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Man Wins Lottery 1000's of Times for $28M Using "Secret System" | Viktor Gjonaj Case Analysis 

Dr. Todd Grande
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This video answers the question: Can I analyze the case of Viktor Gjonaj?
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References:
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www.casino.org/news/michigan-...

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10 ноя 2022

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Комментарии : 849   
@brianmorger2174
@brianmorger2174 Год назад
Mickey Rooney once said - " I lost 2 dollars gambling in 1941 and spent 2 million trying to get it back".
@coffeeaka5569
@coffeeaka5569 Год назад
Hahaha
@nanaman
@nanaman Год назад
The “just one more hit” is a reference to more than just drugs, as the Dr explained! 👍
@KoolT
@KoolT Год назад
😂😂😂😂😂❤❤❤❤
@WildFungus
@WildFungus 11 месяцев назад
pretty much
@traildoggy
@traildoggy Год назад
When casinos first opened in our state I put a quarter in a slot and it spit out $50 of quarters immediately. I cashed it out, bought a mediocre steak for $12 and tipped $10. Then I never went there again. Foolproof system.
@bthomson
@bthomson Год назад
Ditto! I put one quarter in a slot machine pulled the handle and vowed NEVER to do it again and I never have! Cheers!
@MrsRitchieBlackmore
@MrsRitchieBlackmore Год назад
Beginner's luck is so weird. The first time I ever went to a casino I stuck a $20 in a slot. It was one of those video slots with lots of graphics, so I didn't even know what looking for, but the machine kept hitting and hitting for small amounts! I finally cashed out $120 and got off the machine, very happy with my bounty. Some guy hopped right on my machine and immediately hit a $2K jackpot on the first spin! Suddenly, I felt really sick about getting off that slot so quickly. My $120 didn't feel so fantastic anymore. 😕 In fact, I felt cheated. So of course I blew it all in other machines, and left empty handed. I wish I could say I never went to a casino again, but that would be a lie. It's an insidious game!
@russiandude6454
@russiandude6454 Год назад
I put a $1000 and lost and then went back about 300 times . Needless to say I lost about couple hundred grand.
@Throatzillaaa
@Throatzillaaa Год назад
Yes! The only time I have played, I got on a penny machine, put in 1 dollar, turned it into 40 dollar within several minutes, cashed out and left. Haven't gambled ever again. Don't wanna mess up my winning streak
@adotintheshark4848
@adotintheshark4848 Год назад
too bad the steak wasn't better..Whenever I go to the casino, I'll play the one armed bandits. They almost always let you win a little at first then they start draining you. So I just play for about 20 minutes, pocket my winnings if any and go to the restaurant.
@danjacobsen7645
@danjacobsen7645 Год назад
Reminds me of my first trip to Vegas 30 years ago. Won $5000 playing craps, felt so great on the flight home. I’ve been back there 6-7 times with terrible results. Beware of gambling people!
@crystaladdy2155
@crystaladdy2155 Год назад
SAD!!! I have known Victor for 30 years. I would describe him as a person that was very friendly, and nice. Always very well-dressed drove expensive cars, had pretty girlfriends. He used to come to the restaurant where I worked, and if I were to describe him I would call him a quiet tornado. I really hope that when he finishes doing his jail time that he will learn a lesson from this . May he be humbled, and be able to leave gambling alone. I don't know how he will ever pay all those people back he probably won't be able to. Get well Victor!!
@gayestgaymer
@gayestgaymer Год назад
As a Michigander I appreciate you explaining to people what a "party store" is. Not everyone understands that's what we call liquor stores lol.
@heli-crewhgs5285
@heli-crewhgs5285 Год назад
In the U.K. they’re called ‘Off-Licences.’ In Australia, they call them ‘Bottle Shops.’
@lisaowen6103
@lisaowen6103 Год назад
In Michigan Soda Pop is call Pop. Also in some party stores they carry the candy bars and other snacks.
