Friday, October 30, 2009

Poker on TV Update: Face the Ace Saturday, Ivey Tuesday

Face the Ace runs another episode Saturday at 5 PM on NBC.

Phil Ivey is on ESPN's E:60 Tuesday at 7 PM.

The 2009 World Heads-Up Poker Championship is streaming live from the Victoria Casino in London through Saturday.

Million Dollar Challenge is off till November 22. Poker After Dark is in rerun till December 7.

An English-language version of Million Dollar Cash Game season 3 has finally become available for downloading or streaming. The production is poor, particularly the onscreen graphics, but it's a huge cash game so I'm sure some of you will want to watch it.

This week's newsbites:
  • PokerNews.com did a comparison of Million Dollar Challenge and Face the Ace and concluded that Million Dollar Challenge is the better show, which I think is the consensus view.
  • Poker After Dark started filming another 13 weeks of programming Thursday.
  • The 2 Months $2 Million cast did some more interviews, one of which includes a much more interesting story of the Viffer match than the one on the show.
  • Kara Scott will be the sideline reporter for the WSOP Europe
  • Windy City Poker Championship is now also airing on Bright House Networks.
Check our poker on TV schedule for the full list of shows running new episodes.

Don't miss any poker on TV: sign up for our weekly newsletter or subscribe to our feed.

Money Added Tournaments Start This Weekend At Bodog

Bodog (review) is adding $2,500 to $25,000 to the prize pool of every tournament in the Bodog Poker Open, which starts Sunday:

Date
Time
Event
Buy In
Type
Added
Sun
Nov 1
16:00 ET
 1
$100 + $9
NLHE
$15k Added
Mon
Nov 2
20:30 ET
 2
$250 + $20
NLHE
$5k Added
Tues
Nov 3
20:30 ET
 3
$300 + $25
NLHE 6-Max
$5k Added
Wed
Nov 4
20:30 ET
4
$50 + $5
NLHE (Rebuy)
$5k Added
Thurs
Nov 5
20:30 ET
5
$150 + $12
Pot Limit
$5k Added
Fri
Nov 6
20:30 ET
6
$150 + $12
Limit
$2,500 Added
Sat
Nov 7


Satellite Sat


Sun
Nov 8
16:00 ET
Finale
$470 + $30
NLHE
$25k Added

Don't miss any online poker news: sign up for our weekly newsletter or subscribe to our feed.

World Poker Tour Gets Another Purchase Offer

World Poker Tour Enterprises (WPTE) got a $35 million offer from Mandalay Media for the company. PartyPoker had previously offered $12.3 million for WPTE's operating assets, topping an even earlier offer. Mandalay has asked WPTE to postpone the shareholder meeting, scheduled for today, at which they were to approve the sale to PartyPoker.

Mandalay Media is a small, unprofitable company that distributes entertainment, including video and games, over cell-phone networks. Hollywood legend Peter Guber is co-chairman and 13% owner.

The price difference isn't as much as it seems: Party offered to buy the operating assets of the World Poker Tour from the company for $12.3 million. Mandalay is offering to buy the whole company from the shareholders for $35 million ($25 million in cash and $10 million in Mandalay stock). By getting the whole company Mandalay would also get the approximately $14 million in net current assets (cash and such) that WPTE holds. They say that their offer is 23% better than Party's and 54% above WPTE's current share price.

Mandalay claims that they'll add value by putting the World Poker Tour on cell phone networks, but I'm skeptical. Online poker room sponsorship of poker tours and TV shows is proving to be the winning model in the field, so I think Party would get more value out of WPTE than Mandalay.

Update: Mandalay has already increased their offer, to $36.5 million with a greater proportion of cash.

