Critical reviews Las Vegas was met with mixed reviews from critics.
Jack Gould of
The New York Times felt the debut episode to be "thin and strained" and said, "[t]o come up with 10 hours of variety a week is a staggering requirement that will require far more imagination, preparation and probably greater financial expenditure... the whole had the stamp of somewhat old-fashioned
vaudeville." A later review by Gould called the show "indifferent variety, wanting in pace, cohesion and personality" and the remote broadcasts as "... disjointed and suggested a poor man's
Hollywood Palace."
Scripps-Howard's
Harriet Van Horne noted that, while
Las Vegass premiere on WPIX topped
Tonight,
Joey Bishop and
The Merv Griffin Show, all three shows were outdrawn in the ratings by
WCBS-TV's airing of
The Incredible Shrinking Man. Dick Gray of the
Atlanta Journal said Dana "... leaves me less than excited" but praised his show business knowledge and felt the show could be a success if
production values were upgraded.
Robert Goldsborough of the
Chicago Tribune was more receptive to Dana's "hesitant" on-air persona and saw the "endless parade of top talent moving steadily thru the gambling mecca" of Las Vegas as an asset, but was critical of the show's frequent commercial breaks.
Variety viewed the excessive ads as detrimental to "a surprisingly posh program", saying they "made the Vegas end of [the show] seem mere wraparound for a
Madison Ave. blurb festival ... as a kind of parallel
McLuhanism, 'The medium is the message|[the] money is the message.'" Hal Humphrey of the
Los Angeles Times concurred, saying, "
The Las Vegas Show wasn't a show at all. It was a supermarket, and I've been in supermarkets where the box boys tell funnier jokes than were heard here Monday night." Hank Grant of
The Hollywood Reporter praised
Las Vegas as "... a
potpourri that threatened to boil over with too much talent" while
Kay Gardella of the
New York Daily News called it "... a late-night jackpot ... [that] promises to be everything a TV late show should be."
Ratings Las Vegas initially premiered to strong ratings, particularly in New York and Los Angeles, but experience a significant decline over the course of May 1967. Published reports showed
Las Vegas ultimately falling to a fraction of a point nationally and at last place in New York with a 1 rating compared to
Tonights 12 rating,
Merv Griffins 6 rating and
Joey Bishops 3 rating. Bill Dana asserted the show had around 2.6 million viewers in some surveys, making it "perfectly sound" on
cost-per-thousand measurements. == Cancellation ==