Steve Lipscomb Poker

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Steve Lipscomb, the founder of the World Poker Tour, believes that the poker world is on the cusp of something even greater than what has occurred the last two years. And the way to do it, he says, is together.

An Open Letter to the Poker Community from WPT Founder, Steven Lipscomb. December 1, 2005. Most Recent Articles. World Poker Tour Season 1: Steve Lipscomb, Shana Hiatt (Hostess), Mike Sexton (Commentator), Vincent Van Patten (Commentator), Matt Savage: Amazon.com.au: Movies & TV Shows.

Steve Lipscomb is a writer and producer, known for World Poker Tour (2003), World Poker Tour China (2008) and Professional Poker Tour (2006). See full bio » More at IMDbPro » Contact Info: View agent, publicist, legal on IMDbPro. Apr 30, 2018 The World Poker Tour will induct Steve Lipscomb and Lyle Berman into its own version of the hall of fame by giving them WPT® Honors Awards. Announcing the news on April 25, current WPT CEO Adam.

'This is a chance for us all to band to together and share the excitement,' Lipscomb said. 'There are points in time where people in communities like this, as we head into the bright new future, we need to do it in lock-step.'

This week, Lipscomb wrote a letter to the public addressing several issues and rumors that he has heard while producing the WPT. The letter, which is printed unedited at the end of this story, addresses some of the rumors he has heard over and over this past year.

The letter was written to set the record straight and to ask players to work with each other as a community as the business of poker in the 21st century matures.

The letter is as follows:

An Open Letter to the Poker Community from WPT Founder, Steven Lipscomb

As I take stock of all the things we have to be thankful for in the holiday season, I find it appropriate and necessary to share some thoughts with the poker community at large. Firmly believing that people will, in the end, be judged by their actions, I have long made it a policy at the World Poker Tour to let our actions speak for themselves. The persistence of widely disseminated misinformation regarding a number of things has prompted me to break with that tradition today.

I want to first state that the relationship between the WPT and our players is one of paramount importance to us. Neither the WPT nor the players would be enjoying the extraordinary success we have seen over the last three years without each other. It is essential that we all respect and appreciate what the players, the WPT casinos and the WPT staff have brought to the table in creating this new world of poker. We truly value the relationship we continue to have with our players and see it as a two-way street. We encourage players to bring their concerns directly to us in the effort to ensure a healthy, positive and fruitful relationship and we will continue to attempt to address those issues as quickly as possible. To help facilitate communication, we are launching a 'For Players Only' portion of our website early next year, designed to foster information exchange and dialogue directly with WPT players. Players should make sure we have current email information so we can send them a Players Only password.

That being said, I would like to focus on the issues that have caused unnecessary concern in order to help put them in perspective.

FILMING RELEASES

The latest hot button issue seems to be the filming release we require players to sign before they play in World Poker Tour events. The release we utilize is a standard filming release that all production companies must have signed by everyone they film - or the television broadcaster will refuse to air our material. Filming releases are always broadly drafted to protect against frivolous law suits. The language is clear. The production company can use all the footage it shoots and the person's image in all media.

But, the story does not end there. The World Poker Tour is a business. We value our relationship with WPT players and have always acted with great care and deference when using player images. The few players now trying to stir up controversy around player releases are lost in hypotheticals - not reality.

A perfect example occurred recently. Without my approval, a banner ad featuring three prominent players was used by a WPT affiliate to drive people to our online poker site. Within an hour of hearing about the ad, I had it removed - not because we were legally obligated to, but because the players asked us to-and we take their concerns seriously.

We have always acted this way as a matter of course. But, I am happy to go on record today to promise the poker community that we will always listen to a player who feels that he or she is uncomfortable with how we use their image. If we feel we can or should, we will modify or eliminate that use. And, if not, we will explain, to the best of our ability, why not. What I cannot do is subject WPTE to endless lawsuits by severely restricting the rights we obtain in our filming release. No credible production company could or would do so. And, it is in the interest of all poker players for the WPT to be focusing its efforts and resources on growing poker into one of the largest sports in the world - rather than defending an endless line of frivolous lawsuits.

