''High Stakes Poker'' is an American
cash game poker
Poker is a family of comparing card games in which players wager over which hand is best according to that specific game's rules. It is played worldwide, however in some places the rules may vary. While the earliest known form of the game w ...
television program
Television, sometimes shortened to TV, is a telecommunication medium for transmitting moving images and sound. The term can refer to a television set, or the medium of television transmission. Television is a mass medium for advertising ...
. The poker variant played on the show is
no limit Texas hold 'em
Texas hold 'em (also known as Texas holdem, hold 'em, and holdem) is one of the most popular variants of the card game of poker. Two cards, known as hole cards, are dealt face down to each player, and then five community cards are dealt fa ...
. The first four seasons ran from January 16, 2006 to December 17, 2007 on
GSN. The next three seasons ran from March 1, 2009 to May 21, 2011, and was simulcast in
3DTV on
N3D. The show was revived on December 16, 2020 on
PokerGO.
The show was hosted by
A. J. Benza in the first five seasons, alongside
Gabe Kaplan. In the sixth season,
Kara Scott replaced Benza as Kaplan's co-host, with Scott conducting interviews from the poker room floor. In the seventh season,
Norm Macdonald
Norman Gene MacdonaldThe capitalization of Norm Macdonald's surname has been inconsistently reported in publications such as ''TV Guide''. Books that discuss him, such as ''Shales'' (2003) and Crawford' (2000), as well as other sources such as ...
replaced Kaplan as Scott's co-host. Beginning with the eighth season, Benza and Kaplan returned as hosts.
History
The first season of ''High Stakes Poker'', taped at the
Golden Nugget in
Las Vegas
Las Vegas (; Spanish language, Spanish for "The Meadows"), often known simply as Vegas, is the List of United States cities by population, 25th-most populous city in the United States, the most populous city in the U.S. state, state of Neva ...
, was first broadcast on January 16, 2006, at 9:00 p.m., and consisted of 13 episodes until April 10, 2006, hosted by
A. J. Benza and comedian/actor-turned-poker pro
Gabe Kaplan.
The second season, taped at
The Palms The Palms may refer to:
Australia
* The Palms, Queensland, a locality in the Gympie Region
** The Palms National Park, a small national park located between Cooyar and Yarraman in Queensland, Australia
* The Palms at Crown, a concert venue at ...
and consisting of 16 episodes, premiered on June 5, 2006, at 9:00 p.m., and ended on September 18, 2006.
The third season, consisting of 13 episodes, was taped at the
South Point Casino at 9:00 p.m. and premiered on January 15, 2007, and ended on April 9, 2007. New players for the third season included
Jamie Gold,
Phil Ivey
Phillip Dennis Ivey Jr. (born February 1, 1977) is an American professional poker player who has won ten World Series of Poker bracelets, one World Poker Tour title, and appeared at nine World Poker Tour final tables. Ivey is regarded by numero ...
,
Chris Ferguson
Christopher Philip Ferguson (born April 11, 1963) is an American professional poker player. He has won six World Series of Poker events, including the 2000 WSOP Main Event, and the 2008 NBC National Heads-Up Poker Championship. Ferguson is a ...
,
Patrik Antonius
}
Patrik Antonius (born 13 December 1980) is a Finnish professional poker player, former tennis player and coach, and model from Vantaa, Finland. He currently resides in Monte Carlo. Antonius was mentored by poker pro Marcel Lüske as a member o ...
,
Paul Wasicka,
David Benyamine,
Brian Townsend, and others. Returning players from previous seasons included
Doyle Brunson,
Daniel Negreanu
Daniel Negreanu (; born July 26, 1974) is a Canadian professional poker player who has won six World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelets and two World Poker Tour (WPT) championship titles. In 2014, independent poker ranking service Global Poker ...
,
Sammy Farha,
Phil Laak,
Jennifer Harman,
Barry Greenstein,
Erick Lindgren,
Mike Matusow,
Brad Booth, and others.
On April 2, 2007, GSN announced that ''High Stakes Poker'' would return for a fourth season, again taped at South Point. Taping was completed in May, with the season premiering on August 27, 2007 at 9:00 p.m. Returning players included
Patrik Antonius
}
Patrik Antonius (born 13 December 1980) is a Finnish professional poker player, former tennis player and coach, and model from Vantaa, Finland. He currently resides in Monte Carlo. Antonius was mentored by poker pro Marcel Lüske as a member o ...
