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Real Name |
21 Movie name |
Bringing Down the
House |
Busting Vegas |
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Ben Campbell |
Kevin Lewis |
(n/a) |
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Micky Rosa |
Micky Rosa |
Victor Cassius |
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Mike
Aponte |
Fisher |
Jason Fisher |
(n/a) |
The real-life versions of "Ben", "Micky", and "Fisher" are Asian, but were made white for the movie. It seems that Hollywood can't fade an Asian as the hero, not to mention the supporting characters. (Yes, two of the players in the movie are Asian -- the two with the smallest roles.)
However, in the book, Kevin Lewis was identified as half Chinese, and Fisher was identified as half Asian as well.
There's a lot of buzz on the net about the Asian whitewashing, with some folks calling for a boycott. But it's worth pointing out that neither John Chang nor Jeffrey Ma themselves really care about this issue. John Chang says, "Being played by a 2-time Oscar winner isn't exactly an insult." and Jeff Ma says, "For me it wasn't a big deal, because for about three years people had been asking me who I wanted to play me in a movie and I never was saying like 'John Cho' or 'Chow Yun-Fat' or 'Jackie Chan' "
By the way, the players' Asian heritage supposedly wasn't exactly a coincidence. According to the book, Ma was recruited into the team in part because of his Asian looks, which used to be a boon for card-counting, since casino staff expect card counters to be white (perhaps the same way that people expect the lead of a movie to be white).
Incidentally, some people claim that Micky Rosa is a composite of John Chang and Mr. M.(J. P. Massar, who is not Asian). While that may be partially true, I believe that Rosa is mostly John Chang, since Chang used the name Micky Rosa when playing in the World Series of Blackjack.
In the movie...
In real life...
Ben Campbell's father is dead, and Ben desperately needs money for med school.
Jeff Ma's father is very much alive, the family is well-to-do, and Jeff was no longer planning a career in medicine by the time he got involved with the MIT team.
Micky Rosa was an MIT professor.
Casino Guide says that Chang was an assistant professor, but Chang himself says he wasn't a professor at all. Incidentally, here's his 1985 thesis on blackjack.
And since Rosa/Chang wasn't an actual professor, he didn't pull strings to block Campbell/Lewis' graduation from MIT. He also didn't steal $315k from Lewis after Lewis lost $200k at the tables by playing poorly -- neither of those things is mentioned in the book.
Over and over the movie hammers home what a genius Ben Campbell is, from his 1590 SAT score to his calculator-like totaling of a customer's bill in the suit store. But counting cards is nowhere nearly that hard. Anyone of average intelligence can do it. The reasons that most people don't count cards has little to do with difficulty and more to do with other factors:
- Perceived Difficulty. Even though card-counting isn't hard, most people don't know that. They think it's out of their reach.
- Laziness. Most people just don't want to bother to learn.
- Boring. Most people go to Vegas to play and have a good time. But counting cards monopolizes your mind, and probably takes the fun out of the experience for most people.
- Not profitable. Even with blackjack the age-old saying is true: "It takes money to make money." You need about $25,000 in capital to make just $20 an hour counting cards. And if you're the kind of person with $25k lying around, you're probably already making more than $20/hr.
Counters do not win every session, or even every trip, or even every month. The counter's edge over the casino is tiny. It's almost a coin toss. A counter will win in the long term (assuming s/he doesn't go broke first), but in the short term anything can happen. The movie's portrayal of consistent wins was simply unrealistic. John Chang confirms that:As Andy points out, it just wasn't that easy. We didn't win every time. In fact, we endured months of losing from time to time.And Mike Aponte ("Fisher") says:
One thing that struck me was that "Breaking Vegas" [the TV show] was based on Strategic Investments [the MIT team from '91-'93] and the show made it seem as if everything was great on SI. They glossed over the fact that in the end Strategic Investments failed, and didn't make much money. The show made it seem as if Strategic Investments dissolved because the team decided to move on to other things, but the reason it broke up was because SI didn't do very well.Aponte says that SI failed because of mismanagement, low standards of quality for the players, and experimentation with methods like shuffle tracking and card steering which are theoretically more profitable than card counting but extremely difficult to execute.
