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'Stripper Mobile' promo halted in Las Vegas
- 11-14-2009
- Categorized in: Entertainment, Las Vegas, News, Nightlife
A Las Vegas strip club that launched a Stripper on a Bus advertising campaign this week on Las Vegas Strip has decided to follow its lawyer advice and stop its promotion.
The so called "Stripper Mobile" owned by Deja Vu Showgirls, rolled on Las Vegas Strip for 13 nights offering potential customers a full view of the strippers dancing around a pole. The truck runs up and down the Strip from 10:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. carrying a sign with their contact information.
But even when the tactic seemed to be effective, the truck was halted by Las Vegas authorities after receiving hundreds of complaints from outraged citizens. Steve Sisolak, a Clark County Commissioner who voted to shut the “Stripper Moblie down, said he got calls from people who want the truck out of the streets or that considered it a safety problem.
Now Larry Beard, marketing director of Deja Vu Showgirls, said the club is taking its lawyer's advice and taking the truck from the streets indefinitely. According to Sisolak, the state's regulations prohibit advertising vehicles that use animation or flashing lights, and said he would try to prevent live performers from being used as advertisement props.
The so called "Stripper Mobile" owned by Deja Vu Showgirls, rolled on Las Vegas Strip for 13 nights offering potential customers a full view of the strippers dancing around a pole. The truck runs up and down the Strip from 10:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. carrying a sign with their contact information.
But even when the tactic seemed to be effective, the truck was halted by Las Vegas authorities after receiving hundreds of complaints from outraged citizens. Steve Sisolak, a Clark County Commissioner who voted to shut the “Stripper Moblie down, said he got calls from people who want the truck out of the streets or that considered it a safety problem.
Now Larry Beard, marketing director of Deja Vu Showgirls, said the club is taking its lawyer's advice and taking the truck from the streets indefinitely. According to Sisolak, the state's regulations prohibit advertising vehicles that use animation or flashing lights, and said he would try to prevent live performers from being used as advertisement props.

