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The "Dumb Blond" Survival Guide to Vegas Casinos

A non ripoff, completely independent guide to Vegas!

Let Dr. Pam's little guide save you $300 to $1000 or more in Vegas without really trying!

Which Blackjack table will save on average $15-30 per hour in losses?
Which set of show tickets to the same casino show will cost you $150 less?
Sometimes in Vegas the price of the hotel room is the biggest gamble of all.
The same strip casino hotel room, but the price can range from $80 to $150 to $270.
Wouldn't you prefer the $80 price?

Can a "dumb" blonde save you money in Vegas?

Las Vegas, Nv, Friday, 3:22pm
From the Desk of Dr. Pam Wilson, Ph.d

Hi, Dr. Pam here, asking the question: Can a dumb blond with fake but "spectacular" 38 double dd's save you a significant amount of money on a trip to Vegas? Probably not.

But a smart blond with a doctorarte in psychology and an IQ of 157? You bet!


The only Vegas gambling book of its kind, designed for a targeted audience: the smart, high and middle income person who visits and wishes to maximize their fun, while saving them $300 to $1,00 on their trip.

Dr Pam's "dumb blond" Vegas survival book combines the "meat of any good basic gambling book (without all the extra filler crap that makes up the other 98 percent of those books)and combines it with the basic fundamentals (again without all the filler) of a good travel guide.

In addition, Dr. Pam gives you what other books and guides fail to provide: realy useful,"non-traditional" gambling psychology to maximize your odds of having a great time.

Pams's guide is a steal for the price.

Order now.


First and foremost, my "dumb blond" guide is not for everyone. If you want me to promise my guide will help you robe the casino's, then you might as well pass right now. People who buy books and guides that guarantee you will come come out thousands ahead pgenerally also believe in Santa Claus, the Easter bunny and ufo's.

My "dumb blond guide is instead designed for the discriminating, intelligent, middle-class and upper middle class client who is making a trip to Vegas for a few days and wants to save $300 to $1,000 in a combination of "smart" gambling, and savvy entertainment and hotel shopping.


First of all, did you know that there are four kinds of people who who gamble in Las Vegas:

1. Tourists who hope to win big money but don't really have a clue about how to gamble.

2. People some of the basics about smart gambling, but mostly want to play as long as possible to have fun.

3. Realy smart professional and semi-pro gamblers, who don't care a hoot about fun they have in Vegas, they are to make win money.

4. And finally, people who want to maximize their fun as well as their chances of winning ( or at the least reduce their chance of losing.

My guide is target narrowly: I am here to offer the fairly smart, high and middle income person who visits Vegas a chance to maximize their fun, while saving them $300 to $1,00 on their trip.

The key principal to my guide is honesty, and the basic assumption that you didn't just fall off the turnip truck.

It absolutely amazes me how many "smart"people making fifty to a hundred thousand dollars per year or more and who who are shrewd business people on a day to day basis get totally fleeced in Vegas.

Sometimes that's because they suspend their brain is wishful thinking when it comes to the casino's. Other times its because they were too busy to do any homework. Hence, my "Dumb blond guide."

Pam's guide isn't designed to make you rich in Vegas. Its not a fairy tale guide. What it is designed to do is save you about $300 to $1,000 on a typical Vegas stay, depending upon how you use the information, and your gambling and entertainment activities.

So let's throw out a few myths from the get go:

1. You can beat the casino's and make lots of money

Do you believe in Santa Claus and the Easter bunny too?

Yes, it is possible to beat the casino on the short run, and some people do take home winnings of $1000 or more on a short Vegas trip. However, even if you are totally savvy gamblers, over time, the casino will beat you, and believing otherwise is like believing in Santa Claus or the tooth fairy.

"If you win", and how much is somewhat unpredictable. Its determined by a combination of smart play, selecting the correct games and moves to bet on, and plain old fashioned dumb luck.

However, there are ways to significantly reduce your loses. And this is 100 percent in your control!

Pam's Dumb Blond guide provides gaming information on the the the most reliable bets in any casino plus information about the " dozen common mistakes" in beting that will keep you from needlessly giving away to the casino's $300 to $500 or more of your money.

2. There are books and courses you can buy to guarantee you will win at gambing.

Back to belief in the Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny.

Do you know what's in these books and guides? Dozens and dozens of pages of bs,superstion and out and out fraud.

You take a typical gambling guide, peal all the bad and misleading information, and you can boil it down to less than 5 pages of actual useful, statistically logical information. They need the other 75 pages of bs to make you feel like your getting something useful for your $50 bucks.

The gaming portion of Pam's guide gives you everything you need to know to be a savvy gambler in less than 10 pages. Information that will save you money in losses.

Pam's Guide saved my wife and I $425 on my
three-day trip to Vegas. Fantastic!

Jason Bourne, Minneapolis, MN.

What makes Pam's Survival Guide unique? Its two books in one: a smart gaming guide and a discount entertinment guide.

Traditionally, guides to Vegas have taken two forms: Guides that tell you how to gamble, and guides that show you the sights. Look high and low however, and you won't find both in one place.

You can buy lots of cheap "how to play blackjack and craps books for anywhere from $10 to up to $50 but none of them will show you how how to same money on your hotel, dining, showtickets, or non-gaming entertainment. And while there are plenty of good travel guides out there, most give you only cursory information about the ins and outs of smart gaming. In addition many gaming books are outdated.

An example?

Did you know that beginning in 2003, the corporate bean counters who now run the casinos have changed the rules for blacjack on many tables so that you lose an extra 5% or your money from the traditional blackjack play? Or worse, that sometimes an entire casino's blackjack tables have these new "manipulated odds" tables, while other casinos mix traditional "better odds" table with the poorer, "manipulated odds" tables.

You didn't know?

Of course not. The casino's are counting on you not knowing, and the gaming books having updated their information.

Do you really want to be fleeced at the casino? "What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas," but that doesn't have to mean your money.

I used to go the same casino three times a year, mainly because it was a fun atmosphere: the female dealers and cocktail waitresses wore really hot outfits and the drinks were pretty good. Now thanks to Pam I realize I was paying about $30 an hour extra in blacjkack loses just for the privledge of the "eye candy." Virtually 100% of the blacjack tables at this casino are manipulated with the "new" Vegas odds. I don't stay at that casino anymore, I now win more than I lose, and believe it or not, I found another casino where the drinks and the servers are just as attractive.

Jason Bourne, Minneapolis, MN.