|
POKER isn't allowed in school, so eighth-grade
would-be card sharks ditch telltale chips,
gather at lunch and use push-ups as currency: "I
see your five push-ups and raise you 15." Faced
with the same dilemma, high schoolers bet bags
of potato chips and cookies from their lunches,
or toothpicks that they can quickly stuff into
their pockets if the principal happens along.
Ask any teens and they'll tell you Texas Holdem
poker is in. Ask their parents, and they'll
marvel that TVs and video game consoles are
gathering dust. Over the last two years, poker
has increasingly become the centerpiece of
family game nights, birthday parties, bar
mitzvahs, post-prom bashes, even weddings.
Within the party industry, "casinos are the big
thing," says Tracy Nguyen, director of sales and
marketing for the Sterling, Va.-based
Entertainment Connection. "There are a lot of
companies that do nothing but." About half the
customers booking high school-sponsored parties
ask for poker, says Nguyen. Or they ask for
"...you know, that game they play on ESPN."
"Most of my friends play poker," says Mark
Glicksteen, an eighth-grader at Medea Creek
Middle School in Oak Park, in Ventura County
north of Los Angeles. For his 12th birthday,
Mark had a "casino party" where guests played
poker, blackjack and roulette. During the school
year, Mark and his buddies host weekly poker
games at their houses, usually betting chips,
but sometimes, he says, they have $1 buy-ins.
Poker experts and middle school kids say the
trend is pushed along by television shows that
feature the game and aided by a renewed interest
in person-to-person interaction. (Board game
sales are also up 6 percent over last year,
according to the marketing research firm NDP
Group.)
The youthful penchant for poker is winning
praise from parents such as Carrie Glicksteen,
Mark's mother, who says cards have supplanted
another pastime with its own downside -- shoot-'em-up
video games -- as Mark and his friends' favorite
activity. "They actually sit down with real
people and socialize with each other," says
Glicksteen. "The whole idea of playing games
across the table is a really nice thing, an
opportunity to interact again."
Yet some parents are bothered by poker's
popularity, even as they accede to their
children's wishes. One mother who let her son
have a poker party for his 16th birthday would
not allow him to discuss it with a reporter.
"We're not into gambling, and I wouldn't want to
give the impression that our family is," she
says. Gambling "has become almost an illness
with some of our older son's friends. It's
something you have to watch."
The gambling helpline at the nonprofit National
Council on Problem Gaming has received an influx
of calls this year from people in their late
teens and 20s, says Keith Whyte, executive
director of the organization. "Kids have got to
be aware that it's a health hazard. ...The
earlier you expose your kids to gambling, the
more likely they are to develop a gambling
problem."
Just as parents might allow children a sip of
wine at the dinner table but wouldn't let them
guzzle, children should be taught to play poker
in moderation, he says.
Mark learned to play Texas holdem -- the card
game that has stormed casinos and at-home tables
since the advent of TV poker -- by watching the
World Series of Poker on ESPN. The Travel
Channel's World Poker Tour started the trend in
March 2003, and since then Bravo, the Fox Sports
Network and other channels have aired their own
versions.
Internet
Texas Holdem
poker kindled the TV poker phenomenon, says
David G. Schwartz, coordinator of the Gaming
Studies Research Center at the University of
Nevada, Las Vegas. The Web's poker landscape is
ever expanding; between January 2001 and August
2004, the number of Internet tournament players
increased by 2,500 percent to 21,930 per hour,
according to Pokerpulse.com.
"America has always been a nation of gamblers
... of risk takers," and kids are no exception,
Whyte says. Research indicates that gambling is
often the earliest of the addictive behaviors.
In studies of kids younger than 17, "gambling
precedes almost all other risky behaviors:
smoking, substance abuse, fighting and
promiscuous sex. It may be the gateway behavior
that we believed marijuana was," he adds.
In
a study last year by the Adolescent Risk
Communications Institute, more than half of
young people age 14 to 22 reported gambling in
an average month. The study found that those
younger than 18 favored card games, sports
betting and bingo.
This is the first year that the University of
California, Los Angeles, has offered poker at
orientation, and it was a major hit, says
Matthew Ontell, a senior political science major
who helped organize the event. Nearly everyone,
young men and women, knew how to play.
Throughout orientation, "they were all playing
among themselves." Poker is much bigger this
year than last year, he says.
The freshmen "will have a lot of dorm games,"
says Ontell, and fuel the poker playing that's
taken off at UCLA in recent years. "Before,
everybody sat around and played Counterstrike,"
says Ontell of the video game. "Now people play
poker."
Away from campus, poker is one more way to get
everybody together, says Susan Huber, 46, of
Orange, whose 26-year-old son and
daughter-in-law started the Orange County Poker
Tour in December as a family get-together. The
monthly tournament has expanded to include some
40 family members and friends.
There are men and women, college kids and
retirees, many wearing good luck charms --
Members Only jackets or sunglasses or bowlers --
crowding around card tables in the back yard and
living room, often until 2 a.m. Each winner gets
to keep a modified softball trophy (with playing
cards glued to its top) until somebody steals
the title.
With flashy wads of cash floating around --
buy-in is $30 -- this family game night is a
long way from Yahtzee. |