TOPICS
SPEAKERS
HOME
BROWSE TOPICS
BROWSE SPEAKERS
BACK

Jonathan D. Cohen Quotes

Writer
1
2
3
4
Claiming bogus medical reimbursements, he transferred the entirety of his HSA into his bank account to fund his gambling. His mother gave him $8,000 in May to purchase an engagement ring, and over the course of the next three days he transferred almost half of her check into FanDuel.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
In the years immediately following the Murphy decision, sportsbooks got almost everything they realistically could have wanted in the American marketplace. Sports gambling became legal in thirty-eight states; online gambling in thirty. Industry lobbying generally kept tax rates low. Partnerships with leagues and celebrity spokespeople embedded gambling into the sports ecosystem. Advertising made it inescapable. And the bets came pouring in.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Internet sports gambling has particular consequences for young bettors, nearly a third of whom said someone has expressed concern to them about their gambling and almost a quarter have at one point lied about the extent of their betting. While most states only allow bets from those who are at least twenty-one, high schoolers have found ways to get in on the action too. Young people are already used to gamified algorithms shaping much of their lives, from who they date to the TV shows they watch. Online sports betting adds a new level of gamification to sports gambling, which is itself a gamification of actual sports.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Young Americans are open to a range of speculative forms of investing, from the stock market to cryptocurrency to video game skins. Many in this generation have disposable income, but not so much that they see a realistic possibility of saving up to buy a home, start a business, or pay off their student loans. So they gamble instead, whether on March Madness or meme stocks, hoping to multiply their money many times over.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
In interviews, many current and former lawmakers and industry representatives acknowledged the flaws in Colorado’s initial sports betting system, which they attributed to the fact that Colorado was an early adopter and had few models to learn from. (It was the sixteenth state to launch sports betting after Murphy, and the ninth to launch full online gambling.) But there was nothing forcing the state to adopt so early other than a gambler-esque hope for a quick windfall. Colorado could have sat back and assessed the results from New Jersey and Delaware and designed regulations that addressed the issues faced in other states. With money—or water—in their eyes, it chose not to.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
The NFL was terrified of gambling because it would be devastating if fans came to believe that the outcome of that one-yard run was fixed, scripted, rigged. Notwithstanding the popularity of professional wrestling—which actually is scripted—a sports league cannot attract viewers if people believe the outcome to be in any way predetermined. The league’s concern with integrity, then, was as much about ensuring the fairness of its games as ensuring the perception of fairness. “The most precious possessions that we as a football league have are our reputations for integrity and the integrity of our games,” Commissioner Paul Tagliabue told Congress during hearings over PASPA. The league went to extremes to preserve that reputation and distance itself from all things gambling.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
In too many states, sports betting regulatory bodies have ceded control to gambling companies. These regulators are charged with managing sports betting and ensuring companies abide by the rules that the regulators put in place. In practice, they seem to see their mandate as getting out of companies’ way while ensuring sportsbooks meet the bare minimum requirements.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Every other addictive product that you can think of, government seeks to regulate its distribution and consumption,” Levant observes. Given gambling’s official classification as addictive, and especially the evidence about the habit-forming potential of online gambling, a public-health framework suggests the need for measures to protect consumers before they have the chance to harm themselves or someone else.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
The industry's version of 'responsible gaming' is designed to pull people from the river once they are drowning rather than requiring guardrails to make sports gambling products less dangerous,” Daynard, Gottlieb, and Levant wrote in 2022.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
With indications that Gen Z is less interested in watching football—and professional sports generally—as well as an overall decline in America’s broadcast TV habit, dark clouds appear on the horizon, revenue-wise. Gambling was both an infusion of money through partnerships, sponsorships, and data agreements and a way to bump ratings back up. Sure enough, average viewership for 2021–2023 was 17.2 million. As more Americans try their hand at sports betting—especially as more states legalize it—the NFL will rely on gamblers to keep its revenue arrow pointing upward. The league does not seem to mind if it becomes as normal to bet on football as it is to watch football.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
As philosopher Kent Dunnington explains, “persons with severe addictions are among those contemporary prophets that we ignore to our own demise, for they show us who we truly are.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
His cell phone in his pocket offered a near-constant reminder of his addiction. “The devil is in your hand,” he wrote in his journal.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
