Sunday, December 27, 2009

Poker on TV Update: Million Dollar Challenge Today, Face the Ace Saturday

The last Million Dollar Challenge airs at 4:30 on Fox today. Note that it may run late as it's on after football. They're already running qualifiers for the next season.

The last Face the Ace runs on Saturday the 2nd at 2:30 PM on NBC.

The next season of Poker After Dark begins Monday the 4th with a tourney called Commentators featuring Howard Lederer, Gabe Kaplan, Joe Sebok, Ali Nejad, Mark Gregorich, and Kara Scott. New episodes will be in HD. The show airs at 2:05 AM on NBC.

CNBC has been running a special called CNBC Investigates: The Big Business of Illegal Gambling. Upcoming airings are Friday the 1st at 9 PM and Sunday the 3rd at 11 PM. It's also available for downloading or streaming from the usual places. The mainstream media rarely does a decent job with gambling, but you may find the middle and later parts of it worth watching. They include Jay Cohen at the 26-minute mark, the WTO decision at 33 minutes, the Absolute Poker/UltimateBet scandals at 40, and the prohibition vs. regulation debate at 50 minutes.

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

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World Poker Tour Season 8 Premieres January 24, Plus More WPT News

World Poker Tour season 8 premieres Sunday January 24 at 11 PM on FSN.

The WPT added Paris's Aviation Club back to its schedule. They last played there in 2006 for legal reasons. The tournament will take place at the end of season 8 in 2010, and will be filmed for television.

Other WPT newsbites:
  • Card Player talked to some of the WPT people about the tour's future. Expect more international events, the WPT to keep its own brand (it won't be labeled PartyPoker), and for them to encourage other online sites to run satellites to their events.
  • The WPT announced another non-TV event: WPT Bucharest.
  • Poker News Daily summarized the WPT's 2009. Alternatively, you can click our WPT label for all of our stories.
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Saturday, December 26, 2009

Pokertronic Automated TV Production Equipment

Pokertronic's equipment generates poker video with hole cards and winning percentages on the fly, for live-to-tape or streaming video productions. OCR is used to recognize the hole cards. Pokertronic found RFID recognition of bets to be too expensive, so bets must be input manually (see however our previous coverage of RFID solutions: 1, 2). Pokertronic's system isn't available for sale yet, but it will be available for long-term lease (at least one year) in the first quarter of 2010. Currently they offer taping in their German studio or travel to clients' locations (about 8,000 Euro for a one-day show with travel). Below is a screenshot from their live stream of WPT Venice.



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High Stakes Poker Season 6

High Stakes Poker season 6 premieres on GSN Sunday, February 14 at 8 PM. Reruns will air at 11 PM and 2 AM. 13 episodes will air. Gabe Kaplan will do commentary (AJ Benza is gone) and Kara Scott will do interviews from the floor. Each episode will include a new segment called "Did You Know?" where Daniel Negreanu will give a brief lesson about the game, e.g. in the first episode he'll explain the origin of the term "Dead Man's Hand." Blinds will be $400/800 with a $200 ante and a $200,000 minimum to $500,000 maximum buyin. Prop bets will not be allowed.

We know the starting lineups from the three days of taping in November. Known replacement players are also mentioned below. The episodes will be shown in the same order.

Day 1:
  • Phil Hellmuth
  • Tom "durrrr" Dwan
  • Phil Ivey
  • Daniel Negreanu
  • Gus Hansen
  • Antonio Esfandiari
  • Dario Minieri
  • Andreas Hoivold
Eli Elezra, Jason Mercier, and Phil Laak replaced players later.

Day 2:
  • Tom "durrrr" Dwan
  • Phil Ivey
  • Daniel Negreanu
  • Patrik Antonius
  • Barry Greenstein
  • Dennis Phillips
  • Lex Veldhuis
  • Andrew "good2cu" Robl
Phil Laak replaced a player later.

Day 3:
  • Phil Ivey
  • Tom "durrrr" Dwan
  • Daniel Negreanu
  • Doyle Brunson
  • Mike Matusow
  • Bertrand "Elky" Grospellier
  • David Benyamine
  • Eli Elezra
Phil Galfond and Lex Veldhuis replaced players later.

There may be other replacement players that haven't been revealed. Dwan, Ivey, and Negreanu played all three days. 

More details on High Stakes Poker season 6:
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Thursday, December 24, 2009

2010 WSOP Schedule Released

The 2010 WSOP schedule was released (press release). The major change is converting the $50,000 HORSE event into an 8-game Players Championship which adds NLHE, PLO, and 2-7 Triple Draw Lowball to the HORSE games. The final table will be no-limit hold 'em only, as it was in its first year, and it will be televised again. There's long been a battle over whether poker should be modified for TV, and the $50,000 HORSE event's final table was one of the battlefields. The "poker is for TV" crowd (e.g. Daniel Negreanu) won this time. The additional games at least make the tournament worthy of the title "Players Championship," as it now includes most of the serious poker games.

Other than the Players Championship and the Main Event, we don't yet know what will be televised. Two televised events from 2009, the $40,000 no-limit hold 'em tournament and the Champions Invitational, aren't on the schedule for 2010. One major addition, a $25,000 shorthanded no-limit hold 'em event, seems like a likely candidate for television. The other major change to the schedule is the addition of lots of $1,000 no-limit hold 'em events with two starting days to accommodate large fields.

Televised events will be broadcast on ESPN starting in late July 2010.

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Poker After Dark Schedule

Week of January 4, tourney, "Commentators:" Howard Lederer, Gabe Kaplan, Joe Sebok, Ali Nejad, Mark Gregorich, and Kara Scott.