,
David Benyamine,
Doyle Brunson,
Eli Elezra,
Sam Farha,
Jamie Gold,
Barry Greenstein,
Phil Hellmuth Jr.,
Jennifer Harman, and
Daniel Negreanu
Daniel Negreanu (; born July 26, 1974) is a Canadian professional poker player who has won six World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelets and two World Poker Tour (WPT) championship titles. In 2014, independent poker ranking service Global Poker ...
. Newcomers for the fourth season include
Brandon Adams, Mike Baxter, Brian Brandon,
Phil Galfond
Phil Galfond (born January 16, 1985) is an American professional poker player. Galfond won three World Series of Poker bracelets, in the $5,000 buy-in pot-limit Omaha with rebuys event in 2008, the $10,000 no-limit 2-7 single draw championshi ...
,
Guy Laliberté
Guy Laliberté, (born 2 September 1959) is a Canadian billionaire businessman, and poker player. Along with Gilles Ste-Croix, he is the co-founder of Cirque du Soleil. In January 2018, Laliberté was ranked by ''Forbes'' as the 11th wealthiest ...
, Bob Safai, Antonio Salorio, and
Haralabos Voulgaris
Haralabos "Bob" Voulgaris (born 4 July 1975) is a Greek-Canadian professional gambler and principal owner of Spanish soccer club CD Castellón. Formerly the director of quantitative research and development for the Dallas Mavericks, Voulgaris ...
. The later episodes of this season featured a $500,000 minimum buy-in (compared to the regular $100,000 minimum) and these games saw more than $5 million in play on the table at one time. Season four finished airing on December 17, 2007, and featured 17 episodes. The network cited the show's strong
ratings performance in younger demographics.
Season five which ran from March 1, 2009, to May 24, 2009, at 9:00 p.m., was taped at the Golden Nugget on December 19, 2008, to December 21, 2008, and featured a minimum cash buy-in of $200,000. The format for season five differed slightly from its predecessors by having Kaplan and Benza not appear on camera until after the first commercial break in the show rather than at the outset.
Season six premiered at 8:00 p.m. on February 14, 2010, and ended on May 9, 2010, with Kaplan and
Kara Scott. It was taped for a second straight season at the Golden Nugget. The sixth season aired with three different groups of players throughout 13 episodes.
Tom Dwan
Thomas Dwan Jr. (born 1986) is an American professional poker player who played online in the highest-stakes No-Limit Texas hold 'em and Pot-Limit Omaha games, primarily on Full Tilt Poker under the screen name "durrrr". Dwan has won prize mone ...
and Phil Ivey bought in for $500,000. Other rotating players, including newcomers
Jason Mercier,
Dennis Phillips,
Andrew Robl, and
Lex Veldhuis
Alexander Bastiaan Martin "Lex" Veldhuis (born 29 December 1983) is a Dutch professional poker player and Twitch streamer from Vlissingen, Netherlands.
History
Veldhuis was formerly a StarCraft player. During an international event he met the Fr ...
, bought in for $200,000.
Season seven debuted on its new GSN Saturday night time slot at 8:00 p.m. from February 26, 2011, to May 21, 2011.
Norm Macdonald
Norman Gene MacdonaldThe capitalization of Norm Macdonald's surname has been inconsistently reported in publications such as ''TV Guide''. Books that discuss him, such as ''Shales'' (2003) and Crawford' (2000), as well as other sources such as ...
replaced Kaplan as the host and Kara Scott conducted interviews from the poker room floor. The series was filmed in December 2010 at the
Bellagio in Las Vegas. Sponsored
Full Tilt Poker pros were required to boycott the show this time around, as rival site
PokerStars
PokerStars is an online poker cardroom that was a part of The Stars Group until it was sold to Flutter Entertainment on May 5, 2020. It can be accessed through downloadable poker clients for the Windows, macOS, Android and iOS. It is the ...
became its official sponsors. Thus, "High Stakes Poker" Season 7 is devoid of such Full Tilt pros as
Phil Ivey
Phillip Dennis Ivey Jr. (born February 1, 1977) is an American professional poker player who has won ten World Series of Poker bracelets, one World Poker Tour title, and appeared at nine World Poker Tour final tables. Ivey is regarded by numero ...
