BRUNO RETURNING TO LAS VEGAS

Hawaii superstar Bruno Mars will return to the Las Vegas galaxy when he brings his musical fireworks in a six-show run beginning July 3 at the Park MGM this summer.

Performances also will be staged 4, 9, 10, 23 and 24. Tickets – starting at $99.50 – go on sale this Friday. (April 30)

Mars, hot on the charts with his co-billed “Leave the Door Open” with Silk Sonic collaborator Alexander .Paak, should be a sellout, particularly since he has been absent from the concert stage throughout the pandemic shut down all entertainment venues.

He is known for a string of chartbusters, including “24K Magic,” “Uptown Funk,” Just the Way You Are,” “That’s What I Like,” “When I Was Your Man,” and “Grenade.”

Tickets will be available at www.ticketmaster.com, beginning at 7 a.m. HST Friday.

Star-Advertiser Exits

RETIREMENTS, STAFF CUTS CONTINUE TO PLAGUE THE STAR-ADVERTISER

Retirements and staff cutbacks continue to plague the Honolulu Star-Advertiser, with no word on replacements to fill the dwindling ranks.

Notable sports columnist Ferd Lewis last week departed the sports department, after a four-decade stint. Sports editor Paul Arnett also has vacated his desk, with Curtis Murayama succeeding him.

Earlier, Gordon Pang retired as City Hall reporter, and columnist Lee Cataluna decided to bow out to join the Civil Beat, the online newspaper site.

The exit door continues to spin.

Another staff veteran, Betty Shimabukuro, has also retired as a veteran editor, features and food editor, cookbook author and Crave tabloid section honcho and contributor. She has stayed on during the pandemic last year, and finally is throwing in the towel.

Maureen McConnell, from the paper’s Opinion editorial section, has been reduced to part-time status.

After Frank Bridgewater retired last year as editor in chief of the Star-Advertiser, his desk remains vacant.

Some copy editors were slashed last year and not replaced. The cutbacks also meant employees were obligated to take a 20 per cent pay cut, reflected in a required two-week furlough.

Since the pandemic, the paper also has drastically reduced space (pages) and staff of the Features section, which has become a sandwich publication with a cut-back Travel section tucked behind the Sunday section during the Coronavirus pandemic. The stand-alone Features section is just a memory now.

And Play, the broadsheet that was the paper’s Thursday entertainment section, remains missing in action since being shelved last year.