Johnny Beauprez

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Johnny Beauprez

Johnny Beauprez

@jbeauprez

Lover of life, liberty, business, and all things +EV. #bracelethunted | Co-Founder @CLCpoker | PLO QuickPro Lead Instructor

[x] call any Katılım Mayıs 2010
1.4K Takip Edilen1.7K Takipçiler
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Johnny Beauprez
Johnny Beauprez@jbeauprez·
BRAG: Won $6200 in a home game BEAT: The assholes paid me in nickels and dimes and dropped it behind my car 😫 #promisetoneverslowrollagain
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Jon Aguiar
Jon Aguiar@JonAguiar·
I've got a very fun golf match coming up on Saturday vs @SavagePoker Matt thinks I play too far back to get more strokes, and I think he's wrong about how that works, so I challenged him to a $10k match @SHighlandsGC where I play the tips, and he plays the ladies tees. He's giving me 8 strokes (He was 15 and I was a 10.5 when we booked the bet) I hit it about 320, and he hits it about 230, but I have a 2-way miss. Also, no caddies allowed (I can't read greens to save my life)
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Cinema Tweets
Cinema Tweets@CinemaTweets1·
There’s something about Al Pacino’s voice that makes everything he says so fucking memorable. First Team All-Shouter, next to my guy Philip Seymour Hoffman, who just so happens to share this scene with Pacino. The fact these two share this scene is a piece of Cinema history.
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Jordan Ross
Jordan Ross@jordan_ross_8F·
Anthropic ran their entire marketing operation with one person. $380 billion company. Paid search. Paid social. SEO. Email. App stores. One non-technical hire doing all of it — for 10 months. I pulled it apart. Compared it to every system we've built across the clients we've worked with. Then asked myself one question: If I had to reverse engineer this from scratch — what would it actually look like? Turns out the architecture isn't that complicated. I mapped the whole thing into a 47-page PDF you can upload directly to any LLM. It coaches you through building your own version step by step. Comment "marketing" and I'll send it over.
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Alfie Carter
Alfie Carter@AlfieJCarter·
R.I.P lead gen agencies. I just replaced an entire lead gen team with Claude agents. (all working while I slept) Most founders spend $10k-$20k/month on marketing teams that work 9-5. Most agencies spend $30k+/mo on outreach. Last night I built AI agents that run 24/7: - Lead Magnet Engineer → builds viral lead magnets in minutes - Social Media Expert → writes scroll-stopping hooks - Creative Director → generates on-brand visuals - Research Analyst → finds trending topics in your niche - Performance Tracker → analyses and maps out content The results after 24 hours: - 32 lead magnets ready to launch - 60 days of content mapped out - 50+ scroll-stopping visuals created While I was sleeping. Follow + reply CLAUDE and I’ll send the full system + setup.
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Kristy Arnett Moreno
Kristy Arnett Moreno@KristyArnett·
Poker was different when we were kids than it is now that we have kids. In our twenties, if Andrew @Amo4sho or I made a final table, a group text would go out and within an hour, our friends would show up to the casino rail with beers in hand. Once, when I made an FT at Venetian, Andrew torpedoed his stack in a tournament at Planet Hollywood so he could be there. He’d rather bust than miss cheering me on. I didn’t say it then, but I felt how much we belonged to each other back then. We’d scream, cheer, and flag down the cocktail waitress for celebratory shots. And no matter what place we finished, we’d celebrate—usually with an overpriced bottle of liquor at some club, trying to act like we mattered because we could afford a couch by the DJ booth. Then, Andrew and I would stumble back to our place hand in hand, kick our shoes off—letting them land with a thud at the door—then fall into bed in a tangle of limbs, drunk on tequila and adrenaline, and talk about every hand until we passed out. Not a care in the world. Not a damn thing to do the next day. Now, it’s different. After the long stretch of the World Series of Poker this summer when we didn’t see much of Andrew, we were