In the movie Ben won $315,000, presumably in less than a year, but the true average win for each of the MIT players was around $25,000/yr. (Blackjack Forum) The movie also says the money was split 50% to "Micky Rosa" with the rest divided among the five players, so that would mean they won $3.15M total that year. But in fact, the team won only $10M over a twenty-year period, or $500k/yr. Some years were better, of course. Mike Aponte says they did manage to win $500k once in a single weekend. (video interview)Let's assume the movie team did actually win $3.15M, or $185k per the 17 trips stated in the movie. Assuming 24 hours of playing time for each of two big players (the movie showed one, but there were actually at least two), which is generous, that's about $3900/hr. for each big player. Schlessinger shows that back-counters win about 1 unit for every 100 hands played. (Blackjack Attack, p. 137) If the big players play 25 hands per hour, then a $3900 hourly win means the betting unit must have been $3900 x 4 = $15,600. And this assumes that the spoters aren't playing at a disadvantage, even though they are. But the table limit on the floor is $10,000 at best. It's sometimes possible to negotiate a higher limit in high limit rooms, but the movie showed the players on the floor, not in special rooms. What all this means is, it's unlikely the team could have won $3.15M over 17 trips because it would have been hard for them to get enough money on the table. And in fact, the team's typical bet was $1000, and $2000 at most, so at those smaller stakes $3.15M in 17 trips becomes pretty much impossible.
Beatings sometimes happened from the 60's through 80's when the mob ran Vegas, but it doesn't happen in Vegas any more. It certainly didn't happen to the MIT team. These days the casinos are owned by corporations who are beholden to stockholders. As John Chang ("Micky Rosa") said: "You might wonder, are the books true? Put yourself in [book writer] Mezrich's place. He wants to sell books. If he makes up a few lurid details, well, who's going to object? So, let's beat up one of the players. In fact, let's make him swallow a chip. Yeah." (MickeyRosa.com)A few years ago two different casinos handcuffed advantage player James Grosjean and threatened him, but neither actually hit him. Even without getting hit, he still won a judgement of nearly half a million dollars from one of the casinos, Imperial Palace, and a $100,000 judgement from the other (Caesars).
Non-beatings (nowadays)
- 1990's. John Chang ("Micky Rosa") describes some minor abuse in an interview, but certainly nothing like what was depicted in the movie. Presumably this happened during the MIT team's reign in the 90's.
- April 2000. James Grosjean was falsely arrested at Caesars Palace, but was not physically abused. Still, he and his partner later won a $100,000 judgement for the false arrest against Caesars and Griffin Investigations, the private detective firm which had falsely identified the players as cheaters. Griffin was later forced to file for bankruptcy, even though it had been in business for nearly 40 years.
- February 2001. James Grosjean was falsely detained (not beaten) by the Imperial Palace and Gaming Control agents shortly after the Caesars incident. He sued and won a judgement of over $400,000. (Blackjack Forum)
Actual beatings (older times, or outside Las Vegas)
- 1978. Ken Uston had his face broken by a casino security guard at the Mapes casino in Reno. (Blackjack Forum)
- 1986. Ken Uston's teammate was abused by guards at the Flamingo Hilton.
- 1988. Two players were hospitalized after being beaten by guards at Binion's Horseshoe. The players later sued. This might have taken place before 1988; the 1988 date was when the trial was reported on.
- 1990's. In 2003, a player recounted being beaten up by guards at the Eldorado in Reno "a few years ago".
The movie showed a casino manager being incredulous that one of the private surveillance people he hired could count cards. But counting is not that rare a skill among surveillance people, or even casino floor people and managers. They can't all do it, but a few of them can. If the ability to count were truly so rare among casino workers then card counters would be robbing the casinos blind. In fact, the main difficulty in counting cards isn't the actual counting, it's not getting caught.Incidentally, the security company depicted in the movie was called Plymouth, and in real life it was Griffin Investigations, but Griffin went bankrupt in 2005 after a successful lawsuit by a player. (See previous section.)
We're supposed to believe that Ben is simultaneously a fantastic genius who scored 1590 on his SAT's, yet he's so stupid that he keeps a third of a million dollars in the ceiling of his dorm room?! Well, of course that never happened.For starters, Ben/Jeff's take was just not that much, as described elsewhere in this article. MIT team members averaged only $25,000/yr.
