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14 Mar 2008 02:11:36 | Online Bingo
Little old ladies in slippers, playing for pennies and cents in
a converted community hall is no longer the reality of bingo.
The game has in recent years and now more than ever undergone a
rebirth in its popularity and status and now looks set to boom
in the coming years. In the UK alone, bingo comprises a total
annual stake of around £1.1 billion. It’s now big business and
not just for the bingo halls. Customs and Excise collect around
£115 million in duty incurred by bingo each year. However, the
sun has not always shone on the bingo industry. In 1974, the
game seemed to hit its peak in popularity. It was widely seen as
a cheap and cheerful way to provide mass entertainment. However,
the advent of television seemed to cripple the game and its
popularity fell dramatically until the end of the 90s. Yet for
all the doom and gloom, the trend seems to be rising again.
Numbers are holding and profits are increasing. This new surge
of popularity has been partly due to the vigorous marketing
campaigns as executed by the bingo companies. Television and
literature campaigns for bingo are now being promoted in Europe
and companies are attempting to reinvigorate the game buy
adapting and modernising some of the antiquated lingo that
seemed to keep it stuck to its past - 21, the Key to the door,
lucky legs 11, etc. Bill Clinton, Elle MacPherson, Damon Hill
and Jade Jagger are all regular players of the game and no doubt
have contributed to its popularity and rebirth. Many however
disagree. To avid players, it is not the glitz and glamour of
the game that is so appealing; it is rather the warm, social
aspect that seems to fire the hearts of bingo players around the
world. For regular players, it is a safe opportunity to
socialise, have fun and experience the thrill of gambling whilst
being surrounded and protected by a friendly atmosphere and a
hopefully humorous bingo caller prevailing over all. The UK’s
Chancellor Gordon Brown’s recent proposition to cut the duty on
bingo and replace it with a tax on the operator’s income has
proved popular with players and investors alike. The investment
bank Lehman Brothers claim that this duty removal would increase
bingo profits by 30%. However, for all the celebrity icons and
national edicts proclaimed on the game, what is undeniable is
that worldwide the appeal of bingo does seem to be most
prevalent amongst working class, single females. What is also
interesting to note is that the bingo promoters themselves are
not too interested in marketing the game to those who fall out
of this category. Quality and not quantity seems to be the name
of the game as far as they are concerned. They see it as more
likely and realistic to entice existing players into spending a
little more on their visits. The fact that so many bingo players
are single females is certainly advantageous to the industry,
seeing as this social group is becoming more and more populous
as well as wealthier and liberated. Of course it is not just the
bingo halls that are profiting. The internet revolution has not
failed to leave its mark on the bingo industry. Now, at the
switch of a button and the click of a mouse, prospective bingo
players are able to play from their own living room. What is
interesting to note is that even with the social aspect of the
game being removed, the majority of the players are still
female. There is an argument to suggest that the advent of
online bingo is in fact nothing to be jumping for joy over.
After all, many of the positive attributes to bingo are removed.
Players do not even have to check off their cards themselves, it
is automatically checked off for them. Not only does this remove
some of the fun, but it also reduces the mental agility benefits
to virtually nil. The social aspects of the game are also
missing, although some would argue that the online forums and
chat rooms are simply a new pseudo form of socialising. The
secondary business that surrounds the bingo halls also suffers
under the concept of online bingo. Food, auxiliary games, drink
and entertainment all become irrelevant when playing from home
and the concern that players are now playing purely for the
money as opposed to the warmth of the social atmosphere is much
more real. Having said that, in terms of bolstering bingo
popularity, the internet has certainly played its part and in
many cases has provided an easy access option to those who
either are not fond of the socialising aspects of the game or
for whatever reasons are unable to attend the bingo halls,
themselves.
To say that bingo will ever become the craze of the gambling
world or an industry propagated by the modern casinos is perhaps
a little ambitious. In fact, that may not even be what the game
is about or where it would be happy to lie. However, what can be
fairly certain (if anything can be in this business) is that the
popularity of bingo as its own entity is holding well and looks
set to stay the course of time. At least for the time being
anyway!
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