As it seems to becoming a pattern I turn on ABR excited to listen, and soon I'm
fighting myself not to turn it off, and the later wins.
A line from Johnnyt's post:
" The shows started off good IMO, but they are starting to sound like the same old thing "don't rock the pool boat". Agree with everyone from the industry"
I agree, and it's a shame.
*********
A line from Scott Lee's post:
"While it is not their job, necessarily, to ask the "tough" questions (read: harass the guest), at least they are getting access to movers and shakers across the pool industry, and getting information about pool out to a growing audience. "
First of all I agree I think the audience is growing, smaller, unfortunately.
Secondly when you don't ask the hard questions it's like selling watered down booze,
eventually people catch on and move along, nothing to see here!
It's a really sad day in America when you think asking a hard question of a guest is "harassing the guest" LOL (While I do listen to what you say, I must take what you say ( about the show) with a grain of salt, as you do have a segment on this show)
Access to movers and shakers is meaningless and further more a disservice to not
only your listeners, but to the sport in general, if everything they say is met with a head nod of agreement.
If your job was to interview people and you didn't ask "the hard" questions most likely
it wouldn't be long before you were looking for work.
To portrait asking tough questions as harassment is to portrait a show that doesn't ask them as a success. Neither would be correct!
*********
Tony Robles represents everything good in a person and is one of Pro Pools finest
ambassadors to the game. Any parent would be proud to have a child of theirs grow up to be the man Tony is.
Yes Tony places wagers on the out come of his Pool games or at least he did back when I lived in NYC. However you would be much more likely to hear anyone who
knows him, refer to Tony as a gentleman rather than a hustler. That being said I also see nothing wrong with placing a bet on Pool match. (My opinion of coarse).
*********
A quote from Tony Robles on ABR-
"I believe that, as great a film as the "The Hustler" (Movie) is, that film literally took Pool back to the stone age, because everyone I've met from every walk of life when I'm giving instruction, asks me if I'm a 'Hustler'... And that's become a big burden for pool."
I happen to believe that Tony's students ask this because they find it intriguing.
The interest in and prosperity of these movies I think says it all, and is in agreement with my thinking.
Which is, this is the history of Pool and to try and sweep this under the rug is a mistake
and won't work anyway. People (many of whom live sheltered lives) are interested in these things!
Hell, Gun Fighters, Bank Robbers, and Mobsters are romanticized, and have been for years, and much interest is shown.
Really, some guys gambled on Pool, is the problem ? I think not !
The thinking that this is the problem, is the problem. What do I mean?
It's like the police arresting and putting the wrong guy in jail for murder, that leaves the real culprit still out there.
It's the same here, it's easier to blame gambling and to condemn Pool for eternity
than to find root cause of the problem.
To continue doing this is as productive as a dog chasing it's tail.
I have to whole-heartedly disagree with this, as both the Hustler and the COM were a
huge boom in their respective times, to Pool and the Pool industry.
If you were to take these two movies out of Pools history there would be far fewer
rooms and players today, than there are. So on this subject I will have to agree to disagree with Tony's view.
*********
I lived in NYC at this time (COM release) and Chelsea Billiards opened up with many more rooms following right on Chelsea's heels.
Chelsea had 54 Gold crowns, 6 Snooker tables, and 2 heated Billiard tables and waiting lists for tables the same for many other rooms at the time and not just in the city either. Rooms did well all over in those days, well at least for a few years.
I just want to see Pool and the players proper, and ABR also.
To go along not asking the "Tough Questions" and excepting the same old pat answers from the "movers and shakers" is just a form of "Drinking The Kool-Aide"
or choking to use a Pool term!
AS it's already well documented what things the Pro Players have done wrong.
This business of acting like anything can and should be said to or about the Pro Players
and it's alright. While the "movers and shakers" can't or shouldn't even be asked a
tough question, really gets under my skin.
If there are things the "movers and shakers" aren't doing that they should or if
there are things they have done or are still doing that they shouldn't be doing these things should be brought out into the light for everyone to see.
When things are left in the dark it's only giving anyone doing wrong a free pass to continue.
Good Night, I'm out of breath.
.