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Friday, November 27, 2009

Betting your life on a coin flip

I've hit several types of rock bottom, all to do with gambling.

Now I've gambled away my life.

When I lived in Las Vegas, betting was the norm. Pauly and I made prop bets all the time: the color of the flop, the outcome of the old Excalibur poker wheel, what kind of car the waitress drove (and if we both lost, the money added to her tip).

In Key West and Chicago, I've made props with Donkey Puncher: who would be the first poker blogger to get up out of their armchair (all were asleep watching football), the over/under on number of tattoos on the waitress, how long it would take Bobby Bracelet to spend in the bathroom.

These were all small bets -- prop = fun.

Not until getting to Chicago did the bets get larger. Friends and I will wager 50-50 bets on games, typically going double-or-nothing until the loser cries uncle. I've lost half my paycheck on these games.

Now we flip coins for meals. After continually losing these things (how can I expect to win an even 50-50 bet if I can't win in poker when I'm an 80-20 favorite?), one friend proposed a new bet.

A single coin flip for $100 per paycheck for life.

I refused, then he dropped the period to 1 year.

I again refused but countered with a coin flip to get on the other's company life insurance policy as sole beneficiary.

At work, our life insurance is twice our annual salary.

We're both single with no kids, so true heirs are irrelevant, at least to me. I'll be dead anyway, so life insurance to me is meaningless.

It does, however, affect grubette and mamagrub, who are my beneficiaries splitting evenly (along with the stipulation that they take the money to Vegas and gamble 10 percent of it).

My friend agreed to the terms but dropped to 25 percent of the other's life insurance for a period of 5 years. And if either leaves the company for whatever reason, the agreement is nulled.

We were at a Chinese restaurant, already flipping the quarter for other things and generally making a lot of noise.

The quarter was flipped one more time, and I called heads.

Tails.

I called HR and had the papers drawn up.

Sorry, grubette and mamagrub, you're now splitting 75 percent in case you're wondering who the strange man is at the will reading and next to you at the blackjack table.

And now, at least for the next 5 years (which I've been given anywhere from 50:1 to 200:1 chances of dying naturally), I'll be watching my back.

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Don't wear white at a strip club

"Hello, Papi," the girl from Colombia said as she thrust her pelvis into me. From 0 to 2 seconds was all it took. An instant turn-on.

I didn't leave her side until 20 dances later.

The ride to Cheetah's came courtesy of their free shuttle bus stuffed with 10 people. You can call the club and arrange free pickup, which conveniently also comps each passenger his entry fee. This is especially appreciated by me, who no longer possesses a free stripper card (a.k.a. Nevada driver's license that gets locals into any Vegas strip club for free). You can also get any cabbie to take you to any club for free, as they get kickbacks per person brought to the club (when stepping into the cab, say "Can you take us to XXX for free?" and step out if they say no). But while your cab fare is free, you may still be obligated to pay the admission fee anywhere from $10 to $30.

Cheetah's is my favorite gentlemen's club in Las Vegas (Spearmint Rhino is my favorite when doing The Procedure with Pauly and BadBlood). Girls at Cheetah's don't seem especially in a hurry (though for girls in even less of a hurry and maybe lacking ambition, check out Seamless). They won't be the girl next door type (Little Darlings) or the ballroom gown type (Scores/Rick's) but they're more down to earth and fun than any other club I've been to. And heck, it was featured in the movie Showgirls. Even after some stripper stole my rental car keys on July 4th, I still go back.

I have Cheetah's numbers programmed into my iPhone -- (702) 384-0074 and the shuttle driver at (702) 427-9996. If you have a group of at least 5, they're happy to pick up your group for a private ride. If less, they'll pick you up and then make other stops to fill the shuttle.

Last time I rode the Cheetah's bus, I had just ordered nachos and potato skins when they arrived earlier than expected. Eating them in the stripper mobile is a bit uncouth, made more so when I jokingly offered it to the driver as a tip.

One of our group hit two royals that day and as soon as each of our group had girls on our laps, he splurged for the first round of dances. He blew through all of one of the royal money that night.

The girl who called me Papi also called me by my real name. She remembered the last time I was there, when I went into the back room with her (one of many times over the past 3 years). I normally give a fake name (Steve, now Von) and fake profession (inflate tires on UPS trucks, tour with Cirque du Soleil, produce adult films) but somehow I was truthful with her.

