"Paris" bogus offer

FLASH1296

Well-Known Member
#1
LINK: http://travel.latimes.com/articles/la-tr-spot23-2008nov23 (Archive copy)

$3,000 Las Vegas promotion turns out to be a dud
By Catharine Hamm
06:41 PM PST, November 18, 2008

True bargains exist, but finding them takes lots of legwork
A different, less expensive side of Las Vegas
Vegas! Laughlin! London Bridge! A $99 bus tour
I recently received a promotion letter from the Paris/Bally casino in Las Vegas offering me $3,000 in cash or live chips for Jan. 2 to 5. I called the same day (Oct. 16) to make the reservations and was told no rooms were available. Two of my relatives also received the same letter but couldn't reserve rooms either. I asked for a rain check and was told none was available. Shouldn't they honor this?
--Francisca Beverly, Harbor City
Answer: Beverly's promotion letter began, "Looking for the ultimate Vegas getaway? You can always bet on Paris and Bally's!"
Except when you can't.
Here's what actually happened: The fun folks at Paris and Bally's sent a letter promising $3,000 in CASH or LIVE CHIPS (caps theirs). I'm not much of a gambler, but heck, even I would make the trip to Vegas for three grand.
Unfortunately, that was a typo, the director of special events and promotions explained in a subsequent letter to Beverly. What the casinos really meant to offer was $300. After Beverly sent a letter of complaint, she received a second letter saying, "Immediately upon discovering the error, we properly withdrew the offer and, to ensure that our reservations system would no longer accept reservations pursuant to the erroneous offer, we designated the offer as 'sold out' on our reservations system."
That's not quite the same story Beverly said she got when she called. She said the reservations agent told her that the offer was sold out. When she asked how that could be -- she had received the letter the very day she called -- she said she was told that Nevada residents had received their letters first and had gobbled up all the rooms.
Certainly, something bites here, and it's not Nevada residents.
So you can't really blame Nevadans for hogging the hotel, but can you blame Paris/Bally's for something more than bad typing?
Yes and no, said Alexander Anolik, a Bay Area travel attorney and author of "Traveler's Rights."
If you're the type of player who could expect to receive such treatment, you should expect to be accommodated, he said. "If she's a financial whale, then, yes, that's reasonable," Anolik said. "But if she's a minnow, no."
In a later conversation, Beverly said she was more minnow than whale.
Alas, we'll have to chalk this up as the one that got away, even if it does stink worse than 3-day-old fish.
 

FLASH1296

Well-Known Member
#3
The rather strong implication is that there was NO typo.
That was simply their face-saving defense.
I have seen no reports of anyone actually being offered the lesser amount.

I have, on numerous occasions, received cash to play - but in every case I had already established myself as a worthy guest in the casino's eyes.
 

shadroch

Well-Known Member
#4
No so hot on the reading comprehension thing, are we?
Go back and read the response by the Director of Special Events.
This has been discussed ad nauseum on other sites six weeks ago.
 
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