Game allows poker play with pros
Game allows poker play with pros
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By Bill Ordine
Published: September 7, 2008
Poker, once nearly muscled off casino floors by gimmicky table games and flashy slot machines, is hotter than ever in Las Vegas, thanks to the game's popularity on TV.
Now, the Venetian Resort Hotel and Casino will try to build on those winnings by staging an audience-participation show called "The Real Deal!” in its Venetian Showroom, starting in October. The show combines elements of a game show with comedy and celebrities, all revolving around the now-familiar poker game of Texas Hold 'Em. There will be prizes, including the long-shot possibility for an audience member to win $1 million. In "The Real Deal!” the audience will watch a 90-minute poker tournament featuring some of the best-known players in the game such as Doyle Brunson, Phil Hellmuth and Daniel Negreanu. About 10 pros have been signed up. And every audience member can play along, because each theater seat will be equipped with a wireless, handheld touch-screen device. "People who come to Vegas want to play poker,” Negreanu says, "but obviously they can't play in a big game with the likes of Doyle or Phil Hellmuth. But, in this show, they actually can.” At the beginning of each show, six audience members will be chosen at random to sit at the poker table on stage with two pros. Each audience member becomes the virtual ninth player, as every person in the theater is electronically dealt a unique hand on the handheld device to go along with the cards dealt onstage. Big-screen monitors help everyone keep track of the action. Each audience member will start with 100,000 points and will try to increase his or her total, with an electronic leader board keeping track. Near the end of the show, the surviving professional player and the final amateur from the original six will be joined by the audience member who accumulated the most points. The three will battle it out in a showdown. "But you don't have to be a poker player to enjoy the show,” says Merv Adelson, one of the show's creators, who once helped run Lorimar, the company that produced "Dallas” and other hit TV shows. Adelson explains that audience members also can add to their point stacks by making simple bets, such as the suit of the next card or whether a poker pro can correctly guess whether anyone in a certain row is from, say, Pennsylvania — all on the handheld devices. "The technology is what makes this show so amazing,” he says. Comedian Paul Rodriguez should produce some laughs as the show's host, but the poker pros are expected to ante up most of the entertainment. "You get a guy like Scotty Nguyen, and to watch him work a room is absolutely amazing,” says Negreanu, referring to the flamboyant player and five-time World Series of Poker bracelet winner, nicknamed the Prince of Poker. "The professionals can joke and needle each other and be more comfortable in a way that they can't when they're playing for hundreds of thousands of dollars,” Negreanu says. "Plus, the audience will learn a little bit about the game as the players explain why they played a hand a certain way.” Audience members will get prizes — from logo merchandise to jewelry and plasma-screen TVs — at random and for playing performance. About 40 to 50 spectators should walk out with a prize, and sometimes everyone will get a gift, show representatives say. At each show's end, a $1 million jackpot will be up for grabs when selected audience members are dealt a royal flush. "The Real Deal!” is scheduled to begin Oct. 14. McClatchy-Tribune Information Services
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