The Trooper97

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I like the guy from watching his vids.


wish I could do it


funny he dont know what day it is.


thats the life

glad that he wins and is level headed enough to know he needs to work at times.


what a grind though. If he could win a few thousand at a time, things would be better.
 

MadJack

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I like the guy from watching his vids.


wish I could do it


funny he dont know what day it is.


thats the life

glad that he wins and is level headed enough to know he needs to work at times.


what a grind though. If he could win a few thousand at a time, things would be better.

I suspect he doesn't trust his skills vs the higher limit players. He should get a backer for 5/10 at least and I'm sure he could arrange it. Now you're talking thousand dollar wins for sure. Not gonna happen at 1/3.
 

saint

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I suspect he doesn't trust his skills vs the higher limit players. He should get a backer for 5/10 at least and I'm sure he could arrange it. Now you're talking thousand dollar wins for sure. Not gonna happen at 1/3.

So Jack, what's your opinion on this? Wouldn't a skilled poker player be profitable at 1/3? He's -EV and seems to me like he's just not that good of a poker player. He can blame it on this or that but it seems the more hours he plays the more mediocre he gets. I would think that if he had more than average skill he should be turning more profit. Is that accurate?
 

MadJack

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So Jack, what's your opinion on this? Wouldn't a skilled poker player be profitable at 1/3? He's -EV and seems to me like he's just not that good of a poker player. He can blame it on this or that but it seems the more hours he plays the more mediocre he gets. I would think that if he had more than average skill he should be turning more profit. Is that accurate?

I'm sure many more here have more knowledge than me but I'm pretty sure that the game Trooper plays (1/3 NLHE) is only going to earn a solid player $20 an hour over the long haul. I'm pretty sure Trooper does that over the long haul but his bankroll was too short to handle the variance. He hit a bad streak and it wiped him out.

You guys that know better than I know please chime in but I think I'm fairly accurate.
 

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<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/TkfviDk9PjY" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 

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LOS ANGELES (AP) ? YouTube's top-earning celebrity is a 25-year-old video-game-playing jokester who took in $12 million over the past year.

Forbes magazine says Sweden's Felix Kjellberg, better known by his handle "PewDiePie," tops its first list of people who have spun short online videos into huge piles of cash.

YouTube stars make money mainly by getting paid to interact with products on their channels and sharing ad revenue with YouTube. Some also star in movies, write books, go on tour, sell music or cut endorsement deals. They're a hit with younger audiences and brands trying to reach the next generation of consumers.

Two acts tied for second on Forbes' list, both earning $8.5 million: comedy prankster duo Smosh ? Ian Hecox and Anthony Padilla ? and the Fine Brothers, Benny and Rafi Fine.

Dancing violinist Lindsey Stirling ranked fourth with $6 million. Tied for fifth were comedians Rhett and Link ? made of Rhett McLaughlin and Charles Lincoln Neal III ? and video game commentator Olajide Olatunji, known as "KSI," with $4.5 million.

Make-up artist Michelle Phan was seventh at $3 million.

The No. 8 slot was a three-way tie at $2.5 million shared by comedian Lilly Singh, or "Superwoman;" prankster Roman Atwood; and chef Rosanna Pansino.

Forbes is best known for its list of billionaires and the list appearing in its Nov. 2 issue marks its first stab at ranking YouTube stars. It says it measured earnings before management fees and taxes and came up with the figures based on data from online sources such as Nielsen, IMDb and interviews with managers, lawyers, industry insiders and the stars themselves.

.............................................................


endorsements


thats the ticket
 

REFLOG

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LOS ANGELES (AP) ? YouTube's top-earning celebrity is a 25-year-old video-game-playing jokester who took in $12 million over the past year.

Forbes magazine says Sweden's Felix Kjellberg, better known by his handle "PewDiePie," tops its first list of people who have spun short online videos into huge piles of cash.

YouTube stars make money mainly by getting paid to interact with products on their channels and sharing ad revenue with YouTube. Some also star in movies, write books, go on tour, sell music or cut endorsement deals. They're a hit with younger audiences and brands trying to reach the next generation of consumers.

Two acts tied for second on Forbes' list, both earning $8.5 million: comedy prankster duo Smosh ? Ian Hecox and Anthony Padilla ? and the Fine Brothers, Benny and Rafi Fine.

Dancing violinist Lindsey Stirling ranked fourth with $6 million. Tied for fifth were comedians Rhett and Link ? made of Rhett McLaughlin and Charles Lincoln Neal III ? and video game commentator Olajide Olatunji, known as "KSI," with $4.5 million.

Make-up artist Michelle Phan was seventh at $3 million.

The No. 8 slot was a three-way tie at $2.5 million shared by comedian Lilly Singh, or "Superwoman;" prankster Roman Atwood; and chef Rosanna Pansino.

Forbes is best known for its list of billionaires and the list appearing in its Nov. 2 issue marks its first stab at ranking YouTube stars. It says it measured earnings before management fees and taxes and came up with the figures based on data from online sources such as Nielsen, IMDb and interviews with managers, lawyers, industry insiders and the stars themselves.

.............................................................


endorsements


thats the ticket

Starbucks.................
 

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MadJack

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MadJack

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