Author, journalist, word worker

Author: David Clary (Page 5 of 6)

The Page 99 Test

Book blogger Marshal Zeringue gave me another assignment: “The Page 99 Test” inspired by Ford Madox Ford’s statement, “Open the book to page ninety-nine and read, and the quality of the whole will be revealed to you.” Here’s what I wrote:
The Page 99 Test:
The page is part of the chapter where I lay out how organized crime interests seized control of casinos in postwar Las Vegas. When Nevada became the first state in modern America to legalize most forms of gambling in 1931, official oversight was exceptionally weak. Nevada itself had no enforcement role and gambling licenses were handed out on the local level, a fatal flaw that would be exposed years later when mobsters like Bugsy Siegel received approval to run casinos in Las Vegas.
One of these sordid characters was Benny Binion, a Texas native who pulled himself out of poverty by running an illegal numbers racket and high-stakes craps games in Dallas that attracted the likes of oil tycoons H.L. Hunt, Howard Hughes, and Clint Murchison Sr. Binion’s cowboy charm belied a steely edge. Binion’s rap sheet included two murder charges in the 1930s. A reform-minded administration forced Binion to pull up stakes and move to Las Vegas where he could ply his trade in peace.
On Page 99, I tell the story of Binion’s first trip to Las Vegas and his effort to secure a gambling license for his first casino there in 1947. Binion appeared before the Nevada Tax Commission, which then was responsible for handing out licenses and collecting fees. I read an oral history of one of the commissioners at the meeting and he reported that Binion bragged about his lawless exploits in Texas and confirmed that his history of violence was true. Binion’s graphic accounts of how he killed the two men “had the Tax Commission in stitches” and the panel granted the license.
This page is representative of one of the themes of the book: How weak regulation led to organized crime’s control of gambling in Las Vegas. Binion went on to become a fixture in Las Vegas and founded the World Series of Poker, which brought him and his casino vast amounts of publicity. When Binion died on Christmas Day 1989, a friend aptly summed up his wild life: “He was either the gentlest bad guy or the baddest good guy you’d ever seen.”
Link to the Page 99 Test:
https://page99test.blogspot.com/2017/12/david-clarys-gangsters-to-governors.html
Link to the Campaign for the American Reader:
http://americareads.blogspot.com/2017/12/pg-99-david-clarys-gangsters-to.html

 

Authors’ acknowledgments

In her last dispatch as a New York Times book critic, Jennifer Senior fittingly focuses on the acknowledgments sections of books. Sometimes we think of writing as a solitary pursuit, and largely it is. But when you get to the end and need to write the acknowledgments section, you realize how many people helped you along the way. I always thought that only nerds like me bothered to read acknowledgments, but I’ve received a surprising amount of positive feedback on what I wrote for my book. Maybe it connects because people know it comes from the heart.

 

My book, the movie

Book blogger Marshal Zeringue asked me to cast a movie version of my book. It was a fun mental exercise, and here’s what I wrote:

My nonfiction book, Gangsters to Governors: The New Bosses of Gambling in America, explores how and why states have encouraged and promoted the expansion of legalized gambling in America. The book, published by Rutgers University Press, touches on the evolution and expansion of lotteries, tribal gaming, commercial casinos, sports gambling, daily fantasy, racetrack betting, and much more.

My six years of research and writing led me to a rogue’s gallery of colorful characters, from John “Old Smoke” Morrissey, the Irish-born gangster who built Saratoga into a gambling haven in the nineteenth century, to Bugsy Siegel, the gangster who completed the Flamingo hotel-casino in Las Vegas only to be assassinated months later. Daniel Day-Lewis would be outstanding as Morrissey because he portrayed his arch-rival Bill the Butcher Poole in the film Gangs of New York. For Siegel, Tom Hiddleston would be able pull off the lean athleticism and charm leavened with the necessary streak of menace.

Other key roles and the actors who would fill them:

Howard Hughes: Leonardo DiCaprio, who captured his paranoia in The Aviator

Benny Binion: Woody Harrelson, who would convey the Texan’s good-ole-boy roughness

Steve Wynn: Michael Douglas, who has that appealing bad-boy charisma

Donald Trump: Well, who else but Alec Baldwin?

 

https://mybookthemovie.blogspot.com/2017/12/david-clarys-gangsters-to-governors.html

 

Books make great gifts!

