| Community |
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
| Find Action |
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
| In the Tank
|
 |
|
|
 |
|
|
 |
|
| On the Rail
|
 |
|
|
 |
|
|
 |
|
|
 |
|
|
 |
Links |
|
 |
|
|
 |
|
|
 |
|
|
 |
|
|
 |
 |
|
At TwoRags.com, we're committed to providing accurate information to the
poker community. If you see entries or information that you believe to be in
error, please email us.
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
 |
|
|
Rolling Stone 40th Anniversary Celebrity Poker Tournament
|
By RaoulDukeJr
on 01/05/2025
|
read RaoulDukeJr's complete blog
|
Don’t I know you?
Vegas is littered with degenerate dealers that go up big, quit their jobs and live large, slowly give it all back and return to dealing. They enter Vegas as bright-eyed dreamers, and thirty years later, they are still plying that disappointing dream behind a table. For any dealer, pit boss or cocktail waitress who might have been in Vegas thirty years ago, our act was a re-run—a broke, infrequent contributor to Rolling Stone and an overweight, drug addled attorney with no regard for societal norms in town to report on some odd competition.
Indeed, we bore other similarities to Raoul Duke and Dr. Gonzo. We had rooms that were comped, money was never an issue and sleep was out of the question. But did we have a purpose out in the desert? Was there some reason for this lost weekend?
Yes, we’re here on assignment…
Our cover for everyone in Los Angeles was the 40th Anniversary party for Rolling Stone magazine at the Hard Rock Casino. We were going to whoop it up with the very folks who first published the strange tales of Mr. Duke and Dr. Gonzo. Our itinerary was slightly different—private concerts, VIP parties, Rehab at the pool and of course, the Rolling Stone celebrity poker tournament—but I think the general vibe was on par.
The weekend started off on a high note with Snoop Dogg giving a concert poolside Friday night. My associate, who for professional reasons we will call Mr. Pink, could not be pulled away from the craps tables long enough to enjoy the hour plus show. In retrospect, it would have been better if he had taken a little break from the constant stream of Patron shots with giant Red Bull/Vodka chasers. That volatile combination should have been an immediate harbinger, but with Mr. Pink rationality is always scarce. And as I rolled back into the Hard Rock from Mr. Dogg’s concert, I found Mr. Pink in a massive altercation with the Floor Supervisor.
Winner, eight!
This looked like serious trouble; Mr. Pink was quickly overheating. He was recounting how much he had personally tipped a specific craps dealer in the last five years and peppering the pit boss, (who was on the phone) with idle and welcomed threats about never coming back. Never subtle, his presentation reminded me of Bill Cowher giving feedback to a middle linebacker after a key missed tackle—fixed jaw, wild eyes, an unending spray of saliva.
I approached him with care, but he heaved a flurry of insults, threats and other gibberish at me. “We are going to pull and tear out of this place!” he shrieked while making a tearing motion with his hands. I quickly pieced the story together. Apparently, he had a $5,000 wager on the “don’t pass” line when a patron rolled a 5 on one die and the second got caught on the wall. From Mr. Pink’s point of view the second die read 2 giving him a seven and a winner, but a dealer bumped the table and the die rolled to a three making 8, the established point. Cue the human explosion.
The Floor Supervisor was checking with the eye in the sky and consulting the head of gaming, as two pit managers and a host tried to sooth Mr. Pink. “Pack your shit, we are out of here!” he hollered at me. “I don’t know where you are going to stay tonight and I don’t care!” “Ok,” I thought, “this savage really needs to cool down.”, but I feigned like I understood and meekly headed to my room. Shit, if he is this mad now, I certainly don’t want to be around when they tell him there is nothing they can do.
Nice comeback, sir!
I returned to the floor 45 minutes later and all seemed normal, but Mr. Pink was nowhere to be found. I played a little craps and decided to get some rest before the poker tournament the next day. As I headed for my room, I thought about Pink’s whereabouts. The only way that situation ended peacefully was if the Hard Rock reimbursed him for the lost bet, a very, very unlikely scenario. Where was Mr. Pink now at 1:45 AM? Would he show for the tournament?
BOOM, BOOM, BOOM! I rolled over and heard a familiar voice shouting my name from the hall. It was 8:30 AM, and Mr. Pink was pounding on my door. His bloodshot eyes told me he had not slept. Thrown out of the Hard Rock, he cruised over to Treasure Island, won 40K and hooked up a 19-year-old female student from a local community college, who was apparently minoring in personal entrepreneurship. All was good again.
We shared breakfast and talked strategies for the poker tournament. Not surprisingly, Mr. Pink was going play aggressively. “I’m gonna push these donuts around,” he assured me. I warned that it might be smart to play conservative in the first hour, but I could tell he was not listening.
The tournament
Around12:30, after securing our tickets, I pulled Mr. Pink away from an ugly bout at roulette, and we walked the red carpet into the Joint at the Hard Rock. It was packed with C-list celebrities, goofy hangers on, assorted poker dorks and three television crews who were soliciting interviews from Nelly and Queens of the Stone Age leader Josh Homme.
 | | | | | | |