Before I could grab a seat or drink with my friends, she led me to a dark but comfortable corner.

There are some girls where you appreciate the flirty conversation beforehand, there are others where you just want them to get down to business.

She was in the latter.

And she wasn't initially attractive either. She isn't the type to be given double-takes. The first time she approached me a few years ago, I said no. Calling people "papi" isn't the best bedroom talk. But boy does she make up for it.

Immediately picking up where she left off on my last visit (where the bouncer kept coming in saying that I couldn't do what I was doing), on the third song she unzipped my pants, gently shoved her hand down, and began taking liberties I didn't mind her taking. Her scraggly hair covered what she was doing, and her eyes darted around making sure no one was watching.

A true professional.

A friend who spent a couple thousand dollars in the G Spot private room said that was more than he got.

I made a mental note to next time wear dark underwear, because the white stands out in the blacklight lighting of the club.

Song 20 seemed a good a time to end as any, not to mention I was out of money (and seemingly also out a pants button).

She was off to Colombia for Thanksgiving but I promised I'd be back before then. Which I would have, had I not later lost all my strip club money on slot machines.

I did make a trip to the ATM which charged a $15 fee (the gougement is usually in the $25 range) and had two dances with a persistent Thai girl.

We talked green curry and other Thai dishes, and she was into making out (the Colombian girl wasn't). But when nibbling on her ear, she pulled away, slapped me, punched my crotch hard, then bit me on the cheek. And then said we were even.

I did it again just to get the same reaction.

Had a few other dances with other girls, but none compared to the Colombian, who later joined me and said that someone just had 12 dances with her and I still held the record. She needed a few more to make her nut for the evening, and I pointed her toward a couple prospects.

About 3 a.m., we abandoned a few of our men and took the shuttle bus back to the hotel for breakfast.

While eating, one said that he was off to Club Paradise and would text if it was good.

Which he did, and additionally said that there was no cover.

When a friend and I arrived, the place was completely empty except for a cocktail waitress. I've never cared for Club Paradise but thought it may have changed since Howard Stern started taking his radio show there (back in the terrestrial days).

I texted asking where he was, and out he came like Hugh Hefner, in his t-shirt and a girl from every nationality draped around him.

We joined him in his private room that contained a bar, and he left us with three girls as he took the best-looking one to an hourlong dance.

We sat over $14 drinks and girls who were a little worse for wear originally from Chicago.

My girl, Darien, claimed to be an ex-pornstar who was on the cover of Cherry magazine probably from the late '80s. Her body looked good but her face looked like it had danced with a truck. She had meth-looking crumbling teeth and a scrunched face. And this was in the dark.

I took out the last of my money -- three $20 bills.

"What can I get for this?" I said.

Darien took the money, folded it neatly into her purse, and said she'd give me a deal, which amounted to two dances that reminded me more of the typical dances from Chicago -- little contact.

In Darien's case, it was coupled by a kiss that tasted like cigarettes, Hennessy, and pineapple juice, and skin that felt like rubber bands. And porn talk in my ear that really has no place anywhere but in the actual bedroom.

I couldn't get into her as much as I tried, and was thankful when it was over. I figured the part when it ended was the deal.

We high-tailed it out of the club, leaving our one friend to fend for himself in his remaining 30-minute dance in the back corner.

Later we texted him, "Thanks for the scraps."

Friday, November 13, 2009

Going to the casino to lose less

I haven't been to Harrah's Horseshoe this month, and I have a daily freeplay offer of at least $15 every day (can go up to $1000). Freeplay must be played through a slot machine once before cashing out -- which I've never done, by the way, as I will play freeplay until it's all gone… similar to the Bodog ads on this blog -- all revenue was deposited into my casino account, and I'd blow it all on blackjack. Freeplay is designed to get you in the door, the casino counting on the fact that the bells and whistles will lure you in to spend much more.

Well-intentioned me would go right before midnight, use one coupon, wait till midnight, then use the other, then go home. Or maybe play some poker while waiting for midnight to come around. (The casino has been open for 17 months and I've only played poker there once.)

Oh yeah, the casino is about 35 minutes away, and there's $6 roundtrip tolls.

Is it worth it? I have this struggle often.

