Two years ago, Richmond narrowly voted against allowing Black-owned multimedia conglomerate Urban One to build a casino in an economically depressed area of the city’s Southside.
Since the General Assembly passed legislation in 2020 for specified localities to vote on whether to have casinos, four have been approved: Bristol, Danville, Norfolk and Portsmouth. Regardless, this “mini casino,” as state legislators have called it, gives Richmonders a taste of what could be in store for the city. Rosie’s owner, racing and gambling conglomerate Churchill Downs, maintains that this, somehow, is not gambling. It’s Friday night at Rosie’s Gaming Emporium in Southside, and everyone is hoping to strike it big.
Over the gamblers’ shoulders you can see how much they have left on their gaming cards on the bottom left of their screens: $20.
Row after row, the colorful machines light up as gamblers try their luck.īoasting names like China Gold, Quick Spin and Queenie, these penny, ten-cent and dollar slot-like machines have their operators entranced nearly every seat is filled.