For the Player
Riviera opens first bingo room on Strip in four years
1Riviera opens first bingo room on Strip in four years – Business – ReviewJournal.com.
Bingo is back on the Strip! Click the link to read the article about the new Riviera Bingo.
XXX Bingo Night
1XXX Bingo Night
When: Last Mon at 8:30 pm–2 am. Through Oct 31. Phone: 206-402-4606
Categories: Beer/Wine/Booze
The Bridge
(206) 402-4606Mon-Fri 4 pm-2 am, Sat-Sun noon-2 am.
Bingo! Uptown gaming halls attracting younger and often unemployed crowd to regular games
1Bingo! Uptown gaming halls attracting younger and often unemployed crowd to regular games.
BY Laignee Barron
DAILY NEWS WRITER
Bingo is catching on big time uptown – where younger, often unemployed players are filling halls around the clock.
The stakes are big: With $1,000 to $3,000 jackpots and frequent payouts, two uptown bingo parlors have commercialized the game, cashing in on gamble-happy crowds desperate to make an extra buck.
“I pay my bills with bingo,” said Harlem resident Sharon Brown, 44, who has played bingo for nearly a decade and is currently a regular at West Side Hall Inc. on 125th St.
Since she was laid off from her job as an administrative assistant two years ago, Brown plays three to four times a week until late at night renting a $25 computer board in hopes of winning the jackpot.
Last month, she won a $2,000 prize, which she said she used to pay her gas bill and part of her rent.
“The payout is good,” said Brown, adding she knows it’s not the best way to solve her financial problems. “Bingo is gambling. It’s fun, but it’s a bad habit.”
While old-time bingo players still fill church basements uptown, establishments like West Side Hall and Washington Heights Arcade Inc., licensed and incorporated under state law, have lately been attracting a younger crowd, opening at noon and closing when the games are finished – often not until 10 p.m.
“In the last few years we’ve seen people a little younger mixing in and becoming regular players,” said West Side owner Belle Fisch, who has been in the bingo business for 20 years. “It’s a therapy for some. For others, it’s an economic thing.”
Fisch said the hall’s Saturday night games increasingly appeal to young couples – even with its banana-yellow walls and chipped fold-out tables.
“It’s a cheap, fun date,” she said. “If someone wants to try their luck and play a game, it’s a lot less expensive than a casino.”
A similar shift in clientele is also happening at Washington Heights Arcade Inc., located underground in the 181st Street IRT subway station.
“Down here it’s a whole other world most people don’t know of,” said Margaret Porfidio, 69, who plays bingo at Arcade every day with her husband. “It’s mostly senior citizens but, at the end of the month, the age drops off.
Maybe the Social Security check runs out.”
Porfidio warned against relying on gambling for money.
“If you have to depend on bingo to pay rent or buy groceries that’s a bad idea, although you have to do what you have to do,” she said. “I pay all my bills before I come here.”
Washington Heights local and public elementary school teacher Maria Gruriom, 31, knows her chances of winning bingo are slim.
Still, she plays at Arcade on her days off, hoping to snag a prize like she did two years ago, claiming $800 after just one round. “You play to win. And if you win you can pay back bills,” she said. “It doesn’t happen often, but it makes playing often worth it.”
No matter why they play, bingo addicts said it’s easy to get hooked, and wind up gambling away a pretty penny.
“It’s just like in the casino,” said Porfidio, “the only real winner at the end of the day is the casino owner.”
Bingo! Not for Seniors Only
2By ABIGAIL SULLIVAN MOORE
BRYANT University in Rhode Island recently unveiled its latest acquisition — a $1,500 Gemstone bingo console, with black light — christened by its president, with some 400 students in attendance. This may be a church-lady game, but it’s big at Bryant. And this is bingo for the XBox generation: to break a tie, players bust moves in a dance-off.
An hour away, Salve Regina University has seen no fewer than 600 bingo-loving students, nearly one-third its undergraduates, show up at the gym for a comforting whiff of childhood and a shot at iPads and a PlayStation 3.
“It’s kind of crazy that students are going to these games that people play in rec halls and churches,” says Sharon Blumenstock, assistant director of programming at Boston College. “The good thing is they stay to the last prize.”
Ms. Blumenstock likes bingo as an alcohol-free, late-night option — “late night” being prime time on campus. Administrators work hard to fill the hours after 9 p.m. with activities that keep students entertained — and on the grounds.
For the “Late Night U.B.” program at the University at Buffalo, students clamored for bingo. One of its most popular events is Drag Queen Bingo each April. Students invite local cross-dressers to call out numbers, and promote inclusion in the process.
“You can’t get 20 people to a comedian,” says Ken Abrahams, a vice president at Fun Enterprises, a company that helps colleges with late-night diversions. “But you can get 200 to a bingo game.” Philosophical he is not: “It all comes down to the prizes.”
