DeucesCracked, regarded by many as the best of the poker training sites, is offering free streaming of all their videos through Monday. If you're unfamiliar with video training sites, player after player will tell you that they're more helpful in improving your game than books. I'd say they're one of the top self-improvement methods, along with discussing hands and perhaps coaching. Any user who signs up for a freely available basic membership will be able to watch any of DeucesCracked's videos during this open house. I recommend you take advantage of the opportunity to test out their community for free.
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Thursday, November 18, 2010
Thursday, November 11, 2010
WSOP Ratings Decline To Below Pre-November 9 Levels
Ratings for this year's WSOP Main Event final table declined 39% from last year to below pre-November Nine levels, barely edging out Beth Shak's appearance on Bravo's Millionaire Matchmaker an hour earlier. The 17 hour final table was edited down to just over two hours, running over its time slot for the second year in a row.
Reasons for the decline may include delaying the starting time till 10 PM from 9 PM in the past and the lack last-year's Phil Ivey star power. Viewership of the live stream was too low to have affected ratings.
Sources: TVByTheNumbers, Wicked Chops Poker, Pokerati, Fifth Street Journal.
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Year | Winner | Format | Rating | Viewers |
2010 | Duhamel | Nov. 9 | 1.1 | 1.563 M |
2009 | Cada | Nov. 9 | 1.8 | 2.199 M |
2008 | Eastgate | Nov. 9 | 1.9 | 2.364 M |
2007 | Yang | delayed | 1.4 | 1.635 M |
Reasons for the decline may include delaying the starting time till 10 PM from 9 PM in the past and the lack last-year's Phil Ivey star power. Viewership of the live stream was too low to have affected ratings.
Sources: TVByTheNumbers, Wicked Chops Poker, Pokerati, Fifth Street Journal.
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Poker on TV,
WSOP
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
A WSOP Main Event Final Table Review
Will Wright of PokerTableRatings.com opines:
I’ve watched (the WSOP Main Event final table) every year since Moneymaker pulled off that sick bluff against Sammy Farha in 2003. In all those years, however, I don’t remember it ever being so………unmemorable. Maybe I’m getting older and have seen too many of these things, but I doubt it.
I really thought the coverage lacked substance and any sense of continuity when it came to showing what mattered—-the hands. It was full of extravagant intros, bright lights, and [weak] attempts at character development, but was totally devoid of any real story on the felt. I admit that the hands that were shown were insane and there were some ridiculous beats, but there were barely any hands shown. It was very tough to feel the flow of the game in any concrete way because every hand was interrupted by six commercials and two stories we’ve already heard. That’s what the other 20-odd episodes are for—character development. When I tune into the final table of the biggest poker tournament in the world, I’d much rather see how interesting it is than hear how interesting it is. There were only 24 hands shown in the entire two hours (2 heads-up), and almost all of them were all-ins—not particularly interesting from a strategic point of view. It would be nice if ESPN would broadcast some more extensive coverage when it comes to the real action at hand. I know that it was streamed online, but staring at a computer screen just doesn’t do it for me.
I watched part of the live stream this year and found it much more interesting (even without hole cards) than the TV broadcast.
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I’ve watched (the WSOP Main Event final table) every year since Moneymaker pulled off that sick bluff against Sammy Farha in 2003. In all those years, however, I don’t remember it ever being so………unmemorable. Maybe I’m getting older and have seen too many of these things, but I doubt it.
I really thought the coverage lacked substance and any sense of continuity when it came to showing what mattered—-the hands. It was full of extravagant intros, bright lights, and [weak] attempts at character development, but was totally devoid of any real story on the felt. I admit that the hands that were shown were insane and there were some ridiculous beats, but there were barely any hands shown. It was very tough to feel the flow of the game in any concrete way because every hand was interrupted by six commercials and two stories we’ve already heard. That’s what the other 20-odd episodes are for—character development. When I tune into the final table of the biggest poker tournament in the world, I’d much rather see how interesting it is than hear how interesting it is. There were only 24 hands shown in the entire two hours (2 heads-up), and almost all of them were all-ins—not particularly interesting from a strategic point of view. It would be nice if ESPN would broadcast some more extensive coverage when it comes to the real action at hand. I know that it was streamed online, but staring at a computer screen just doesn’t do it for me.
I watched part of the live stream this year and found it much more interesting (even without hole cards) than the TV broadcast.
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Poker on TV,
WSOP
Friday, November 05, 2010
WSOP Main Event Final Table, Other TV Updates
The WSOP Main Event final table live streams start at 3:00 Saturday on ESPN3.
There's an episode of Million Dollar Challenge on Fox this Sunday, generally airing at 4:30 after football. The next episode will be on November 21.
The WSOP Main Event final table is televised at 10 PM (not 9 PM) to midnight Tuesday on ESPN. It ran over two hours last year.
