Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
Rob King: We're here at the Poker Star's week in EPT London. We've got Liv Boeree with us.
Liv, how you doing? Liv Boeree: Very well. How you doing now?
Rob King: I'm doing okay. Slightly it's been a little exciting experience for us. First
EPT. Liv Boeree: Oh great. That's right.
Rob King: We have one steep learning to go shall we say. [Inaudible 00:32:00], quite
interesting. You've bubbled at UKIPT right? Liv Boeree: That's right. Yeah, I bubbled
the UKIPT. A little bit annoying. I made a bad shove I think on the bubble. In fact I
know it was a bad shove and I walked into kings and ran into Kings again. Yeah it was
what it was. Rob King: It happens as to all of us. Unfortunately
not all of us have quite half the skill itself so we come up with a lot more often. Also
when you were online I noticed you got quite deep in the Sunday Million and partly some
other [inaudible 00:01:02]. Liv Boeree: Yeah. Actually I haven't been
playing that much online for the last six months or so. Yeah I played the, I was out
in [inaudible 00:01:10] and I just finished that. Thought of the Sunday Grind, just played
a few tournaments to help to the Sunday Million and I ended up finishing 27th I think and
it was a big one as well. A little bit frustrating to be playing until five in the morning and
then for not that much to show for it. Rob King: Was that the one you were playing
on your iPhone? Liv Boeree: Yeah. Half of it I was playing
on my iPhone, because the internet at the hotel was awful, it kept disconnecting and
then I found out how to get onto another one. Eventually I was back on my computer, but
it really counted. Rob King: Thank God for small miracles, right.
Liv Boeree: Yeah. Rob King: Knowing your history, you came from
and Astro Physics backgrounds. What interest you into Astro Physics, I have to ask?
Liv Boeree: I just love Physics at school. Maths and Physics and Geography and Biology
were like my four subjects that I liked the most. I knew I wanted to do Physics at university
really and then the Astro side of it. I had always been interested in space and the bigger
picture and that sort of thing, so yeah I decided to apply for that.
Rob King: Would you consider yourself a geek? Liv Boeree: Yeah in some ways for sure. Yeah
I can be pretty, no doubt on a lot of things definitely. It's hard to sort of set the exact
definition for the word. I have been called a geek many times and I'm happy to call myself
one. Rob King: What led you to poker? I know you
did the reality stuff, but was there anything else behind it?
Liv Boeree: No. I didn't know the show wasn't poker. I just was applying for game shows,
because I didn't really have anything else to do and I seem to be successful at getting
on them and I like doing them. Yeah it was another game show basically and it turned
out to be about poker and I learnt about the industry and the lifestyle and the celebrities
and so on. I was like wow the seller to really, really fun thing to do, I want to see how
well I could do at it. Rob King: Have you ever thought about if you
were to leave poker what you would go into? Would you go back into the Science side?
Liv Boeree: No, I think I'm too sort of far gone in my terms of academic studies. I mean
maybe I could if I really immerse myself back into it. To go purely into academia, I find
it too claustrophobic for me now. I love meeting, all the human interaction of traveling the
world and I love show business as well. What I would like to do at the same time and still
playing poker is to get back into Science-Fi TV. Maybe do dome science related broadcast.
Hello BBC. You know that sort of thing is what I'd really like to get into. I love the
documentaries that are being made at the moment, like Brain *** and people like that and they
get to travel all over the place. Be with animals, adventure, danger or just purely
sort of an educational TV show, I'd love to get into that sort of thing.
Rob King: You did quite a lot of work for the EPT Live guys, I have to be honest I'm
one of the guys that watches. Liv Boeree: You listen, oh good. Okay.
Rob King: [Inaudible 00:04:40]. Liv Boeree: Oh that was you right. Fantastic.
Thank you. No, it was awful. Yeah. Rob King: You mentioned a company broadcast
about [inaudible 00:04:50] around the poker table?
Liv Boeree: Right. Rob King: How did that come about and most
of you guys get asked the same question. Liv Boeree: Yeah. It was just a result of
that, but always been asked what's it like being a woman at the poker table, I'm like
well, I don't know I've never been a man at the poker table, so I have no point of comparison.
We were just thinking of belligerent answers to annoying questions.
Rob King: I could understand. Do you actually think that the way poker media for the game
is heavily sexist or do you think its [inaudible 00:05:26]?
Liv Boeree: I don't think poker media are sexist in anyway. I just think it's their
job to write stories that it's going to go on a reader interest. If readers want to hear
about women in poker then they're going to have to ask those questions. It's just one
of those things, if I wasn't a woman in poker I wouldn't be as nearly as well known as I
am. It's part of a flip side of the coin. I don't mind being asked the question. I like
being a woman and I like being in poker so ask me about that that's fine.