Books make great gifts, so for the holiday season my publisher is offering all books at a special 40% discount with free shipping! Simply enter the special discount code (02XMAS18) in the shopping cart and you’ll get “Gangsters to Governors” at a cheaper price than that website named after the big river in South America! You can also call 1-800-848-6224 to place orders by phone. Thanks, and happy reading!

www.rutgersuniversitypress.org

 

Supreme Court and sports betting

Today the Supreme Court heard oral arguments on New Jersey’s challenge of the federal ban on sports gambling, and legal experts believe that the justices seem to be siding with the state. A decision will come in June.

The law at issue is the 1992 Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act, which grandfathered in four states that already had legal sports betting — Delaware, Montana, Nevada, Oregon — and barred other states from doing it. Of the four, only Nevada has single-game sports betting.

Since 2009, the same year Chris Christie was first elected New Jersey  governor, the state has challenged PASPA in the courts. New Jersey voters approved a 2011 referendum permitting sports gambling at casinos and racetracks, and Christie signed a bill approving such betting by the fall of 2012. The NCAA, NBA, NFL, NBA and NHL collectively sued New Jersey in federal court for trying to circumvent the 1992 ban. New Jersey lost in a lower court and appealed to the Supreme Court, which in June 2014 allowed the ban to remain.

New Jersey pressed ahead with revised law and planned to open a sportsbook at Monmouth Park in fall 2014, which was blocked by a federal judge. In August 2016, 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 10-2 in favor of the leagues to uphold the federal ban on sports betting. But the Supreme Court agreed to hear New Jersey’s appeal and here we are.

The ground has shifted so much on this issue since 2009 that I don’t think even the leagues really believe in their legal position anymore. NBA Commissioner Adam Silver has said sports betting should be legalized and regulated. Leagues and teams have entered into partnerships with FanDuel and DraftKings and casino signage is all over stadiums. Also, the leagues know that gambling and daily fantasy fuels fan interest and TV ratings, which has a direct impact on the leagues’ financial health.

And for the first time, public polling this year showed that a majority of Americans think sports betting should be legalized. Justices are sensitive to public sentiment when evaluating cases because they don’t want to move too far ahead of public opinion. It’s always hard to predict exactly how the court will rule, but all signs indicate that this is likely to be a milestone in the history of gambling in America.

Argument analysis: Justices seem to side with state on sports betting

“Give and Take” podcast

I’ve had the pleasure of being interviewed by about a dozen media outlets about the book. Most recently, I appeared on the “Give and Take” podcast hosted by Scott Jones. He’s an engaging conversationalist and brings on an eclectic roster of guests — everyone from a senior editor at the National Review to a former Obama speechwriter. We talked about the rise and fall of Atlantic City, my struggles with a Betty White-branded slot machine, journalism in the Trump era, and the taboo against legalized sports betting.

Here’s the link:

https://giveandtake.fireside.fm/64

 

Shop at independent bookstores!

On Sunday afternoon, Nov. 5, I was lucky to have an event at Laguna Beach Books, a lovely independent bookstore right on the PCH!

One of the things that I’ve learned in the promotion phase of getting a book published is the importance of independent bookstores to our communities. They were without exception wonderful to deal with in terms of being willing to host events for me or order my books if having an event wasn’t feasible. They are champions of local authors and vigorously promote events through social media and in their stores. The folks that work at the stores are avid readers and recommend books that might otherwise get overlooked. So if you’re looking for a place to drop some coin this holiday season, please consider doing so at your local independent bookstore!

 

Radio, radio

My publisher has hired an outside PR firm that has worked hard to help get the word out about “Gangsters to Governors.” I did my first-ever radio interview on Monday with WBZ NewsRadio, a CBS-owned station in Boston. It’s one of those hard-boiled “weather on the 9’s” kind of stations, so the interview was brisk to say the least. I’ll be on a gambling-focused radio show, KPBS Midday Edition in San Diego, a thoughtful religion and politics podcast called “Give and Take,” and Wisconsin Public Radio’s morning show. An eclectic lineup to say the least!

Sondheim’s writing advice

The New York Times posted a conversation between Lin-Manuel Miranda and Stephen Sondheim that contains sage advice for writers of any kind.

Here’s Sondheim, talking about what makes a good collaborator:

You’ve got to have somebody who’ll surprise you and, you know, it’s the old lesson, you’ve got to work on something dangerous. You have to work on something that makes you uncertain. Something that makes you doubt yourself.

And Sondheim again later in the interview:

You shouldn’t feel safe. You should feel, “I don’t know if I can write this.” That’s what I mean by dangerous, and I think that’s a good thing to do. Sacrifice something safe.
Miranda wrote in the article that he corresponded frequently with Sondheim during the development of “Hamilton” and said Sondheim’s email response was always the same: “Variety, variety, variety, Lin. Don’t let up for a second. Surprise us.”
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