While television is
cluttered with unreal reality shows, this competition is
genuine, cerebral and full of high drama.
It’s tournament poker,
and the tense exchanges of hundreds of thousands of
dollars are the hottest ticket in American television.
Behind baseball
caps and sunglasses, these modern-day gunslingers read
weaknesses, watch for any frailties and pull the trigger
when they feel it’s right.
Texas HoldEm
Poker
tournaments date back to 1949, but they weren’t
televised until the early 1990s. Early versions of
televised poker drew little attention.
Then the Discovery
Channel asked filmmaker Stephen Lipscomb to do a
one-hour documentary on the game.
Lipscomb was
fascinated by the drama of high-stakes poker and soon
started the “World Poker Tour” and created a sensation
on, of all things, The Travel Channel.
He brought his
presentation skills to the table, installing “lipstick”
cameras at each player’s seat so the viewing audience
could see the “hole cards,” or the cards dealt face-down
that only that particular player can see.
That changed the
whole experience, said professional player Annie Duke.
“Without seeing the
hole card, it’s just a bunch of stone-faced people
sitting around a table. But with the lipstick camera, it
becomes very exciting and fun to watch.”
Texas HoldEm
Poker also is
exciting, Lipscomb found, because “it’s the perfect
blend of luck and skill.”
“You and I could
get on the court with the Lakers or Pistons, and we’d
get killed,” he laughed. “But [with
Texas HoldEm
poker], you and
I can play against the pros!”
Lipscomb also was
able to build story lines and avoided clichés with his
brief bios of the players, in which no one tells, over a
tinkling piano, how his steelworker father got up at
3:30 every morning to drive him to the municipal poker
table for practice.
Now, ESPN hosts the
“World Series of Poker” and Bravo holds the “Celebrity
Poker Showdown” to rival the World Poker Tour’s
“Hollywood Home Game.”
Lipscomb delights
in the fact that ESPN recently showed poker for 24 hours
straight, and he said that a recent “World Poker Tour”
show drew 3 percent of all viewers in America — a high
number given the number of channels on most cable
systems.
Their game is
No-Limit Texas HoldEm.
Each player gets
two cards face down and can bet, if they’re staying in.
Three community cards are put on the table, face-up, in
what’s called the flop.
Players again bet
based on the combined cards. Two more cards are turned
up, and players make the best five out of their seven
cards. And the money flies.
But why poker, and
not bridge? Or blackjack?
Chris “Jesus”
Ferguson, a Ph.D. in artificial intelligence and the
2000 World Champion, feels it’s the game’s unique
combination of skill and luck that is its drawing card.
“It’s a great game.
There’s a lot of thinking going on, but lots of luck,
too. And the human element — there’s a lot of emotion
shown by the players. It’s really works, from the
game-show aspect.”
Duke, sister of the
current world champion Howard Lederer, and
Texas HoldEm
poker pro for
the past ten years, agrees.
“In craps, there’s
no skill — it’s all luck. Baccarat — there’s a huge
element of chance,” she said.
“And in chess,
chess is deeply intellectual. If I played Kasparov 100
times, he’d win 100 times. But you combine the two
elements in poker.”
And it’s an
equal-opportunity game, Duke said.
“I don’t like when
people single me out because I’m a woman,” she said.
Duke spoke of
winning a recent tournament:
“The day I won,
there were two tournaments — women only, and open. I
played with the men. But [women-only tables] are a great
entrée for women.”
Celebrities are
addicted, too — to both watching and playing.
“It’s interesting
to watch the different styles [of the pros],” said Lou
Diamond Phillips in a telephone interview.
Playing Texas
HoldEm is “my new passion,” Phillips said. But he knows
his depth.
“You’re always in
danger against the pros,” Phillips said. “They never
make a stupid bet.”
So Phillips plays
other celebs on “Hollywood Home Game.” His take on his
rivals?
“Ben Affleck plays
a lot. Really good. Tobey Maguire is a good player.
“Norm MacDonald
plays a good game. Mimi Rogers. Camryn Manheim (of the
legal drama “The Practice.”)
“James Woods is a
really good player, probably the best. A really tight
player. He’s a brain.”
Does he have advice
to the GI who wants to learn?
“Yeah man, play!
You have to take some bad beats before you get good.
You’ve gotta get a feel for the table. Play!”