,
Jennifer Harman,
Tom Dwan
Thomas Dwan Jr. (born 1986) is an American professional poker player who played online in the highest-stakes No-Limit Texas hold 'em and Pot-Limit Omaha games, primarily on Full Tilt Poker under the screen name "durrrr". Dwan has won prize mone ...
,
Patrik Antonius
}
Patrik Antonius (born 13 December 1980) is a Finnish professional poker player, former tennis player and coach, and model from Vantaa, Finland. He currently resides in Monte Carlo. Antonius was mentored by poker pro Marcel Lüske as a member o ...
,
David Benyamine,
Mike Matusow, and
Eli Elezra. GSN later announced it would be scaling back its airings of ''High Stakes Poker'' after PokerStars pulled out of the U.S. market following the indictments in ''
United States v. Scheinberg et al.'' crackdown on online gambling.
Season eight ran for 14 episodes from December 16, 2020 to March 17, 2021 on the streaming service PokerGO. It was taped at the
Aria Resort and Casino. Season nine ran from February 21 to May 23, 2022 for 14 episodes. Season ten will premiere in January 2023.
Format
When it first aired, ''High Stakes Poker'' was unique among televised poker series because it did not take place in a
tournament
A tournament is a competition involving at least three competitors, all participating in a sport or game. More specifically, the term may be used in either of two overlapping senses:
# One or more competitions held at a single venue and concentr ...
setting. Instead, the program showed a high-stakes
cash game. The minimum buy-in to the game is $100,000, but players have bought in for as much as $1,000,000, such as Daniel Negreanu in Season 1 and Brad Booth in Season 3. For part of the fourth season, the minimum buy-in was $500,000.
The first episode with the minimum $500,000 buy-in was broadcast on November 5, 2007. The minimum cash buy-in for the fifth season increased to $200,000 – the largest buy-in for an entire run of a television series. Unlike in
poker tournaments, the chips involved represent real money. If a player loses his or her initial buy-in, that player may rebuy a minimum of $50,000. In addition, players may use cash instead of casino chips. Cash plays and stays as cash in the pot, it does not have to be converted into casino chips. Unlike tournament poker,
blinds and
antes are constant, instead of increasing as time goes on. ''High Stakes Poker'' has $300/$600 blinds with a $100 ante. The fourth season features three forced blinds of $300, $600, and $1,200, with a "
straddle
In finance, a straddle strategy involves two transactions in options on the same underlying, with opposite positions. One holds long risk, the other short. As a result, it involves the purchase or sale of particular option derivatives that all ...
" or optional fourth blind of $2,400.
The players include poker professionals along with amateurs such as
Jerry Buss and Fred Chamanara. The show was created by executive producer
Henry Orenstein. In season one,
Daniel Negreanu
Daniel Negreanu (; born July 26, 1974) is a Canadian professional poker player who has won six World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelets and two World Poker Tour (WPT) championship titles. In 2014, independent poker ranking service Global Poker ...
confirmed in a post on his website's forums that all players were paid $1,250 per hour for taking part and that 13 episodes were edited down from 24 hours of actual play. 2006 WSOP Main Event Champion
Jamie Gold commented that players were paid for participating, though they had to put much more money at risk to get to play the game. Gold also spoke about his interactions with other players, particularly Mike Matusow. The theme song for the show is titled "I'm All In", written and performed by John Pratt.
Notable hands
Large pots
In Season 2,
Gus Hansen won $575,700 with four fives, beating Daniel Negreanu's full house. Hansen raised to $2,100 with , and Negreanu re-raised to $5,000 with , which Hansen called. The pot was $11,700, and the flop came . Hansen checked his set of fives with a 4% chance of winning the hand, and Negreanu bet $8,000 with his set of sixes and a 94% chance of winning. Hansen raised to $26,000 and Negreanu called, bringing the pot to $63,700. The turn came , making Hansen quad fives, leaving Negreanu a 2% underdog with his full house. Hansen bet $24,000, and Negreanu called, slow playing his full house. The pot was now $111,700. The river came . Hansen checked, and Negreanu bet $65,000. Hansen then went all in for his remaining $232,000, bringing the pot to $408,700. Negreanu called, and Hansen won the pot of $575,700. This was the largest pot before the $500,000 minimum buy-in game played during Season 4.