Lipscomb

I challenge the poker community to be very cautious about accepting misinformation without looking further. I am convinced that, if people take the time to investigate how the World Poker Tour has acted, they will agree that we should be commended as a company for the way we have handled this issue-and the way we listen and respond to players in general.

One more thing. The few players trying to make this a wedge issue want people to believe that players may lose endorsement opportunities because of signing WPT or ESPN film releases. Once again, this is not a real concern, but a remote hypothetical. You need to ask if any player has lost an endorsement deal because of WPT, ESPN, FOX, etc. filming releases. The answer is there are none. Players should always let potential sponsors know that they have signed the industry-standard, filming release that makes it possible for them to be on television - and therefore be of value to the sponsor. Sponsors and manufacturers deal with these circumstances all the time - on every television show from Survivor to Seinfeld. If you are lucky enough to have your television poker exposure make you a star worthy of endorsement contracts, the release will not impede that process.

And, finally, players who have played in any WPT events over the last three and a half years have already signed a release. That means that signing a release at the next hundred or a thousand WPT tournaments will have no effect of committing them any more than they are already committed.

THE WORLD POKER TOUR HAS YET TO TURN A PROFIT

Another rampant misunderstanding in the poker community is that the World Poker Tour or WPT Enterprises (WPTE) is making massive profits and is somehow the evil empire that refuses to spread the wealth. Nothing could be further from the truth. WPTE has been in business for four years and has yet to turn a profit. We continue to invest in what we believe will be the bright future of poker and the league that launched poker as a sport. And we, more than any institution in the business, have taken and continue to take steps to grow the poker world in general to benefit players and the broader community. Just a few examples:

In our second season, we launched and funded the first player management company in history - not because we thought it would make us money, but because we wanted to foster relationships and build opportunities for players. We passed that organization on to Brian Balsbaugh who has managed to make meaningful sponsorship deals a reality for an ever-growing group of players.

In Season III, we fulfilled the dream of many people in the poker community by launching and funding the first professional poker league in the history of the sport, giving $2.5 million dollars away prior to securing a broadcast deal. As many of you know, we have yet to receive any return of that investment.

In 2004 we invited all poker players and the general public to become investors in the WPT at a very early stage - to give everyone an opportunity to benefit from our future growth.

In Season IV, the WPT lobbied the Travel Channel on behalf of players and secured a change in the logo policy to allow pre-approved logos at WPT final tables.

In a broader sense, it is the World Poker Tour, its staff and casino partners that have made this poker boom possible. Every player that commentates on a rival TV show, every player that wins a million dollar first prize, every player that participates in or endorses an online poker room, every player that sits down in a packed poker room full of new players benefits from the World Poker Tour. Some people seem to forget that just three years ago you had to wait a year to get a shot at a million dollar first prize tournament. Poker rooms were being shut down across the country and industry leaders were holding conferences seeking ways to save a dying business. People forget that the biggest five and ten thousand dollar buy-in events had thirty to sixty people in them - not the six to nine hundred players you see today.

A LAND OF OPPORTUNITY

A tremendous land of opportunity has been created and opened to the poker community by the World Poker Tour and the other poker shows it has spawned. Poker rooms across the country are making money as they never imagined they could or would. Online poker has exploded from a two hundred million dollar market to a three billion dollar market by associating with the WPT and other television shows. And, whereas no one wanted to put regularly scheduled poker on television in the U.S. in 2001/2002, at least fifteen shows are currently airing in the U.S. - copying the WPT format.

There are a lot of people making money in the poker market today. Most of those opportunities did not exist prior to the World Poker Tour. The three founders of Party Gaming cashed out over a billion dollars from their business this year. Estimates are that Full Tilt Poker, owned and launched by A-list poker players, is making hundreds of thousands of dollars a day, millions of dollars a month. Poker players are being paid for appearances, they are endorsing products and poker sites and they are even beginning to crack the difficult layers of legitimate corporate sponsorship. Free-roll television shows totaling millions of dollars in prize money are being announced monthly and new poker interest shows are being produced as well.

