What Sean means is that, to a certain degree, the DJ booth is setup as a secondary attraction. Intrigue might not be taking it to the same level as old-school Chicago and Detroit where the underground created bonds between different clicks, but it’s a step in the right direction. With the new club focusing on personal interactions, there will be a private VIP room has where social media has a strict “leave it at the door” policy.
With most resident DJs having established multi-year contracts with the hotels during the big EDM boom after EDC moved to Vegas, a source close to the situation said when it comes time to renew, “offers are expected to go down, some by as much as 50 percent”. With the continually opening and one-upping of Vegas clubs, come 2018 with the opening of Alon across the street from the Wynn, those highly coveted six-figure contracts might be a thing of the past.
Another huge reason behind not recruiting high profile DJs is because of the crowd that comes with them. Jesse Waits, one of the minds behind Wynn’s mecca XS who now oversees plans for Alon, told Page Six, “People who just want to see DJs don’t dress up, they don’t have style, they don’t even want to be in a nightclub — they want to see a concert. They’re not cool. Nightclubs are cool-people clubs.”
Source: Page Six