Pros
The pay is relatively decent for Las Vegas. Benefits are good. The facilities are new, modern, and clean -- three qualities missing from every other call center in Las Vegas. Most of the people are friendly. You'll learn a lot about tech, and your family will be asking you how to fix their phones.
Cons
The location is terrible. It's way out of the way for many of the techs. Management is out of touch with the techs, and any outside reality. There are managers who don't have any idea, for example, that the best talent in Las Vegas goes to The Strip for jobs. Management lives in a bubble of spreadsheets and metrics of dubious quality and accuracy. This is an insurance company (after market extended warranties, actually) trying to do tech. The result is people in the VP and C suite in Nashville are completely clueless about how tech works or what customers need. They work with a third party for things like ADA compliance and any sort of medical issue which requires leave of absence. That third party has no understanding of basic HIPAA policies and disregards various legal and ethical guidelines in medicine. You'll be told that internal promotions are what they're all about. But when push comes to shove, external managers are hired while those promoted are sat back down. Upper management is led by people with no connection with reality. In other words, this is a corporate call center led by shallow people who never read books or could make it in another field. This is a call center. It's a shallow industry led by shallow people.