THE WORLD POKER TOUR

The World Poker Tour is excited by all of this - and no one is happier than Lyle Berman or me when players do well and manage to cash in on the poker boom. But, with all the money being made, the poker community should be aware that the guy who put up millions of dollars to change the poker world - Mr. Lyle Berman - has, to date, not made a cent. He has never drawn a salary and, as of today, he and Lakes Entertainment have not sold one share of World Poker Tour stock. Their investment has appreciated, but I can not imagine that poker players or the poker community begrudge him that - any more than they would expect Party Gaming's investors or the Full Tilt players to redistribute their profits.

For my own part, all my compensation is a matter of public record. And, to quote the wife of one of our WPT Champions, 'I've seen what you made to launch this business and no poker player would have done it for that. I wouldn't have done it.' As to my stock in the company, I have sold less than twenty percent of my ownership and continue to believe and invest in the future growth of poker and the World Poker Tour.

WE ARE AN OPEN BOOK, PLEASE COME READ US

As a public company, all of this information is easily assessable on any search engine: YAHOO! Finance, CNN Business, Motley Fool, MSNBC, etc. I encourage members of the poker community to look at our company information. Under the watchful eye of the Securities and Exchange Commission, we report how much money the company makes, how much it spends, how much executives are paid and even how much stock, if any, those executives sell. Lyle can attest to the fact that we have yet to turn a profit. He made a $10,000 bet with another poker player when the World Poker Tour began that the company would turn a profit sometime in the first five years. To date, he has not been able to collect on that bet.

THE WPT AND THE POKER COMMUNITY

I guess I would like to ask the poker community in general and the poker player community in particular to help us keep focused on the task at hand - which is to grow poker into the largest global sports phenomenon in history. I ask that you judge us by what we do and look beyond rumor. Seek the truth; don't just accept misinformation as gospel. While individual players may have their own motivation for spreading misinformation about the WPT or anyone else in our community, keep an open mind and look for the reality. Everyone has his/her own agenda and we are no exception to that rule. But, our incentives tend to align with the growth of poker as a sport that will continue to bring benefit to everyone in the community.

Steve Lipscomb Poker

I appreciate your taking time to digest these thoughts. Together we have managed to change the face of poker forever. Together we have managed to dispel the perception that poker could never be a sport. We look forward to working together in 2006 to find new ways that we can grow the poker world together. And, on behalf of Lyle, Robyn and everyone at the World Poker Tour, we wish a safe and joyous holiday season to you and yours. We truly feel blessed to be a part of this exciting time in poker.

Regards,

Steve

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Who likes poker? A show of hands.

An alumnus hits the jackpot with cable television’s latest moneymaker.

Steve Lipscomb, JD’88, has played his cards right. The 43-year-old founder and CEO of the World Poker Tour, a televised, no-limit Texas hold ’em tournament on the Travel Channel, bet big before the flop and helped spur a poker fever that in the past year and a half has made lingo like “flop” familiar in households across the country.

World Poker Tour, LLC, estimates that some 50 million Americans—and 100 million people worldwide—play the game. Online poker rooms have multiplied, and Internet gambling revenue reached more than $7 billion this year, according to Christiansen Capital Advisors, a market research group. Multiple news reports, meanwhile, tell of casinos scrambling to add more poker tables, once neglected grottos, to their gaming floors. And cable is overrun with poker shows.

While viewers can choose between Fox’s Poker Superstars (a less flashy, retro affair), ESPN’s World Series of Poker (newly revamped for the sports network), and Bravo’s bubbly Celebrity Poker Showdown, Lipscomb’s brainchild, the Travel Channel’s World Poker Tour, started the craze.