Saturday's episode will be the final one for the Doubles Poker Championship as a winner is decided.
The Big Game is in rerun till November 29.
2+2er GrindUnumb has joined the Fifth Street Journal team and will be writing mostly about online poker.
This week's newsbites:
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There's an episode of Million Dollar Challenge on Fox this Sunday, generally airing at 4:30 after football. The next episode will be on November 21.
The WSOP Main Event final table is televised at 10 PM (not 9 PM) to midnight Tuesday on ESPN. It ran over two hours last year.
Saturday's episode will be the final one for the Doubles Poker Championship as a winner is decided.
The Big Game is in rerun till November 29.
2+2er GrindUnumb has joined the Fifth Street Journal team and will be writing mostly about online poker.
This week's newsbites:
- Taping of the next season of Poker After Dark is under way at a new location, Aria.
- Whales is a new poker comedy show under development at Showtime by the producers of its hit show Weeds.
- A poker mockumentary, Hitting the Nuts: The True Story of the Scott County Series of Poker, won an award at the Cincinnati Film Festival and is seeking distribution.
- Krantz (of 2 Months, $2 Million), Ryan Firpo (of From Busto to Robusto), and Taylor Caby are producing a full-length documentary about the online poker boom.
- PokerStars will provide free online poker rooms to Fox Sports and ESPN.
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Poker on TV,
Poker on TV Update
High Stakes Poker Season 7 Tapes In December, Biggest Winners/Losers
High Stakes Poker season 7's taping has been delayed till December. That probably pushes back our previously estimated February 13 air date. There's a report that High Stakes Poker's new location will be the Bellagio. They are also expected to raise the blinds for season 7 (19:10 in this Mori Eskandani video), possibly to $600/1200.
Due to its popularity I'm reprinting the win/loss records for the televised hands on the first six seasons of High Stakes Poker:
Tom Dwan +1,756,500
David Benyamine +904,150
Doyle Brunson +782,300
Mike Matasow +609,350
Patrik Antonius +418,490
Phil Ivey +332,400
Eli Elezra +312,650
Barry Greenstein +277,600
Erick Lindgren +273,550
Mimi Tran +251,400
...
Mike Baxter -200,700
Todd Brunson -202,400
Jamie Gold -217,140
Daniel Alaei -222,300
Shawn Sheikhan -243,900
Antonio Esfandiari -273,050
Dario Minieri -328,400
Ilari Sahamies (Ziigmund) -362,150
Phil Galfond -406,300
Daniel Negreanu -2,182,850
The full list is here.
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Due to its popularity I'm reprinting the win/loss records for the televised hands on the first six seasons of High Stakes Poker:
Tom Dwan +1,756,500
David Benyamine +904,150
Doyle Brunson +782,300
Mike Matasow +609,350
Patrik Antonius +418,490
Phil Ivey +332,400
Eli Elezra +312,650
Barry Greenstein +277,600
Erick Lindgren +273,550
Mimi Tran +251,400
...
Mike Baxter -200,700
Todd Brunson -202,400
Jamie Gold -217,140
Daniel Alaei -222,300
Shawn Sheikhan -243,900
Antonio Esfandiari -273,050
Dario Minieri -328,400
Ilari Sahamies (Ziigmund) -362,150
Phil Galfond -406,300
Daniel Negreanu -2,182,850
The full list is here.
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Labels:
High Stakes Poker,
Poker on TV
Monday, November 01, 2010
WSOP Main Event Final Table Live Streams Start Saturday
The WSOP Main Event final table will be streamed live on ESPN3 without hole cards:
Update: ESPN comented on viewership: “Our live streaming of the telecast on ESPN3.com, Saturday through Tuesday, delivered some strong numbers with 61,266 unique viewers for a total of 136,600 hours consumed and an average time spent of two hours and 14 minutes per unique viewer.”
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- Saturday, November 6th at 3 PM Eastern they will play from nine players down to two.
- Monday, November 8th at 11 PM Eastern the heads-up match resumes and they will play down to a winner.
Update: ESPN comented on viewership: “Our live streaming of the telecast on ESPN3.com, Saturday through Tuesday, delivered some strong numbers with 61,266 unique viewers for a total of 136,600 hours consumed and an average time spent of two hours and 14 minutes per unique viewer.”
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Poker on TV,
WSOP
How Poker TV Shows Are Made - Video
441 Productions, the company that produces the WSOP broadcasts, did the live stream/TV taping for the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure. The video below gives a behind-the-scenes view of how the shows were made. It's a pretty boring 8 minutes but it will at least disabuse some of you of the notion that producing poker TV shows is cheap.
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Poker on TV
Vanessa Rousso: An Ordinary Girl - Documentary
Vanessa Rousso: An Ordinary Girl is a 17-minute documentary filmed over a week in Monte Carlo. We get to meet Venessa's husband and mother as well. I found it well worth watching.
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Labels:
Poker on TV
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