In the November 12, 2007, episode of Season 4,
Jamie Gold won $495,867 of a $743,800 pot that developed between Gold with three Kings on the turn card, and
Patrik Antonius
}
Patrik Antonius (born 13 December 1980) is a Finnish professional poker player, former tennis player and coach, and model from Vantaa, Finland. He currently resides in Monte Carlo. Antonius was mentored by poker pro Marcel Lüske as a member o ...
with a straight on the turn card. Antonius held and Gold had pocket K. After the flop and turn, Antonius was a 4-to-1 favorite with his straight vs. Gold's three kings. Gold moved all-in and Antonius called. With such a large amount at stake, the players agreed to run the river (deal the river card) three times. The first river card, , and the second river run, , both paired the board to give two wins to Gold with a full house. The third river run, , kept Antonius' straight in front. As a result, Gold won $495,867 from the pot and Antonius won $247,933. Antonius' calm demeanor after the hand prompted host A.J. Benza to comment, "I'll tell you one thing: Patrik can take a punch. Imagine if that was Phil Hellmuth."
In the November 26, 2007 episode of Season 4,
Doyle Brunson won a $818,100 pot against
Guy Laliberté
Guy Laliberté, (born 2 September 1959) is a Canadian billionaire businessman, and poker player. Along with Gilles Ste-Croix, he is the co-founder of Cirque du Soleil. In January 2018, Laliberté was ranked by ''Forbes'' as the 11th wealthiest ...
. Brunson held and Laliberté . The flop came and the turn was . Brunson bet the turn, and Laliberte raised and Brunson moved all-in and was called. The players agreed to run the river twice. Brunson was a 75% favorite with his better kicker and flush draw, and he won both times to take the entire pot. After the hand, Brunson said, "When you don't make a pair for eight hours, you go crazy."
Later in that same November 26, 2007, episode of Season 4,
Patrik Antonius
}
Patrik Antonius (born 13 December 1980) is a Finnish professional poker player, former tennis player and coach, and model from Vantaa, Finland. He currently resides in Monte Carlo. Antonius was mentored by poker pro Marcel Lüske as a member o ...
won $749,100 from a $998,800 pot that developed between Antonius with a pair of nines on the flop, and
Sammy Farha with a king-high flush draw. Antonius went all-in after the flop and Farha called. The odds were roughly even, and the players agreed to run the turn and river four times. Antonius won three times to take three-quarters of the pot, $749,100, while Farha won $249,700.
In Season 4,
Guy Laliberté
Guy Laliberté, (born 2 September 1959) is a Canadian billionaire businessman, and poker player. Along with Gilles Ste-Croix, he is the co-founder of Cirque du Soleil. In January 2018, Laliberté was ranked by ''Forbes'' as the 11th wealthiest ...
and
David Benyamine created a pot of $1,227,900 — the largest in ''High Stakes Poker'' history — before negotiating a reduction of the pot to "only" $238,900. David had and Laliberté had and the flop came giving Laliberté top two pair and Benyamine the nut flush draw. Acting after Farha, Benyamine raised to $43,000 and Laliberté reraised to $168,000. Farha folded his , Benyamine went all-in, and Laliberté called, bringing the pot to $1,227,900. After turning the respective cards over, Laliberté, knowing he was the favorite, offered to run it once or twice. After further negotiation, Laliberté offered to take the pot previous to the raises of $238,900. Benyamine agreed.
Antonio Esfandiari and a couple of other players wanted to see the turn and river, but Laliberté and Benyamine refused.
In Season 5,
Tom Dwan
Thomas Dwan Jr. (born 1986) is an American professional poker player who played online in the highest-stakes No-Limit Texas hold 'em and Pot-Limit Omaha games, primarily on Full Tilt Poker under the screen name "durrrr". Dwan has won prize mone ...
won the biggest pot — $919,600 — to be played straight up (with no side-deals or multiple runs). Dwan won with three Queens, beating
Barry Greenstein's two pair – Aces and Queens.