Second, it's easier to keep a lot of the money in Vegas rather than moving it back and forth all the time. Teamember Mike Aponte confirms this: "We kept a large inventory of chips so that we didn't have to continually cash in and out every trip we played."
Third, even though they might hide some of their money around their abode, they wouldn't keep all of it in the same place. This story illustrates that:
When John ["Micky Rosa"] was going to move to California I went back to help him pack and clean out his apartment. The first night I was sitting at his cluttered desk. On the desk was a jar. I opened it up and saw a bunch of chips. I said, "Oh, this is where you keep your chips." He said, "What, I have chips there?" I pulled it out and it was $6,000. I thought this was a fluke.Then I was cleaning out the closet and I saw a dirty, old, fanny pack in the corner. I was going to throw it out, but I opened it first and found $20,000 in traveler's checks. I said, "John, you have $20,000 in traveler's checks here." He said, "I do?"
Next, there were all these boxes full of junk. I told him we should go through the boxes and throw out the stuff he didn't need rather than shipping them to California. He started going through the boxes and found an envelope. He ran out and hugged me and said, "Please, please, don't tell anybody. This is bad even for me." I sad, "What is it?" It was $120,000 in traveler's checks. I have never met anyone like this. I said, "Are you insane?" He said, "You aren't going to find any more. This is it for sure."
The last day I opened a big box and found $16,000 or $18,000 in Atlantic City chips. Over the course of two weeks I found $165,000 that he didn't know he had. He said he had a slight feeling he was a little short. (Blackjack Forum)
In the movie it takes (presumably) weeks of training before Ben is clued in about how team play works with a Big Player. That's crazy. This would be in the first fifteen minutes of any instruction I gave to anyone about counting cards. Likewise, we're supposed to believe that after all this training, when Ben gets to the casino he's unaware that he's not supposed to touch his cards. Likewise, when we hear him counting the cards in his head at the casino he does so at a glacial pace, not merely unbefitting an academic whiz-kid, but unbefitting anyone who's had a modest amount of practice with counting. He might have counted that slowly the first time or two he practiced, but not by the time he got to the casino. Of course, the slower scene worked better for the movie...
Jeff Ma's team played in the early 90's. But the movie shows the Red Rock and Planet Hollywood casinos, which didn't open until 2007. Incidentally, the book mentions the hero seeing the Stratosphere casino tower from the plane on his first trip to Vegas, though the tower wasn't built until 1996.
The hallways, rooms, and views of the Hard Rock Hotel in the movie are not actually the Hard Rock. (I've stayed at the Hard Rock myself multiple times.) The casino interior is legit, though. I've passed the area where Ben Campbell falls down nearly every day for the last couple of months, on my way to the Hard Rock gym.
There were actually two teams, with as many as 25 total players. (Blackjack Info)
In the book it's Micky Rosa's idea to have strippers cash out the MGM Grand chips. In the movie it's Ben Campbell's idea. But in fact, that event never happened at all. Mike Aponte ("Fisher") says: "Whenever someone asks me that question, I say, 'We went to MIT, do you really think we would give strippers $1000 and $5000 chips?' Who in their right mind would do that?"
The goal of blackjack is commonly misdescribed (including in the movie) as "trying to get as close to 21 as possible without going over." But that's not really true, because often you'll stand on a total of 12, and 12 is pretty far from 21. The proper description is, "The goal is to beat the dealer." Sometimes you'll do that by trying to get close to 21, sometimes you won't.
I believe in the movie one team member told another team member that splitting 8's againts a dealer 10 or ace is a "sucker play", when in fact, splitting is the proper play. The Wizard mentioned to me that perhaps her comment was supposed to have been sarcastic, but I'm not certain.
Do I remember correctly that when "Ben" was rehearsing in front of the mirror, he was talking about placing a half-million-dollar bet? If so, then he would have likely been seriously overbetting his bankroll. In fact, the typical bet was only $1000, and $2000 at most. They just weren't capitalized to be betting higher. You just don't suddenly bet 500x what you normally bet, no matter how good the count gets. Besides, most casinos wouldn't let you bet that much except in extraordinary circumstances. You certainly couldn't do so and fly under the radar.
The MIT team
The movie and the book
Consequences to card counters
General blackjack stuff
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