Interview With Wil WheatonBy Steve Marzolf |
|
What were your early experiences playing poker like?
"I started playing in high school - the stupid dealer's choice games where half the deck is wild, and I still managed to lose. But, my buddies and I never played holdem; we always played the silly dealer's choice games that lent themselves to drinking a lot of beer. As we got older and split off, the game fell apart."
How did you get back into it?
"About 1999, I saw the World Series documentary on Discovery Channel that Steve Lipscombe did, and I picked up 'Poker Nation' in an airport bookstore. And, this perfect storm happened, where I finished that book, saw the World Poker Tour on the Travel Channel the next night, and then while walking through a local bookstore, picked up Jim McManus's 'Positively Fifth Street.' This would have been about 2001. McManus put me at the final table, put me in Binion's, put me on Fremont Street and made me feel like I was there. It was so compelling and exciting to me that I got my friends back together and said, 'We're gonna play no-limit texas holdem now.' Back then, poker as a national pastime hadn't happened yet. It was hard to find poker chips, and none of us really knew what we were doing. We started playing, and I got completely hooked on it."
And poker just grew in popularity along with your own interest?
"I couldn't tell you exactly which came first. It felt like I was having a great time playing this particular form of poker, and it feels coincidental to me that as my interest grew, so did the rest of the nation's. I was on the leading edge of that bell curve just by coincidence."
You've had such a varied career - do you consider yourself a celebrity player, or is poker just one more thing you're doing?
"It's just another thing that I do. I don't think of myself as a celebrity at all. When I think of celebrities, I think of people who can't go to the movies because people bug them, who can't take their kids out for dinner because people are constantly coming up to them. That time is over for me. I definitely had that experience as a kid, but I don't really have it anymore. These days, I'm best known for my writing and the work I do online. That's a different kind of notoriety."
You're really lauded on the internet as a hero to geeks everywhere - do you have a lot of gamers and Star Trek fans showing up to cheer you on?
"Actually, no. When people show up, it's generally to give me a bunch of crap. Every week on PokerStars, the tournament leader board player gets to play a heads-up match against a member of Team PokerStars, and I usually have to turn observer chat off. All these people show up to just sit there and be lame. What's kind of cool is we used poker kind of frequently on 'Next Generation.' There's the officers' poker game, where Riker, Data, Troi and Worf would get together to play poker all the time. And, the only time Wesley ever gets to play in that game, it's seven-card stud. Wesley has a pair showing, and you know he has a set. They're on fifth street, and Wesley makes a bet. Riker comes way over the top of him, showing three spades on his board. Wesley thinks about it and thinks about it and folds. Riker of course is on a stone bluff and gets beaten by somebody else. I just saw this episode the other night - I hadn't seen it since it first aired - and I didn't know that Riker had three spades out there. And, I'm thinking, that's a perfectly legitimate fold. Depending on how the betting action goes, if you're playing against somebody with three cards to a flush out there while you have a set, and they're going to make you play for a lot of your chips, that could be a great lay-down."
So, you're backing Wesley up years later?
"Years later, I think it was kind of a tight fold, but I don't think it was the complete pussy move that people have referred to it as for so long."
Do people chat you up a lot about Star Trek and Stand by Me when they're at your table?
"Most of the people I talk to talk about my blog or a little about 'Star Trek'. What's kind of weird to me is how many people really love 'Stand by Me' and tell me that. They talk about how much it means to them, and that's really, really cool. I've noticed something about that movie as well. It's a movie that changes with time. When kids see it, it's a fantastic adventure story. When you're an adult, it's about friendship and this time in your life when everything seems uncomplicated, right before high school where everything becomes very complicated. I'm just really fortunate to be part of a movie that means so many things to so many people. I love it that people want to talk to me about it when we play together. Sometimes people try to put me on tilt by giving me a bad time about it, but nobody's going to say something I haven't heard before."
Does your acting experience help you much at the table?
"As an actor, to create believable characters and situations, I have to emotionally connect to and feel whatever my character is supposed to be experiencing. When I go and play in Vegas, where nobody ever wants to fold, it's really easy to just decide what my cards are before I even see them. I just play it like, 'If I actually had this hand, what would I do?' So, as an actor, I love playing against other actors because other actors tend to overdo it - they act a little too much. The people that I don't like to play against are magicians. I have friends that are magicians, and when it's their turn to deal - no joke - we just put the button in front of them and someone else handles the cards."
Have you had some sort of bad experience with a magician in the past?
"One of my real good friends is a magician and actually knew he was being cheated because he saw some guy false-shuffling. He knew he was being cheated because of his experience as a magician. So, we have all these rules, like, 'If you're a member of the Magic Castle, you may not handle the cards.' I'll still play against him; I just won't let him shuffle."
What poker-related projects are you working on these days?
"I host a tournament every Tuesday night at PokerStars. It's at 8:30 EST, and it's listed in the lobby under Tourneys, Private. Just look for WWDN, which is for WilWheaton.net, and the password is always 'monkey.' I'm also a member of this World Poker Bloggers Tour, and right now we're running a bunch of different tournaments to send a bunch of bloggers to the World Series this year. I'm also working on a work of fiction that combines a lot of the experiences I've had over the last few years, along with some experiences that have been related to my by my friends. It's the obligatory Las Vegas, poker, gambling, strippers, hookers, lost-weekend story. Just cause it's fun to write."
What about non-poker stuff?
"I worked two days on a great little indie Bollywood film called 'Americanizing Shelley.' But I'm also in contention to host a show that's kind of like a sci-fi 'Talk Soup.' I have the unique distinction of being one of the biggest sci-fi fans in the world who also happens to work in the genre. It's like being a kid who grew up being a big fan of the L.A. Dodgers getting to play for them when he goes pro."
100% up to $600 first deposit that can be made over up to three deposits. Only at the world's largest poker site.
UltimateBet
111% Signup Bonus. Join now and get the ultimate bonus up to $1,100 in bonus cash.
CarbonPoker
New Features. Improved Tournament Details, Mini-Mode, Game Personalization, Exclusive New Loyalty Program, Rematch Option For Sit-N-Go's.
Pacific Poker is giving away $8 to all new players with no deposit required.
Holiday Poker Gift Ideas
Holiday gift ideas for poker players, a list of what and what not to get this season.
Joint Committee Study on Online Poker
The Joint Committee on Taxation predicts huge revenue by taxing online poker
Joe Cada Wins WSOP
Joeseph Cada beats Darvin Moon heads-up for the 2009 WSOP Main Event Championship.
2009 WSOP is Heads Up
Heads up play is set for the 2009 WSOP Main Event with players Darvin Moon and Joseph Cada.


