years: Drew Millard May 03 2019 12 00PM EST I got into gambling three years ago, at the age of 27, when I had to fly to Las Vegas to interview the British DJ duo Disclosure, according to MSNBC. I was scheduled to talk to them at one in the morning backstage at a nightclub in some casino they were DJing the club at two and so, with some time to kill, I took 20 and started playing the slots. PowerBUY! SELL! BUY! SELL! BUY! SELL! BUY! SELL! BUY! SELL! BUY! SELL! BUY! SELL! BUY! SELL! BUY! SELL!BUY BUY BUY!SELL SELL SELL!BUY AND SELL AT THE SAME TIME! PowerI made 15 betting on Donald Trump's tweets and you can too! Predict It, which calls itself The Stock Market for Politics combines political punditry with legal gambling. I ended up winning something like 80 through sheer dumb luck, and even though Disclosure blew me off long story, but it turns out famous British DJ duos enjoy drinking champagne with their friends more than talking to reporters I at least made enough money to pay for the Ubers I had to take to and from various airports. Everything else the social stigma surrounding it, the low odds of landing a windfall, and the very real possibility of losing way too much money on it is what makes it great for me, at least . Because I don't live near a casino and I don't know any Tony Soprano-types to invite me to their all-night underground high-stakes poker games in a crummy motel suite, I often find myself poking around in the liminal space between gambling and legitimate finance. Ever since then, I've found that the main thing that sucks about gambling is that it's illegal to do it on my phone.
(news.financializer.com). As
reported in the news.
Tagged under years, slots topics.