Rob King: Fair enough. What about the World Series Ladies Event, what do you think of
what they've done with a 10K buy-in for them? Liv Boeree: I don't know. I can see again
both sides of the argument, I could see why you could argue that it's a little bit discriminatory,
but I wouldn't care if they wanted to hold a one event that's a 1K for men and the 10K
for women I'd be okay with that. If they really want to do that, fine by me. Because women
have got one, so why not men. People are getting on their high horse about it, it's not like
it's the only event. There's 50 other events, its one tournament. If there's a big market
for it and it gets more people into the game and that they have fun and play the game and
what's the harm in it really. The fact they have 2,000 or so women turning up excited
every year looking forward to it and they wouldn't play the event if it was a completely
event, then just let it happen. It's one out of thousands of tournaments a year.
Rob King: Do you think they are good for the game?
Liv Boeree: Yeah. I do think they're good for the game, because like I said a lot of
the women whether it's right or wrong would not play if it was a mixed game, if it wasn't
a mixed event. A lot of us in the poker industry might disagree with that mindset, the point
is it exists and there's a market for it. There's a market for it and it encourages
people to play the game, which is what surely we all want why fight it. If 40% of the events
started paying women own events, then yes, I think that would be a problem. It's one
or two events, maybe they'll be one at each stop and it's a low by-in and just let the
women have their event if they really want it and if there's a desperate call for one
or two men only events as well, fine by me. Rob King: What would be your standard advice
for people getting into poker? Would you amend any of that for a young lady trying to get
into poker, maybe not the same route you went through, but is there anything that you would
advice people to do or not to do from your experience?
Liv Boeree: Yes. Obviously the holds and be extremely with bankroll. I would still always
advice someone to getting into poker in anyway as to just still keep it as a hobby and not
just quit everything and drop out of school or quit their job or anything like that. You
need to make sure that you have diversify your income. Now, obviously I understand there
can be an issue for someone in a full time job to then try and play poker full time,
it's impossible. So see how you do at poker, you can still put in a quite a bit of volume
in the evenings or on weekends and if you start showing good results and your proving
over a large sample size to be a profitable player then maybe you can consider sort of
slowly winning yourself off and just more into poker, but always have other options
I think is the thing to do. That's what I always did, I always had. I never solely relied
on my poker income, in fact I've never relied on it, I've always had other ways and means
of making money and I would recommend that to anybody, be it a business that you're running
or employment. Rob King: I have to say, I'm a musician myself.
I've worked in the industry on and off for years. I have to ask, I've seen some of your
videos of your playing. How often do you get to play these days, how often to you get out
the guitar? Liv Boeree: Unfortunately never. I've just
bought an apartment in London. For the last three or so years my guitars have basically
been in storage at my parents house and I just haven't played at all. I can't put all
the blame on the fact that they were in storage, I just haven't had the burning desire to get
it out and play. Those videos that were on the internet were filmed four or five years
ago I would say and I was much, much, much better than I am now. With that said I do
believe it's something if I really knuckled down I could get back into it and I'm setting
myself up a studio in my apartment, sort of to give me that kick up the *** that I need
to get back into it, because I loved it. It used to give me so much pleasure, hearing
an amazing song and being like I want to be able to play that, I want to learn that solo.
I never quite got to the level that I wanted to be at. I was okay, I definitely wasn't
a great guitarist. Rob King: Have you thought about putting a
couple of poker players together setting up a band and just for fun?
Liv Boeree: I would love to, I'd always have a jam session. Weirdly I've been getting,
not that I can sing, but I really enjoy doing it and I like getting friends together and
we'd have karaoke nights or singing nights. I really do enjoy music, but I don't know
if I would ever have time to do a band. Rob King: It would be.
Liv Boeree: Very time consuming. Rob King: I would pay money to come and see
a band of poker players. Liv Boeree: I don't if you would. Just bring
ear plugs probably, would be my recommendation. Being that said there is a lot of talent in
poker. I know a lot of people that are very good at many different instruments.
Rob King: As we're at the EPT, you really should mention the event. You played Day 1A
yesterday. How'd it go for you? Liv Boeree: It went well. I'm with a 56K,
which I think is around average or just a little bit above. Yeah, it went fairly smoothly.
Pretty much just build up steadily. I got up to 75K at one point and then in the last
level bluffed off 20K, in a stupid spot. Rob King: You can't leave without that, it's
a great story. Liv Boeree: Oh no. I know its whole story.
It just was bad. Then I was down to 45 and I built back to 56 and then the day ended.
I'm happy we going into 400, 800 so back to the room.