The Incredible True Story Of Online Poker

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20:59
23 Jun

Based on a True Story: Molly Bloom Talks Seeing Her Own Story on the Big Screen. He is no stranger to adapting true stories, his screenplay for The Social Network – based on the true story of Facebook’s founding – won a BAFTA. Online Poker, 3 days ago. Here we take a look at some of the most amazing gambling stories that have made the headlines over the years. Twice in a Lifetime Luck. We all dream of that one big life-changing jackpot win but here we tell the story of Elmer Sherwin's amazing double Megabucks multi-million dollar jackpot wins. A Poker Story from the “Old Days”. Back then, just five years ago, online poker wasn’t much of an option for making money, so I would usually play anywhere from $80-$160 limit hold’em to $300-$600 or $400-$800 mixed games depending on my bankroll at the time. I habitually played with an inadequate bankroll which was part impatience.

(Photo: Fortune.com)

Poker players are well-known for being a little crazy. Most people think it is just money they are crazy with but I think we will all admit the lifestyle and stories are outstanding. I have been entertaining myself reading some of the funniest poker stories posted online and remembering some of my own experiences. I trust and I hope that these stories are honest and I think they are. I just hope I do them justice because there is limited space.

Here are my favorite funny poker stories. The last one is my own, which happened to me some years ago and was so funny I’ve never forgotten it and I am sure I never will.

For FedEx Sake!

This one is funny to me and I laughed when I read it. It is a bit of the butterfly effect, and when you ponder it, you will find your mind realizing how crazy life can be. Here goes. In 1973, FedEx was not the multi-billion dollar company it is today. It was in deep trouble, and the company was down to its final $5,000 in the bank with a $24,000 fuel bill staring owner Fred Smith in the face. Fred decided to go down in style, heading to Vegas with his final $5,000 and gambling it (as you do!). He hit a timely run of cards, turning $5,000 into $27,000 and saving the company. Over 40 years later, FedEx has grown into the huge company it is today, giving Fred a personal net worth of over $2 billion. Just think about that for a moment! I wonder if he tipped the dealer that night?


Know Your Left From Your Right

In a small buy-in tournament in the USA, a young man was holding a short stack and staring elimination in the face. He had his hole cards in one hand and his few remaining chips in the other. He looks at his cards and stops to think for a moment and then throws his chips into the middle announcing “fold” as he does so. The dealer says “But you threw your chips into the pot?” to which the player sits for a moment then swears. It transpires he had forgotten which hand his chips were in and meant to throw away his other hand (his hole cards) rather than his last few chips. Unfortunately the poker Gods did not spare him and he busted out of the tournament. At least it appears he would have made a good decision to fold before the bad decision to “muck” his chips!

Celebrate Wisely

This story is funny, but only because it didn’t happen to me! User Laez posted this on Reddit and it was so funny I actually laughed out loud, rather than just “internet laughing”, which for me is just to smile. Over to Laez.

“A friend of mine had been running pretty bad and was on his last $300 at 1/2. He runs it up to about $800. He's feeling lucky so he moves to 2/5 with $500 with $300 to retreat to 1/2 if it doesn't work out. . Shorty after getting a seat he finds himself with KK. He limp 3 bets. Gets 4 bet shoved on by another limper and the original raiser calls. He tanks forever. Says he knows one of them has AA. Calls anyway. Both have AA. He binks a K on the flop. Triples up.

He is super stoked. Decides to celebrate by going to his favorite hooker who lives in another state an hour away. So after celebrating his luck with this hooker she asks him for a ride to another motel. This next motel is a police sting. They arrest him. Then he finds out that the hooker told them that he was her pimp. She said that he beats her, takes her money and that he is the one that posts the ads on Craigslist. They charge him with dozens of charges and tell him he could get 15 years in prison. He uses his phone call to call the poker room. We go bail him out the next day. When he comes out he says thanks but nothing else. Obviously didn't sleep that night. It's quiet in the car for like 15 minutes. And then out of nowhere he says. 'I should have folded those Kings.';

Tremendous. He should definitely have folded those kings but the true humor in this story is that he is blissfully unaware of the odd activities he undertook that led to him being arrested. I hope the hooker in question is no longer his favorite, I’m not sure she deserves it anymore.


Incredible

Never Teach People to Play Poker

This story happened to me and is 100% true. My friend knew of my interest in poker and had railed me one evening when I had done quite well in a low stakes MTT and had won $50. He thought this was fantastic and said he had always fancied learning to play poker and begged me to teach him. I eventually agreed and as I have a set of chips and cards we set about playing one evening. After a painful hour or two teaching him the rules he still didn’t seem to get it so we began to play a little heads up with a view of learning as we encountered different spots. It was not difficult to beat him at first as he called everything and if I had a hand I was usually ahead.

Then suddenly we got to the flop and he raises instead of calling. “You’re raising?” I said, impressed he remembered how to do it. “Yes.” he said, looking rather excited. “We need to work on your poker face.” I said. We got to showdown. I had two pair and pure morbid curiosity had gotten me this far as he had bet every street. I showed my two pair. “Can you beat this?” I asked? “Yes.” He said, turning over his cards. “A red flush.” “A what?” I said. “A red flush.” He said, like I was the fool. And there it was. Three hearts and two diamonds. “Nice hand.” I said. He looked so happy I couldn’t break it to him, but we have a laugh about it now. He turned out to be a pretty good poker player once he got to grips with the game. Don’t forget, we all start somewhere!

12:59
17 Dec

Bringing a story from real life to the big screen is not always a straightforward process. Nor does it often leave the original story intact, but Molly Bloom seems to feel Aaron Sorkin has done her story justice with his version of the truth. “He inflated my LSAT score, gave me a few extra points, but for the most part he made a movie that was very rooted in the truth,” she told BBC journalists on the press tour for the movie, which is making its way into UK theatres on New Year’s Day.

Molly approached Sorkin after her book was published. He is no stranger to adapting true stories, his screenplay for The Social Network – based on the true story of Facebook’s founding – won a BAFTA, a Golden Globe and an Oscar, and he knocked it out of the park with his script for Moneyball. This time he’s not just writing, but directing.


The Long Road North

Bloom opted not to watch the film until it was completely finished, getting special dispensation from the US government to cross the border into Canada to watch it with an audience at the Toronto film festival. She needed that permission because she is under a travel ban as part of her punishment for the Federal charges she racked up during the time portrayed in the movie.

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The Incredible True Story Download

“There was a moment five minutes in, sitting in that theatre, where I was like, what was I thinking? This is crazy. And how am I going to get through the next two hours and 25 minutes, because I feel like I can't breathe. But halfway into that opening scene, I was just watching a movie. And I was able to get outside of myself - even though I couldn't have possibly brought more personal baggage. I was able to just watch it as an extraordinary film.”

Not Quite A Mirror

She was particularly pleased with Jessica Chastain’s portrayal of Molly herself. Chastain is no stranger to the world of telling real stories on screen (c.f. Zero Dark Thirty), and that seems to have come across in the way she managed to portray Bloom.

The incredible true story cd
“She blew my mind because she didn't get to spend much time with me - she has a packed schedule and this was a short prep time,” Bloom said of Chastain. 'I was wondering as they were filming, 'Is she just going to do her own creative interpretation of this?'. But when I watched that movie [...] she was able to communicate the intricacies of how I felt in those moments.”

The Incredible True Story Song

In the end, it sounds like Bloom is thrilled with the way the story is told, and audiences seem to be going along for the ride with her. After living a life dramatic enough for a blockbuster movie to be made about her, one imagines the Bloom will be looking forward to a rather quieter sequel.

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