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In the glitzy underbelly of Las Vegas, where hopes rise and fall with the spin of a wheel or the turn of a card, a cast of colorful characters try their luck against the house. Most lose. Few win. But in Louis Theroux’s unforgettable documentary Gambling in Las Vegas, one man stood out among the compulsive gamblers, desperate dreamers, and forlorn losers: Alan Erlick — the self-proclaimed “Mattress King.”
Erlick didn’t just appear on camera. He commanded it. With his loud floral shirts, big talk, and even bigger bets, Erlick became the unlikely star of Theroux’s exploration into the psychology of gambling addiction. But who was this man, and where did he come from?
The Rise of the Mattress King
Long before his flamboyant turn on British television, Alan Erlick built a name for himself in the most unlikely of industries: mattresses. Based in Southern California, Erlick owned and operated a chain of stores that earned him the nickname “The Mattress King.” With his booming voice and relentless work ethic, Erlick turned beds into bucks — lots of them.
He wasn’t just selling memory foam. He was selling a dream of comfort, of luxury, of success. His face was on billboards. His voice blared from local radio ads. People in his community knew him. Erlick made it — or so it seemed.
But beneath the surface of that success story was a man with a hunger for risk. And when the stakes in business didn’t feel high enough, the neon playground of Las Vegas called his name.
The Louis Theroux Spotlight
In Gambling in Las Vegas, a 2007 documentary from the BBC, Louis Theroux dives into the psychology and personalities that fuel Sin City’s billion-dollar gambling industry. Most of the people Theroux meets are tragic — individuals like Dr. Martha Ogman, a once-promising medical professional caught in the destructive grip of gambling addiction.
But Alan Erlick was different. While others seemed burdened or broken, Erlick appeared to thrive on the chaos of the casino floor. A smiled broadly as he pushed chips into the center of the table. He cracked jokes with croupiers and dealers. He called himself “a businessman, not a gambler” — even as he dropped tens of thousands in a single evening.
At first glance, he seemed like a high-rolling eccentric. But as the documentary progressed, viewers were treated to the subtleties behind the bravado. Erlick wasn’t a reckless addict. He was calculating, confident — perhaps delusional, but also undeniably compelling.
He talked about winning streaks, systems destiny. And for a moment, just a moment, you wanted to believe he might actually beat the house.
Erlick’s Downfall
Following the documentary’s release, Erlick became a minor cult figure among fans of Louis Theroux’s work. Online forums buzzed with speculation. Who was he? Was he still gambling? Was his business thriving?
For a while, it seemed like Erlick faded from the public eye. There were no more TV appearances. No interviews. No Mattress King billboards.
Then, rumors began to surface: Alan Erlick was driving for Uber.
At first, it sounded like a myth — a story passed between Theroux fans with a wink and a nod. But slowly, testimonies began to appear online. Riders in the Las Vegas area claimed they had been picked up by a charming, talkative driver who introduced himself as “Alan.” He wore flashy shirts. He told stories about running mattress stores and gambling with five-figure chips. One rider even recognized him from the documentary.
It was him. The Mattress King had traded box springs and baccarat for backseat passengers.
A Fall, or a New Chapter?
How did Erlick go from successful entrepreneur and big-time gambler to ride-share driver?
There are no clear answers — and Erlick himself has never officially commented on the transition. But what seems apparent is that he embodies the classic American archetype: the risk-taker, the reinvention artist, the man who bet it all — and kept betting, even after the game changed.
Maybe his mattress empire collapsed under the weight of competition. Gambling caught up with him. Maybe he lost it all — or maybe, just maybe, he chose a simpler life, one without roulette wheels and investor meetings. Perhaps Uber gave him something Vegas never could: control.
And perhaps, in a strange way, it’s the perfect ending to Erlick’s story — or the perfect new beginning. A man who once sold dreams of restful nights, who chased his own dream of beating the house, now spends his days ferrying others through a city built on illusion and chance.
As you step into the back of his car, you might catch a glint in his eye — the same spark Theroux saw all those years ago. And if you’re lucky, he might tell you the story of the time he almost — almost — broke the bank.
Because Alan Erlick never really disappeared. He just took a different road.
Photo: Freepik