The sports gambling crisis could have been avoided if states had taken a more careful approach to legalization. Instead, entranced by promises of easy money, they went all in.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Companies will insist that their data should be treated as a trade secret. But scholars and lawmakers cannot make informed decisions about gambling policy without better data, and modern sportsbooks have more data on their players than any gambling operation in human history.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Keith Whyte at the National Council on Problem Gambling claims problem gambling is 338 times less well-funded per capita than treatment for substance abuse.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Tonko introduced the Betting on Our Future Act, which proposes a ban on sports betting ads on television, radio, and the internet. The bill is intentionally modeled on the 1969 legislation that prohibited most cigarette advertising. It comes in response to what Tonko called “a public health crisis” created by “predatory promotions.” By offering generous bonuses and so-called “risk free” or “no sweat” bets, Tonko alleged, the industry is seeking to “hook and retain a new generation.” “Instead of Joe Camel, now we’ve replaced that with celebrity spokespeople.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Rather than feel humbled by a big loss, gamblers instead have an urge to bet more to win it all back. Anna Lembke theorizes that problem gamblers are addicted to chasing their money: “The more they lose, the stronger the urge to continue gambling, and the stronger the rush when they win.” Andrew chased, and he lost. But he did not panic. After all, he was the sports genius who had been up $43,000. So he kept betting, buoyed by the belief that, “If I got up all this… I can get it back so quick, because I got it so quick, right?
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Fearful of competition, of demanding stockholders, and of public and private entities seeking greater cuts of their profits, sportsbooks allow people on their platforms to develop gambling problems. Then they let them keep betting until the money runs out.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
After the 2018 Supreme Court decision, sports betting launched in thirty-eight states in less than six years. In much of the country, this rapid pace was facilitated by the gambling industry, which not only lobbied for legalization but helped write the bills and the regulations governing its own behavior.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Sportsbooks should do more because they can do more. Instead of simply promoting responsible gambling by individuals, they should practice the responsible provision of gambling.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
The nation has not faced the long term of its embrace of legal sports betting, which was facilitated by profit-hungry companies and revenue-hungry lawmakers.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Who determines exactly what a high-risk bettor looks like? What will happen when their account is flagged? How restrictive will the limits on young bettors be? The efficacy of the programs will depend on the answers to these questions and the degree to which companies are willing to make decisions that hurt their bottom line.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
By recognizing that unsafe gambling is not simply a matter of personal irresponsibility, sportsbooks could transform themselves into sustainable businesses that protect public health. Every day they choose not to do so brings them a day closer to reckoning.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
The question is not how to totally denormalize sports betting such that putting $5 on the Cubs becomes socially or legally unacceptable. The question is how to normalize safe betting practices and, more importantly, to put a system in place that prevents unsafe practices from developing in the first place.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Claiming bogus medical reimbursements, he transferred the entirety of his HSA into his bank account to fund his gambling. His mother gave him $8,000 in May to purchase an engagement ring, and over the course of the next three days he transferred almost half of her check into FanDuel.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
In the years immediately following the Murphy decision, sportsbooks got almost everything they realistically could have wanted in the American marketplace. Sports gambling became legal in thirty-eight states; online gambling in thirty. Industry lobbying generally kept tax rates low. Partnerships with leagues and celebrity spokespeople embedded gambling into the sports ecosystem. Advertising made it inescapable. And the bets came pouring in.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Internet sports gambling has particular consequences for young bettors, nearly a third of whom said someone has expressed concern to them about their gambling and almost a quarter have at one point lied about the extent of their betting. While most states only allow bets from those who are at least twenty-one, high schoolers have found ways to get in on the action too. Young people are already used to gamified algorithms shaping much of their lives, from who they date to the TV shows they watch. Online sports betting adds a new level of gamification to sports gambling, which is itself a gamification of actual sports.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Young Americans are open to a range of speculative forms of investing, from the stock market to cryptocurrency to video game skins. Many in this generation have disposable income, but not so much that they see a realistic possibility of saving up to buy a home, start a business, or pay off their student loans. So they gamble instead, whether on March Madness or meme stocks, hoping to multiply their money many times over.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