finally back in rhythm as a family at home in Austin. Maya said “Dada” for the first time. Miles started waking up early just to build monster truck arenas with Andrew before breakfast. After weeks of distance, we’d all reconnected. But soon enough, it was time for another trip—Andrew was flying to Northern California to play the $2,700 Main Event at Rolling Thunder. We drove him to the airport and kissed him goodbye. Maya waved, and Miles yelled, “Run good, play good!” from his car seat. Before walking through the sliding doors, he turned back for a moment and we caught eyes. I smiled and waved. He smiled back, but we both knew that our smiles were hiding something. Andrew loves being a poker player. It’s his passion, and his passion supports our family financially. I love being home with the kids. It’s given my life meaning. And yet, as he left, I think we both felt sadness. Our smiles were the kind you give when you’re pretending it’s all okay. Mine covered a flicker of envy. Maybe I missed my identity as a poker player, when I wasn’t just a mom. His covered guilt. Maybe he felt bad leaving again. Or maybe it was the other way around. Maybe he wished he could stay home. Maybe I was worried about not contributing by working. I think we both sometimes wonder, are we doing the right thing? Andrew’s flight ended up canceled. Then rebooked. Then delayed. He was upset. I’m away from you guys for this? He ended up missing the first starting day entirely. He only had one shot: Day 1B. And he crushed it. With around 80 players left, Andrew had a big stack. Then he got into a hand—check-raised the flop, barreled the turn and river, then faced a shove. He tanked, then folded a flush. His opponent proudly tabled a bluff. Andrew admitted what he folded. Another player at the table, who’d been running well, looked at him over her huge stack and said, in a condescending tone, “Oh honey, you can’t fold a flush there,” as if Andrew was some washed-up has-been and she was the new sheriff. He said it felt like the table relished in watching the big bad pro stumble. Like they’d been waiting all day to see him get it wrong. The version of Andrew in his 20s might’ve shot back with a jab. Or melted under the pressure and tried to force the next big play, trying to prove himself. Because back then, Andrew always wondered if he’d just gotten lucky, and that any minute, everyone would find out he wasn’t as good as he seemed. But the version of Andrew in his 40s took a deep breath. He knew, from experience, that folding the best hand isn’t always weakness. Sometimes it’s wisdom. If you never fold the winning hand, you’re calling too much. The bigger test is whether you can fold the best hand and still play well after. Andrew looked down at his now-short stack and said to himself: Okay. Let’s see what we’re made of. And he climbed back. Slowly. Quietly. Until he made the final table as chip leader. At the dinner break, he FaceTimed us. I told Miles, “Daddy is trying to win a trophy.” Andrew rubbed his forehead and said, “Yeah, buddy. But it’s been really hard.” Miles jumped up, put Grave Digger in front of the camera and said, “Take a monster truck and smash everybody!” We laughed. Then Miles repeated something I say to him often: “You know you can do hard things, Dada.” Andrew smiled. “That’s great advice, buddy.” Sometime around 10:30 PM in California—12:30 AM for me—I was in bed, Miles’ foot lodged in my back, Maya latched and half-asleep on my chest, scrolling in the dark, refreshing updates with one hand, until I read the final one. Andrew Moreno is the Main Event Champion. $200,000. No cheering rail. No shots. No victory lap. I wished I could have been there with him. To hug him. To sit on his lap for a winner’s picture. To go for steak and eggs and talk about every hand. I felt that familiar swell in my heart, the butterflies in my stomach, just now in a silent room. When we were kids, poker was about proving we mattered. Maybe part of it still is. But now, with kids, it also feels like something deeper. Something more meaningful. Maybe to belong. Maybe to provide. Maybe to become the humans we want our kids to learn from. I thought about this as I read the updates while listening to Miles’ little stuffy nose whistle. Then Andrew texted: We did it. The phone glowed as I read it. I smiled. That’s what he always says now, when he wins a tournament. We did it. Not “I.” And that small word—we—reminds me that we, from the time we were kids to now, are still in this together. I texted back: I’m so proud of you. Andrew: It was really hard today Me: Good thing Miles gave you some good advice Andrew: He really did I pulled the kids closer and closed my eyes, knowing, for the first time, that the "we" Andrew was talking about… was all of us. (if you've made it this far, thank you! And I have a substack now- check link below)
