Phil Ivey Full Tilt Commercial

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While my friend and colleague Dan Katz reported earlier this week on the closure of Full Tilt Poker (occurring today), it was big enough that I felt that I needed to add onto the remembrances of the site. While many may dwell on what was the end – and the nearly nomadic existence it has had over the past decade – there was a time when the phrase “Full Tilt Poker” was one of joy. Let us take a walk down memory lane, shall we?

  1. Funny commercial for Full Tilt Poker featuring Phil Ivey. Play Free Online Poker For Real Money:http://freepoker.freepok.
  2. The historic Full Tilt Poker brand is in its final days of existence, with the online site due to be turned off as parent company The Stars Group takes the last remnants of FTP off the Internet on.
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Do You Remember the U. S. Poker Team?

Ivey was an integral part of Full Tilt Poker's marketing campaigns - who can forget his commercial when he stumbles upon his wife/girlfriend at home with another man, all while maintaining his poker face? Things have changed dramatically for Phil Ivey since that time. Phil Ivey, who at the time was fully sponsored by Full Tilt Poker, was extremely embarrassed. Rumors started spreading that he and the other members of Full Tilt’s Pro Poker team knew about the mishandled funds but chose to keep quiet about it. Ivey denied these claims, and a thorough investigation found him innocent.

Phil Ivey Full Tilt Commercial Furniture

Way back in 2004, many in the U. S. were preparing for the Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece, and I was but a young(er) poker journalist. Now what do the Summer Olympics and poker have in common? One of the very first promotions for Full Tilt Poker was that they were advocating for poker to be included in the Olympics, and they took a masterful tack to build their audience.

In sending out an email to announce their “initiative” to have poker honored as an official sport at the 2004 Olympics, a company called Full Tilt Poker offered “U. S. Poker Team” hats and shirts to people who simply went to a website and gave up their email address. This masterful stroke allowed Full Tilt Poker to build an audience of poker players in general and, with the explosion of online poker, a ready database of potential players. When they launched in the summer of 2004, success was a foregone conclusion.

Many might have found the website cartoonish with its avatars, but it was just as good a poker site as the two dominant forces in the market at the time, PartyPoker and PokerStars. There was a tremendous number of games and variants offered and it offered tournaments aplenty. It was the second leg of their plan that was another masterful stroke.

As it turned out, some of the biggest names in the game had ownership in the site. Such popular pros as Howard Lederer, Chris Ferguson, Phil Ivey, Jennifer Harman and Phil Gordon (among others) made up “Team Full Tilt.” These top professionals were the stable for the site (part owners, as it came to be known) and they actively took on all comers on the virtual felt. This was unheard of! PROFESSIONAL poker players actually playing against those who wanted to be them…what a deal!

The first two years showed a slow but steady growth. They had an outstanding “relaxation area” for players during the 2005 World Series of Poker, adding to their legend. There was a memorable, ornate display in the “relaxation area” where the WSOP bracelets that members of “Team Full Tilt” had won over the years that was truly impressive. But the true growth would not come until 2006…

The “Golden Years” of Full Tilt Poker

In 2006, the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act (UIGEA) was signed into law and Full Tilt Poker had a decision to make. Would they follow the course of publicly traded companies like 888Poker and PartyPoker and leave the U. S. market, or would they continue to service the country against the mandates of the UIGEA? Full Tilt, like the private company PokerStars, decided to stay in the country and reaped millions for the decision.

Over the course of the next five years, Full Tilt Poker went on to become the second largest online poker room behind only PokerStars. They continued to innovate in the online poker industry, bringing out more diverse poker variants that some poker rooms would not even touch (this allowed them to do mixed game tournaments). They also became the home of “high stakes” play, as Ivey and a plethora of young hotshots – including a then-unknown ‘Isildur1’ (Viktor Blom) – who would play at nosebleed levels (eight of the ten largest online poker pots in history took place at Full Tilt).

Tilt

There would also be downsides for Full Tilt. Poker professional Clonie Gowen accused the ownership of wrongful termination, claiming that they offered her a 1% share in the company when she came on (Full Tilt denied this…then). They also had several lawsuits filed against them by others who had been a part of the Full Tilt family – at one point, they literally had over 100 “Friends of Full Tilt” that benefitted from the operations (and we count getting their rake back as a benefit).

The end would come quickly and suddenly, however…

“Black Friday” Destroys the Company

In April 2011, the U. S. Department of Justice dropped the hammer on the major online poker operations in the country – PokerStars, the CEREUS Network rooms Absolute Poker and UB.com, and Full Tilt Poker. While PokerStars was able to quickly negotiate a method to repay its U. S. players all monies they had on the site, the others – Full Tilt included – had not segmented their finances between being able to pay players and pay business expenses – in essence, they were using player money to fund operations, including paying their significant personnel. It may be arguable, but Full Tilt Poker was one of the worst abusers of this fact.

In court filings over the next six months, it became known that Full Tilt Poker paid the members of “Team Full Tilt” massive monthly payments from the operational funds. This included three members of its management: Lederer, Ferguson and Roy Bitar (Bitar was the only one of these three to face criminal charges). These payments left Full Tilt with no money on hand to pay players in the U. S. once the hammer was dropped by the DoJ.

Ivey

Full Tilt Poker really died then, in September 2011, when they lost their operational license from the Isle of Man. Sure, PokerStars bought them in 2012 and relaunched the site, but it was but a shell of its former self. Full Tilt Poker limped along for a few more years before basically becoming a “skin” of PokerStars and not an independent operation in 2016. It has essentially existed in name only for the past five years.

