Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Californication and Thoughts on TV

OK, so I'm a cheap bastard and refuse to pay for Showtime. Of course, I have the full boat HD package but no premium channels. The HD is, of course the perfect accessory to the feel-better purchase that I made last year. (46" Sammy LCD) And the perfect accessory to that is being able to watch Californication on DirectTV's free preview channel when they run it.

I've always liked David Duchovny as an actor ever since the X-Files. He's a little deadpan, but it's defintely appropriate for certain roles, and his Hank on Californication is a GREAT role. Of course, I can relate to his usually dysfunctional choices. Especially WHY he makes the choices he makes. Hank is hopelessly in love with the mother of his child, but is making his dysfunctional best of the situation. He really means well, but his psyche often gets in the way. Of course, his choices usually mean that he has sex with anything that walks, but hey, that's one way to express one's unhappiness with oneself.

Reminds me, I'm going to need to go get a Blockbuster Online or Netflix account and rent the series.

One other at least quasi-interesting show that I saw on Tuesday night was "Whatever, Martha." The basic concept is that with Martha Stewart's blessing, her daughter and her daughter's friend (who coincidentally is the daughter of the head of Martha Stewart's production company) make fun of old clips of "Martha Stewart Living" ala "MST3K". The humour wasn't nearly as intelligent or pop-culture savvy as MST3K, but an occasional crass comment from Martha's daughter and her friend were remotely amusing. If you're in your early 20's and have a half a brain, I guess.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Bad Calls Resulting In Bad Beats - Reforming the Brat

So for years, I was known as the "Poker Brat" of the Lake Norman World Tavern Poker League. And I admit, I was pretty obnoxious about bad calls resulting in bad beats. I actually made a good friend of mine cry after I berated her about making an awful call and hitting a 2 outer on the river to beat me. Luckily, my tirades tend to last no more than a minute, and then a cooler head tends to prevail, so I apologized. (Once again, sorry CF...Glad you and DF are still friends of mine)

Luckily, I've seen the light and grown up. Poker IS a skill game, requiring a hefty dose of math, psychology, and pure chutzpah. However, such a large luck element is involved that it's inevitable that one is going to experience bad beats from bad calls.

People often debate, wonder, and wax philosophical about "how much of poker is luck and how much of poker is skill?" I'm going to throw in my two cents...No-Limit Hold 'Em is, IMHO,70 percent skill, and 30 percent luck.

I personally believe that the 3 elements of skill required for poker are (as stated above) math, psychology, and chutzpah. A good or great poker player will be able to blend the three skills into a seamless dance, and vary how much of each element they employ depending on the game and the situation. They will also know when to use these three elements to take advantage of luck when it comes their way.

Of course, in NLHE, I am fully convinced that the art of the game only has a small math component. Don't get me wrong; if a poker player doesn't understand the math to correctly calculate odds, pot odds, outs, etc., they're typically going to find themselves short or out in very short order. The math is the easy part though; playing the psychological game and having the chutzpah to trust your instincts, whether based on psychology or math...that's the hard part.

So while there are players that are loose cannons for the sake of being loose cannons, there are plenty of smart players that are employing an element of skill that tighter players tend not to be able to have. Once again, the key becomes finding the correct balance for each game or situation. An unskilled poker player will play purely with their guts all the of the time and not adjust their game. These are the loose cannons that will win big usually or go home early. Admittedly, they ARE the most frustrating to play against. Achieve balance in your game, between luck, math, psychology, and chutzpah, and it won't matter. You'll win in the end.