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Alex Lieberman
Alex Lieberman@businessbarista·
Welcoming to the world Brooke Spencer Lieberman. Named in honor of my dad, Bruce Spencer Lieberman. She’s healthy and happy and so is mama. We are so very blessed.
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Jonathan Bales
Jonathan Bales@BalesBets·
People inherently care more about the frequency of positive outcomes than truly maximizing overall EV; that is, people mostly care about how often they are right or how often they win (the probabilities) and not what they win when they are right (the payoffs).
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Kendrick Perkins
Kendrick Perkins@KendrickPerkins·
Oh sh$t!!! What a game. Another game winner for Gordon and great find by Russ. Another Legendary performance from Jokic. This postseason has been one of the best I’ve seen in the last 5 years and we still got more to go. Good night and Carry the hell on…
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Drew Shore
Drew Shore@Drew22Shore·
Hilarious golf challenge/bet tomorrow: Playing w/ 3 friends and rather than strokes, we are handicapping the match based on the number of clubs you are allowed to carry. One friend only gets 2 and is using a 7-wood and a wedge. Two people are allowed their full bags. I am allowed 3 clubs, but can’t decide what to bring. My boy, @CSURAM88, is betting against me all 3 ways. @practicalgolf What clubs should I bring? Can’t wait to stuff everyone 😀
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Daniel Negreanu
Daniel Negreanu@RealKidPoker·
The latest FSD Tesla update is unreal. Just did a 40 min drive and never touched any controls or the wheel at any point. I’ve had Teslas for over a decade and the recent upgrade is truly next level. Surreal.
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Chip Leader Coaching
Chip Leader Coaching@clcpoker·
🚨Our Black Friday Sale is LIVE! You can now get The Closer at the LOWEST PRICE it will ever be! Click the link below this tweet or the link in our profile bio. Sale ends in 4 days!
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Ryan Feldman
Ryan Feldman@TheRyanFeldman·
Who are the most entertaining, most interesting people in poker? People who you would listen to talk every day or every week about strategy or news or hot takes? @Joeingram1 & @DougPolkVids are the obvious answers but who else…
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Jon Sherman
Jon Sherman@practicalgolf·
The new software update to GSPro is *awesome* Randomizing targets on the range to different green types. You can do pretty much any green style you want.
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Triton Poker
Triton Poker@tritonpoker·
After a 5-year hiatus, 🇺🇸 @WAFoxen has made a triumphant return to Triton Poker, claiming his first Triton 🔱 title in Event #5 $50K NLH title and a massive $1,470,000! 🏆🔥 With a stellar performance, Foxen proves he’s still a force to be reckoned with. Welcome back and congratulations, Alex! @wpt_global @GTOWizard @_Jacobandco #BetACR
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Jon Sherman
Jon Sherman@practicalgolf·
3-woods are the devil
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Chip Leader Coaching
Chip Leader Coaching@clcpoker·
Kristen Foxen looking to make history today as we play down to the final 9 players in the 2024 WSOP Main Event. After being down to 5BB, Kristen Foxen (@krissyb24poker) ended the day 5th in chips with 18 players remaining. LFG! 🐐🔥
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Chip Leader Coaching
Chip Leader Coaching@clcpoker·
Pro tip: Do not try to bluff Kristen Foxen (@krissyb24poker) 🐐 59 players left in the 2024 WSOP Main Event! 🏆 Watch on @PokerGO LIVE at 1pm PST
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