Over two and a half years ago, I started writing for PokerNews (and I am not going to glorify them with a link in this article). I had been writing about poker for about a year at that point and, when they said they liked my work and wanted me to write EXCLUSIVELY for them, I was more than happy to take part in the work. Thus started what has been a great journey which will only get better.
Over the past 2 1/2 years, I have written over 600 (and that's conservative) articles that have been repeated around the world, for which I am grateful (if you don't believe me, Google it...Earl Burton and Poker, or you can go to PokerNews and put my name in their search area). I covered tournaments from LA to Mississippi and wanted to do more (I actually pushed PokerNews to cover tournaments...I was told it wasn't "financially viable" as they got no extra signups to earn them money from reporting tournaments). I covered the last two World Series and really wanted to be there for this one.
When PokerNews started covering tournaments in 2007 (and, I must add, this is not going to be a full time thing...don't expect to see them cover every WPT, WSOPC or even major tournaments that are outside of those), I was somehow left out of the mix. When I wrote a three part preview of the WPT Championship that they asked to be cut to one article (which were run on this blog), flags went up. When I tried to repeat my 2006 series on the WSOP for this year's event, that was squelched as well. That was perhaps a warning of things to come.
I was a major part of making PokerNews what it is today...I can remember a time when it was me and a certain editor I won't mention were the only pieces. Apparently he forgot those times...I am no longer working with PokerNews.
I am not alone in this exodus from PokerNews, though. I am comforted by the fact that Tim Lavalli (the Poker Shrink) has also ended his association with them. Apparently there is much more going on than what I, sitting 1500 miles from the WSOP, knows about...which was one of my main bones of contentions to start with.
It is unfair to ask readers to read pieces that are written by someone who isn't there, giving them the stories as if they are. In the first 15 days of the WSOP, I wrote 38 articles like I was there, but did nothing other than read the live updates and create a story around them. Then I saw these stories chopped to nothing more than a scorecard that you could get from any site anywhere. That was the final straw.
I talked to two well respected poker people and they commiserated with me. Apparently it went to a length that it was mentioned to TPTB at PokerNews that I mentioned it. Well, PokerNews felt it was "insubordinate" of me to mention their transgressions and, thus, I am gone.
What is wrong is that people I consider great friends have not come to the defense of a fellow writer. Apparently they are more consumed with their efforts than the (correct) objections of a comrade who should have been backed. But perhaps that is the current state of poker reporting.
So, instead of the (edited) writing you saw over the first part of the WSOP, you now have a film student with no prior poker experience doing stories. I'll leave that to creative people to figure out who and what. It is the end of an era and perhaps it was overdue. There's quite a bit more that I could say but, for now, I won't. You can be sure of this, however...I am going to write about the poker world and I will find a new home soon.
Thursday, June 21, 2007
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