Doyle Brunson’s Twitter Account Gaining Fans by the Thousands
A recent tweet from Doyle Brunson “The Texas Dolly” summed up what many skeptics had to say when they learned the 10-time World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelet winner has taken to the microblogging site Twitter: “Can it be that you guys really like the blonde jokes? My followers are going up at an alarming rate…never thought I’d be a tweeeter:-)”
If the parenthetical smiley face is any indication, Brunson, also known as @TexDolly on Twitter, not only uses the popular social networking site, but also is down with the Twitter lingo. Brunson has been known to tweet at fellow users, bust out acronyms typically seen on the internet poker forums, and even drop smiley faces from time to time, especially when doling out a stream of dumb blonde jokes.
As he alluded to in the aforementioned tweet, Brunson has seen a major spike in followers over the past month, jumping from 16,000 less than two weeks ago to nearly 45,000 as of Friday morning. The recent spike in followers puts Brunson ahead of other big name players like Phil Hellmuth and Daniel Negreanu and suggests the “old timer” of the poker world still has a big influence on the industry. In a statement from DoylesRoom, Brunson’s online poker site, the longtime pro suggested that his deep run in the WSOP Europe Main Event and an appearance at an affiliate convention in Budapest are to blame for the spike, but there may be more to Brunson’s popularity in the Twitterverse than just a heightened profile.
There are plenty of celebrities from Hollywood, the sports world, and the poker community on Twitter, but not all of them pick up huge followings. Some suggest the hit and miss nature of celebrity Twitter accounts depends on the types of things a person elects to tweet about. If celebrities tweet infrequently or only post mundane details about their lives, they are less likely to have a large following, even if they are on the “A List.” Brunson’s account has its fair share of run-of-the-mill fare like when cash games are running on DoylesRoom, but he also includes his thoughts on current events, responses to other people’s tweets, and jokes (lots of jokes).
The recent stream of blonde jokes is the result of Brunson losing a bet on a recent Monday Night Football game. He explained his reasoning with a tweet from Tuesday that read, “Lost the Monday night football game. I’m gonna tell dumb blonde jokes until I finally win one!! ya, that’s right, suffer along with me.” Since then, he’s posted seven blonde jokes, but has found time to respond to the tweets of others, including socialite Nicky Hilton, who is one of Brunson’s many followers.
While Twitter and Texas Dolly may seem like an unusual combination, it makes sense when you consider how long he has been posting in his popular personal blog. Past posts have proven that Brunson does not bite his tongue on issues, as he has spoken out on everything from politics to poker and it seems that people are paying attention. A recent blog in which Brunson proposed candidates for a “Poker Hall of Shame” criticized several of his fellow old school gamblers for their bad poker behavior and was picked up by several poker media outlets as a newsworthy event. His blog endorsing World Poker Tour (WPT) host Mike Sexton for the 2009 Poker Hall of Fame class has made its way into poker print as well.
Some of the other old school pros like Amarillo Slim prefer to lay low now that poker is part of the mainstream media, but the 76 year-old Brunson has elected to remain in the spotlight. DoylesRoom’s team of online pros, dubbed the Brunson 10, are just another example of how the man who got his start playing cards in backrooms across the South keeps adapting and changing with the times. The Brunson 10, which currently consists of Amit “amak316″ Makhija, Alec “traheho” Torelli, Zachary “CrazyZachary” Clark, and Chris “Moorman1″ Moorman, will feature online pros supposedly hand-picked by Brunson to represent his site. The divide between live and online pros has been a major theme in the post-Moneymaker era of poker, but the Brunson 10 is the poker legend’s attempt to bridge the gap between the old and new guard of players.
Be it the Brunson 10, his blog, or his increasingly popular Twitter account, Brunson seems to have tapped into the younger generation of poker players and has become an unexpected new media success story. While he still has a ways to go to catch some of Twitter’s most popular accounts, which possess more than one million followers, it seems as though Brunson may be onto something with those blonde jokes.
Related Poker News:
- Doyle Brunson Reaches Out to Amateurs
- Poker Scandal - Doyle Brunson Under Investigation By The SEC
- Poker Legend Doyle Brunson Interview
- WSOP Flashback: Doyle Brunson Wins #10
- World Series of Poker Day 2 At Rio Dedicated To Doyle Brunson
- Doyle Brunson Under SEC Investigation
- Doyle Brunson: We Texans don’t like this kind of trickery
- Doyle Brunson Interview with Bernard Lee
- Minh Ly Takes 2005 WPT Doyle Brunson North American Poker Championship
- Poker Interview: Doyle Brunson
- Poker legend Doyle Brunson comes from another era
- Doyle Brunson Pounds Dikshit in Blog
Poker talk:
- LEAK - To show one's hole cards (often unknowingly).
- POSITION - One's location in the betting sequence, relative to the players still in the hand. First position is first to act.
- WHITE BLACKBIRD - A hand so astonishingly rare as to be unworthy of the opponents' consideration, e.g., being dealt a pat royal flush in 5-card draw.
- SPREAD LIMIT - A variation on fixed limit wherein the minimum and maximum bets are different. A 1-4-8 game allows bets from 1 to 4 in the early rounds and 1-8 in the last round. A 1-4-8-16 game allows bets from 1 to 4 in the early rounds, 1 to 8 in the next-to-last round, and 1 to 16 in the last round.
- BURN - To discard the top card of the deck prior to dealing, usually done for every dealing round except the first. The theory being that if somehow the cards are marked (illegally) no one will know what card will next be dealt, only what card will be burned. This makes marked cards less of an advantage, hence tends to reduce cheating.
- CUT - To break the deck into 2 stacks of at least 5 cards each. Usually performed by the player to the dealer's right to insure that the the deck is not stacked.

RSS feed


