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Copyright 2005 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
THE SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER
July 11, 2005, Monday FINAL
HEADLINE: TOO MANY LIVES FLUSHED BY ONLINE
POKER PLAYERS
BYLINE: NORMAN CHAD Columnist
DATELINE: LAS VEGAS
BODY: Here is my fear about the poker nation
we are creating, part one: One day, while tens of millions of
us are holed up in our bedrooms or dens - shades lowered, computers
whirring - playing four screens of Texas hold 'em simultaneously,
Soviet troops will roll into New York and bring America to the
brink of collapse.*
(* I know some of you are saying, "What do you mean, Soviet
troops? There's no Soviet Union anymore." Poker players don't
know this - they're too busy trying to make a flush on the river.)
Here is my fear about the poker
nation we are creating, part two: With college students spending
dozens of dormitory hours weekly at Internet sites and young professionals
wiling away their down time losing the mortgage money online one
house drop at a time, a decade from now Gamblers Anonymous will
have more outlets than Starbucks.
For the past few days here at the Rio Hotel and Casino, 5,619
players have gathered to chase the $7.5 million first prize in
the World Series of Poker Main Event. It is a stunning spectacle,
a testament to the rising popularity of poker.
But there's a dark side. Poker's growth is fueled mainly by television
and the Internet - TV always worries me; the Internet worries
me more.
I love playing the game and, now, as analyst on ESPN, I love
talking about it. And I'm certain that much of the newfound interest
emanates from people playing on the Internet.
Still, I'm struck by a notion - online
poker is great for the game and lousy for the greater good
of America.
(Alas, I must address a question: Am I a hypocrite? Admittedly,
if I did not live near a card room or I was incapacitated for
any length of time, I likely would play
poker online. Plus, I am a lifelong pro-gambling advocate
who now promotes poker on TV. So, on this hypocrite thing, I am
somewhat guilty as charged.)
Online poker has a pretty simple dynamic: You withdraw into your
home.
You play whenever you want.
You interact only with your mouse, your mouse pad and your keyboard.
You eventually emerge from your isolation - sometimes richer,
sometimes poorer - with the interpersonal skills of a lampshade.
"Online gaming is very dangerous," says poker pro Bill
Gazes. "It has destroyed a lot of people."
Yet time and again, we're told how people are quitting their
jobs and earning a living through online poker. Huh? You always
hear about the winners; you never hear about the losers.
Trust me: People are losing.
(By the way - and my Internet associates tell me I'm an idiot
when I say this - I don't trust online poker. I believe it is
easier to cheat online, and beyond that, I don't care what the
programmers say about the software being impenetrable - if there's
that much money at stake, somebody sometime somewhere somehow
is going to try and be smart enough to crack the system. Eventually,
we will have an online poker scandal that will make the 2002 Breeders
Cup pick six betting scam look like a Soapbox Derby fix.)
Anyway, at least with a card room, you get up and get out, you
deal with other folks, you develop relationships; I fully expect
to meet a future ex-wife of mine at a card table. On those rare
occasions when online guys walk into a card room, they're like
cows wandering into an ice cream shop.
Now, you should be able to do what you want from the comfort
of your home, whether it's completing crossword puzzles in the
nude, eating fajitas for breakfast or playing
poker on your computer. But many online habitues forget my
Aunt Rosalinda's rule of thumb: Everything in moderation.
So I'm pleading with the online crowd to temper its habit. It's
not healthy to sit on your butt hours on end, staring at a screen.
If nothing else, you should get up and maybe watch some television.
Ask The Slouch
Q. After watching it on NBC, I've just got to ask: What does
the future hold for professional bull riding? (Josh Peter; New
Orleans)
A. If you had the people riding those bulls also playing poker,
I think you'd be onto something.
Q. What are the perks that come with being a poker commentator?
(Radu Marinescu; Alexandria, Va.)
A. I haven't paid for a deck of cards in three years, not to
mention the women.
Q. How do you stay awake during tapings of the World Series of
Poker? (Bob Krul; Brookeville, Md.)
A. I have one of those palm-sized video poker games that I play
until somebody goes "all in."
Q. I'm excited about the upcoming telecasts of the World Series
of Poker, but I work Tuesday nights. Do you think ESPN will ever
rebroadcast the episodes? (Peter J. Rudy; Bakersfield, Calif.)
A. Pay the man, Shirley.
You, too, can enter the $1.25 Ask The Slouch Cash Giveaway. Just
e-mail asktheslouch§aol.com and, if your question is used,
you win $1.25 in cash!
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