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Las Vegas NV: Need A Boost? REVIV at MGM Grand


One of our favorite movies is 1997’s “Vegas Vacation”. A family plays bingo at the MGM Grand Resort. Dad Griswold (Chevy Chase) has gambled away thousands of family savings dollars, and they're about to leave town totally broke. Then, in a lucky moment, they get it all back and thousands more, because a dying old man (the great Sid Caesar) gives them his winning bingo ticket. 

Current Vegas celebrants can get similar uplifts at the MGM Grand. The new service there, called REVIV, offers medical help to those who overdo (and who doesn’t?) their Vegas vacations. Staffed by certified physicans and nurses, there are various revival offerings to help party animals who do a bit too much partying.

Treatments include hydration, IVs, electrolytes, multivitamins, antioxidants and other medications. There are also relaxing spa and massage services available. Fees start at $99, and REVIV is available seven days a week from 9 a.m. to midnight. For MGM guests, in-room service is also offered. For more information, go to www.revivme.com/las-vegas

Senior Sojourns: Ease Your Way to the Big Easy for Mardi Gras PDF Print E-mail

If you want to experience the fun and excitement of Mardi Gras in New Orleans, you’d better be making plans to be there now. The event this year blasts off on Fat Tuesday, February 24, and promises to be the very best in the two-century history of masks, music and mayhem of the always wild event.

Mardi Gras mask

 

New Orleans, created in 1718 by French settlers, is famed for its rich Creole culture, the birthplace of pure jazz, eclectic architecture, celebrations and some of the best Southern cooking in the land. As it is just about every night, Mardi Gras in the French Quarter will be as free and wild as revelers will find anywhere, seniors certainly included.

Although New Orleans hotel prices and dinners in plush restaurants will be high, all Mardi Gras events, including, music, costumed marchers, street concerts and parades, are all free. Also, the rumor that you must bare a part of your body to get free strings of beads shouldn’t apply to seniors. But be prepared and don’t be surprised if it does. The idea is to join in on all the fun your age and health can handle, and then worry about recovering from it the next day.

Once you’ve experienced Mardi Gras in the Big Easy, you’ll want to return, to next year’s celebration, or maybe before that just for a more quiet vacation. The jazz, night life, fantastic food and wrought-iron archetecture will always lure you back to one of America’s most welcoming cities.

 
 
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