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Beat: Pokerstars may limit amount of tables(Readable version) (mod note: but not worth reading) Beat: Pokerstars may limit amount of tables(Readable version) (mod note: but not worth reading)

06-26-2010 , 11:15 PM
PokerStars Game #45437193501: Hold'em No Limit ($0.25/$0.50 USD) - 2010/06/13 0:41:39 ET
Table 'Megaira III' 9-max Seat #6 is the button
Seat 1: Kepper111 ($176.15 in chips)
Seat 2: Dooley2005 ($50.75 in chips)
Seat 3: DURAMAXCHUCK ($29.90 in chips)
Seat 4: mireyco ($53.05 in chips)
Seat 5: _jay_44_jas ($77.35 in chips)
Seat 6: Pete007poker ($48 in chips)
Seat 7: denis 1970 ($56 in chips)
Seat 8: brockman39 ($49.10 in chips)
Seat 9: jagseg ($43 in chips)
denis 1970: posts small blind $0.25
brockman39: posts big blind $0.50
*** HOLE CARDS ***
Dealt to Dooley2005 [7d 7s]
jagseg: calls $0.50
DURAMAXCHUCK said, "JAY?????????? how can u play 24 tables and still keep up the action"

DURAMAXCHUCK said, "can't be human must be a computer program"

brockman39 said, "i agree ..."

DURAMAXCHUCK said, "some people play one table and can't call pre flop without keeping other players waiting"

DURAMAXCHUCK said, "poker stars should limit the amount of tables played at any given time ( say maybe 5)"

brockman39 said, "too much waiting ..."
DURAMAXCHUCK said, "yeah you may have a point"

DURAMAXCHUCK said, "lets complain"

brockman39 said, "especially on the "fast" tables"

DURAMAXCHUCK said, "i will send an e-mail and see what response i get"

brockman39 said, "cool ..."

DURAMAXCHUCK said, "i'm paying to play humans not computers"

DURAMAXCHUCK said, "all in favour say I"

brockman39 said, "I"

denis 1970 said, "lol"

DURAMAXCHUCK said, "C/MON HUMANS"

brockman39 said, "good luck with that by the way ... PS limiting gambling on their site"

brockman39 said, "lol"

brockman39 said, "should be an option same as fast or 6 max tables"

DURAMAXCHUCK said, "david against goliath"

brockman39 said, "pretty much"

DURAMAXCHUCK said, "i like a challenge"
Beat: Pokerstars may limit amount of tables(Readable version) (mod note: but not worth reading) Quote
06-26-2010 , 11:23 PM
Beat: Pokerstars may limit amount of tables(Readable version) (mod note: but not worth reading) Quote
06-26-2010 , 11:57 PM
^^LULZ
Beat: Pokerstars may limit amount of tables(Readable version) (mod note: but not worth reading) Quote
06-27-2010 , 12:47 AM
Beat: Pokerstars may limit amount of tables(Readable version) (mod note: but not worth reading) Quote
06-27-2010 , 12:54 AM
Is that deeb with a corona?
Beat: Pokerstars may limit amount of tables(Readable version) (mod note: but not worth reading) Quote
06-27-2010 , 01:00 AM
[IMG]http://mzeberlein.files.wordpress.com/2009/03/******_ninja.jpg[/IMG]
Beat: Pokerstars may limit amount of tables(Readable version) (mod note: but not worth reading) Quote
06-27-2010 , 02:30 AM
Do you know what a **** barometer is Bubbles? It measures the **** pressure in the air. Eventually your head will implode from all the **** pressure. The winds of **** are coming.
Beat: Pokerstars may limit amount of tables(Readable version) (mod note: but not worth reading) Quote
06-27-2010 , 02:37 AM
this is ****ing awful
Beat: Pokerstars may limit amount of tables(Readable version) (mod note: but not worth reading) Quote
06-27-2010 , 02:38 AM
seriously you sound like a ****ing moron
Beat: Pokerstars may limit amount of tables(Readable version) (mod note: but not worth reading) Quote
06-27-2010 , 03:00 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by rakemeplz
Do you know what a **** barometer is Bubbles? It measures the **** pressure in the air. Eventually your head will implode from all the **** pressure. The winds of **** are coming.
Definitely! Good call rake man!
Beat: Pokerstars may limit amount of tables(Readable version) (mod note: but not worth reading) Quote
06-27-2010 , 04:09 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by RickyR
seriously you sound like a ****ing moron
Are you talking about me?
Beat: Pokerstars may limit amount of tables(Readable version) (mod note: but not worth reading) Quote
06-27-2010 , 05:32 AM
CBS News anchor Dan Rather, renowned for his unusual expressions and sayings, has led a colorful life. However, one bizarre event really takes the cake.
One night in October 1986, Rather was walking down a Manhattan street when he was punched from behind and thrown to the ground. His assailant kicked and beat him while repeating, "Kenneth, what is the frequency?"

No one could explain the event, and the rumors flew fast and wide. Some speculated the assailant was a KGB agent, while others claimed the attack was the work of a jealous husband. Rather himself couldn't shed any light on the subject. His explanation at the time?

I got mugged. Who understands these things? I didn't and I don't now. I didn't make a lot of it at the time and I don't now. I wish I knew who did it and why, but I have no idea.
Apparently the strange event moved R.E.M. singer Michael Stipe, who said of the incident:

It remains the premier unsolved American surrealist act of the 20th century. It's a misunderstanding that was scarily random, media hyped and just plain bizarre.
The attack inspired the 1994 R.E.M. hit "What's the Frequency, Kenneth." Being a good sport, Dan Rather even accompanied the band when they performed the song on a Late Show with David Letterman appearance.