Peter Eastgate was the original raiser with , with Greenstein re-raising to $15,000 with , Dwan calling with and Eastgate calling behind him. The flop came , causing Dwan to bet on his pair of Queens and a King high flush draw, Eastgate to fold, Greenstein to raise with his pair of Aces and backdoor straight draw, Dwan to reraise, and finally Greenstein to push all-in, which Dwan quickly called. Greenstein had turned down Dwan's offer to run it twice on an earlier hand (in which Dwan had the best hand when they went all-in, though Greenstein ultimately won), and this time Greenstein again wanted to run it only once, but offered to take some of their money back, which Dwan turned down stating "sorry...no" Commentator Gabe Kaplan noted the comparison with the earlier hand when Greenstein would not run it twice. At this point, it was almost an exactly even race. The turn was the , and the river the , so Dwan won the pot of $919,600.
Large bluffs
In Season 3,
Brad Booth with executed a successful bluff against
Phil Ivey
Phillip Dennis Ivey Jr. (born February 1, 1977) is an American professional poker player who has won ten World Series of Poker bracelets, one World Poker Tour title, and appeared at nine World Poker Tour final tables. Ivey is regarded by numero ...
, (then) leading with , in a pot that stood at $31,100 pre-flop. The flop came , Ivey's overpair was a 79% favorite to Booth's inside straight draw and backdoor flush draw. After Ivey bet $23,000 on the flop to make the pot $54,100, Booth raised to $300,000. Ivey folded.
At the beginning of Season 4, the players agreed that anyone who won a pot while holding the weakest possible hold 'em hand (2–7) would be paid $500 by every other player at the table. This led to several five-figure bluffs that were calculated to pick up the $3,500 bonus (and the respect of the table).
Phil Hellmuth
Phillip Jerome Hellmuth Jr. (born July 16, 1964) is an American professional poker player who has won a record sixteen World Series of Poker bracelets. He is the winner of the Main Event of the 1989 World Series of Poker (WSOP) and the Main Even ...
won the 7-2 bonus in the second televised hand of the season, making a $40,000 bet on the river that caused
Mike Matusow to lay down pocket Kings.
The biggest unsuccessful bluff occurred as a result of this $500 for 2–7 rule. Amateurs Antonio Salorio and Brian Brandon went to a raised flop with 2–7 and K-K respectively. When Brandon flopped the best possible hand with K-4-K, Salorio continued to bet hard on his 2–7 bluff, eventually losing more than $100,000 of his own bets before giving up when Brandon raised on the turn.
In Season 5,
Tom Dwan
Thomas Dwan Jr. (born 1986) is an American professional poker player who played online in the highest-stakes No-Limit Texas hold 'em and Pot-Limit Omaha games, primarily on Full Tilt Poker under the screen name "durrrr". Dwan has won prize mone ...
executed a successful bluff against
Barry Greenstein and
Peter Eastgate in a pot that stood at $133,500 pre-bluff. Dwan won with a pair of tens against
Barry Greenstein's higher pair of Aces and
Peter Eastgate's (then) leading trip deuces. Greenstein, with , opened the play
under the gun
Under the Gun may refer to:
Film and television
* ''Under the Gun'' (1951 film), an American film noir directed by Ted Tetzlaff
* ''Under the Gun'' (1995 film), an Australian action film by Matthew George
* ''Under the Gun'', an Australian fi ...
to $2,500 and was quickly called by all players. Before the flop came out there was $21,400 in the pot and at this point, Dwan jokingly offered to chop the pot. The flop was . Eastgate, with trip deuces on his , and
Doyle Brunson with , both checked. Greenstein led out with $10,000 after some thought, and with seven people behind him, Dwan raised the pot to $37,300.
David Benyamine (),
Eli Elezra (),
Ilari Sahamies () and
Daniel Negreanu
Daniel Negreanu (; born July 26, 1974) is a Canadian professional poker player who has won six World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelets and two World Poker Tour (WPT) championship titles. In 2014, independent poker ranking service Global Poker ...
() all quickly folded. The action came back to Eastgate, who called, as did Greenstein. With the pot already at $133,500, the turn came a , and Eastgate and Greenstein quickly checked. After some thought, Dwan (a 95% underdog at this point) bet $104,200, causing Eastgate and Greenstein to reluctantly fold. Following the hand, Dwan was quick to announce he was bluffing by stating, "Peter had the best hand, I'll make a sidebet that Peter had the best hand." Doyle Brunson accepted, and eventually lost $9,000 when Peter, after a $1,000 bribe from Dwan, announced he had a trip deuces a few episodes later. After the hand was done, commentator
Gabe Kaplan said that the only other person he knew who would have made a similar move was "maybe the late
Stu Ungar.”