How about free buffets in the Diamond Lounge and $15 in miscellaneous food from the deli? I've used the food comp on big cookies before. Somehow knowing that the $1.50 retail value of the cookies end up costing me $300 each makes them taste better.

How about the fact that I have to turn in the rental car tomorrow morning and I filled the tank when I only needed to fill it 3/4. That's free gas and mileage going to waste.

To sum up, that's $30, free buffet, $15 in cookies, and $6 tolls.

How much does the above need to be before you say yes (for me, the tipping point is the $15/day… $10 per day is a dealbreaker)? If you're normal in the head, you know this isn't worth the effort. Logically, I also know it.

But gambling ain't logical, and my twisted reasoning for going is to take advantage of the casino, to make them hurt. (Yeah, $30 will really make a dent in their profits, bad economy or not.)

A friend offered to buy up my freeplay coupons, paying me $30 a day not to gamble. He then offered $100 to not gamble this week.

I turned him down.

I didn't want his money, I wanted the casino's.

Better might be if we made a deal where I had to return his $30 and pay another $30 if I gambled that day.

I'd probably still do it.

Like in Michael Powell's The Red Shoes but substituting gambling for dancing, if you were to ask me what goes on in my head, "Why do you want to gamble?"

I'd respond, "Why do you want to live?"

I was debating whether to go, right up until 9:15 p.m., as 10 p.m. was the cutoff for the buffet. Then it would only be $30 freeplay and $15 cookies.

What probably saved me was mamagrub calling again to talk about another Vegas trip she just returned from.

A gambling story saved me from gambling.

But that's not entirely true, as I deposited $500 via my already hurting credit card, ran it up to $1402, and then lost it all, all in online blackjack.

Getting me out of the house and away from online gambling is a positive.

I wonder how many people view a casino's freeplay as losing less than sitting in front of the computer.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

UltimateBet paid for my car

I rented a car for Halloween so I wouldn't have to wear my costume on public transit. Apparently I went as Lenny Kravitz if Lenny were a Rastafarian New Zealander.

The Halloween party was a good time, with my costume significantly covering enough of me that I could lose my inhibitions and approach strange women with lighted breasts (who may have crashed our private party) and comically hump them like a dog with reckless abandon.


I also somehow sneaked a set of silverware into my oversized pocket. When drinking, I seem to develop kleptomania. Three more trips to that bar and I'll be ready to host a dinner party.

The next day, I drove to Four Winds and Blue Chip, a Boyd Gaming property in Michigan City, Indiana, that has one of the worst buffets I've ever had (yes, worse than Imperial Palace in Vegas). Though that didn't prevent me from using my buffet comps to stuff myself silly on a bad dinner and a bad breakfast.

Used up $150 in freeplay but the night ended up costing me much more.

Still, the room was nice and comfortable, and on the big screen TV I got to watch a behind-the-scenes look at the D.C. snipers (one of whose death I celebrated yesterday by going to Five Guys for lunch) and what George Washington really looked like.




On the way out was a line of senior citizens awaiting a lunch buffet for Bud Ruby's 90th. Hopefully we weren't sharing the same food, or Bud may not see 91.


Happy birthday, Bud.

Cooped up without a car for 3 years, the drive to the casinos was an excuse to find a nice long peaceful road to drive on. And of course, at the destination I could take out my frustrations and stress and anger on gambling. There's such satisfaction to slapping that slot machine button, risking H1N1, and ogling girls dressed up as Wonder Woman -- all under one roof.

Laziness ensued after the rental week was up, so I extended it for one more week and have been going to Target every day. The Toyota Aztec is really growing on me, I may never give it up.

* * *

My bulk email folder showed me that UltimateBet spammed me with a free $25.

I haven't played UB since losing a ton in blackjack 3 years ago with no bonuses or points (I constantly wrote to them about that and they'd say "soon"), and I removed their software before the superaccount scandal.

But hey, a free $25 is worth re-installing for another peek at ol' Annie Duke.

Although I haven't played there in ages, they kept me at Contender level (I last played before they had any tiered status), and their new (?) RAISE program offers a way to trade my points for cash instead of some trifling in their store.

I had two options: trade 3572 points for $25 or 7144 for $50. I had more points, but it was capped at the odd 7144 number. Perhaps next month I'll be able to convert more.

