaine Wynn and Rose said simultaneously. .."
I?m intrigued by this concept of ?poor freedom.? Perhaps Ms. Wynn or Mr. Rose would like to reexamine their absurd notion that poor people are somehow free. Sure, we have the freedom to worry about when a big-time tycoon will slash our job, where our next meal will come from, how we will pay for health care, or how we will manage to retire when we aren?t able to work anymore. And of course the ?ski bums? Ms. Wynn speaks about need to find matching seasonal work for the summer time, which is not an easy task. But I suppose seasonal workers have the freedom to look through the classified pages, and the freedom to hope they can find another job that pays an equally marginal wage.
I?m one of those ?ski bums? and I enjoy my life, but it?s hardly a life of freedom. I?ve got to think this concept of ?poor freedom? is some kind of ?code,? or self serving justification spit out by the abusively wealthy so they don?t feel so guilty about the disgraceful income disparity they promote.
Sixty Minutes should be ashamed of buying into this nonsense, and Mr. Rose should take a few minutes to reexamine his view of the working poor. - Reply to this comment
- "I want to understand a bit about the casino business," Rose remarked.
"So do I," Wynn joked.
He told Rose the only way to win in a casino is to own one, "unless you're very lucky."
And he says, even when people are lucky, they usually gamble away their winnings.
"You have never known in your entire life a gambler who comes here and wins big and?walks away?" Rose asked.
"Never," Wynn replied.
"You know nobody hardly that over the stretch of time is ahead?" Rose asked.
"Nope," Wynn said.
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Mr. Wyann is to be commended. The casino games are stacked so that the House will always win. No only Mr. Wynn tells us that but numerous books, articles, lectures, etc.
If it gives you a thril, and can afford it, then go ahead and drop a sizable bundle at your favorite casino. You are helping some fat cats get richer. If you do not want to do so, or cannot afford to, then stay away from a casino.
In TX, some big wigs are pushing a bill through the state legislature to allow casino gambling. If I had a vote, I would vote no. Hell no. We cannot afford the nightmares that come with this. - Reply to this comment
- The world's largest pear shaped diamond is the "Star of Africa" or sometimes it is called, "Cullinan I" and it is located inside the Royal Sceptre of the British Monarchy. It weights 530.20 carats which is approximately 300 carats larger than Steve Wynn's 231 carat diamond.
However, if one were to state that Steve Wynn is the proprietor of the world's largest PRIVATELY OWNED pear shaped diamond, then I cannot disagree.
CBS, get your facts straight. Other than this one discrepancy, it was a great interview.
So very sorry to learn the Wynn's are divorcing after so many years of marriage. :( - Reply to this comment
- Wynn should give his money to help the people who can't get cancer treatment anymore at the Las Vagas hospital. Sorry about his eye-site getting worse but perhaps this is God's way of working the system to let Wynn know he ain't any better than anyone else. How does he feel about the people who can't get treatment for cancer anymore? This was a fluff piece of cr**. I don't care how much he has, he ain't gonna take it with him with he dies. All these bleeding hearts that are writing about how wonderful he is, he took you money, you smucks!
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- That seemed like the same story I would have heard 5 or 10 years ago. Pure fluff and no substance. I have always admired Steve Wynn and I was hoping to see more in depth and current subject matter. I would like to see what he has to say about the economy in Vegas, the over building of the strip, the decline of gambling revenues and where Las Vegas is going. You would expect more from 60 Minutes. But then again Wynn Resorts must be a paid advertiser on CBS.
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- I want to thank Mrs. Wynn for explaining what "rich freedom" and what "poor freedom" is. A large percentage of American's are experiencing "poor freedom" right now. How did this cheesy puff piece get on the most respected news magazine in television history? But, I respect Charlie Rose.
David - Reply to this comment
- We will be curious next Sunday to see if Andy Rooney chooses to exploit the dark irony of tonight's Steve Wynn segment. Were the producers of Sixty Minutes deriving some form of sadistic pleasure in showcasing excess in an unpaid 15 minute advertisement the week after Las Vegas was featured as the locale for dying cancer patients whose death sentence was handed down because of the lack funding at the local public hospital? Did Charlie Rose or Steve Wynn watch last week's show? Perhaps next week you can have a feature on the joys of having a manicure as a counter-point to tonight's feature on amputees. On the brighter side, perhaps your advert will help Mr. Wynn put another billion in his pocket, at the expense of compulsive gamblers like his father and he can put some of the Vegas poor back to work (those who haven't died for lack of medical attention).
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- Good heavens...the segment on Wynn was full of anomalies...friend of the Dalai Lama, i bet my house against that...the Dalai Lama would not fall for the charm and the flamboyance and the ego of this guy...that is charlie rose's gig.
You want people to say wow...here's how you do that...you go back to 60 minutes 7 days ago and you build something you dont have to see...you build a clinic that your State of Nevada saw fit to close so that hundreds of people who paid taxes and health insurance all their lives will have to die because there is no money to keep the clinic open. In fact, while I am at it, sell the painting "La Reve" to the highest bidder...you wont be able to see it anyway in several years and give the money to Dr. Spiritos who with his own savings, meager compared to yours, has opened a new clinic to serve the victims whom Nevada screwed...there's your chance to be more considerate as you said in the interview, and throw in a bit of generosity. The people you help would gag no more at the disgusting billion dollar monstrosities you have built in this time of need, and most of all your father could be proud if you are able to make some significant changes for the better, changes that have meaning and not only bombast. - Reply to this comment
- Please may I leave a message for Steve Wynn. Please Steve Wyknn. Do I identify with you on a very very small scale. I taught senior high for 10 years, nursing school for 5 years, and now I manage property that I own in Southern Iowa. Except I don't have so much money. My husband is a math and chemistry major, teacher and college guidance counselor for 36 years. I owned 36 units, apartment houses, duplexs, and houses, then I bought a 36 downtrodden unit . It was a lot of work. I like people to come into my units and say "Wow". An artist friend tells me what to do. I see myself as an artist, but know I am not up to date, and I trust her judgement. I can hardly wait for you to see my project.
I wear bifocals now, and seem to lack periferal vision. I do a lot of the work myself, with help. Come see us. I am a home economics major and a great cook. Congratulations. Honest, come to see us. I decorate my complexes with Peter Max print, Picacco prints, Amsel Adams, junk, etc. Honest, come see us. It would be our honor. We went to Bellagio to see you, on Sept. l6,08 for my husbands birthday. Your turn to come see us. Sincerely, Rita Matkovich, 641-895-8416 - Reply to this comment
- please note the inadvertent misspelling of the Dalai Lama.
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