@cowoverthemoo
@cowoverthemoo Год назад
​@@heli-crewhgs5285 in Stoke they're called bargain booze lol
@kimberlyroland9394
@kimberlyroland9394 Год назад
I literally thought a party store was like party City or other costume birthday supply stuff lol l
@SF-eo6xf
@SF-eo6xf Год назад
That's a good one, we should start using that everywhere
@terryKessler42719
@terryKessler42719 Год назад
I once worked in an alcohol treatment facility where the therapists believed in this screaming type of treatment. It was so upsetting to me, before and after these “sessions”, that I resigned. I don’t feel it’s good medicine to tear a patient down in order to help them. Patients would leave these sessions in tears, so I couldn’t see how this was beneficial. Plus, I never saw a patient completely cured of their addiction, if that’s possible. It was a revolving door in treatment. Patients were discharged only to be brought back in after being on the outside for a significant time. I believe in the Hippocratic Oath. First, do no harm. I feel screaming at a person, no matter their addiction, is doing harm.
@HereTakeAFlower
@HereTakeAFlower Год назад
Everything in moderation, I'd say, although I agree that if I wanted to be yelled at I can get for free at home.
@TheSacredCowtipper88
@TheSacredCowtipper88 Год назад
That's not really the Hippocratic oath. The Hippocratic oath is swearing felty to the god Jupiter and Hermes lol
@somexp12
@somexp12 Год назад
​@davidblaske6911 "get your head checked." Kinda the same gaslighting tactic used by these facilities. They operate with the assumption that clients must take any dumb thing they say seriously, "because, obviously, these clients should not be trusting their *own* judgment." Every value the client holds, no matter how otherwise laudable, is deemed worthless, "because, obviously, nothing legitimate can come from such a source." Easier to gaslight your clients and to assume a God-like authority over every corner of their lives than to accept, for one solitary moment, that the criticisms they're aiming at you were formulated inside of a human mind.
@RizztrainingOrder
@RizztrainingOrder Год назад
Perhaps that’s the intent, it’s the same strategy as big pharma, why cure anything when it’s much more profitable to keep them coming back?
@WildFungus
@WildFungus 11 месяцев назад
I can't help but think it makes these negative personality and mental health problems worse. Like even Ted Kazinski probably would have been less dangerous without such treatments.
@Mandrake591
@Mandrake591 Год назад
I had a counselor who once said to a small chemical dependency group I was in “Well, obviously none of you came here on a winning streak!” He was brilliant and a former addict himself.
@McSmooth5150
@McSmooth5150 Год назад
@@cht2162 3
@barbarawarren9443
@barbarawarren9443 Год назад
Love that approach.
@kateashby3066
@kateashby3066 Год назад
I am in recovery and I recall going to a group and it was a snooze fest. Granted we were forced to be there. But having a lively counselor helps a LOT. And they’re usually in recovery themselves, which really helps to know so one can relate to them more. No one wants to be counseled by someone who has no experience with addiction 😂
@thelocalmaladroit8873
@thelocalmaladroit8873 Год назад
Several years ago, we had a friend who retired with almost a million dollars. Enough for him to live comfortably the rest of his life. But, it wasn’t enough and he invested half of it with a real estate developer who promptly declared bankruptcy and left town and the other half in one of those scams where you send them $5000 and a week later you got double your money back. My husband even told him, “don’t do this it’s a scam”. Sadly, he lost it all. He got greedy and thought he could outsmart the system. Great analysis Dr Grande. Appreciate the personal message today too!
@glasshalffull2930
@glasshalffull2930 Год назад
So tragic for your friend. I just found out that a close friend of mine, who was planning to retire early next year, put all of their retirement money into crypto currency and has suffered a terrible loss in just a week or two. I wish they had asked me.
@Dwightstjohn-fo8ki
@Dwightstjohn-fo8ki Год назад
@@glasshalffull2930 I have "normal, life experience" womenmyownage in my life as seniors, and they come to the seniors dance or banquet or art show and pronounce "advice" from some asshat falling out of a dumpster. BUT they know millionaries at the dance. Do you think they THOUGHT to call any of these long time friends and ask for ADVICE?? NO. And these ladies are "normal". I dont' get it.
@glasshalffull2930
@glasshalffull2930 Год назад
@@Dwightstjohn-fo8ki Part of the issue might be embarrassment in ‘needing’ to ask an acquaintance for financial advice when they feel they should be savvy enough to make their own decision. When just stating out, I asked my dad about investment advice as far as the stock market. He had grown up in the depression and considered the stock market as going to Vegas. Luckily I got advice from a coworker that had been a stock broker and invested in the S&P500 mutual fund that spreads the risk. I would not have been able to retire without this advice.