In interviews, many current and former lawmakers and industry representatives acknowledged the flaws in Colorado’s initial sports betting system, which they attributed to the fact that Colorado was an early adopter and had few models to learn from. (It was the sixteenth state to launch sports betting after Murphy, and the ninth to launch full online gambling.) But there was nothing forcing the state to adopt so early other than a gambler-esque hope for a quick windfall. Colorado could have sat back and assessed the results from New Jersey and Delaware and designed regulations that addressed the issues faced in other states. With money—or water—in their eyes, it chose not to.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
The NFL was terrified of gambling because it would be devastating if fans came to believe that the outcome of that one-yard run was fixed, scripted, rigged. Notwithstanding the popularity of professional wrestling—which actually is scripted—a sports league cannot attract viewers if people believe the outcome to be in any way predetermined. The league’s concern with integrity, then, was as much about ensuring the fairness of its games as ensuring the perception of fairness. “The most precious possessions that we as a football league have are our reputations for integrity and the integrity of our games,” Commissioner Paul Tagliabue told Congress during hearings over PASPA. The league went to extremes to preserve that reputation and distance itself from all things gambling.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
In too many states, sports betting regulatory bodies have ceded control to gambling companies. These regulators are charged with managing sports betting and ensuring companies abide by the rules that the regulators put in place. In practice, they seem to see their mandate as getting out of companies’ way while ensuring sportsbooks meet the bare minimum requirements.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Every other addictive product that you can think of, government seeks to regulate its distribution and consumption,” Levant observes. Given gambling’s official classification as addictive, and especially the evidence about the habit-forming potential of online gambling, a public-health framework suggests the need for measures to protect consumers before they have the chance to harm themselves or someone else.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
The industry's version of 'responsible gaming' is designed to pull people from the river once they are drowning rather than requiring guardrails to make sports gambling products less dangerous,” Daynard, Gottlieb, and Levant wrote in 2022.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
With indications that Gen Z is less interested in watching football—and professional sports generally—as well as an overall decline in America’s broadcast TV habit, dark clouds appear on the horizon, revenue-wise. Gambling was both an infusion of money through partnerships, sponsorships, and data agreements and a way to bump ratings back up. Sure enough, average viewership for 2021–2023 was 17.2 million. As more Americans try their hand at sports betting—especially as more states legalize it—the NFL will rely on gamblers to keep its revenue arrow pointing upward. The league does not seem to mind if it becomes as normal to bet on football as it is to watch football.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
As philosopher Kent Dunnington explains, “persons with severe addictions are among those contemporary prophets that we ignore to our own demise, for they show us who we truly are.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
His cell phone in his pocket offered a near-constant reminder of his addiction. “The devil is in your hand,” he wrote in his journal.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
The sports gambling crisis could have been avoided if states had taken a more careful approach to legalization. Instead, entranced by promises of easy money, they went all in.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Companies will insist that their data should be treated as a trade secret. But scholars and lawmakers cannot make informed decisions about gambling policy without better data, and modern sportsbooks have more data on their players than any gambling operation in human history.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Keith Whyte at the National Council on Problem Gambling claims problem gambling is 338 times less well-funded per capita than treatment for substance abuse.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Tonko introduced the Betting on Our Future Act, which proposes a ban on sports betting ads on television, radio, and the internet. The bill is intentionally modeled on the 1969 legislation that prohibited most cigarette advertising. It comes in response to what Tonko called “a public health crisis” created by “predatory promotions.” By offering generous bonuses and so-called “risk free” or “no sweat” bets, Tonko alleged, the industry is seeking to “hook and retain a new generation.” “Instead of Joe Camel, now we’ve replaced that with celebrity spokespeople.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Rather than feel humbled by a big loss, gamblers instead have an urge to bet more to win it all back. Anna Lembke theorizes that problem gamblers are addicted to chasing their money: “The more they lose, the stronger the urge to continue gambling, and the stronger the rush when they win.” Andrew chased, and he lost. But he did not panic. After all, he was the sports genius who had been up $43,000. So he kept betting, buoyed by the belief that, “If I got up all this… I can get it back so quick, because I got it so quick, right?
