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EP 13 | Dolphins in Court, Vegas on the Edge, and the Mailman

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Manage episode 500045808 series 3649585
Content provided by Octus. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Octus or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

Jason Sanjana and Kevin Eckhardt open in Florida with the bankruptcy of the Miami Seaquarium, owned by Mexico-based The Dolphin Company. What began as a typical debt-fueled acquisition has spiraled into one of the most contentious Chapter 11 cases of the year. Former CEO Eduardo Albor is accused of obstructing the current management, withholding company records, defying court orders, and even engineering an armed standoff at corporate headquarters. The case now includes $10K daily sanctions, $3.3 million in damages claims, and a tug-of-war between U.S. bankruptcy court and Mexican civil proceedings. David Zubkis, Legal Analyst at Octus, joins (03:51) to break down the cross-border legal mess, asset sale hurdles, and the practical challenges of selling live animals under federal law.

From there, the discussion shifts to Las Vegas (24:37) where the focus is on the collapse of its middle-market tourism base. With Canadian and Mexican travelers historically making up roughly 50% of international visits to Vegas, political tensions and rising costs have pushed that traffic into steep decline. Earnings from MGM Resorts and Caesars Entertainment show luxury properties like the Bellagio holding strong while mid-tier hotels struggle, and Station Casinos has pulled a $1.5 billion loan repricing amid soft demand. The hosts ask if the city is undergoing a temporary slump or if the era of affordable Vegas is gone for good.

At (37:23) the episode’s unofficial sponsor takes the stage: Visit Las Vegas, the “tourism board” that insists the Strip is not empty, you are just poor. The tongue-in-cheek ad skewers airfare hikes, inflated room rates, and mortgage-sized table minimums before the conversation turns to The Sphere (38:36), the $2.3 billion, debt-heavy venue owned by Sphere Entertainment Co.. While some call it the best concert experience of their lives, others cite obstructed views, logistical headaches, and ticket prices that rival rent payments.

The episode wraps with The Mailman segment (47:27), a Nextdoor saga where a new homeowner tried to stamp “Return to Sender” on a single addressed piece of junk mail marked for “Current Homeowner” instead of simply throwing it away. Their USPS carrier returned it with handwritten notes pointing out why that is not how mail works. Jason and Kevin side with the postal worker, question the legal citation the homeowner tried to use, and offer a reminder to pick your battles and be nice to the people delivering your mail.

----more----

Hosted by Jason Sanjana & Kevin Eckhardt
Guest: David Zubkis (Legal Analyst, Octus)
Produced and Edited by Tanya Hubbard
A Production of The Octus Podcast Network

  continue reading

13 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 500045808 series 3649585
Content provided by Octus. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Octus or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

Jason Sanjana and Kevin Eckhardt open in Florida with the bankruptcy of the Miami Seaquarium, owned by Mexico-based The Dolphin Company. What began as a typical debt-fueled acquisition has spiraled into one of the most contentious Chapter 11 cases of the year. Former CEO Eduardo Albor is accused of obstructing the current management, withholding company records, defying court orders, and even engineering an armed standoff at corporate headquarters. The case now includes $10K daily sanctions, $3.3 million in damages claims, and a tug-of-war between U.S. bankruptcy court and Mexican civil proceedings. David Zubkis, Legal Analyst at Octus, joins (03:51) to break down the cross-border legal mess, asset sale hurdles, and the practical challenges of selling live animals under federal law.

From there, the discussion shifts to Las Vegas (24:37) where the focus is on the collapse of its middle-market tourism base. With Canadian and Mexican travelers historically making up roughly 50% of international visits to Vegas, political tensions and rising costs have pushed that traffic into steep decline. Earnings from MGM Resorts and Caesars Entertainment show luxury properties like the Bellagio holding strong while mid-tier hotels struggle, and Station Casinos has pulled a $1.5 billion loan repricing amid soft demand. The hosts ask if the city is undergoing a temporary slump or if the era of affordable Vegas is gone for good.

At (37:23) the episode’s unofficial sponsor takes the stage: Visit Las Vegas, the “tourism board” that insists the Strip is not empty, you are just poor. The tongue-in-cheek ad skewers airfare hikes, inflated room rates, and mortgage-sized table minimums before the conversation turns to The Sphere (38:36), the $2.3 billion, debt-heavy venue owned by Sphere Entertainment Co.. While some call it the best concert experience of their lives, others cite obstructed views, logistical headaches, and ticket prices that rival rent payments.

The episode wraps with The Mailman segment (47:27), a Nextdoor saga where a new homeowner tried to stamp “Return to Sender” on a single addressed piece of junk mail marked for “Current Homeowner” instead of simply throwing it away. Their USPS carrier returned it with handwritten notes pointing out why that is not how mail works. Jason and Kevin side with the postal worker, question the legal citation the homeowner tried to use, and offer a reminder to pick your battles and be nice to the people delivering your mail.

----more----

Hosted by Jason Sanjana & Kevin Eckhardt
Guest: David Zubkis (Legal Analyst, Octus)
Produced and Edited by Tanya Hubbard
A Production of The Octus Podcast Network

  continue reading

13 episodes

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