New Las Vegas slogan commercial is dropping at the Grammys

Ed Komenda
Reno Gazette Journal

LAS VEGAS – A 60-second commercial revealing Sin City’s new tourism slogan will air during the Grammys.

After almost two decades, the iconic “What happens here, stays here” – a catch phrase that's deeply rooted in the American tourism vernacular – will get an update.

While tourism authorities have been mum on confirming what the new slogan will be, an official hashtag tied to the Jan. 26 music awards show offers a hint: #OnlyVegas.

'What happens here, only happens here.'

R&R Partners, the advertising agency behind the new slogan, deployed more than 100 people over several years to assemble the campaign. 

“One of the things we’ve have known for years in Las Vegas is there’s a feeling people only get here,” Billy Vassiliadis, R&R CEO, told the USA TODAY Network. “That feeling is tied to an experience that is unique and they can’t get anyplace else.”

The 60-second ad set for the Grammys Sunday will air around the time Aerosmith takes the stage for a live performance.

Aerosmith last year participated in what appeared to be a top secret campaign to roll out the new slogan surprise on Jan. 26. 

In November, singer Steven Tyler introduced to a concert crowd what many speculate is the city’s new mantra: “When I say, ‘What happens here,’” Tyler told the audience, “you say, ‘only happens here!’”

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A picture of the Las Vegas strip at night taken from a high vantage point. The view is north along the mid-strip area on December 23, 2015.

A travel mantra for the ages 

For almost two decades, "What happens here, stays here" has served as this city's mantra of excess.

Rarely has an official tourism slogan been so widely recognized, with Las Vegas travelers often reciting the familiar mantra.

The catchy and controversial one-liner encouraged and empowered tourists to behave in ways they would have never dared back home – a wink to the naughty. 

The slogan surfaced as an effort to inspire travel to Las Vegas after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks froze travel plans across the country and visitation numbers dropped in this vacation mecca that had seen nothing but growth for many years. 

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With the “What happens here” launch came a series of 30-second television ads about the kind of ribald behavior that's possible when your secrets stay safe.

One ad featured a man explaining the freedom that comes with a trip to Vegas.

“We’re like the Huns,” he said to a friend. “This is all for the taking… all for the pillaging.”

The ad campaign carried a long shelf life – a concept that’s rare in a city known to implode the old to make way for the new time and time again.

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A new slogan takes flight

The new commercial set for takeoff at the Grammys is one of two 60-second spots the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority will launch in the coming months, according to Vassiliadis. 

The 2020 Grammy Awards will broadcast live from Los Angeles' Staples Center on Sunday, Jan. 26. It airs on CBS at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT.

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Ed Komenda writes about Las Vegas for the Reno Gazette Journal and USA Today Network. Do you care about democracy? Then support local journalism by subscribing to the Reno Gazette Journal right here