Don't miss any poker on TV: sign up for our weekly newsletter or subscribe to our feed.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Kara Scott New High Stakes Poker Hostess

AJ Benza blogged twice (1, 2) lately about losing his High Stakes Poker gig. On the October 26 Mediocre Poker Radio podcast he added that Kara Scott will be the new hostess for High Stakes Poker season 6, doing interviews while Gabe Kaplan does commentary alone:
I heard it's going to be Kara Scott who's going to be down by the tables. She'll work three days 'cause the game's a three day game. And then Gabe will do all the commenting alone, which is kind of lonely: there's nobody to play off of, there's nobody to joke with. I know Gabe, he's a comedian, he's got great timing, and I know he's going to miss that (indistinct) but.. GSN just... they got into this price-slashing mode. And a lot of people took a lot less money. I offered to take less money to keep the job but they said they didn't care about that.

Really what they're doing now is that they have Kara Scott doing tableside interviews and Gabe announcing alone you're basically just doing Poker After Dark.
I think adding a hostess is a step in the wrong direction. 90% of the interviews on Poker After Dark aren't as good as watching the game, and that show airs most of the hands. High Stakes Poker only shows a selection of interesting hands, so the poker that's sacrificed for interviews is likely to be a greater loss.

Kara Scott is attractive and well-liked, however, and they could do much worse. She's most well known to most of us for being the European Poker Tour hostess. She's also the girlfriend of Brian Townsend, one of the best poker players in the world, and has had some good tournament cashes lately.







Some more tidbits from the AJ Benza interview:
Mori took a pay cut like you guys wouldn't believe.

I don't think right now that High Stakes Poker is having an easy time putting poker players together to play season 6.

Poker After Dark... it should be on at two o'clock in the morning because it really is like Valium, it's like a Xanax, it's the most boring, slow-paced show.... it should be Poker After Death.
Don't miss any poker on TV: sign up for our weekly newsletter or subscribe to our feed.

Monday, October 26, 2009

2 Months 2 Million Likely To Return, Plus My Thoughts On The Show

KRANTZ was on Episode 41 of the Deuce Plays podcast. If you want to know how the show was made you should listen to it, since it's the most detailed description I've heard. Some of the interesting points:

G4 has 90 days after the first run to decide if they want a second season. Ratings have exceeded expectations, so Jay is confident it will get renewed. 2 Months 2 Million is the most expensive show G4 ever produced. It's gotten strong word of mouth, so viewership has increased week after week. New G4 viewers also came to the network just to watch it. This is the first reality show for G4, a division of Comcast. The show has been heavily pirated, which surprised them, but they policed it pretty actively. They can't stream 2 Months 2 Million or offer it internationally until 90 days after the first run because of contractual arrangements (there have been a lot of complaints from people unable to watch it). Some viewers have suggested changing up the player lineup, but Jay doesn't like the idea: they've all been friends for years, and they might not even want to do it if the lineup was changed. Jay didn't want the show to be called 2 Months 2 Million because they didn't know if they could achieve that goal (though they had done so the previous two summers). Big no-limit hold 'em games didn't run too much over the summer, which hurt their earnings. Pot-limit Omaha ran more often, but they aren't big PLO players. They'll probably spend time learning PLO and mixed games before next summer's show. Additionally, the four of them are well known to their opponents now, so it's hard for them to get action. KRANTZ was new to UltimateBet, so he was able to get good action there. They didn't actually stumble upon Erica Schoenberg at a pool and set up a match, as the show suggested: it was a reality-TV setup. There was a process of coming up with episode ideas, like going dune buggying. There were arguments over what the players wanted to do, and producers' ideas that they didn't want to do. In the club scenes there would be signs up saying that filming was going on, and people would have to sign release forms. The stuff around pools generally wasn't set up, but sometimes the girls were miked up. The players weren't allowed to talk about the cameras, so they came up with stories like Emil being a prince from Dubai. Jay says the single guys pulled mad tail over the summer, but the producers chose to portray them as a lot dorkier than they are, e.g. showing Dani being shot down by his Connect Four date when in reality they dated for a while. Jay described a typical day while shooting the show and the process of making the show, e.g. the cameras weren't there continuously: they arrived late each morning. The four of them went to a lot of places where the cameras couldn't get in to film them, e.g. nightclubs. 2 Months 2 Million was more documentary style than other reality shows according to the staff that worked on it. They had one day off a week, though that could still be dominated by show work like G4 publicity. They were often drained by the end of the day.