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Fearful of competition, of demanding stockholders, and of public and private entities seeking greater cuts of their profits, sportsbooks allow people on their platforms to develop gambling problems. Then they let them keep betting until the money runs out.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
After the 2018 Supreme Court decision, sports betting launched in thirty-eight states in less than six years. In much of the country, this rapid pace was facilitated by the gambling industry, which not only lobbied for legalization but helped write the bills and the regulations governing its own behavior.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Sportsbooks should do more because they can do more. Instead of simply promoting responsible gambling by individuals, they should practice the responsible provision of gambling.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
The nation has not faced the long term of its embrace of legal sports betting, which was facilitated by profit-hungry companies and revenue-hungry lawmakers.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Who determines exactly what a high-risk bettor looks like? What will happen when their account is flagged? How restrictive will the limits on young bettors be? The efficacy of the programs will depend on the answers to these questions and the degree to which companies are willing to make decisions that hurt their bottom line.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
By recognizing that unsafe gambling is not simply a matter of personal irresponsibility, sportsbooks could transform themselves into sustainable businesses that protect public health. Every day they choose not to do so brings them a day closer to reckoning.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
The question is not how to totally denormalize sports betting such that putting $5 on the Cubs becomes socially or legally unacceptable. The question is how to normalize safe betting practices and, more importantly, to put a system in place that prevents unsafe practices from developing in the first place.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Claiming bogus medical reimbursements, he transferred the entirety of his HSA into his bank account to fund his gambling. His mother gave him $8,000 in May to purchase an engagement ring, and over the course of the next three days he transferred almost half of her check into FanDuel.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
In the years immediately following the Murphy decision, sportsbooks got almost everything they realistically could have wanted in the American marketplace. Sports gambling became legal in thirty-eight states; online gambling in thirty. Industry lobbying generally kept tax rates low. Partnerships with leagues and celebrity spokespeople embedded gambling into the sports ecosystem. Advertising made it inescapable. And the bets came pouring in.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Internet sports gambling has particular consequences for young bettors, nearly a third of whom said someone has expressed concern to them about their gambling and almost a quarter have at one point lied about the extent of their betting. While most states only allow bets from those who are at least twenty-one, high schoolers have found ways to get in on the action too. Young people are already used to gamified algorithms shaping much of their lives, from who they date to the TV shows they watch. Online sports betting adds a new level of gamification to sports gambling, which is itself a gamification of actual sports.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Young Americans are open to a range of speculative forms of investing, from the stock market to cryptocurrency to video game skins. Many in this generation have disposable income, but not so much that they see a realistic possibility of saving up to buy a home, start a business, or pay off their student loans. So they gamble instead, whether on March Madness or meme stocks, hoping to multiply their money many times over.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
In interviews, many current and former lawmakers and industry representatives acknowledged the flaws in Colorado’s initial sports betting system, which they attributed to the fact that Colorado was an early adopter and had few models to learn from. (It was the sixteenth state to launch sports betting after Murphy, and the ninth to launch full online gambling.) But there was nothing forcing the state to adopt so early other than a gambler-esque hope for a quick windfall. Colorado could have sat back and assessed the results from New Jersey and Delaware and designed regulations that addressed the issues faced in other states. With money—or water—in their eyes, it chose not to.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
The NFL was terrified of gambling because it would be devastating if fans came to believe that the outcome of that one-yard run was fixed, scripted, rigged. Notwithstanding the popularity of professional wrestling—which actually is scripted—a sports league cannot attract viewers if people believe the outcome to be in any way predetermined. The league’s concern with integrity, then, was as much about ensuring the fairness of its games as ensuring the perception of fairness. “The most precious possessions that we as a football league have are our reputations for integrity and the integrity of our games,” Commissioner Paul Tagliabue told Congress during hearings over PASPA. The league went to extremes to preserve that reputation and distance itself from all things gambling.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
