The new season of Poker After Dark continues tonight with The Bratty Bunch week on PokerGO. Named in reference to Phil Hellmuth, “The Poker Brat” is joined by Chamath Palihapitiya, David Sacks, Jason Calacanis, Bill Gurley, and Alan Keating to play $100/$200 No-Limit Hold’em.
Stream the world’s largest collection of live poker tournaments and TV shows like the World Series of Poker (WSOP), Poker After Dark, High Stakes Poker, and more on PokerGO. Poker After Dark “Studio Cuts” will air every Wednesday at 9 pm ET. PokerGO is a digital video subscription service that gives fans access to exclusive live poker tournaments and events – over 100 days of live poker a year. PokerGO also offers 24/7 access to exclusive original shows, behind-the-scenes content, and a library of poker.
Hellmuth and Keating may be regarded as the two poker players of the group, but Palihapitiya, Sacks, Calacanis, and Gurley all regularly play poker. However, they are mostly known for their business ventures that include being involved with companies such as Facebook, Google, Slack, PayPal, Uber, SpaceX, Airbnb, Calm, GrubHub, Zillow, and many more.
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Poker After Dark: Eli Elezra, Gus Hansen, Patrik Antonius, Doyle Brunson, Shana Hiatt, Phil Laak, Erica Schoenberg, Tom Dwan.
Stream the world’s largest collection of live poker tournaments and TV shows like the World Series of Poker (WSOP), Poker After Dark, High Stakes Poker, and more on PokerGO.
Once the business discussions are put aside, and the cards are in the air, it is Hellmuth that will be adding to the record books as the most influential player in Poker After Dark history.
Watch Poker After Dark | Season 12 (2020) | The Bratty Bunch now on PokerGO!
With Poker After Dark entering its 12th season on television, Hellmuth has dominated the show since it first aired on NBC in January of 2007. This week marks his 45th appearance on Poker After Dark with his nearest rivals being Antonio Esfandiari and Mike Matusow who are tied on 29, while Tom Dwan sits on 23, and both Eli Elezra and Randall Emmett share 22 appearances each.
The Poker After Dark format has had both cash game and sit-n-go formats, and Hellmuth leads both those categories with 24 and 21 appearances respectively. When it comes to sit-n-goes, Hellmuth is tied with Howard Lederer and Johnny Chan for most wins with four, while he has reached heads-up an additional eight times. The one category that Hellmuth falls short in is total Poker After Dark winnings where he ranks second behind Huck Seed by just $7,000.
“I love Poker After Dark, it probably became the biggest hit show we had in poker,” Hellmuth said. “People glorify High Stakes Poker and they should, but with Poker After Dark we would film one day and it would be shown over six days. Hour-long shows. And I love that format. More than that, they weren’t after huge pots. It was like a talk show and it picked up a lot of people that didn’t know how to play poker because they would tune in and hear us talking about interesting things, interesting side bets, interesting issues.”
The original airing of Poker After Dark would see six players come together to play a sit-n-go with that night of filming aired over five nights plus an additional director’s cut episode. Season 4 would introduce cash games, and after a hiatus following Season 7, when Poker After Dark returned six years later for Season 8, it would be aired as a live stream and dominated by cash games.
“It ran on NBC forever and I would tune into that show myself just to hear Jennifer Harman talk, or Annie Duke or Howard Lederer, or Chris Ferguson because these are really smart folks and they always had something really interesting to say. So to me, Poker After Dark is also a talk show.” Hellmuth said.
The line-ups on Poker After Dark would generate some great table dynamics which were brought together by the week themes. Everything from pitting couples against couples, WSOP champions, or other shows like trash talkers, golfers, or commentator-themed shows were all what Poker After Dark was about.
“When it was a Full Tilt Poker show they wanted their pros on it, but I still appeared on the most shows,” Hellmuth said. “So I think I realized that people wanted to see me on television. At that point, I thought I was pretty good for television – for better or for worse. I certainly embarrassed myself a lot. My wife and I would watch me go off and I would be unrecognizable to her. Maybe once a week I get upset, but when you watch me filming poker you think I’m upset every day or something.”
