Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Black Enterprise Bid Whist Article

Reprinted from BLACK ENTERPRISE Magazine

"Are You Game For Bid Whist"
Here’s how black professionals turn cards into contacts.

by: MONIQUE R. BROWN

Whenever I have a social affair at the house, there is always a contingent of people who say, ‘Let’s play whist," says Roland MacFarland, vice president of standards for the Fox Television Network. "And there are probably eight people waiting to play the winners."
MacFarland and his colleagues are caught up in the excitement of bid whist. The card game has been a tradition of African Americans since slavery, according to research by Angel Beck. She writes the only syndicated bid whist column in the nation (for more information, e-mail her at a7notrump@aol.com ) and is the author of How to Play Bid Whist (Zwita Productions, Box 112486, Stamford, CT 06911, $6.95).
"It started from slaves when they developed their own adaptation of the card games they saw the white folks playing, primarily bridge and whist," she says. And contrary to popular belief, Beck says, black professionals are this pastime’s biggest fans. "Like golf, it’s a setting where networking, business opportunities and transactions are made," she contends.

"In my profession, I have met individuals, made deals and [established] contacts over a game of bid whist," says MacFarland. Last year, MacFarland played in a celebrity bid whist tournament at the San Diego Black Film Festival, where he ran a "Boston" (see sidebar). "Playing against [actor-director] Bill Duke, who bragged all night long about how good he was, was the highlight of the night," MacFarland laughs. But the chairman of the Black Film Festival believes their social meeting will result in some professional benefits as well. "He [Bill Duke] says he is going to spread the news [about the festival], and I think he is going to bring [a film] next year," MacFarland says. "He established what he felt were solid, more genuine relationships, and that was a result of playing bid whist with us."

Several professional organizations such as the National Association of Black Journalists and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, sponsor scholarship bid whist tournaments at their conferences.

Black professionals continue to slam cards, brag about their stellar hands and give each other high fives because they have fun. The players and observers are able to shed their professional armor—if only for a few hands--and be accepted. "This is one of the attributes of the game" MacFarland suggests. "You can walk with kings and not lose the common touch of playing bid whist." And after "church is out" (see sidebar), everyone returns to their respective environments and personalities. Most important, they've made a connection. "Once you see that side of a person, it’s easier for you to interact with them from that point on," says MacFarland.
Are you ready to try your hand at this card game? Start by connecting with the bid whist division of the National Card Sharks Inc.

SIDEBAR:"Winning Words Of Whist"
One of the key attractions of bid whist is the ‘trash talking’ or whist talk, that takes place between hands of the game," says Dennis J. Barmore, founder of the National Card Sharks Inc.

Here are some common bid whist terms:
  • Boston – When a player wins all of the books or tricks.
  • "I smell the tea!" – A phrase indicating that a Boston is on the way.
  • "Sport the kitty" – A request for a player to reveal the four to six hidden bonus cards that were as a fifth hand at the center of the table.
  • "He’s selling wolf tickets" – The opponent is bluffing.
  • "Trump tight" – The remaining cards in your hand are in the winning suit of cards.
  • "Rise and shine or "Rise and fly" – The losing team is ordered to give up their seats to a new set of waiting players.
  • "Church is out!" – The game is finished and won.

©, BLACK ENTERPRISE MAGAZINE New York, N.Y. All Rights Reserved
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