They did talk about some non-show things as well. The guys would like to play live more often because of the weaker competition, but they would have to get used to the deeper stacks. Jay hasn't put a lot of work into his game in the last year since he's been working on his business DeucesCracked, the show, and writing a screenplay. Without working at poker constantly he can't remain at the top.

My thoughts on the show:

I love online poker so I anticipated it eagerly, and after the first episode I said it was the most exciting poker show I'd seen since the first episode of High Stakes Poker, maybe ever. My enthusiasm for it quickly waned, however, as it proved to be all short-attention-span theater, no meat. My favorite comment on it from the message boards was "ooh, shiny things!" I've seen brilliant reality shows before, and each of them was great because I got to know and root for a favorite character to win a competition. With 2 Months 2 Million, however, we don't get to know the characters at all, and the show isn't a competition format. Editing in slurping sounds over pictures of Emil drinking through straws seems to be the producers' idea of character development. As mentioned above, they even showed Dani being blown off by a girl he actually dated in order to keep up their preselected characterization of the four guys as nerds. The best character development I remember from the show was when they briefly delved into a guest star's debate about whether to go to college or be a poker pro. Despite all that, I enjoyed the show, am sad the season is over, and look forward to seeing it again. I've seen much better-made reality shows, however, and if it weren't about a subject I love I wouldn't have kept watching 2 Months 2 Million.

Don't miss any poker on TV: sign up for our weekly newsletter or subscribe to our feed.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Million Dollar Challenge "The Highest Rated Poker Show in US History"

Daniel Negreanu wrote about Million Dollar Challenge's ratings in a recent blog:
I am SO very happy with the show. Wow, just amazing numbers in terms of viewers and I really think the show hits a demographic that is mostly totally new to poker and likely doesn't watch shows like PAD, High Stakes Poker, or even the WSOP. The whole point of creating the show was to introduce people to poker in a format that they are more comfortable with: a game show format.

We retained 15% of the NFL audience with ratings of 2.1 million households and estimates at around 4 million viewers. That makes the show officially the highest rated poker show in US history. I'm still in a bit of shock!

As I mentioned in my preview blog about the show, as a poker player, when watching the show, you have to think about the bigger picture here. The target audience is NEW players. That's really good for ALL of you! It's certainly good for poker.

The poker is fast paced, but again, what that does is give the contestants a real chance at winning big money. If you have a deep, slow structure, they'd have a tough time getting through three players. The faster structure increases the luck factor, but there still is enough skill involved to make the play interesting- especially to players who are new to the game. The response as a whole has been overwhelmingly positive.
In contrast to Million Dollar Challenge's 4 million viewers, Face the Ace pulled in 1.6 million during its premiere, and that was during prime time.

The next episode of Million Dollar Challenge airs November 22.

Don't miss any poker on TV: sign up for our weekly newsletter or subscribe to our feed.

Doyle Brunson Hates the Poker-Based Game Shows

From Doyle Brunson's blog:
No disrespect intended, but these poker shows are awful. Full Tilt’s “Face the Ace” and Poker StarsMillion Dollar Challenge” are so bad, it’s embarrassing. There is no skill involved in either show and I can’t imagine getting an audience that will watch the shows. As I travel around, the High Stakes cash games are the ones all the fans talk about and I agree with them that they are by far the most interesting.
Doyle has said he's a poker purist, and I am too. One of my favorite Doyle quotes was when he said, while playing a tournament on Poker After Dark, that he preferred real poker (by which he meant cash games) to tournaments. On a different episode of that show Patrik Antonius also said he preferred real poker. One of my favorite editorials, The High Stakes Poker Episode That Only Showed Seven Hands, was also mostly composed of Doyle quotes.