WINNING PRIZES
Bryant University
• Month’s prime parking spot
• Dorm visit from mascot Tupper, an English bulldog
• Two cruise tickets (“Luau” theme night)
Illinois State
• Semester’s textbooks
Nichols College
• Snuggies, Shake Weights (“As Seen on TV” theme night)
• Big-screen TV, iPod, Nook (“Big Prize” theme night)
University at Buffalo
• Bags (reusable, of course) of groceries
• “Campus cash” of $25 to $100
Wii Bingo Party Deluxe
2I know, you just cannot get enough Bingo. So where can you go for those times when you just have to play? Do you have a Wii? If you do, you can now play Bingo Party Deluxe, a WiiWare title (500 points) that allows you to play three game modes. 75 number bingo, 90 number bingo and Bingo Party. It looks like it might be a UK only title, because I couldn’t find it on the Nintendo USA website. But maybe it might be coming soon. Anyway I thought you might enjoy seeing a video of what the game entails. Enjoy!
BigBadBingoBlog.com is 1 year old!
1Today is the 1st birthday of BigBadBingoBlog.com. I cannot believe that it has already been one year! Thank you for coming and visiting the site, and we hope that you continue to come and visit. Please send us your pictures, videos and ideas on how we can make BigBadBingoBlog.com better. We want to be around for many years to come!
Binion’s Bingo?
4You read that right. Binion’s Gambling Hall in Downtown Las Vegas has just opened up a new bingo hall in the center of their casino. They decided to bring back bingo because there wasn’t really a presence of bingo in the Downtown area. They feel it will be a way to cater to the locals. They also know that bingo players stand to stay around and play the slot machines in between sessions.
Binion’s Bingo is running 7 days a week, with six sessions daily. Each session has thirteen bingo games. The session times are: 11am, 1pm, 3pm, 5pm, 7pm and 9pm. Binion’s website is at www.binions.com.
If anyone has played at the new hall, please let us know what you think of the new hall in the comments section. Thanks!

The Therapeutic Value of Bingo
1This article originally appeared here.
Friday night bingo is a tradition in many households. Each week hundreds of thousands of people, many past the age of 60, gather up their money and head off to the local bingo parlor. They come equipped with their specially designed bingo markers (also known as bingo daubers), lucky charms and some sort of a homemade snack. For the next 3 hours, they will be in a world of their own.
Regulars know all of the ins and outs of Friday night bingo. They arrive early so they can stake out either their lucky seats or regular one. They need time to buy and lay out their bingo cards and set up their section of the table. Before the first game starts, they take the opportunity to say hello to their other bingo playing friends and wish them good luck, even if they want to win themselves, it is just good manners.
Once the games get started, things get a little more serious. There are some players that concentrate on their cards and nothing else. They may have only 1 card for the game or they may have 10. It does not matter to this type of player. They are only concentrating on each number as it is called in hope of getting a bingo.
Most of the players do not take the game quite so seriously. They are there for fun. Winning is nice, but it is not what brings them back week after week. Bingo is actually a therapeutic experience for many who do not get out of the house very often. It is a chance to talk to others and share their experiences. The typical topics that are discussed amongst many seniors are family, politics and current medical needs.
While marking their cards, a player has a chance to strike up a conversation with the person to either side of them. They may talk about how their children and grandchildren don’t visit them or they may talk about the sad state of our economy. Issues that are important to them can be shared. It is almost as if they’ve been storing up ammunition all week until they can release it in the bingo hall.
Perhaps the number one topic of conversation is talking about their recent experiences with doctors. They may tell you of their ailments in painstaking detail. They may tell how they went for an operation and how it was nip and tuck for a time before they pulled through. Complaints about waiting in doctor’s offices and the high cost of their prescription drugs are shared with their playing partners. Getting things off their chests is a very therapeutic release of pent-up emotions.
When the games are coming to an end, everybody turns a little more serious, hoping to leave with a winning ticket. Some go home with more money than they came with. Most leave with a few dollars less than what they had when the night started. Everybody leaves feeling a little better, having had the chance to interact and share their feelings with their bingo playing friends.
Bingo fever begins at the Marco Y
0Veteran bingo player Jan Martin was full of praise for bingo “caller” Fritzi Holmes.
“You do good girl … you are a good caller,” Martin told Holmes during a break in proceedings at the Y’s first bingo session of the season.
“She’s distinct, and she has good timing,” Martin said as Holmes engaged in a chat with the Y’s bingo organizer, Dottie Weiner.
About 35 players, including just one male, turned out for the session, which had payouts of between $25 and $40 per game.
Later, Weiner pointed to Martin and singled her out as one of the better players in the room.
“She’s good,” Weiner said. “She’s fast at reading numbers.”
“You learn to do that,” Martin explained. “I tape mine (sheets of numbers) down.”
Although some bingo games can be lucrative, the takings on this particular day were fairly modest because of the number of participants, Holmes said.
“Obviously, you can’t give out more than you take in,” she said.
Player Clare Gates said getting rich at bingo games isn’t the motivating factor for participating.
“It’s more about the camaraderie,” Gates said. “It’s relaxing. When you’ve had difficult things going on in your life, or had a stressful job, it’s a good way to relax.”
Organizer Weiner said setting up for bingo sessions requires two volunteers to help with pack sales.
The packs of numbered sheets, she said, are supplied by a Fort Lauderdale company, and the Y owns the Lotto-like machine that blows numbered balls around in a chamber and eventually traps them in a funnel for reading and calling.
The original article can be found here.



