Tuesday, April 26, 2005

Dan Rather talking about Poker on CBS

Dan Rather gets some pointers from some of the biggest stars of the poker circuit on CBS the other night. Find out how these top players read and deceive their opponents. "It's all about deception," says Galloway, who calls herself a grinder. She's not looking for the big kill; she's looking for a steady income. Her office is the casino. Her goal? To make $5,000 a night. And her strategy? Whatever works. "It's all about lying," says Galloway. "I mean, poker is a game of lies.

"What separates the men from the boys on this battlefield is knowing your enemy. "That guy that has the Gulf ball cap on? I can tell he is new by the way he handles his chips, the way he bets his chips, the amount of money he pushes into a small pot," says Galloway, who's sizing up the players. "The guy in the blue shirt, when he has a hand, he immediately puts his glasses on. It is a sign of weakness. It tells me that he is afraid that something he does is going to give his hand away.

"Galloway read Rather like a dime-store novel. "Show me how you would look at your cards," says Galloway to Rather. She says this is one way for her to spot a beginner at the game. "Well, I tend to look at mine this way," says Rather. "OK. OK, now, the guy sitting next to you, he just saw your cards. Believe it or not," says Galloway, laughing. "He just saw your cards.""Isn't that cheating?" asks Rather. "Well, that’s the part of cheating. It’s like if you’re gonna show me your cards. It’s your responsibility to protect your cards," says Galloway. "So, you want to take the cards and put them out in front of your chips. And you want to cover and be very careful and just look at the corners -- just the corners of the cards. Now, nobody can see your cards.

"When you watch one of those big time, big money poker tournaments on TV, Galloway is likely to be there -- but not up on stage. Instead, she plays at tables out on the periphery, trying to take money from guys who've just lost. "They’re mad and they've got to try to get even," says Galloway. "I just wait there for them to come in. I’m so bad. I am so bad.

"She's bad … and good. On this night's take, she wins almost $5,000. At the center table, under the TV lights, the stakes are higher. Here, winners are transformed from backroom card sharks into big-time celebrities. "Daniel Negreanu", a high school dropout, became the 2004 Poker Player of the Year after winning nearly $4.5 million. "If I come to a table where I'm sitting with eight people that I've never seen before, I think within 15 to 20 minutes, I can have a rough idea how they play poker, based on what they're wearing, based on things they say," says Negreanu. "Jennifer Harman" is one of the few female super stars. Harman went to college to become a doctor until she figured gambling was more lucrative. She has won more than a million dollars at tournaments, plus millions more in casino poker rooms. Does she study the cards, or the people?

"I study the people," says Harman. "Poker is very psychological. You try to get into people's heads. Try to figure out what they're thinking. Try to figure out what they're thinking about you. It’s a very complex game.

Chris Ferguson, better known as "Jesus" is one of the brainiest players. He has a Ph.D. in computer science, but dropped studying technical books for analyzing poker players. "If someone's bluffing, they might throw their chips in very slowly. Whereas, if they have a monster hand, they might naturally go something like this [noise]," says Ferguson. "You might interpret this like, 'Oh, the guy shrugs his shoulders. Oh, he’s weak. No, but that’s actually a sign of strength. And people wouldn’t even be aware that they are doing that." "That’s where poker really gets interesting," adds Negreanu. "When you get to the level of like level one, like what do I have? Level two, what does he have? Level three, like what does he think I have? And then, what does he think I think he thinks I have? There’s so much cat and mouse psychology."

Tuesday, April 19, 2005

Matt Damon, Hollywood Actor

He might be a big-time movie star, but the truth is, Matt Damon is a regular guy. The fresh-faced Oscar winner (for co-writing 1997's "Good Will Hunting" with long time friend Ben Affleck), star of the Jason Bourne series ("The Bourne Identity" and "The Bourne Supremacy"), poker film Rounders, and more than 30 other films. Oddly enough Matt Damon does not own a cell phone, he dislikes flying and prefers to drive his mother back home to Boston when she visits him in New York.

Damon is sticking to the metaphorical fast lane, starring in the planned July release "The Brothers Grimm" and the planned September release "Syriana" executive producing a third season of "Project Greenlight" (now on Bravo, same network that hosts Celebrity Poker Showdown) and executive producing the upcoming thriller "Feast."

The Bourne Supremacy star Matt Damon feels "bad" for his pal Brad Pitt, with all of the increased attention he's faced since the meltdown of his marriage to Jennifer Aniston.

Matt Damon, who co-starred with Pitt in Ocean's Eleven and Ocean's Twelve, saw the same attention directed at his longtime friend Ben Affleck during his doomed romance with Jennifer Lopez, and he's admits it's a position he' d hate to be in.

He says: "It's got to be tough. Most actors can lead a quiet life if they decide to. I do. But Brad is one of those actors you get once every generation who is born to be a star. He's as nice and as regular a guy as there is, but attention follows him everywhere."

Pitt and Aniston announced their separation in January.