@glasshalffull2930
@glasshalffull2930 Год назад
@@cht2162 In my mother, as she approached her later 80s and definitely needed help with housekeeping/medication/shopping, there was certainly a GREAT resistance to getting any help for things that she had been able to do all her adult life. Any person would probably resist this, but add memory loss or early dementia, both of which my mother had, and it is worse. Imagine if your ability to drive was taken away. How would it affect your life?
@yourneighbor2567
@yourneighbor2567 Год назад
@@glasshalffull2930 I personally gained a small fortune from investing in crypto. Many other's became millionaires from investing in crypto. Unfortunately, if you didn't cash out before Biden took office, you lost it all 🤷‍♂️. It just crashed along with the economy... I'm curious though, what would you have told them if they came to you first?
@niccolleholder
@niccolleholder Год назад
I managed a wedding venue, we did 150 weddings a year $15k-20k each at the time, the owners gambling addiction made it difficult to even order food for these weddings and linens, having to keep this from party's was such a difficult task. I was overwhelmed and over worked ...and pregnant. I worked 3 months for free just to finish out the season and applied for unemployment, none of my brides knew what went on behind the scenes. When I left after the last wedding, he owed about $100k to the food and linen companies, and nobody got paid for the last wedding we worked. He was at the casino every night, he would come in and take cash from the bar and head out to the casino. He was addicted to gambling, women, and the white stuff ppl put in their nose. Over the next couple years he was on the news a few times for not being able to give weddings to people who had already paid and eventually was sued and his entire venue was taken for unpaid taxes. Gambling is a very serious addiction, people are willing to give their entire life's work for that high of winning a few bucks.
@andreasrau2161
@andreasrau2161 Год назад
A very interesting case analysis, Dr. Grande. But here's a different take on gambling addicts who think that they have found a system that guarantees wealth and happiness. The Great Gazoo, a character from The Flintstones cartoons in the 1960's, knowingly gave Fred a list of winners at the dinosaur races (which he had the power to predict) in order to teach him a lesson about the dangers of gambling. He concluded with "If you can't afford to lose, you can't afford to win."
@kathrynj.hernandez8425
@kathrynj.hernandez8425 Год назад
What a nice little treasure that is. I remember a Flintstone's character The Great Gazoo. Just another reminder that cartoons of that era were not necessarily for us kids.
@nicknico4121
@nicknico4121 Год назад
@@kathrynj.hernandez8425 Same thing for the Simpsons that I started to watch at 11 years old. The same episode watched 20 years later have a different meaning sometimes.
@trybunt
@trybunt Год назад
@@nicknico4121 marge high on life: "I'm high on something, but you can't drink it, and you can't smoke it" Otto the bus driver "then you better put it between my toes, my mum checks my arms" Ooff 💀
@nicknico4121
@nicknico4121 Год назад
@@trybunt she was high on LSD (love for the son and daughter)
@sergiomarcano9697
@sergiomarcano9697 Год назад
Yeah Gazoo I remember the green little guy
@BigZebraCom
@BigZebraCom Год назад
Just a reminder I'm not diagnosing anybody in this video; only speculating about a bunch of ping pong balls rotating in a clear plastic drum like this.
@annwethenorth
@annwethenorth Год назад
Lol
@rorycats2108
@rorycats2108 Год назад
@@annwethenorth hey thanks! :)
@ZYX84
@ZYX84 Год назад
You have a funny mind!🤪 that’s good! 😉
@elizabethCorkins83
@elizabethCorkins83 Год назад
Lol 👍🏻
@GMDOCNICE
@GMDOCNICE Год назад
Now on to my analysis. The first number drawn was a number which was colored black on a white ping pong ball...
@glendasully
@glendasully Год назад
I loved the true life story at the end. Please do more of these!
@glendasully
@glendasully Год назад
I very much need to discuss a situation that I have with a Psychopath here in YT. You'll be shocked. Please email me. My address is on the about page of my channel
@KarenM5981
@KarenM5981 Год назад
My husband won a 9 digit powerball and has wittled it down to low 7 digit and plays incessantly to this day. He thinks he will actually win a huge jackpot again which makes him keep spending irresponsibly. It's a sickness for sure.
