Hello everyone,
I was looking through some billiard related ephemera and came across
an interesting piece. It's a tobacco card from 1928. It shows a comical rendition of "The Spectators". I found it interesting to see they portrayed them as being fast asleep.
This card was made during one of the high points of Billiards in America. I think it also makes a strong statement as to why pool/Billiards is in the state it's in today. At the professional level, the game looks amazingly easy to the "average spectator" and this becomes very boring. When this card was made (1928), there was not much else to do but listen to the radio, so watching Billiards at your local room was something many people did. It was obviously very boring then as well.
Today there are thousands of outlets of entertainment at our fingertips and constant exciting sporting events on TV at any given point in the day.
The real question is how do we draw in spectators? And when we do;
how do we keep them awake?
I was looking through some billiard related ephemera and came across
an interesting piece. It's a tobacco card from 1928. It shows a comical rendition of "The Spectators". I found it interesting to see they portrayed them as being fast asleep.
This card was made during one of the high points of Billiards in America. I think it also makes a strong statement as to why pool/Billiards is in the state it's in today. At the professional level, the game looks amazingly easy to the "average spectator" and this becomes very boring. When this card was made (1928), there was not much else to do but listen to the radio, so watching Billiards at your local room was something many people did. It was obviously very boring then as well.
Today there are thousands of outlets of entertainment at our fingertips and constant exciting sporting events on TV at any given point in the day.
The real question is how do we draw in spectators? And when we do;
how do we keep them awake?