Week of January 11, tourney, "Nicknames:" Annette Obrestad, Mike Matusow, Antonio Esfandiari, Erick Lindgren, Phil Laak, and Phil Hellmuth.

Weeks of March 15 and 22, cash game: Chris Ferguson, Phil Hellmuth, Antonio Esfandiari, Brandon Adams, Todd Brunson, and Mike Matusow. Dennis Phillips and David "Viffer" Peat joined after players left. The buyin was $50,000.

Week of April 19, tourney, "My Favorite Pro:" Phil Hellmuth, Chris Ferguson, and online qualifiers Jens Voertmann, Craig Ivey, James Ashby, and Steve Bartlett.

Week of April 26, tourney, "He Said, She Said:" Erica Scoenberg, Jean-Robert Bellande, David Grey, Karina Jett, Mike Matusow, and Annie Duke.

You can find player biographies and the lineups for rerun weeks on NBC's web site.

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Monday, December 07, 2009

Poker on TV Update: Amazing Poker After Dark Cash Game Lineup

There's an amazing cash game lineup on Poker After Dark for the next two weeks. For the first week it's Daniel Negreanu, Phil Ivey, Patrik Antonius, Tom "durrrr" Dwan, Gus Hansen, and Phil Hellmuth. David "Viffer" Peat appears during the second week. The blinds are $200/400 with a $100,000 minimum buyin. You can read more about it on NBC's site. The show airs at 2:05 AM weeknights.

The next Face the Ace airs Saturday at 3 PM on NBC.

The next Million Dollar Challenge airs Sunday at 3 PM on Fox (the time may vary by region).

Vanessa Rousso will be a judge on Bank of Hollywood, which starts airing on E! at 10 PM Mondays on the 14th.

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

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Saturday, December 05, 2009

Final Thoughts On The 2009 WSOP

This year I succeeded in avoiding the results of the WSOP Main Event final table until it aired (last year I tried and failed), but I had to go to great lengths to do so. Some others succeeded as well, but lots of others failed. Among the leading spoilers were Yahoo, PokerStars, and people who knew you were interested in poker. 2+2 and ESPN, on the other hand, were reportedly better about not spoiling it this year. Still, if ESPN wants to maximize ratings, I think they'll need to film the show on Monday for airing on Tuesday. This year they started filming it on Saturday, one day earlier than last year, which may be one reason the ratings declined this year.

There was one really awful editing choice on this year's broadcast: only showing a 90-million chip AA vs. KK pot from the point when the players were all in. I appreciate the move from two to two and a half hours this year, but I think three hours next year would be better. If they really want to do it right, however, they'll have a live stream on one of their secondary channels (like ESPN 2 or Classic) in addition to the edited broadcast. Plenty of people manage to watch all the "boring" hands on Poker After Dark each week (they show most of the hands played), so plenty of people would be willing to watch every hand of the WSOP too (even without the hole cards it's worth watching).

I recently editorialized about how ESPN should change their target audience from people who aren't interested in poker to poker fans. A look at the numbers makes that argument clearer. For comparison purposes, football's championship, the Super Bowl, gets about 40% of US households to tune in. The important fact about that is that it's clearly more than the number of football fans. Poker's world championship, the WSOP Main Event, on the other hand, doesn't even get nearly all the poker fans to tune in. How many poker fans are there? It's hard to say, but the following numbers will give us a ballpark range. 55 million Americans play poker. 15 million of them play real-money online poker and an indeterminate number of others play real-money live poker. Not all of them are going to be what I'd call "poker fans," however. Some smaller groups are mostly poker fans: the Poker Players Alliance alone has 1.2 million members and 2+2, the leading poker forum, had one million unique visitors last month. Plenty of poker fans and regular players have never heard of either of those, so it would appear that the number of poker fans lies somewhere between one million and the 15 million real-money online poker players. If just 1/3 of the real-money online poker players (or 9% of all poker players) are "poker fans," then we'd have five million poker fans in the US. The WSOP Main Event final table got 2.2 million viewers, and the average WSOP broadcast got 1.2 million. While football's championship event gets far more viewers than there are football fans, ESPN's broadcast of poker's world championship isn't even getting nearly all the poker fans to watch. If they aren't even getting the low-hanging fruit why do they think getting the non-fans to watch is the best strategy? Many of us poker fans just don't watch the WSOP any more (for example). Not only is ESPN losing the poker fans, they're also not converting the non-fans to fans because ESPN simply doesn't focus on the poker.

Regular readers will recall that ESPN/ABC plans to apply their poker broadcasting model to football in the future. I recently learned they've added another element to their plan. As you know, ESPN has been reducing the number of WSOP events they air every year. It was down to two of 57 events this year: the Main Event and one preliminary event. They do that because the preliminary events have lower ratings than the Main Event. They'll now be applying the same theory to football: in the pros they'll air only the Super Bowl and one playoff game; in college football they'll only air the national championship game and one regular-season game. I'm kidding of course, but it's another way to make clear how ESPN cuts their own throats by broadcasting hardly any of the world championship they have broadcast rights to. As I explained in ESPN's WSOP Monopoly Must End, they don't even have to broadcast the other events themselves: other cable networks would be glad to broadcast WSOP events, and could do so profitably with lower production costs than ESPN. ESPN's WSOP ratings would benefit from the broadcasts in the same way that regular season games contribute to the Super Bowl's ratings.

See also Michael Craig's interesting take on watching the final table live and how it can sometimes be better than edited poker on TV. 

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