What's the reputation of the House of Billiards in Santa Monica?
Strictly 1P and 3C.
What's the reputation of the House of Billiards in Santa Monica?
What's the reputation of the House of Billiards in Santa Monica?
The beginning of the end was when they 86ed Danny Shades.
Good 1 pocket action, but the tables are too close together.What's the reputation of the House of Billiards in Santa Monica?
Good 1 pocket action, but the tables are too close together.
The food is ... well ... let's say ... something you wouldn't go out of your way to find.
But there are lots of fine restaurants real close.
Why did they 86 Danny?
For having too much class.
Danny is the world's oldest hippy! :grin:
I wonder why 1 pocket and 3 cushion have become the dominant games there? You'd think rotation games and 14.1 would get some play.
Funny thing is that he seems to wear the same outfit all the time- all black. A friend of mine refers to him as the "Creature of the Night". Seems to shoot 1 pocket really well. He seems to live at HOB- I don't know if I've ever been there and not seen him.
I practice at the HOB in Santa Monica, but don't gamble. I'm simply a recreational league player. I just find the whole hustling scene fascinating. Would love to do a sociological and psychological study on it.
I wonder why 1 pocket and 3 cushion have become the dominant games there? You'd think rotation games and 14.1 would get some play.
Ha! I think laziness and immediacy would be the common factors!Funny .... I just find the whole hustling scene fascinating. Would love to do a sociological and psychological study on it...
It's already been done.I practice at the HOB in Santa Monica, but don't gamble. I'm simply a recreational league player. I just find the whole hustling scene fascinating. Would love to do a sociological and psychological study on it.
It's already been done.
Check out "Hustlers, Beats, and Others" by Ned Polski.
Great book on the pool hall culture in the first half of the 20th C.
"The opening examines the alleged causes for the decline of American poolrooms and finds them
wanting, traces the rise and fall of poolrooms to historical changes in America's social
structure, and cogently dissects the recent poolroom revival.
The second chapter, reports a field study of a deviant occupation, pool hustling,
describing the hustler's work situation and career from recruitment to retirement.
In revealing how pool hustlers, although dedicated wholly to a vocation that merely
breaks unenforced gambling laws, frequently supplement their income by means
of outright felonies, the author develops a new theory of "crime as moonlighting."
The third chapter sharply criticizes our criminology textbooks for avoiding the study
of uncaught adult criminals in their natural environments.
It demonstrates such research to be both necessary and practical
with career felons as well as moonlighters."
Funny thing is that he seems to wear the same outfit all the time- all black. A friend of mine refers to him as the "Creature of the Night"...