Three years ago televised poker was virtually nonexistent. ESPN, which had run the World Series of Poker for years, had dropped the contest in favor of other late-night obscurities. Around that time Lipscomb, who played in a regular low-stakes home game himself, was producing Comedy Central’s talk show Turn Ben Stein On. Previously he had practiced law in Los Angeles, but when his mother, attending a Southern seminary, complained of gender discrimination, Lipscomb decided to make Battle for the Minds, a documentary about fundamentalist Southern Baptists repressing women. The film won festival awards and was picked up by PBS’s independent documentary showcase, POV.

After Battle for the Minds’s success, Lipscomb’s junior-high friend called him needing a producer-director for an idea he had already sold to the Discovery Channel. The friend, Lipscomb recalls, said, “Hey, you play poker, right?” The phone call led to On the Inside of the World Series of Poker and later 2001 Tournament of Champions of Poker and Cruisin’ to a Million for the Travel Channel.

Noting the high ratings the shows earned, Lipscomb sensed an untapped audience.“I went and pitched poker to every network you can imagine,” he says. “I went out and said, ‘Poker. We’ll make it into a sport. It’s gonna be great.” When nobody bit, he wrote a business plan, raised the money, and figured if he “built it they would come. Thank God somebody showed up.”

Table talk

Steve lipscomb poker tour

Indeed, since its March 2003 debut several million somebodies have shown up and World Poker Tour, aired Wednesday nights, is the the Travel Channel’s highest ratings grabber, essentially, Lipscomb jokes, putting the station “on the map.” He attributes the booming ratings to editing savvy and the “WPT cam.”

Before the World Poker Tour’s innovations, says Lipscomb, “poker had always been filmed with three, maybe four cameras around a table, incomprehensibly watching guys look at cards and throw them in the middle.” These days World Poker Tour uses 16 cameras, “edits every hand like a story,” and, most important, shows what cards the players are holding. The new production style, he says, allows viewers to be “everywhere. You get to see every bead of sweat that is on anyone’s face. … You’re right there on them when they figure out that they have a million-dollar decision, having cards change their entire world in one heartbeat.”

Steve Lipscomb Poker

It didn’t take long for other cable networks to notice. ESPN, for one, revamped its coverage of the World Series of Poker, which now has the most name recognition in the increasingly crowded field. The purses have swelled all around, and tournament entries have grown from a first round of 40 or so to hundreds in major events, all plunking down $10,000 to $25,000 or winding their way through cheaper satellite and online tournaments to have a chance at multimillion-dollar pots.

The game of choice is no-limit Texas hold ’em. Each player receives two cards face down, bets, and then bets four more times over five community cards: the “flop” (the first three cards), the “turn” (the fourth), and the “river” (the fifth). The concept is simple, but a World Poker Tour hand, complete with play-by-play commentary, bristles with strategy and counterstrategy. As the announcers sagely muse, the game “takes a minute to learn and a lifetime to master.”

World Poker Tour’s combination of skill and democracy are part of its appeal, Lipscomb says. Worldpokertour.com boasts, “Unlike professional sports or reality shows, anyone can enter a poker tournament.” Whether buying in or spectating, Americans are hooked and he’s cashing in. WPT Enterprises went public over the summer, and Lipscomb promises, “You’re going to see World Poker Tour all over the place,” as logoed chips, tables, and clothing turn up in stores across the country. Like the NFL and NBA, he says, “We’ve branded poker.”

Steve Lipscomb Poker Show

Steve Lipscomb Poker

Steve Lipscomb Poker Youtube

WPT’s brand of poker, like the other televised tournaments, offers viewers drama, if not a pile of money (which in the final round sits on the gaming table in enticing stacks of cash). Even the set evokes a certain Who Wants to be a Millionaire aesthetic, with rotating spotlights and towers creating a coliseum of the gaming table. The poker phenomenon, says Lipscomb, “has created something of a new American dream. It’s ‘Bye bye, Lotto. Hello, WPT.’”—A.L.M.