@sincerelyrob4240
@sincerelyrob4240 Год назад
Take some of the money and start a business and don't tell him about it, tell him it's for a another family members emergency, (he's the other family member and his addiction is the emergency.) That way you can generate money he can't touch to protect you from when he spends all the initial money. Do some research and start a business that's a surefire way to generate income. Recession-proof, even.
@kristyhoyt5840
@kristyhoyt5840 Год назад
I loved that you shared a personal experience at the end. I think it would be a great addition to your videos. Also I would love to hear hypothetically what type of help you would give in each video. Love your videos!
@adotintheshark4848
@adotintheshark4848 Год назад
I don't think the moral-shaming form of treatment would work other than being a mild form of aversion therapy. A much more effective aversion therapy is to present a picture of the addictive item and zap! the person with an electrical shock. Or have them drink something that makes them retch. It eventually triggers a negative response in the patient to something that they used to enjoy.
@ToyInsanity
@ToyInsanity Год назад
Funny because the "do you wanna bet?" joke seems on par with the grande style of humor in most videos
@MrsRitchieBlackmore
@MrsRitchieBlackmore Год назад
That's what I was thinking...lol
@elizabethhamm5320
@elizabethhamm5320 Год назад
He was absolutely consumed with winning the lottery. I admit, I play and have fantasized about winning but I can’t imagine becoming that obsessed. Thanks for covering this case. I love the variety of your videos. I can always count on them for entertainment and information.
@xminusone1
@xminusone1 Год назад
I've seen a woman on health care (disabled program) who was spending so much in video poker machines that her daughter was paying the rent for her so her mother wouldn't be homeless. Very scary addiction.
@coweatsman
@coweatsman Год назад
The lack of humility it must take to think for one to think they can hoodwink mathematics and probability.
@janecoe9407
@janecoe9407 Год назад
he was mentally ill.
@coweatsman
@coweatsman Год назад
How did my above comment come to be shown in the wrong video?
@trybunt
@trybunt Год назад
@@coweatsman your above comment is being shown in the lottery video, which makes perfect sense. If its showing up elsewhere, probably just a bug
@jeffersonott4357
@jeffersonott4357 Год назад
Dr grande is legit the ONLY RU-vidr who’s ads I don’t just click through. His advertisement is so charming, I’ve actually bought hello fresh from him. I sorta look forward to his adds, he is so calm
@IMWeira
@IMWeira Год назад
And so brilliant.
@hippygirlfriend4937
@hippygirlfriend4937 Год назад
Can we have a story time channel? I’m interested in all the crazy or interesting stories you have from working with counselors that weren’t of the norm etc you’re so interesting to watch I always check daily if you posted. Thanks dr grande
@bthomson
@bthomson Год назад
Yes! Story time! GREAT idea! Not easy to always think of past experiences that would fit this description but BOY! would we love it!
@lindamoxley2223
@lindamoxley2223 Год назад
Sounds entertaining, but also unethical 🫣
@bthomson
@bthomson Год назад
Names could be changed to protect the clients?
@danieldonato3269
@danieldonato3269 Год назад
I was thinking the same!!
@pathicalstar2723
@pathicalstar2723 Год назад
It could be still a breach of confidentiality even with changed names. I mean personally i think it’s a great idea.
@ladykay1068
@ladykay1068 Год назад
I watched this hoping that there was a secret system to win the lottery and that you would explain it so I could win. LOL!
@nomeinthecottage4767
@nomeinthecottage4767 Год назад
Your description of ideas of reference was on point. I was institutionalized for this when in the grips of a severe methamphetamine addiction. I thought the characters in Law and order were talking about me. I thought the whole radio was targeting me.
@CarolH2O
@CarolH2O Год назад
I've had a very similar issue with ideas of reference, starting when I was about 16 or 17. How long after stopping the use of meth did it take before the ideas of reference stopped?
@xminusone1
@xminusone1 Год назад
I've never took meth and I didn't know that it can make you psychotic. I know weed can do this to some people as cocaine but I'm unfamiliar with meth. I did cocaine alot when I was young and I'm lucky to never get addicted to it. I think some people are more akin to become addicted because of physical and psychological factors. The only thing I'm physically addicted to is my chronic pain medication. I take it for years but I never felt the need to take more than it was prescribed. The only reason I know I'm addicted is that when I forget to take them, I becomes very sick. Like a very bad flu, I shake and the pain worsen alot. When I feel like this I know I've missed a dose. It happens after 5 to 8 hours after I was supposed to take the pills. I forget to take the morning dose alot.
