You could see it last week at the Broadhurst Theatre on 44th Street, the site of a final public hearing on the casino before a do-or-die vote. “For the first time,” promised Marc Holliday, the CEO of the city’s largest commercial real estate firm, “everyone has a seat at this table, with Jay-Z at the head.” It’s a massive loss for all of the partners in the Times Square casino project—including its most famous one, whose up-from-nothing, keep-close-to-the-streets story was at the center of the closing argument.
Author: Noah Shachtman
Published at: 2025-09-17 20:35:51
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