Online Casino Games

Online Gambling Home
Online Baccarat
Online Bingo
Online Blackjack
Caribbean Stud Poker
Online Craps
Online Keno
Let it Ride Poker
Pai Gow Poker
Online Poker Rooms
Online Roulette
Online Slots
Spanish 21
Online Video Poker

Online Casino Directory

Microgaming Casinos
Odds On Casinos
Playtech Casinos
Real Time Gaming Casinos
Vegas Technology Casinos

Gambling Directory

Directory
What's New
Search

The name is Bond, James Bond

The name is Bond, James Bond
by Mark Pilarski  

Email this article 

Jan 19, 2003, 23:08 

 

Dear Mark,
You answered a question by stating that the most popular number played on a roulette wheel was 17 and reasoned that this was so because it was located in the center of the layout and everyone could reach it. I guess my point is that it is likely that other factors add to the "appeal" of 17 for the masses. I suggest that its popularity is based somewhat on the James Bond films where he bets "17 Black." Just a hunch, but I know many players who bet this way. Jimmy H.

Correct you are, Jimmy. Bond did enjoy both baccarat and roulette as a way to relax and unwind after saving the world. And yes, players drinking martinis, shaken not stirred, tend to follow his pattern of play.

Besides birthday and anniversary dates, many players choose numbers used in the movies, from record LPs (the Beatles; number 9, number 9, number 9), even after a player's favorite athlete. Popular in northern Nevada when I dealt the game was 16 Red, Joe Montana's jersey number and color.

Getting back to Her Majesty's favorite secret agent: The most popular number in the movies is not 17, even if it was a favorite of Ian Fleming's Bond, but 22. You'll see it played at pivotal points in "Casablanca," "The Sting" and "Lost in America."

Also of little note, 22, my personal favorite, was the first number called at Bill's Casino at south Lake Tahoe when it officially opened on July 1, 1987 at 7:01 p.m. And who (brag mode ON) called that first number? Yours truly (brag mode OFF). One player had a $25 chip on it and won $875.

Dear Mark,
I am having a minor dispute with a friend about 'jack's or better' five card draw.

Is there usually (obviously house rules vary from place to place, but in general) a requirement to prove you have a pair of jacks or better to open? When I learned this game, there was no such requirement and you could actually bluff the open. My friend now tells me that this is not the case and penalties like matching the pot are usually imposed if the opener does bluff. What is your experience on this issue? John K.

When I was growing up, John, if I misplayed a hand in pinochle, fraudulently or not, the chastening was not only getting the heave-ho from the game but castigated for piss-poor play and an additional penalty of washing all the dishes. This is how I learned that honesty prevails in card play. But I'm writing about a friendly, or in my case, a hostile game environment at the kitchen table where local rules apply.

In casino poker rooms, they don't offer a jacks or better game for one simple reason. SHOW ME THE MONEY! Casinos can't pay the lighting bills on the many dead hands that a Jacks or better game would create. You can't 'rake' a pot that isn't there. The rake, the money that the card room charges, is usually a percentage or flat fee taken from the pot after each round of betting. Every time a dealer pitches out a hand, your miserly casino owner wants a piece of the action.

As for home rules, I've heard of everything from matching the pot to forfeiting the hand, and in a worst case senerio, the bucking up for all the booze and burgers.

So in the future, John, let whoever is gracious enough to let you spill beer and chip dip all over their carpet make the rules of the house.

 For more gambling strategy tips by Mark, check out the Deal Me In index page


©  Copyright 2002-2010 by Greedyhog Gambling

 

Top of Page

Deal Me In 

Bringing Down the House

Those Hungry Slots

The No Seven Shooter

An Odds way of looking at things

Kids show Pops the hazards of gambling

Slot Nostalgia

Airport machines are a tough beat

Man of letters moving up

Downright Lethal vs Pretty Good

With one lonely Ben Franklin left, I would...

Online Casino Purchase Methods

900 Pay Casinos
ACH Casinos
Central Coin Casinos
Citadel Commerce Casinos
Credit Card Casinos
Delta Casinos
Duocash Casinos
Ecocard Casinos
Firepay Casinos
Neteller Casinos
Moneybookers Casinos
Payspark Casinos
Prepaid ATM Casinos

Gambling Strategy

Deal Me In
Deal Me In 2004