@_EightySix
@_EightySix Год назад
They were talking about you.
@shethingsd
@shethingsd Год назад
@None in the Cottage thanks for sharing your experience.
@Italian69Boi
@Italian69Boi Год назад
probably more to do with the lack of protein, magnesium, and potassium and sleep
@JP-wx6uh
@JP-wx6uh Год назад
Dr. Grande, You may want to look into someone named Bill Benter. A man who actually did crack a system within Hong Kong horse racing, developed software and used it to amass enormous amounts of money, before he and his small organization were eventually barred from wagering in Hong Kong. It truly is a fascinating case and there is a sizeable amount of information online.
@KeikoKeepSmiling
@KeikoKeepSmiling Год назад
This sounds interesting, I hope Dr. Grande considers making a video on the topic.
@mathetes7759
@mathetes7759 Год назад
I actually read about this~ It was a fascinating story
@JP-wx6uh
@JP-wx6uh Год назад
@@mathetes7759 The man is a mathematical and/or statistical prodigy. He just wanted the challenge of seeing if he could beat the system, and he did. But he had to apply it to races that bring in enormous amounts of money in wagers per race. So Hong Kong was the best place to try to develop an algorithm. It really is a remarkable story.
@mathetes7759
@mathetes7759 Год назад
@@JP-wx6uh Do you have a links to any articles about this guy? If you would post them I would greatly appreciate it! Thanks in advance!
@hroschasseuse
@hroschasseuse Год назад
Many years ago I found a small book that detailed a method to use to think of the winning numbers for lotteries like mega and power ball. At the time there were only 5 numbers needed to win. I attempted this method one time and successfully thought of 4 of the 5 winning numbers. I won 75 dollars. However the amount of mental exhaustion I experienced was so great I never attempted it again and no longer have that book even. Since then they have increased the range of numbers and the number needed to win the state lottery in NY. Just saying.
@EricDodsonLectures
@EricDodsonLectures Год назад
A single course in Probability & Statistics can obviate a lot of these sorts of problems.
@samygirl3113
@samygirl3113 Год назад
In relation to your last story, I was talking to a therapist once who told me it was "stupid" of me to keep drinking, like I kept making the "choice" to pick up the next bottle. I just looked at her, appalled that a therapist would ever say something so wrong and insulting. When you're an addict/alcoholic, free will goes out the window, no matter how much you want to stop. That's WHY we have rehabilitation facilities.
@lindamoxley2223
@lindamoxley2223 Год назад
Sounds like she was being insensitive and calling you out. Nothing wrong with pointing out that you had made those choices, but calling you stupid…I’d feel offended too.
@glasshalffull2930
@glasshalffull2930 Год назад
Regarding the ‘choice part,’ I always found it interesting that ‘some’ people with addiction/self control problems can resist/control themselves during work or other times, but fail in private. What comes to mind is a sex addict or serial killer. They both claim they cannot control themselves, but neither would act out at high noon on Main Street in front of a police officer. So, they do have a great deal of control.
@lindamoxley2223
@lindamoxley2223 Год назад
@@glasshalffull2930 I think a part of it is triggers and motivations. Sometimes people are triggered by different cues and are reinforced by different settings. For example, if you smoke while you drive. The behavior of driving might become a trigger for craving a substance. Possibly a trigger can be harder to control in the face of a cue. Speaking to impulsive behavior, an event usually follows the behavior. Was watching a video recently of a presumed murder interact with someone, and you could see them repeatedly toying with his thumbs, gripping on a stirring wheel and the other hand by his side. Yet, when he was fiddling, he was making repeated motions with both hands, I assuming to soothe his trigger to want to attempt to you know what. It’s hard to say exactly what can be cues, but typically you can look at behavioralist theories and or consider the factors that made someone more at risk to offend - the events leading the behavior, history of behavior, settings, and cues.