Full Tilt Poker did a lot right in its time in the online poker industry. They had a “player first” feel to them that didn’t exist in another online site, as evidenced by their “Learn, Chat and Play with the Pros” tagline. But Full Tilt Poker was eventually ruined by those very pros that were responsible for its success. It is arguable that they would still be in existence today…IF they had been responsibly managed and fiscally responsible.

Requiescat in Pace, Full Tilt Poker…it was a good run.

Full Tilt Poker Phil Ivey Commercial

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Tom Dwan has just posted a link to a new video commercial for Full Tilt Poker in which he takes part. This is Tom Dwan's first video commercial appearance for Full Tilt Poker, but probably not the last one since he's the most successful poker player in the world right now.

Personally I have always liked Full Tilt's commercials because they are very professionally made and always with a new cool theme. Well, judge for yourselves! Here is the new Full Tilt commercial. Enjoy!

Youtube Phil Ivey


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18 comments on 'Video: Tom 'durrrr' Dwan in new commercial for Full Tilt Poker'

SCDossett08/04/2010 11:06:46 GMT
Im a big durrrr fan and that really didnt do much for me.
Maybe im just being picky
Kristan08/04/2010 11:16:47 GMT
I like it! Theme is original and suits with the persona ! Durrrr FTW!
dozn0108/04/2010 11:31:14 GMT
man he can pull some werid faces....................... evil .... evil i tell ya,
IslandJack08/04/2010 11:55:40 GMT
I like him!
I kinda like the commercial too. My playing style changes monthly as I read (or see) how these different pro's play. Hansen helped me along a lot (I read his book), but I kinf-d of just use part of his thought processes and steal something from someone else to find my own game, which will probably take another year, but so what?
He pulls weird faces alright!
Tries to look kind of stupid most of the time, whether he's holding the nuts or nothing... I like it!
SCDossett08/04/2010 11:57:31 GMT
Durrrr is the player i would like to play with least live. Followed closely by Phil Ivey.
Durrrr because i know i would pay him off. And Ivey because he seems like a bit of a douche. Not a bad player. Just a douche.
IslandJack08/04/2010 12:06:36 GMT
Posted by SCDossett:
Durrrr is the player i would like to play with least live. Followed closely by Phil Ivey.
Durrrr because i know i would pay him off. And Ivey because he seems like a bit of a douche. Not a bad player. Just a douche.

I thought I was the only one.
I couldn't agree more.! Don't like Ivey at all. Everyone is so crazy about him. Good player, of course, but a 'douche', like you say...
SuperNoob08/04/2010 13:36:23 GMT
Posted by dozn01
man he can pull some werid faces....................... evil .... evil i tell ya,

man we gotta run before he comes out of that video
ruinnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn
DaMessiah66608/04/2010 13:58:21 GMT
I've just watched at Poker Channel last night. I like their ad style very much. My favorite one is an ad which Gus Hansen is pushing all his chips against an old man. After that, the old man folds because he couldn't stand Gus Hansen's sight!
ILI_00208/04/2010 15:32:16 GMT
that black & white 'film noire' style adds some mystery in all the FTP commercials... very cool
leroi2108/04/2010 21:35:31 GMT
nice commercials do some one know how many million they give to tom 'durrr' dwan each years for being a full tilt pro??
Kristan08/04/2010 21:41:20 GMT
Posted by leroi21:
nice commercials do some one know how many million they give to tom 'durrr' dwan each years for being a full tilt pro??

All buy ins for live tourneys including travel expences - this already is worth million a year atleast. Probably they get the buy ins for online tourneys aswell I believe or then some monthly to spend on their own choice.
Good question, but I think without having a pro poker bloke well never know the exact amount
DAGOR08/04/2010 22:18:23 GMT
Hello everybody!
It is still annoying this guy. To be as talented as rich why can not we lol. What is it for? Talent? Boldness? Madness? Or the right mix of all this?
See you soon for new posts lol!
Fakiry09/04/2010 10:58:21 GMT
Nice video. Full Tilt sure should pay a lot to whoever gets this ideas! 'You should play like a pro, but never forget who you are: apprentice can become a master'. I havent enjoyed much last FT comercial with Phil Ivey, but he is making a big effort to enter the top poker players list of all times, he still have to become more 'comercially friendly'!
jporp09/04/2010 13:19:58 GMT
He is one of the faces of ftp and one of the best poker player nowadays. Nice ad
Hajinnho09/04/2010 19:51:07 GMT
what he says is very importan. 'Than i started to play like me'. I think it is the only way to success. You can get tips and learn from others, but in the end you can only be successfull if it is your own stil, which is succesfull
Pokerlam09/04/2010 22:55:00 GMT
i love his style of playing, altho he does have big luck
Raggamann10/04/2010 03:24:16 GMT
hehe, they knew they couldn't durrr make look as cool as the others, so they told him to make weird faces
xxxbchxxx10/04/2010 13:07:17 GMT
OK so that was OK, got the point across and mentioned the site a few times...
I wonder if they would get more out of it if they had a mobster on there as well?
Mobsters / Bankrollmob must be more famous than Durr, surely.
BRM if they ask for me tell them i cant commit till we speak about the sponsership...

Phil Ivey Full Tilt Commercial

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