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Tuan Vu
Nickname(s)Tommy
ResidenceOrlando, Florida
Born5 December 1957 (age 63)
World Series of Poker
Money finish(es)10
Highest ITM
Main Event finish
22nd, 2005
Information accurate as of 14 July 2014.

Tuan Anh Vu (born December 5, 1957[1]), better known as Tommy or Tom Vu, is a Vietnamese Americanpoker player, real estate investor and speaker best remembered as an infomercial personality in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

Infomercial career[edit]

His late-night infomercial featured Vu surrounded by luxury items: mansions, yachts, expensive cars and, most visibly, collections of young bikini-clad women. He promoted his free 90-minute seminar to learn the same secrets he used to make millions. As a Vietnamese immigrant, he presented himself as the classic 'rags to riches' story. His infomercials promoted free seminars that served as advertisements for paid seminars, the most expensive of which was a week-long seminar held only in Orlando, Florida that cost as much as $16,000. Vu's investment theory involved finding what he characterized as 'distressed' properties, such as homes mired in foreclosures, bankruptcies, divorces or tax liens, and selling them at a profit.[1]

In the early 1990s, Vu was sued by former students and investigated by government officials in Florida for alleged violations of securities laws, fraud and false advertising.[2]

18 Of Your Favorite Toys From The '90s. Some of the best memories of being a kid is when your parents would take you to the toy store. How many of these toys do you remember? In this Casino, you can play many VideoPoker like American Poker 90's, Fruit Poker Original, American Poker 3, Fruit Poker II, and Bonus Poker 3-7-9. Everything is for free, game is offline, and there are no ads! There are progressive free coins, starting from 50 coins every 4 hours, and growing by 5 coins up to 150 coins for every 4 hours. American Poker 90's Mod is 100% safe because the application was scanned by our Anti-Malware platform and no viruses were detected. The antivirus platform includes: AOL Active Virus Shield, avast!, AVG, Clam AntiVirus, etc. Our anti-malware engine filter applications and classifies them according to our parameters. This is old style videopoker like real one from 80's and 90's video poker machine. Game is based on American Poker II with simple colors, 8 bit sounds and real 90's feelings. Card deck contains 52.

Formerly of Longwood, Florida[1] and later a California resident, Vu has retired from real estate and lives in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Professional poker career[edit]

Vu continues his parallel career as a tournament poker player. As of 2017, he has won more than $1,975,000 in casino poker tournaments, including a second-place finish in a no limit Texas hold 'em event at the 2007 World Series of Poker[3] and a 22nd-place finish at the 2005 World Series of Poker championship event.[4] His 10 cashes at the WSOP account for over $850,000 of his lifetime tournament winnings.[3]

In April 2006, he finished ninth in the Season FiveWorld Poker Tour championship event, earning $216,585.

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References in popular culture[edit]

Vu and his infomercials and seminars have been parodied numerous times, including on the animated series Courage the Cowardly Dog, King of the Hill, Beavis and Butt-head and Family Guy, TV sketch shows In Living Color and Saturday Night Live, the 1995 Troma film Blondes Have More Guns, Martin Scorsese's film The Wolf of Wall Street and in the 2013 Michael Bay film Pain & Gain.[2] Vu was interviewed by Tom Arnold for his HBO comedy special Tom Arnold: The Naked Truth.[5] Vu was also one of the subjects of Renee Tajima-Peña's documentary series about Asian Americans, MY AMERICA... (or Honk if You Love Buddha).[6] On March 24, 2017, Bill Maher used a clip of Vu from one of his old infomercials during a New Rule segment on his show Real Time with Bill Maher.[7]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ abcSantich, Kate (May 24, 1992). 'Tom Vu's Secrets Of Success'. Orlando Sentinel.
  2. ^ abShiver Jr., Jube (February 16, 1992). 'Despite Florida Probe, Real Estate Promoter Tom Vu Still Wows Crowds'. Los Angeles Times.
  3. ^ abWorld Series of Poker Tuan (Tommy) Vu information
  4. ^Hendon Mob Poker Database: Tuan 'Tommy' Vu
  5. ^Righi, Len (April 5, 1991). 'No Laughing Matter Arnold, Emo Specials Are Disappointing'. The Morning Call.
  6. ^'ExEAS - MY AMERICA (OR HONK IF YOU LOVE BUDDHA)'.
  7. ^'New Rule: Trump and the Long Con'. Real Time with Bill Maher. March 24, 2017.

External links[edit]

Wikiquote has quotations related to: Tom Vu
  • Video clip of classic Tom Vu infomercial at YouTubeVideo clip of classic Tom Vu infomercial at YouTube
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tom_Vu&oldid=983658134'

As the World Series of Poker approaches its 40th anniversary in just one week, PokerListings is looking back in a series of articles at how the event has evolved. This fourth part looks at the 1990s.

The 1990 World Series of Poker started with the same 14 preliminary events as there had been during the last few years, but it saw a record 194 players sign up for the Main Event.