@glasshalffull2930
@glasshalffull2930 Год назад
@@lindamoxley2223 Very interesting! Brings me back to my childhood when family vacations were always rife with arguments between my parents as we drove for hundreds of miles. To this day, preparing for a vacation causes me great anxiety even though I’m looking forward to the holiday. I also recall an after work get together with the folks from our small department. One of the guys there, who everyone considered a kind of sociopath, nonchalantly picked up a steak knife and was in a trance as he fondled it and started cutting into the table. Finally, a supervisor told him to stop. I was relieved when he was transferred to another office. 😬
@Luis-ec2vu
@Luis-ec2vu Год назад
Whether it is involuntary or not it is still stupid. If it wasn't stupid, why stop?
@andrewryder3276
@andrewryder3276 Год назад
It's interesting to note that, although state lottery numbers are generated randomly - (i.e., using air-blown numbered ping-pong balls) - the numbers used by Keno are PSEUDO-random; they are electronically generated by a computer algorithm mathematically modifying a seed number (usually based on a member of one of the previous output generations). It is therefore possible, at least in THEORY, to derive a Keno game's "seed" through analysis of the system's output, and predict subsequent numbers if you can figure out the generating algorithm and the re-seeding algorithm. The problem is, by the time the system starts outputting numbers, the game is closed off to betting. You would, therefore, have to have every possible seed mapped out for every possible re-seed within the generating sequence, and play them all, which (although not as vast as every possible combination of numbers used) would still cost you far more than you'd win!
@boat6float
@boat6float Год назад
Years ago a Keno game was rigged in Las Vegas. It was an inside job and the guys were arrested.
@pxxxbxxx1981
@pxxxbxxx1981 Год назад
Thought this was going to be about the guy who figured out some particular lottery games structured the odds wrong and actually did make money.
@iyalove9383
@iyalove9383 Год назад
You're always on it Dr. Grande. I appreciate your work.
@tankthearc9875
@tankthearc9875 Год назад
id think with his dark humor he would like that bet joke
@bthomson
@bthomson Год назад
Ok just what we want more of! That last comment was gold! The feeling given is that you are talking directly to us - your commenters! I don't know why this is so appealing but it is!
@tinawindham6958
@tinawindham6958 Год назад
Someone called and wanted to buy my house and wanted to close in 60 days, he also said other buyers would b coming through for 60 days. I knew then he wanted to buy low and try to make a few $$ extra. However, if he couldn’t sell on his end, he would just back out of the contract. What a scam. Like you need a bunch of vultures trying to low ball the last person. Be safe y’all.
@SBguitarcovers
@SBguitarcovers Год назад
Your channel has become my favourite thing to watch lately. Keep up the great work Dr. Grande!
@ausplundespring9855
@ausplundespring9855 Год назад
I always look forward to watching your daily videos. They are interesting and insightful, and I often listen to them when driving to school.
@parkerottoackley6325
@parkerottoackley6325 Год назад
🤪 I win the lottery every time I DON'T play. Save your money 💰
@elbertderf803
@elbertderf803 Год назад
tell that to the guy who won 2 billion
@akedi2734
@akedi2734 Год назад
The 2 billion didn’t come out of no where, out of ur pocket
@elbertderf803
@elbertderf803 Год назад
@@akedi2734 ??
@rejaneoliveira5019
@rejaneoliveira5019 Год назад
Thank you for sharing your personal experience at the end of this video! I bet viewers will also enjoy listening a little bit of your counseling work:) This was a very interesting analysis. Thank you, Dr. Grande.❤
@moonstruck562
@moonstruck562 Год назад
I really enjoy the personal stories too. Especially when we get a glimpse of what goes on behind the counseling work doors. I can almost say I remember each and every one he has shared with us. Some on his Patreon channel. They’re all so very interesting. This one, idk why, reminded me of nurse Ratched from the original 1975 movie lol that’s where my mind went as the story progressed… I sensed a dark undertone.
@rejaneoliveira5019
@rejaneoliveira5019 Год назад
@@moonstruck562 Oh you remember nurse Ratched?😃 Haha, that was a creepy nurse.😅
@nataliedelagrandiere4022
@nataliedelagrandiere4022 Год назад
I have known a pathological gambler. Your thoughts about them is very interesting and true. Thank you Dr Grande.
