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05/05/07

"52" Wants to be your Friend

I would say the calendar turned 2003 before I purchased a cellular phone; a bulky walkie-talkie by Nextel. My friends started pressing the waves to their ears three to four years prior. In the same stride, I have only recently entered my virtual being into the MySpace domain. And now I am hearing that MySpace is becoming the bulky Nextel of the social networking world. Supposedly Facebook is the "Q" if you will. I really don't give a damn either way. My dogs playing poker background and scrolling photo montage suits me just fine for now.
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In the very brief time I have spent surfing MySpace pages I came across some pretty suh-weet nicknames from the females; "Hot Chips"- nice Tiffany- or the one I dig the most, "Jennicide". That one works on so many different levels! This got me thinking about my nickname; and the only thing cooler than being on MySpace is self-proclaiming your own moniker. And so I debuted Mark "52" Rogers on my profile. If I were to continue following trends I might need to get my 'sexy on' for some head shots. Currently I have a couple's pic of my girl and me. (Is this a MySpace faux pas?) Anyhow, a Blue Steel pose might be in my future or maybe a group shot of me and some blonde bimbos, if "The Kid" can spare a few.
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Search me up, I would like to know about the viewers and contributors of Wise's World.
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Post scriptum: Here's a quote for Gary per his "About Me" section:
"If knowledge is power, than a god am I!" - The Riddler (Jim Carrey), Batman Forever.

Mark Rogers is a poker historian and author of "52 Greatest Moments World Series of Poker"
www.52pokermoments.com

Permalink . Mark D. Rogers . 01:21:06 pm . 291 Words . wisehandpoker .

04/29/07

Jimmy 'the Greek' and Oral History

The Oral History Program under the University of Nevada, Reno conducts taped interviews with those figures who have impacted the development of Nevada. For two days in 1973, Mary Ellen Glass sat down with Lester Benny Binion. The interview covered Binion's childhood, careers in Texas and Las Vegas, while emphasizing the Horseshoe and his family. The transcript is a fascinating read and not lost is Binion's Texan dialect.
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By 1973 the popularity of the World Series of Poker had just began to bud. The year prior Thomas "Amarillo Slim" Preston won the event and took his prize on the road appearing on many radio and television spots including the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. Still at this time, Mary Ellen Glass did not dig that deep into the event as I might have hoped for. In fact, only two letter style sheets are dedicated to the WSOP, and even then the tournament is only mentioned, not from direct questioning, but from Binion discussing the advertising involved in running the Horseshoe. He briefly describes the action between Puggy Pearson and Johnny Moss in the '73 Main Event, but the majority of the excerpt is devoted to one man, Jimmy 'the Greek' Snyder.
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"The first year, when he (the Greek) put on the poker game here for us, he didn't charge us anything. Howard Hughes had just let him go, and he wanted to prove hisself, what he could do, he just took this poker game. Hell! Nobody thought you could get this much publicity out of this poker game! I didn't, but he did. He said, "I just want to show 'em what I can do with this poker game. Let me have it."
We said, "You got it!"
He put it in seven thousand newspapers. So I'd say that's pretty doggone good."
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I agree. Snyder's promotion came before the pocket cam, rabbit cam and cheesy ESPN coverage; not an easy sell. He narrated the first television documentary of the WSOP in 1973. And if you happen to bootleg that one at the market, you might find it to be the best WSOP coverage to date; old school in the truest sense, and bluntly real.
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Binion goes on to describe Snyder as having "a lot of personality, he's a good speaker...And I think he can just get about as good as coverage as anybody. Fact of business we use him exclusive for the poker game." The game was lucky to have the notorious Snyder as a spokesman in the early stages. After 1973, CBS began regular documentaries on the event into the 80's, then ESPN eventually took over in the 90's and the circus culminated with the 2003 poker media explosion. A lot of poker players are rich today, outside of the playing itself, thanks to Snyder's promotional seeding.
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Interesting note: Doyle Brunson received his nickname when Snyder planned to announce Brunson to the crowd as "Texas Doyle" but instead mistakenly uttered "Texas Dolly". The nickname stuck.
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Mark Rogers is a poker historian and author of "52 Greatest Moments World Series of Poker"
www.52pokermoments.com

Permalink . Mark D. Rogers . 04:12:01 pm . 509 Words . wisehandpoker .