I went with the $50, bringing my free loot to a total of $75.

To cash out, UB now charges a fee. A check by mail costs $8, a check by courier costs $25, and a wire transfer costs $50.

A 10 percent surcharge? No thanks. Maybe I could win 8 bucks to offset.

Wandering around their revamped site, I saw that the bad beat jackpot recently hit for a whopping $273k. They split $89k to the bad beat winner (quad Jacks), $44k to the winning hand (straight flush), $1351 to the 3 players in the hand, and $351 to 80 players at the same stakes.

They also removed multiplayer blackjack, which is what I lost big on a few years back. I'm guilty of flooding that chat box with creative curse words, expressing how rigged I thought blackjack was to fellow players. A few months later, players were found to be using poker accounts that saw every player's hole card. So the idea of rigged blackjack isn't that far off.

They also now have Step tourneys, which I hope Full Tilt adds soon. SnGs on Tilt are much more difficult now than they were 5 years ago, mostly because players are aware of the correct ICM pushes and calls, which to me makes the game more about luck.

But satellites and step tourneys -- those contain more recreational players.

Played a $10 step SnG, where I came in 9th. Then played an Elimination Blackjack game for $2, which I won.

Then returned to the beast and played regular blackjack.

Playing online blackjack for so long, you get a feel for hands and streaks. That's all fallacy, I'm sure (nothing about gambling is logical), but playing at UB was such a difference from playing at Bodog, where my flawed tracking shows the dealer consistently getting 4 times as many blackjacks as the player, over 5000 hands. And playing into my rigged conspiracy theory, Bodog is taking over 2 weeks now to send me my blackjack play history.

UB's blackjack seemed like regular table blackjack: in other words, non-rigged.

Played small to win the $8 shipping fee, then kept going and ended up running the $75 to $450 before cashing out.


$442 will cover the rental car for 2 weeks, and I like the idea of gambling paying for at least something before I inevitably lose it all.

Now to see if I can turn some other freeplay into my Vegas rental car payment next week.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

How to stop master betting

Yesterday, on Ask.com, someone searched for "i need help to stop mastyrbating i have been doing it for 2 years" and found Poker Grub.

After years of being online, the blog has finally achieved its goal of being the #3 site for misspelled masturbating.

Sorry, guy, except for the hairy palms and blindness, you're on your own.

Working in gaming, we were trying to come up with an all-encompassing word for a complete bet. In pai gow ("PAI GOW!" as grubette would say while throwing up her hands) there's generally a fortune bet/envy bonus, which is a side bet you can make in addition to your bet hand. This gets you something extra for a straight or better (all 7 cards) plus if another player gets quads or better, you share in their fortune.

That's a long way to say, what do you call the combined pai gow bet plus the side bet?

"Master Bet" was considered.

And then tossed.

Are you going to master bet? How many times did you master bet today? I can't master bet anymore because I'm married.

Welcome to Master Betters Anonymous.

Sunday, November 08, 2009

Rethinking the UIGEA

I talk to mamagrub on the phone once every couple months and she usually does all the talking.

Now that she's retired, she has time on her hands and has been taking a lot of trips -- the vacation kind (New Zealand, Canada, Hawaii) and the casino kind (every week in California or Las Vegas).

Chatting for 2.5 hours about slot machines can be grueling because I know what she's talking about already -- from new games to wins and losses to comps to the gambling experience. I can get a clear visual picture, though, since I tend to know the exact locations of the games in the casinos, just from visiting them so many times. If someone were to ask what my superpower is, it would be that, as meager a superpower as that might be.

But within those 2.5 hours she'll say things that have me laughing, usually about her own life.

A few days ago she visited grubette, who was taking care of a friend's black labrador. Before retiring this year, mamagrub taught elementary school for increasingly rowdy and unruly kids who had even rowdier and unrulier parents. She said that the dog was beautiful and all, but she couldn't look it in the face because it looked exactly like a kid she taught, who was the worst student of her entire career.

The image of a kid's face superimposed onto the dog's and mamagrub steering clear was enough to get me to forget about gambling losses for the day.

* * *

And oh those gambling losses.

In the apartment across the hall (which used to be the apartment above before I moved upstairs), I hear a loud TV blasting the Bears game. The guy is pretty vocal, so I can follow what's going on based on what he's yelling.

