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Thursday, July 26, 2012
Gambling With an Edge - Listener questions answered
This week's show is devoted to answers to questions about gambling submitted by listeners.
Labels:
Gambling,
Las Vegas,
Radio Show Podcasts,
video poker
Thursday, July 19, 2012
Gambling With an Edge - guest Hollywood Dave Stann
The guest this week is Hollywood Dave Stann, known as "The bad boy of blackjack," and author of Hollywood Blackjack.
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Labels:
blackjack,
card counting,
Gambling,
poker,
Radio Show Podcasts
Thursday, July 12, 2012
Gambling With an Edge - guests Ed Miller and Arnold Snyder
There are 2 guests on the show this week to discuss reading players at the poker table. The guests are Ed Miller and Arnold Snyder.
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Labels:
Gambling,
Las Vegas,
poker,
Radio Show Podcasts
Thursday, July 5, 2012
Gambling With an Edge - no guest this week
No guest this week so Bob and Mike discuss the current World Series of poker and other recent gambling news.
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Sunday, July 1, 2012
BJ episode of This American Life
If you have never heard This American Life you are missing one of the best shows on radio. Fortunately the show has reached the modern era, and can be heard on the internet or as a podcast. A recent episode was about blackjack, and has prompted a lot of discussion. http://www.thisamericanlife.org/radio-archives/episode/466/blackjack. Usually when I see someone is doing a show on blackjack, or casinos in general I know it is going to suck. It doesn't matter if it is 60 Minutes or The History channel, invariably they get it wrong. I'm happy to report, that this episode does not suck. They got Andy Bloch for the first segment. (You can hear my podcast with him here.) And they have member of the Holy Rollers team for segment 2.
I was talking with a close friend, a high level professional player who has been playing on again off again for 35 years. He told me that he was listening to the show, and at one point his body convulsed into a massive sob. Something in the show struck him so strongly that he had an immediate physical reaction. I knew exactly what moment he was talking about. In the segment on the Holy Rollers they are talking to a player named Mike. Mike said that he would have an enormous suite on the Las Vegas strip. Everything is comped so he can eat in the finest restaurants, drink the best champagne, see any show. But he would go up to his massive suite, order a club sandwich, sit looking out over the Las Vegas strip, and think about how lonely he was. Wow. That is a moment of absolute truth, and I think every professional blackjack player has experienced it. I think this is one of the major reasons that people stop playing professionally.
I have a son who turned 18 this year. He is interested in playing, and asked me, "Why aren't X and Y out playing?" There are players that would give up their left testicle for the opportunity X and Y had. They both had been trained by some of the best advantage players alive. They never had to count cards, they went right to the good stuff. And both of them are now working at straight jobs. My son asked, "Wouldn't they make more money working as APs?" I would have to think they would, even though I wouldn't bet that either of them could ace a basic strategy test. So why aren't they doing it?
As a parent we try to pass along some bit of wisdom to our kids, and we always hear that you have to "find your passion." Clearly X and Y did not have a passion for beating casinos. I also told my son that you have to find the things in life that make you happy. For me, I realized long ago that I am much happier working with people than working alone. That is why I will always be happier as a director, than a writer, happier eating with friends, than fine dining alone, and playing blackjack with a partner, rather than by myself. Right now there is a game I should be playing. It's worth between $500 and $1,000 per hour, and I can't get myself to go. I tell myself it is because it is hard to get to, lots of travel, maybe it's burned already, yada yada yada. But I know the real reason I'm not going is because my current partner has heat in that casino, and I would have to go alone. I would rather go to a worse game with a partner, than a better game alone. Oh well, I may not maximize my earnings, but at least I know what makes me happy. And if my son ends up learning that about himself, that will make me happy too.
I was talking with a close friend, a high level professional player who has been playing on again off again for 35 years. He told me that he was listening to the show, and at one point his body convulsed into a massive sob. Something in the show struck him so strongly that he had an immediate physical reaction. I knew exactly what moment he was talking about. In the segment on the Holy Rollers they are talking to a player named Mike. Mike said that he would have an enormous suite on the Las Vegas strip. Everything is comped so he can eat in the finest restaurants, drink the best champagne, see any show. But he would go up to his massive suite, order a club sandwich, sit looking out over the Las Vegas strip, and think about how lonely he was. Wow. That is a moment of absolute truth, and I think every professional blackjack player has experienced it. I think this is one of the major reasons that people stop playing professionally.
I have a son who turned 18 this year. He is interested in playing, and asked me, "Why aren't X and Y out playing?" There are players that would give up their left testicle for the opportunity X and Y had. They both had been trained by some of the best advantage players alive. They never had to count cards, they went right to the good stuff. And both of them are now working at straight jobs. My son asked, "Wouldn't they make more money working as APs?" I would have to think they would, even though I wouldn't bet that either of them could ace a basic strategy test. So why aren't they doing it?
As a parent we try to pass along some bit of wisdom to our kids, and we always hear that you have to "find your passion." Clearly X and Y did not have a passion for beating casinos. I also told my son that you have to find the things in life that make you happy. For me, I realized long ago that I am much happier working with people than working alone. That is why I will always be happier as a director, than a writer, happier eating with friends, than fine dining alone, and playing blackjack with a partner, rather than by myself. Right now there is a game I should be playing. It's worth between $500 and $1,000 per hour, and I can't get myself to go. I tell myself it is because it is hard to get to, lots of travel, maybe it's burned already, yada yada yada. But I know the real reason I'm not going is because my current partner has heat in that casino, and I would have to go alone. I would rather go to a worse game with a partner, than a better game alone. Oh well, I may not maximize my earnings, but at least I know what makes me happy. And if my son ends up learning that about himself, that will make me happy too.
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