In too many states, sports betting regulatory bodies have ceded control to gambling companies. These regulators are charged with managing sports betting and ensuring companies abide by the rules that the regulators put in place. In practice, they seem to see their mandate as getting out of companies’ way while ensuring sportsbooks meet the bare minimum requirements.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Every other addictive product that you can think of, government seeks to regulate its distribution and consumption,” Levant observes. Given gambling’s official classification as addictive, and especially the evidence about the habit-forming potential of online gambling, a public-health framework suggests the need for measures to protect consumers before they have the chance to harm themselves or someone else.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
The industry's version of 'responsible gaming' is designed to pull people from the river once they are drowning rather than requiring guardrails to make sports gambling products less dangerous,” Daynard, Gottlieb, and Levant wrote in 2022.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
With indications that Gen Z is less interested in watching football—and professional sports generally—as well as an overall decline in America’s broadcast TV habit, dark clouds appear on the horizon, revenue-wise. Gambling was both an infusion of money through partnerships, sponsorships, and data agreements and a way to bump ratings back up. Sure enough, average viewership for 2021–2023 was 17.2 million. As more Americans try their hand at sports betting—especially as more states legalize it—the NFL will rely on gamblers to keep its revenue arrow pointing upward. The league does not seem to mind if it becomes as normal to bet on football as it is to watch football.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
As philosopher Kent Dunnington explains, “persons with severe addictions are among those contemporary prophets that we ignore to our own demise, for they show us who we truly are.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
His cell phone in his pocket offered a near-constant reminder of his addiction. “The devil is in your hand,” he wrote in his journal.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
The sports gambling crisis could have been avoided if states had taken a more careful approach to legalization. Instead, entranced by promises of easy money, they went all in.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Companies will insist that their data should be treated as a trade secret. But scholars and lawmakers cannot make informed decisions about gambling policy without better data, and modern sportsbooks have more data on their players than any gambling operation in human history.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Keith Whyte at the National Council on Problem Gambling claims problem gambling is 338 times less well-funded per capita than treatment for substance abuse.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Tonko introduced the Betting on Our Future Act, which proposes a ban on sports betting ads on television, radio, and the internet. The bill is intentionally modeled on the 1969 legislation that prohibited most cigarette advertising. It comes in response to what Tonko called “a public health crisis” created by “predatory promotions.” By offering generous bonuses and so-called “risk free” or “no sweat” bets, Tonko alleged, the industry is seeking to “hook and retain a new generation.” “Instead of Joe Camel, now we’ve replaced that with celebrity spokespeople.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Rather than feel humbled by a big loss, gamblers instead have an urge to bet more to win it all back. Anna Lembke theorizes that problem gamblers are addicted to chasing their money: “The more they lose, the stronger the urge to continue gambling, and the stronger the rush when they win.” Andrew chased, and he lost. But he did not panic. After all, he was the sports genius who had been up $43,000. So he kept betting, buoyed by the belief that, “If I got up all this… I can get it back so quick, because I got it so quick, right?
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Fearful of competition, of demanding stockholders, and of public and private entities seeking greater cuts of their profits, sportsbooks allow people on their platforms to develop gambling problems. Then they let them keep betting until the money runs out.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
After the 2018 Supreme Court decision, sports betting launched in thirty-eight states in less than six years. In much of the country, this rapid pace was facilitated by the gambling industry, which not only lobbied for legalization but helped write the bills and the regulations governing its own behavior.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Sportsbooks should do more because they can do more. Instead of simply promoting responsible gambling by individuals, they should practice the responsible provision of gambling.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
The nation has not faced the long term of its embrace of legal sports betting, which was facilitated by profit-hungry companies and revenue-hungry lawmakers.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
Who determines exactly what a high-risk bettor looks like? What will happen when their account is flagged? How restrictive will the limits on young bettors be? The efficacy of the programs will depend on the answers to these questions and the degree to which companies are willing to make decisions that hurt their bottom line.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
By recognizing that unsafe gambling is not simply a matter of personal irresponsibility, sportsbooks could transform themselves into sustainable businesses that protect public health. Every day they choose not to do so brings them a day closer to reckoning.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
The question is not how to totally denormalize sports betting such that putting $5 on the Cubs becomes socially or legally unacceptable. The question is how to normalize safe betting practices and, more importantly, to put a system in place that prevents unsafe practices from developing in the first place.
From Losing Big: America's Reckless Bet on Sports Gambling
Avg Rating: --Rate This Quote
1
2
3
4