Consider This from NPR - Taking gambles on Primm, Nevada

Episode Date: July 3, 2026

The town of Primm, Nevada was once a thriving tourist destination.Located on the Nevada-California border, the town has seen a sharp decline in tourism and has become like a ghost town, due in part to... the proliferation of casinos across the country.Now, one family wants to revive Primm's glory days. But how?For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Email us at considerthis@npr.org.This episode was produced by Erika Ryan and Tyler Bartlam.It was edited by Christopher Intagliata and Tinbete Ermyas.Our interim executive producer is Courtney Dorning.See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:00 It's considered this, where every day we go deep on one big news story. Today, we look at the future of the little casino town, Prem, Nevada, right on the California border. It's named after the casino developer Ernie Prem. And his grandson, Corey Clemetson, remembers that back in the 1990s, the town was popping. The hotels were packed. It was filled. People were obviously having a great time, you know, drinking, gambling. What I remember is you had kind of a carnival type of atmosphere here.
Starting point is 00:00:29 Today, Prem is nearly empty and two of its three hotels are shuttered, but Clemitson and the rest of the Prem family are hoping to resurrect this town. You know, the magic can come back. It might not be exactly like it was 30 years ago, but can it be great in different forms? Absolutely. Prim will be back to some better days, hopefully sooner rather than later. Consider this, the town of Prem Nevada has seen its fortunes fade as casinos have proliferated across America. So can the family that owns Prim turn the town? luck around? From NPR, I'm Juana Summers. It's consider this from NPR. Prim Nevada is just a blip on Interstate 15, about 40 minutes outside of Las Vegas. 30 years ago, it was a thriving tourist stop. Today, it's nearly a ghost town. So how has Las Vegas managed to adapt to shifting gambling trends?
Starting point is 00:01:31 Well, casino towns like Prem have not. And what will it take to bring Prem back to life? My co-host, Elsa Chang, traveled to Nevada to learn more. When the Desperado Roller Coaster first opened up in 1994 right here on the Nevada State Line, it was one of the tallest and fastest in the world. And Corey Clemenson was among the first to ride it. Front car. You were in the front car? Front car. Are you a screamer?
Starting point is 00:01:57 No, but I screamed on that right. I kept my eyes shut. Out of genuine terror. Yeah, it was in a great moment. The roller coaster was the latest attraction in a little casino town called Prim. which was named after Cleminson's grandfather Ernie Prim. The Prim family still owns all the land this town is built on. Prim would be the first place you would spot across the Nevada border cruising from L.A. to Vegas.
Starting point is 00:02:22 The first place you could gamble. Three-day hotel casinos, 4200 slots, canned restaurants. It's a must stop. Back in the 1990s, TV spots like this advertised the thousands of cheap rooms. And visitors would flood into Prim, not just for the gambling and the roller coaster, but also for the rodeos, boxing matches, performances by stars like Aretha Franklin, and one of the top outlet malls in the country. But those massive crowds feel like a distant memory now.
Starting point is 00:02:53 What would this place look like in front of us, this parking lot? Packed. Packed, cars? Would it be hard to find a parking spot? It would be. On the weekends, it would be nearly impossible. There was great anticipation with what Prim was doing and where, you know, Prim is kind of on top, right?
Starting point is 00:03:08 I mean, it really... Because the investment in a roller coaster is a big investment. Was there a feeling of like this is going to get bigger and better? I think for anybody who was here, it was never going to end. And what does it feel like right now in this moment, Corey, to look at this inert roller coaster, it's faded, it's rusting? Heartbreaking. Heartbreaking. Today, the loudest sounds in prim are the trucks speeding by on the highway.
Starting point is 00:03:39 and the lone crows looming over empty parking lots. Two of the three hotel casinos here have closed. That's Whiskey Peets and Buffalo Bills. Then a couple months ago, the company that operates these properties, Affinity Interactive, announced that it would be closing the third and final hotel, laying off hundreds of staff. And that is when Cleminson and the rest of the Primm family decided to step in,
Starting point is 00:04:06 teaming up with a Nevada convenience store company called Terribles to try to resurrect this ghost town. If you can turn a ghost town into greatness again, there's not anything you can't do. And so why not go for the challenge? Why not us? But how do you bring back the people to Prim? So there used to be a monorail that went going across the freeway from Whiskey Peets over here or maybe... A people mover. A people mover. Yeah, to get people from one side to the other.
Starting point is 00:04:34 That is David Schwartz. gaming historian at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. And that people mover is now abandoned, gathering cobwebs and bird poop. But Schwartz says that train is a reminder of Prim's potential. That was a time of big dreams. And when Vegas itself was thriving so much and just expanding and exploding, why not? Because it seemed like this would last forever. So tell me why a town that used to be thriving like Prim was turned into
