Rubin was okay. He certainly contributed more than Alex, who might as well not have showed up. The problem is that the celebs have to get more microphone time than the civvies (unfair, I know, but them be the facts). So there really isn't much time for anybody else except Vasgersian and Stann to get in their licks.
In the civvie series the dealer was a silent movie, though a very nice-looking silent movie. And nobody cared if Vasgersian and Rubin talked over the players. So the duo had all the time in the world to chatter about betting strategy, possible outcomes, whatever their little hearts desired. That's definitely not the case with the celeb series.
Speaking of the civvie series, I happened to catch Fox Sports' poker show with eight top players. One of the commentators was Michael Konik, last seen trying to intimidate the room and read Tiki on GSN's civvie blackjack series. It looked like he had shaved a little closer for Fox.
And still speaking of the civvie series, I rustled up this odd story from the Google news cache. Remember the winner, "MIT Mike"? Well, his real name is Michael Aponte, and he got tangled in a
trademark infringement suit with, you guessed it, MIT. Seems the university wants its name off the web site operated by Aponte and a couple of his "Bringing Down the House" buddies.
Somehow, I don't think that any of the celebs will have similar difficulties.