Sadly, the event will be remembered as the time Stu Ungar lost his chip lead and a shot at a third bracelet when a drug overdose left him unable to play.

He was blinded off at the final table on the third day and finished in 9th place.

The winner of the 1990 Main Event, Mansour Matloubi, was the first non-American to win the championship. He was propelled to victory by what the late Chip Reese characterized as, 'without question the most incredible hand in the history of the World Series of Poker.'

Late in the tournament, Matloubi had put himself at risk with pocket tens against Hans Lund's ace-nine, on a nine-high board. The ace on the turn seemed to guarantee the bracelet to Lund, but Matloubi hit one of his two outs on the river.

$1 Million to the Winner

During the broadcast of the final table, Jack Binion guaranteed that the top prize for the 1991 Main Event would be $1 million dollars.

One year later, Brad Daugherty bested 215 entrants to become the first WSOP million dollar winner at a final TV table that had only one player with prior final table experience.

The number of preliminary events increased again at the 1992 WSOP, but with only 201 players, the Main Event showed a slight decrease from the previous year.

Main Event winner Hamid Dastmalchi, born in Iran, took home the $1 million dollar top prize. Preliminary event winners that year boasted a who's who, with Phil Hellmuth, Men Nguyen, Erik Seidel, Lyle Berman, Eskimo Clark, Hoyt Corkins, Tom McEvoy and Mickey Appleman each taking home a bracelet.

Three more towards eleven.

In 1993, eight of the 18 preliminary events were won by just three players, with Ted Forrest and Phil Hellmuth each winning three bracelets and Humberto Brenes winning two.

Jim Bechtel bested the 220 who entered the Main Event including the chip leader going into the final table John Bonetti, who Bechtel went after right from the first hand.

'Well, if you're going to win a tournament, you're going to have to get it from the guy who has the chips,' Bechtel told PokerListings.

In their now-famous final confrontation, Bechtel had a pair of sixes.

'Shorthanded, a pretty strong hand,' he said.

Both players checked a K-4-6 flop with two spades, but when the Jack of spades turned over, Bonetti pushed in for over $1 million in chips.

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With barely a hesitation, Bechtel called, much to the delight of the microscopically short-stacked Glen Cozen.

'Bonetti was the type of player that if he had any type of decent hand he was willing to play a big pot,' Bechtel said. 'He didn't have to have the nuts to stick all his money in the pot.'

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Bechtel was right, Bonetti turned over A-K and went out third. Soon after, Bechtel was the champion.

Hamilton Wins His Weight in Silver

Russ Hamilton, a name now sadly considered an anathema in the poker world, surpassed 268 players to win the 1994 Main Event. He took home more than the $1 million dollars prize, receiving an additional $30,000 to represent his then-considerable weight in silver, commemorating the series' 25th Anniversary.

The only woman to make a Main Event final table was Barbara Enright, who placed fifth in 1995.

'Action' Dan Harington actually went on to win, beating a field of 273 after earlier winning the $2,500 NLHE event - earning bracelets in the only two events he entered that year.

The WSOP had a then-whopping 23 preliminary events, including two Chinese poker tournaments.

Huck Seed won the 1996 Main Event, but it was the 1997 event that was the most memorable of the decade.

A man of action.

Stu Ungar made a triumphant return to take his third Main Event title after outlasting a field of 312 at an outdoor final table in the sweltering Las Vegas heat. Ungar, who died the next year, prophetically proclaimed, 'There's no one who could ever beat me playing cards. The only one who could beat me was myself.'

'When I was there in 1997 all anyone talked about was the comeback story,' said Nolan Dalla, author of One of a Kind: The Rise and Fall of Stuey 'The Kid' Ungar, The World's Greatest Poker Player. 'No one talked about skill. It was about Stuey, the man and tortured soul.'

1998 is Scotty Time

Daniel Negreanu became the then-youngest bracelet winner at the 1998 WSOP and Scotty Nguyen won the Main Event.

On the final hand, with the board showing eights full of nines, Scotty bet enough to put his opponent, Kevin McBride, all in.

'You call this one and it's all over baby,' Scotty memorably told him. McBride called, playing the board, and Scotty turned over jack-nine. It was all over.

Almost 400 signed up for the 1999 Main Event and Noel Furlong won at a final table that included Huck Seed and Erik Seidel, among others.

Mike Matusow won his first bracelet as did another young player known as much for his temperament as for his play, Layne Flack.

'Every year it seemed it probably couldn't get any bigger,' said Bechtel, who in addition to his 1993 win, was runner up in 1979, made two final tables in the 80's, and the H.O.R.S.E. final table in 2006.

'It was standing room only at Binions. At the time, every tournament seemed as big as it could ever get.'

As we know now, the WSOP had not yet seen its true explosion.

By the end of the 1990's, the second place prize money for the Main Event was larger than the prize money earned by the first six champions combined, and twice as many entered the Main Event as at the start of the decade.

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But that was nothing compared with what was about to happen to the WSOP.

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Next article: 40 years of the WSOP: The new millenium

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