In Season 6, Tom Dwan executed a successful bluff against Phil Ivey in a pot that stood at $408,700 pre-bluff. Tom Dwan () raised $25,000 preflop and got called by Phil Ivey with (). After a flop of (), Dwan fired another $45,800 and Ivey called, making the pot $162,300. The turn came (), and Dwan fired again, this time $123,200. Ivey again called with his flush and inside straight draws, creating a pot of $408,700. The river came (), leaving Ivey with a small pair and Dwan with 9 high. Dwan bet another $268,200. Ivey considered calling for over 3 minutes (according to the TV show), but ultimately folded.
In Season 7, amateur player
Bill Klein opted to see the river in a $192,800 pot, by calling the re-raise to $67,000 by professional Phil Galfond of his $28,000 bet. Klein held for a flush draw, and Galfond, holding , had a straight on a board that read . The river card was the , which prompted Klein to take a glance at Galfond from under his hat. "Looks like Klein's creative juices may be flowing", quipped commentator Norm Macdonald, as Klein slid a tower of 30 $5,000 chips forward equalling $150,000. After Galfond folded, Bill Klein showed the bluff and received a standing ovation and fist-bumps from around the table.
Quick loss
In a single episode of Season 6,
Daniel Negreanu
Daniel Negreanu (; born July 26, 1974) is a Canadian professional poker player who has won six World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelets and two World Poker Tour (WPT) championship titles. In 2014, independent poker ranking service Global Poker ...
lost a total of $380,000 in two hands, both to
Mike Matusow. In the first hand, Negreanu went all-in on trip nines, holding on a board. Matusow, however, had flopped a full house since he held . In the second hand, Matusow went all-in as the favorite on a flop of holding for a flush draw and two overcards. Negreanu called with . The players agreed to run the turn and river twice; Matusow completed the flush both times.
Players
These players appeared in the first seven seasons:
Doyle Brunson,
Antonio Esfandiari,
Barry Greenstein, and
Daniel Negreanu
Daniel Negreanu (; born July 26, 1974) is a Canadian professional poker player who has won six World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelets and two World Poker Tour (WPT) championship titles. In 2014, independent poker ranking service Global Poker ...
. None of them returned for the eighth season, while only
Phil Hellmuth
Phillip Jerome Hellmuth Jr. (born July 16, 1964) is an American professional poker player who has won a record sixteen World Series of Poker bracelets. He is the winner of the Main Event of the 1989 World Series of Poker (WSOP) and the Main Even ...
,
Tom Dwan
Thomas Dwan Jr. (born 1986) is an American professional poker player who played online in the highest-stakes No-Limit Texas hold 'em and Pot-Limit Omaha games, primarily on Full Tilt Poker under the screen name "durrrr". Dwan has won prize mone ...
,
Phil Ivey
Phillip Dennis Ivey Jr. (born February 1, 1977) is an American professional poker player who has won ten World Series of Poker bracelets, one World Poker Tour title, and appeared at nine World Poker Tour final tables. Ivey is regarded by numero ...
, and
Brandon Adams appeared in both the original ''High Stakes Poker'', and season 8.
Key sponsors
Most seasons included a key sponsor. Over the years, they included notable companies like
PokerStars
PokerStars is an online poker cardroom that was a part of The Stars Group until it was sold to Flutter Entertainment on May 5, 2020. It can be accessed through downloadable poker clients for the Windows, macOS, Android and iOS. It is the ...
,
Full Tilt Poker, and
Bellagio. The eight season is sponsored by Poker King, an online poker app focused on the Asian market.
See also
* ''
Poker After Dark''
References
External links
*
GSN website(archived)
*
''High Stakes Poker'' All Seasons Statistics
{{Game Show Network
2006 American television series debuts
2007 American television series endings
2009 American television series debuts
2011 American television series endings
2020 American television series debuts
American television series revived after cancellation
Game Show Network original programming
Poker in Las Vegas
Poker television shows
Television shows set in the Las Vegas Valley