Dinner in the steakhouse comes at a price
Dear Mark,
This episode happened to me recently in Las Vegas. I was playing
blackjack making $10 wagers when I was approached by a pit
boss asking if there was anything he could do for me. "Sure,"
I replied. Can I get a dinner at the steakhouse?" His
response was, "Let me track your action for a few minutes
and I'll tell you what we can comp you." Well, as luck
would have it, the cards weren't going my way and I left without
following up on that steak dinner. But I still want to know
what the pit boss meant by tracking my action for a comp?
Stanley K.
First, Stanley, the comp (steak dinner) is nothing more
than a reward system for the worthy play of high volume
players. The casino thanks you by rebating back some of
your losses because you played at such a level, for such
a period of time, and because they have such an advantage
over you; the longer you play the more they win. So here's
your carrot and please come back again.
Tracking your play means taking your average bet and multiplying
it by the hours played, speed of the game and the casino
advantage. This, in theory, should equal your loss.
In your case, Stanley, you mentioned betting $10 a hand.
With two hour's play, averaging 100 hands per hour, coupled
with the house advantage of five percent they hold over
the average blackjack player, this tells Mr. Pit Boss you're
going to lose $100. Because mathematically you'll lose that
Ben Franklin, the casino can afford to rebate your losses
in the form of a corn-fed beef dinner.
The warning here is that to give comps, the casino is going
to demand action, preferably losing action. They also want
you to bet a decent chunk of change for an extended period
of time to justify giving you freebies.
Of course, Stanley, I always recommend grinding any comp
you can get out of the casino, but I caution all players
never to gamble just to receive them. It's much better to
make sensible, low house advantage wagers, which will increase
your winning opportunities.
Dear Mark,
You said in a recent column that it was easier to hit my state
lottery than to get a sequential royal flush. I can't be sure,
but it seems I've gotten the latter but was never fortunate
enough to hit the lottery. Are you sure? Shirley L.
Using a software program called Statistics Menu from Spreadware,
I find that the numbers crunch this way. The chances of
hitting the California lottery are 18,009,460 to one. For
an ascending royal flush in any suit, the chances are one
in 311,875,119, a difference of elephantine proportions.
These "gimmick" bonus jackpots are nothing more
than a marketing scheme to induce play. In most cases, Shirley,
it's more than a challenge to win, it's impossible.
Dear Mark,
Which slot machine revolutionized slots as we know them today?
Jeff C.
My answer, Jeff, will subject me to heated debate among
one-armed bandit collectors- of which I'm not one-but my
biased guess would be the 1964 "Money Honey" manufactured
by Bally's. This machine was the first to have electronic
circuitry to read the reels, a hopper, relays for protection
against slot cheating and a brightly lit front end. The
latter, mind you, was not for esthetics but for inducing
play.
Dear Mark,
On a recent trip to Las Vegas, I noticed a fascinating slot
machine on display that was built from a wooden cowboy. As
a collector of gambling artifacts, I would like to add one
to my collection. Two questions: Are these machines a rarity?
And who designed them? Stewart K.
Scarce, yes, as only 92 were made in 1950. The ingenious
cowboy artist who created the life-size human figures on
slot machines was Frank Polk.
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