Don't miss any poker on TV: sign up for our weekly newsletter or subscribe to our feed.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Shuffle Up and Deal: New Poker-based Game Show

Shuffle Up and Deal looks to be the next poker-based game show to hit the air, joining Face the Ace and Million Dollar Challenge. The show doesn't seem to involve actually playing poker: BuzzerBlog says:
Shuffle Up and Deal pits five amateur poker players against each other, competing to build the best hand possible, from cards picked from an oversized electronic poker board. The player with the most money at the end of the show has a chance to win up to $1,000,000 on a single hand.
They're looking for contestants for production in November. No network deal has been announced yet. Oates Media Group principals Dewey Oates, Brenda Prackup, Robert "Chip Burner" Turner, and Marsha Waggoner created the show and Valcom will produce and distribute it.

Update, November 20, 2009: Mike Sexton will host and Brandi Williams (of Ultimate Poker Challenge and Cash Poker) will be the hostess. Chad Brown is scheduled to host a live touring version. 13 episodes have been ordered and will air on MyNetworkTV.

Update, March 13, 2010: Shuffle Up and Deal is looking for a sponsor and a channel according to Poker News Daily

Don't miss any poker on TV: sign up for our weekly newsletter or subscribe to our feed.

WSOP Ratings Up 11%

Through 11 weeks of coverage ESPN's 2009 WSOP ratings are up 11%, to .91 from .82. Ratings among males aged 18-49 and 25-54 were up even more, 12% and 16% respectively. Those demographic are important to advertisers like PokerStars, Full Tilt Poker, and UltimateBet. The final table starts filming at noon Pacific time on Saturday, November 7, so you may want to avoid poker media from then till you watch the final table on Tuesday, November 10.

Source: Poker News Daily.

Don't miss any poker on TV: sign up for our weekly newsletter or subscribe to our feed.

Wednesday, October 07, 2009

Will WSOP HORSE Return to TV? Plus More on Schedule Changes

The limited number and variety (all no-limit hold 'em) of televised events at this year's WSOP has come in for a lot of criticism, especially the absence the $50,000 HORSE tournament from TV. ESPN's Doug White says "We heard that loud and clear. I'm not ruling out that HORSE won't be back for 2010." WSOP Communications Director Seth Palansky says "Unless it goes back to no-limit hold’em (for the final table), the event will exist, but the television component probably will not." White doesn't agree, however, saying "It’s not so much what the H.O.R.S.E. event has to do as it is what else might be out there that we think would be compelling."

I'm not optimistic that we'll get much variety next year. WSOP Commissioner Jeffrey Pollack says "ESPN knows how to program its channel better than anyone else. They know what poker fans are interested in watching. Historically the Main Event always does the best by far." The Champions Invitational and $40,000 no-limit hold 'em events won't be back next year, despite the good turnout for the latter. Some feared that the $40,000 tournament would erode the Main Event's position as poker's unofficial championship. What will there be next year? More $1000 events. The Stimulus Special this year sold out, and about six $1000 tournaments are expected on the 2010 schedule. When asked about the prestige of bracelets, Steve Zolotow said: "I’m trying to think of a delicate way to say this … They talk about (things like): 'We don’t want to have a turbo event because it would demean the prestige of a bracelet.' To me, bracelets are nice, but they’re giving away more than 50 a year. They’re pretty much demeaned at this point. You can win a $1,000 crapshoot and get a bracelet." I commented on the declining value of bracelets and the potential erosion of the Main Event's prestige in my 2009 WSOP TV Schedule Analysis.

The 2010 WSOP schedule will be released later this year.

Sources:
Don't miss any poker on TV: sign up for our weekly newsletter or subscribe to our feed.

Tuesday, October 06, 2009

Poker on TV Update: WSOP To 9 PM, Million Dollar Challenge

The World Series of Poker broadcasts move back an hour (to 9 and 10 PM) starting today.

The Million Dollar Challenge starts airing at 4:30 PM Sunday on Fox. Note that it airs after football, so it may start late.

The EPT London live stream airs at 7 AM on Tuesday (TV table) and Wednesday (final table).

Poker After Dark is in rerun till December.

This week's newsbites:
Check our poker on TV schedule for the full list of shows running new episodes.

Don't miss any poker on TV: sign up for our weekly newsletter or subscribe to our feed.