Tim Cook attends opening of Adele's Las Vegas residency
Apple CEO Tim Cook was in attendance at the opening night of Adele's Las Vegas residency on Friday, watching the singer start her run of performances.
![Adele [Caesars Palace]](https://photos5.appleinsider.com/gallery/51461-101838-adele-vegas-xl.jpg)
Adele [Caesars Palace]
Performing at the Colosseum at Caesars Palace, Adele played to an audience of 4,100 people at the opening night. In attendance were many major personalities in showbiz and in business, including one from Apple.
In a list of high-profile attendees at the event, Tim Cook is listed alongside WeWork founder Adam Neumann, execs from Sony Music Group and CBS, director Baz Luhrmann, British artist Stormzy, and James Corden. While Cook's individual opinion isn't covered by Variety, the group of VIPs were said to be "audibly and visibly thrilled," complete with "screams and frequent standing ovations."
The performance was long-awaited, as the residency was originally set to start in January. However, production issues and Adele's unhappiness with the staging led to a nine-month delay.
At the start of the show, the singer apologized to those in attendance, saying "I'm truly sorry for any inconvenience and any disappointment that I've caused." The two-hour show then ensued, with almost 30 minutes of banter accompanying her greatest hits.
Read on AppleInsider
![Adele [Caesars Palace]](https://photos5.appleinsider.com/gallery/51461-101838-adele-vegas-xl.jpg)
Adele [Caesars Palace]
Performing at the Colosseum at Caesars Palace, Adele played to an audience of 4,100 people at the opening night. In attendance were many major personalities in showbiz and in business, including one from Apple.
In a list of high-profile attendees at the event, Tim Cook is listed alongside WeWork founder Adam Neumann, execs from Sony Music Group and CBS, director Baz Luhrmann, British artist Stormzy, and James Corden. While Cook's individual opinion isn't covered by Variety, the group of VIPs were said to be "audibly and visibly thrilled," complete with "screams and frequent standing ovations."
The performance was long-awaited, as the residency was originally set to start in January. However, production issues and Adele's unhappiness with the staging led to a nine-month delay.
At the start of the show, the singer apologized to those in attendance, saying "I'm truly sorry for any inconvenience and any disappointment that I've caused." The two-hour show then ensued, with almost 30 minutes of banter accompanying her greatest hits.
Read on AppleInsider

Comments
https://www.theguardian.com/music/2021/dec/03/security-intimacy-and-money-why-adele-is-going-to-las-vegas
She's doing 32 shows in Vegas at venues that seat over 4000 and tickets are over $700.
32 x 4000 x $700 = $90m
$90m in one year is hardly a sign of a washed up celebrity. Adele also had one of the best selling albums last year:
https://bestsellingalbums.org/year/2021
These days the sign of a washed up celebrity is selling personal messages on Cameo.
Lady Gaga did it for 2 years so she could make a lot of money while focusing on her next big album. I think your idea of Vegas entertainment is an antiquated notion of when the town was run by wise guys.
Also, your closing statements inadvertently confirmed my point. She can do this while recharging her creative batteries and come out with something significant later.
point suggesting that she’s so washed up as an artist that she is now a Las Vegas act with your “from a shooting star to another Vegas act” comment. I think you realize your brash initial reaction was in error and are now trying to save face.
https://www.billboard.com/pro/adele-earn-2-million-las-vegas-shows/
it looks like the $950,000 per show for Adele is her take, which may or may not be adjusted for her personal staff and other payouts, but it might be since these residency shows tend to pay allot payments and services to keep everything as simple as possible for the big acts.
Taylor Swift's 2018 Reputation Stadium Tour did break the record for the highest-grossing U.S. stadium tour of all time with $345 million from 38 shows. That is about $9 million per show, but that is gross. Those shows have a lot of overhead but I'm sure it's more than Adele is taking in per night but it's harder work and more stress to travel constantly. The previous record was held by The Rolling Stones, whose A Bigger Bang Tour from 2005 to 2007 grossed $245 million across 70 shows. =