Matt Ingenthron's Stream of Consciousness

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20040912 Sunday September 12, 2004

The Power of Television

I talked to my 92 year old grandfather, Ed Ingenthron, for a little bit tonight. [I'd wanted to post a link to this article about him in the Kansas City Star, but their content isn't solely advertising supported :( ] Anyway, he's an avid poker player (his preferred game is Omaha hold-em), and has been for many, many years.

In one of my last few visits to Kansas City, we went to a riverboat casino1. He showed me a room they had on the barge where they used to have poker pits. He told me that the casino closed the poker pits, due to lack of popularity. He was forced to go to Las Vegas to play poker.

Well, when I talked to him this evening, I asked him if the recent popularity of poker on television had any effect on the casinos there in KC. It turns out that all of the casinos have re-opened their poker pits and they're packed all of the time!

I just find this weird. I wish I understood the chain of events-- did latent poker players become inspired to go to casinos? Or did people get enough confidence watching it on TV to chance their own money on it? Btw, the casinos do win more often than not, in case you weren't sure.

In any event, it just reconfirmed how powerful television is in this society of ours...


1. It's a bit of a misnomer to call it a riverboat. It used to be they had to go out and cruise the river to be legal. Well, over time, the boat became a barge on the side of the river. In an accident, one boat broke away from the bank. There were more changes to laws, and now the barges only need to be in river water, in a pool, attached to the river. To me this is just silly....

( Sep 12 2004, 10:30:19 PM PDT ) Permalink Comments [1]

Comments:

I suspect the popularity on television, books (such as "Positively fifth street") and inexpensive computer games have combined to make the game (esp. Hold 'em games, where everyone has a large number of shared cards) less frightening. When one sees people like Chris Moneymaker, coming from the web to win millions of dollars, it seems anyone can beat the odds (in a tournament, the odds are X-1 against where x= n-1 players) and come out a millionaire. As for the house... I can't say for the boats, but in Vegas the house doesn't play poker... it charges a fee (taken as a percentage of each pot) to host the game. This is because poker is a game of chance and skill, where good players have an edge. The is no mechanical way to guarantee a payoff, and certainly no way to keep it small enough (per hour of play) to keep the losers playing, day in, day out. TK

Posted by Terry Karney on September 27, 2004 at 07:31 AM PDT #

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