In 1997, based on a tip from a psychiatrist, Rather's attacker was identified as William Tager. According to the psychiatrist, Tager, who was currently serving time for killing an NBC stagehand, blamed news media for beaming signals into his head, and thought if he could just find out the correct frequency, he could block those signals that were constantly assailing him. Hence the enigmatic inquiry.
Beat: Pokerstars may limit amount of tables(Readable version) (mod note: but not worth reading) Quote
06-27-2010 , 05:53 AM
OK I just thought it was humorous but clearly not. Just lock the thread if morons like rakemeplz are guna just rip me to shreds lol
Beat: Pokerstars may limit amount of tables(Readable version) (mod note: but not worth reading) Quote
06-27-2010 , 06:04 AM
CBS News anchor Dan Rather, renowned for his unusual expressions and sayings, has led a colorful life. However, one bizarre event really takes the cake.
One night in October 1986, Rather was walking down a Manhattan street when he was punched from behind and thrown to the ground. His assailant kicked and beat him while repeating, "Kenneth, what is the frequency?"

No one could explain the event, and the rumors flew fast and wide. Some speculated the assailant was a KGB agent, while others claimed the attack was the work of a jealous husband. Rather himself couldn't shed any light on the subject. His explanation at the time?

I got mugged. Who understands these things? I didn't and I don't now. I didn't make a lot of it at the time and I don't now. I wish I knew who did it and why, but I have no idea.
Apparently the strange event moved R.E.M. singer Michael Stipe, who said of the incident:

It remains the premier unsolved American surrealist act of the 20th century. It's a misunderstanding that was scarily random, media hyped and just plain bizarre.
The attack inspired the 1994 R.E.M. hit "What's the Frequency, Kenneth." Being a good sport, Dan Rather even accompanied the band when they performed the song on a Late Show with David Letterman appearance.

In 1997, based on a tip from a psychiatrist, Rather's attacker was identified as William Tager. According to the psychiatrist, Tager, who was currently serving time for killing an NBC stagehand, blamed news media for beaming signals into his head, and thought if he could just find out the correct frequency, he could block those signals that were constantly assailing him. Hence the enigmatic inquiry.
Beat: Pokerstars may limit amount of tables(Readable version) (mod note: but not worth reading) Quote
06-27-2010 , 09:50 AM
After an early position in Sioux City, Iowa, Tom Brokaw's career in broadcast news began in earnest in 1962 when he worked in Omaha, Nebraska. He moved to Atlanta, Georgia in 1965 to report on the civil rights movement, then joined NBC in Los Angeles as a reporter and anchor in 1966. From the West Coast, Brokaw moved to Washington, eventually becoming NBC's White House correspondent during the Watergate era. In 1976 and 1980 he was a member of NBC News' team of floor reporters for the Democratic and Republican conventions. In 1984 and 1988 he served as anchor of all NBC News' coverage of the primaries, national conventions, and election night, a role he repeated in 1992. In the fall of 1987 Brokaw scored a number of high profile successes, interviewing Mikhail Gorbachev in the Kremlin, Ronald Reagan in the White House, and in December 1987 moderating a live, televised debate from Washington among all declared candidates for the Presidential nomination from both parties. He also moderated the first debate among the declared Democratic candidates for President in December 1991.

Brokaw's opportunity to serve as anchor arose when, after being courted by ABC, NBC countered by teaming him with Roger Mudd, (apparently attempting to replicate the Chet Huntley-David Brinkley pairing) and the two went on the air as co-anchors in April l982. Mudd was soon dropped by NBC, and Brokaw took over as sole anchor in August 1983. At CBS Dan Rather had replaced Walter Cronkite in 1981, at ABC Peter Jennings, who had anchored from 1964-67, returned to that position in 1983, and thus a three-man race was put in place which continues to structure the national nightly news. When each of the networks was bought by a large conglomerate in the mid-1980s, (ABC by Capital Cities, CBS by Laurence Tisch's Loews Corporation, and NBC by General Electric), network news divisions became cost-accountable in new ways that also impinged on the importance of the anchor. While budgets and staffs were cut, promotional campaigns were expanded, and increasingly, the center of those campaigns was the persona of the news anchor, who became a virtual corporate symbol.

Brokaw has been one of the most well-recognized participants in the trend toward expanding the role of the news reader into a prominent position of creative control and celebrity. Along with Rather and Jennings, Brokaw has emerged in the 1990s as a kind of living logo, the image taken to be representative of an entire news organization. A number of critics have raised questions about the quality and integrity of news presentation in this increasingly star-driven climate, charging that on the national news broadcasts, journalism has become subordinate to entertainment. Brokaw was reportedly the model for William Hurt's Tom Grunick, the protagonist in James L. Brooks' 1987 film Broadcast News.

As an anchor, Brokaw is renowned for his globetrotting, and he has provided live coverage of such important recent events as the dismantling of the Berlin Wall. In addition to NBC Nightly News, Brokaw has anchored, with Katie Couric, the nighttime program. Now with Tom Brokaw and Katie Couric as well as the short-lived Expose a news magazine show on the order of 60 Minutes. He has also anchored a series of periodic prime-time specials.
Beat: Pokerstars may limit amount of tables(Readable version) (mod note: but not worth reading) Quote

      
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