2nd Place: Chik-Fil-a-Tio 78
3rd Place: Manti Te’o’s Zombie Girlfriends 77
Pat Gallen of Phillies Nation and I will be hosting a Super Sports Quizzo This Sunday at the Field House at 6 p.m. The winner will walk with 4 lower level tix to an upcoming Flyers game and a $50 gift certificate to Field House. 2nd Place will walk with $50 gift cert. Gonna have plenty of craft beers for $3 and $4. Should be a great quiz, with at least one baseball round, one Super Bowl round, and another three rounds on a variety of subjects, from basketball, baseball, hockey, tennis and even a little boxing. The Flyers game will be on TV and there will be plenty of cold beer on tap. Hope you can make it!
Just a reminder, folks. February 23rd, 2013 at the World Cafe Live. Quizzo Bowl IX. It promises to have all of the insanity you’ve come to expect from the premiere quizzo event on earth. Tickets go on sale next week!*
*I won’t be rapping at Quizzo Bowl this year. Let’s nip that pesky little rumor in the bud right now.
We kick it off at Ugly American at 8 p.m. It was rocking and rolling last Thursday. Hopefully we have more of the same tonight. Save Ear came in and won in hostile territory last week. Can they do it again, or will someone else step up? And yes, I’ll have fries to give away and Lagers will be dirt cheap.
On to the Bards at 10:15 p.m. Steak Em Up is back on another run and you’re going to need to bring you A-game to knock them off…however if it’s gonna happen, tonight could be the night. A speed round designed specifically to keep them in check. Tough quiz tonight, I’ll warn you now, but a good one. And a wild card round inspired by Manti Te’o. Hope to see you there!
Many of you on the quizzo circuit know Vaughn, aka the Sandman. Not only has he been an off and on player for numerous years, he has also hosted the quiz for me on numerous occasions, and done a bang up job from all reports. Anyways, Vaughn just recently stopped being a pro poker player, and is looking to go into writing.
He enjoyed poker, he made money at it, but to be a pro player these days you need to move to the soulless pit that is Vegas, and that town and Vaughn, who has as much soul as any white boy I know, just weren’t a good fit. Regardless, here is his story of what it’s like to be a poker player and how he got into it.
JGT: Tell me how you first got into poker.
Vaughn: Well I was always a bit of a gambler. I used to sneak into the Taj to play blackjack when I was 16-20 years old. Not often, once or twice a year.
JGT: Were you pretty good at it, right off the bat?
Vaughn: Yeah. I was a chess prodigy as a kid. Top 5 in the country age 9 and under, with two therapists for parents. I was kind of born and bred to play poker
JGT: I didn’t know that you were a chess prodigy.
Vaughn: I peaked at age 8. But that movie Searching for Bobby Fisher? I used to play with that kid a lot.
JGT: Ok, so when did you make the jump to cards?
Vaughn: Age 25, working as an assistant in Hollywood. Flew home to Philly for a one week vacation, had a changeover in Las Vegas.
JGT: An assistant what?
Vaughn: I was the assistant to the head writer/executive producer of an ill-fated CBS sitcom.
JGT: Called what?
Vaughn: Ladies Man. Helluva cast but the show never got off the ground. Alfred Molina, Betty White. But it was working 90hrs a week on the Titanic. Anyway, my flight was late out of LA and missed the Vegas to PHL flight. It was 11pm and next flight was 7am. Being a bit of a latent degenerate, I put my bag in a locker and took a cab to the Bellagio. I had 6 hours to kill and knew I couldn’t spend it playing blackjack.
Rounders had recently come out. I wandered over to the poker room, played $1-$5 spread limit stud all night. Finished up $12 and thought it was the coolest f***ing thing. On the way to my flight I went into the gift shop and bought the first book I saw on poker strategy. The book mentioned poker was legal at several card rooms in L.A., including the Hollywood Park Racetrack which was maybe 15 minutes from the Culver City lot where we shot the show. I didn’t go during weeks when we were shooting, but the non-shooting weeks I went a couple times a week and I was a better than breakeven player almost right away.
JGT: Had you found a passion or just a hobby?
Vaughn: Both. Clearly some part of me that been been long dormant just got engaged right away. I mean, is there any way of keeping score more authentic than stacking piles of money? At the time, however, I had pretty much slaved away 3 years of my life to get myself into the position where I might get a job writing for a sitcom, and I was finally next in line.