Poker Popularity
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The very mention of poker evokes images of middle-aged men, cigars, and five-card stud. Not anymore. Today, Texas Hold Em is the poker game of choice, and more and more people are playing it, in casinos, in tournaments, and at home.
Susan McGinnis reports in the second of a two-part series on The Early Show that pokers popularity is surging.
“I think the fact that it isnt the smoky halls, it isnt the VFW clubs ora lot of the smoky casinos, it really does allow for people to enjoy the game,” says Nick Hart, a poker game host.
Every couple of months, Hart hosts a poker tournament at his home in an Ohio suburb. McGinnis watched as Nick had a full house to play one game: Texas Hold Em.
“Two years ago, Id have maybe three or four guys and wed be searching for a game to play, just to kind of keep it alive, exciting for a couple of hours, and now, essentially I can turn guys away,” says Hart.
Scenes like that are playing out across the country, as poker seems to be going mainstream spurred on, many say, by television shows like Bravos “Celebrity Poker Showdown,” “The World Poker Tour” on The Travel Channel, and ESPNs “World Series Of Poker.”
They have made the game of Texas Hold Em fun to watch and easy to follow.
At Trumps Taj Mahal Casino in Atlantic City, the Texas Hold Em games are fast and furious. But for a novice, its not that easy to explain. Suffice it to say, there are terms like “blinds,” “flops” and “rivers. And of course, betting, “calling” and winning.
The players at Nicks game love it.
“Its always a friendly game, no matter how much you lose or how much you win,” says player Leila Neese.
But winning is nice — and these superstitious players will try anything to help their game.
“Hopefully, hides my eyes, hides, you know, the fact that maybe Im doing something wrong,” says Eric Mallory, wearing sunglasses upside down.
Nick himself has a “lucky poker shirt.”
And then of course, there is a pot to win.
With poker games like Nicks