Prior to filming Poker After Dark, Hellmuth battled Antonio Esfandiari on High Stakes Duel before filming several sessions of the new season of High Stakes Poker. Now playing on Poker After Dark, the lineups across all three of these shows are vastly different.
“I’ve been on a phenomenal streak. I’d won 23 out of 25 times filming cash games between here and the [Live at the] Bike,” Hellmuth said. “I just kept winning and winning, and a lot of times I would be down with a half an hour to go and I would end up a big winner. I just stuck to my game and thought I’ll just take a small loss, but I’m just going to play my game. And boom I picked up some hands.”
“The only time I did lose was when I was up $54,000 going into the last hand and I let Alan Keating stack me, Hellmuth said about his last major loss. “I didn’t have to miss my pair and flush draw twice – I needed an ace, five, or a diamond – but that was on me. All I had to do was fold the ace-five and book my $54k win and it would have been 24 out of 25 with once or twice of breaking even. Phenomenal streak.”
Watch the hand between Hellmuth and Keating here on Poker After Dark | GOAT Week!
Hellmuth continues to build upon his already impressive Poker After Dark resume with his appearance on The Bratty Bunch week. During an uncertain time in the poker content landscape, Hellmuth has been at the forefront of PokerGO programming with High Stakes Duel, High Stakes Poker, and Poker After Dark.
Although Hellmuth hasn’t appeared on this season of High Stakes Poker, his first appearance will come in the next few weeks. And if you aren’t a fan of the jovial, conversation-type atmosphere that Poker After Dark brings with The Bratty Bunch, then High Stakes Poker might be what you’re looking for.
“I thought that the first High Stakes Poker lineup I played in was the toughest lineup in history,” Hellmuth said. “That’s what I thought. It was me, [Phil] Ivey, [Tom] Dwan, Jason Koon, Brandon Adams, Ben Lamb, and John Andress. I thought that was the toughest show in history!”
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Poker After Dark is an hour-long poker television program . The show made its debut on January 1, 2007. For its first two seasons, both of which first aired in 2007, the show was presented by Shana Hiatt. The host for season 3 was Marianela Pereyra, and Leeann Tweeden took over starting with season 4. All seasons have contained voice-over commentary by Oliver 'Ali' Nejad.
The Poker After Dark format features an 'intimate look at one table as it develops over the week.' Blinds start at $100/$200 and slowly escalate. Commentator Ali Nejad’s commentary is limited, allowing viewers to hear much of the table talk among the players, all of whom are miked. The series was originally structured as a series of week-long No Limit Texas hold ’em mini tournaments for six top poker professionals. Each week the players vied for a $120,000 winner-takes-all prize pool, with each paying a $20,000 buy-in. By the end of the fifth show, a winner is determined. The sixth show is a 'director’s cut' that includes excerpts from the action from the previous five days, interspersed with talking heads commentary from the participants. Beginning with season 4, the producers began to experiment with different formats, including 2 weeks of cash game play, and a week consisting of a double-elimination Heads Up battle between the first 4 winners of the National Heads-Up Poker Championship. Also, starting with Season 3, each season has had a so called 'Dream Table,' pitting an amateur against five pros.
Poker After Dark, new late night show, invites viewers into the exclusive Las Vegas poker scene. The nightly hour-long show, hosted by LeeAnn Tweeden, features six poker professionals vying for a winner-take-all $120,000 first place prize.
Hosted by Leeann Tweeden, each week’s tournament will follow the action from the time the players shuffle up and deal until the last pot is pushed to the winner. In between, you’ll see first-hand why the pros say it takes more than just good cards to be a winning player.
Bluffs will be called, nerves will be tested, and characters judged as each player attempts to outplay, outwit, and outmaneuver the competition.
When all is said and done, one player will walk away a winner while the rest will just walk away.