And what he just yelled is: "Oh my God, fucking hell! Jesus Christ! Fuck fuck fuck!"

Sounds like the Cardinals scored.

Or it could just as well be a bad beat on the river.

His timings seem coordinated to my poker sessions. I generally show no reaction (positive or negative), but my thoughts are conveniently projected through him.

Gambling has been of crushing proportions lately. I currently have less than $500 in my Full Tilt account, which is sadly more than what's in my bank account.

Thinking back to my time in Vegas, I had maxed out my credit cards, cashed out my 401(k), and took an $8.50/hour job in my second year there. If not for Pauly signing on as a roommate to split costs (which he paid for a few months in advance), I don't know what I would've done.

Now, even with a full-time job that pays more than $8.50/hour, my credit cards are again close to maxing out and I've borrowed against my 401(k).

Three years later, I realize I'm in pretty much the same position as I was then.

Poker has taken a drastic downturn. I can be up $4000 after a month and then lose it all in a few days. The swings aren't just from sit-n-gos; when I'm on a Sharkscope Super Tilt, I tend to load up the heads-up and 6max games where I'm usually crushed for double what my Sharkscope graph shows.

I began recording 50/50 hands, where I'm all-in against someone else pre-flop. After almost 300 of these, I'm averaging 31 percent. Even giving myself 10 percent for errors and forgetting to record in my favor, that seems pretty far off. Then again, it may still be a small sample and in the near future I'll have a lot of pocket pairs that will hold up.

I don't think online poker is rigged, but I do think I'm getting terribly unlucky.

And that's par for the course in other luck areas -- slots and online blackjack being the primary culprits of my addiction. You'd think I would've hit something big in slots, for the amount I play.

Playing on a bank of Cash Express slot machines, a woman sitting next to me said she only plays Geisha at 27 credits a spin (at nickel denom, $1.35). And she's hit the top progressive nine times.

Nine friggin' times! Seven of those times were for $10,000 or more.

I'm now making it my life mission to win one of these.

I no longer play games such as Mr. Cashman or Gold Fish, where I can only win 40x bet or so. Instead, I'm going for the big scores.

Over in blackjack, an online casino sent me a personal offer that I couldn't pass up: on any deposit, an instant 10 percent bonus that I can immediately play with, and 25 percent of any losses would be comped back to me. Also: no playthrough and unlimited withdrawals with no fees whether courier or wire transfer.

And in addition to that, they still offer cash comps based on playthrough.

Seemingly the advantage play would be to deposit a large amount, play with just the 10 percent bonus, then withdraw the whole thing. They'd probably kick me out of the VIP program if I did it too many times.

I had stopped playing this online casino because I had 5 credit cards/gift cards registered and it wouldn't let me register another. A quick online chat had them remove all 5 and allowed me to register the new card.

And I was back in business with a higher deposit limit of $5k per month.

Not that I would ever reach that, but then, last year my limit was $3k per month and I maxed that out pretty often.

My credit card let out a sigh as I did several deposits and used the 25 percent comp several times. Within that, I picked up a royal on quarter video poker ($1000) and was dealt quad Aces with a 3 kicker on dollar ($2000).

And still lost.

Last night I deposited $500, lost that, deposited $400, and won that back plus $1700. Then gave that $1700 back. I drowned my sorrow in Panda Express.

I've now withdrawn my $900 to see if I will get 25 percent on that original $500 lost. I also requested my entire blackjack play history for the past 4 weeks.

In my gamblin' heyday in Washington, D.C. and Las Vegas, I was playing online blackjack at a playthrough of $1.6 million per month (I knew this because I would get cash comps of $1600 every month, plus giant gift baskets every holiday).

The house edge on the blackjack I was playing was very low -- assuming perfect strategy (which Microgaming had on autoplay), I was playing a 0.3 percent game.

Even at 0.3 percent, though, I was expected to lose $4800 per month.

That seems unfathomable now. But the play history will be a wakeup call, I'm sure, to see just how close I am to reverting back to my old ways.

I want to put a stop to this, he says, being a few days away from going to Vegas.

I signed up to the Poker Players Alliance but elected not to renew after sending my name and email to senators who now spam me with their form letters. I rescinded my support, because I now think that we (meaning I) would really be better off without online gambling of any sort.

And if online poker is considered part of that, so be it.