Starting point is 00:05:06 a ghost town? So if we go back to 1975, pretty much the only place you can gamble legally in a casino is in Nevada. Okay. Fast forward, 1976, casino gambling legalized for Atlantic City, New Jersey. In 1980s, you have the proliferation of tribal casinos, and you also have the beginnings of riverboat casinos
Starting point is 00:05:26 in the Midwest. Fast forward to the 90s. Now you have casinos at racetracks, 2000s, more land-based casinos in cities all around the country. Then what happened is you have the proliferation of tribal casinos in Southern California. Okay. And what did tribal casinos offer that say maybe a town like Prim did not? Well, convenience. A lot more convenience. Instead of having to drive all the way to Prim,
Starting point is 00:05:48 you could just drive a much shorter distance right up the road. And it's really hard to say, hey, we're going to invest millions of dollars here based on vibes, yeah. Based on what vibes now? Yeah, based on, well, hopes. Hopes to the future. Optimism. A faith in. in our ability to reinvent ourselves. Yeah. Wow, now that's a sign from the heavens. It is.
Starting point is 00:06:15 We just got some thunder. Yes, because rain in the desert is a promise of new beginning. And rain in the desert is a good thing. I feel like the places that can do more to reinvent themselves to offer different things, just like Vegas did, are going to do a lot better. What brings you to Vegas, baby?
Starting point is 00:06:34 Expensive casinos. We're here for a convention. Wizard of Eyes. It was great. Oh, in the sphere. Yep. Good food. Really good food in Vegas.
Starting point is 00:06:42 Oh, Omega Mark. You've got quite a lot of cards here with a broad selection of women. I'm married. I don't get a game. So I will throw them into the closest trash can I can find. We went ATV riding. We had dinner at the top of the world. And we're going to bed.
Starting point is 00:06:57 You're going to bed? It's only 7 p.m. We've been up since Saturday. It's Tuesday. When you stand on the strip in Vegas, just 40 miles from Prim, you are in a totally different universe. The tourism numbers in Vegas are almost as high as they have ever been before. I asked David Schwartz, who also met us here,
Starting point is 00:07:22 why does Vegas continue to thrive, even as casinos have been popping up all over the country? What Vegas did differently was they invested a lot of money in buildings, things like the Venetian, like Mirage, like sphere, sports teams coming here now. Legion Stadium, Team Mobile Arena. All that stuff gives people a reason to come to Vegas instead of going to a casino closer to where they live. Right. And you come to Vegas, I feel like not just to gamble.
Starting point is 00:07:47 Yeah, a lot of people who come to Vegas don't gamble at all. And at one time, the casino owners would have panicked. Now it's not such a big deal because they're selling rooms and concerts and all that stuff. Speaking of concerts, a recent addition to the Vegas skyline is The Sphere, a $2.3 billion entertainment venue. It's a lot more expensive than other venues might be, but it's a real premium experience. And I think it helped to prove another time that, yeah, people will pay for that premium experience. Yeah, people will pay for innovation.
Starting point is 00:08:20 And Vegas has managed to survive by continually placing bets on the next big thing. Now, the question for Prim Nevada is, can they do the same? We've got to make one of the greatest comebacks in Nevada history. That's what we've got to do. Corey Clemenson says he is going to ignore all the naysayers. This is a tall order. This is definitely a tall order, but I think there's a lot of possibilities here. Including a possible new airport in the next decade or so, just a mile or two from Prim. And he's hoping that airport will bring tourists here the same way the highway once did.
Starting point is 00:08:57 I think what Prim needs to do is modernize in its own unique way, and we have to figure that out. How does Prim compete with a city like Vegas? Vegas is not that far away. I think you have different price points. It's always been a more affordable option. Prim might also be the only town that has a bootlegger buried upright with a whiskey bottle in his hand. I'm talking about Whiskey Pete, the namesake of one of the shuttered hotels. At least, this is how legend tells it.
Starting point is 00:09:27 I've heard multiple stories, but I've never seen where he's been buried. I don't mean this to be a morbid question. but would you want to be buried on the premises here? I don't think so. I don't think my wife, no. I love my grandfather, but I'm not thinking about my obituary just yet. Nor is he thinking just yet about the obituary of Prim Nevada. This episode was produced by Eric Horan and Tyler Bartlam.
Starting point is 00:09:54 It was edited by Christopher and Taliatta and Tim meet Armias. Our interim executive producer is Courtney Dorney. It's considered this from NPR. I'm Juana Summers. Before we go, a quick thank you to our Consider This Plus listeners who support the show. Your contribution makes it possible for NPR journalists all around the world to do their jobs. Supporters also get to hear every episode in even less time with no sponsor messages. Learn more at plus.npr.org.

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