@pierre6625
@pierre6625 Год назад
Hello Dr. Grande, thank you again for another very interesting video. What I enjoy most about following you is how the topics vary from one video to the other. One day it is about a court drama followed by a crime. as for today, it was about an addiction. This is what attracts me to your variety of subjects in the videos, Fun to follow you. Best Regards.
@sophiaisabelle0227
@sophiaisabelle0227 Год назад
Dr Grande certainly knows how to offer criticisms in a way that’s structured well. Seems like this analysis May be one of his best ones to date.
@bthomson
@bthomson Год назад
I agree.
@nomadscavenger
@nomadscavenger Год назад
I agree 💯👍. I just wish Dr. G. had addressed the destructive effect of pathological gambling on family besides associates, others convinced by charm, past apparent success, and their own vulnerability to take a "gamble". This platform is always interesting and informative, tho.🌻
@PyrPupMom
@PyrPupMom Год назад
"The house always wins. That's why there's a house."
@DovieRuthAuthor
@DovieRuthAuthor Год назад
I spent many years working with children in psychiatric settings. On one occasion, the chemical dependency unit was understaffed so I was told to go there for one shift. What a difference! That population was definitely not my calling. Those patients were so manipulative. I never knew what they were trying to get past me.
@paulajohnson139
@paulajohnson139 Год назад
Smart observation!
@khakitaco
@khakitaco Год назад
Thank you for the extra content following your close. I appreciate your insight and comments on your own field of work and also how precisely you frame your communication (i.e. "if one wants to think of that as clever)"
@Flamsterette
@Flamsterette Год назад
Thanks for the upload, Dr. Grande! So many weird cases that I haven't heard of before!
@conorfitzmaurice8959
@conorfitzmaurice8959 Год назад
Thanks again Dr. Grande, great video, I think sometimes gambling can be overlooked as an addiction and an issue. It would be quite a common complaint here but I think many choose not to see it as a problem.
@kimberlyhackney8190
@kimberlyhackney8190 Год назад
Thanks for sharing you personal story, they bring context to the analysis.
@paulwatson5380
@paulwatson5380 Год назад
I found your analysis of this topic to be informative. Thanks Doc!
@lindajohnson7675
@lindajohnson7675 Год назад
I lived in Reno, NV for a couple of years. The people there taught me ....NEVER BET YOUR WINNINGS! DON'T be greedy!
@alking6633
@alking6633 Год назад
You Are A Brilliant Speaker And Man. I Love Watching You Analyze Certain People's Behaviors. 💯💯💯
@slopely
@slopely Год назад
Gambling addiction is so sad. My grandfather suffered from it and left my mom with a lot of debt
@LindaMarieMagnusson
@LindaMarieMagnusson Год назад
I have missed the psychological approach that you had a long time ago when you talked alot about different disorders. I an very interested in that so I became very pleasant surprised by the ending here! More of this again plz 🙏💖💖💖 Love your shows anyway, but extra much today 😊💖💖
@bthomson
@bthomson Год назад
Me too!
@glendabrady9996
@glendabrady9996 Год назад
I really like your thoughts,humor and educational content. Thanks so much.
@shulamiteKINGSbride
@shulamiteKINGSbride Год назад
I would consider it a "Lottery Win" if Dr Grande hearted my comment. Love your videos Dr Grande either way.
@aarondavis8943
@aarondavis8943 Год назад
I was so curious what his "system" was going to be. It was just that he believed in magic. I feel like I've been conned 🤣
@Spudcore
@Spudcore Год назад
That's a very good point about the pamphlet reinforcing the gambler's delusions, I didn't think about it that way but you're right.
@queenvictoria309
@queenvictoria309 Год назад
Great commentary at the end - thank you!
@Panwere36
@Panwere36 Год назад
That is the best analysis on that kind of disorder I have see. Very good.
@helpyourcattodrive
@helpyourcattodrive Год назад
Another unbelieveable story and case analysis. Thanks so much, Grande. I appreciate them all!
@kathrynj.hernandez8425
@kathrynj.hernandez8425 Год назад
Your user name tho. 😂
@emeraldaisle2927
@emeraldaisle2927 Год назад
Dr. Grande is like the wisest neighbor, uncle, and boss I've never had.
@kimberlyroland9394
@kimberlyroland9394 Год назад
I feel like we were approaching something else at the end. I dig it. More personal more insight into the field and your personal experiences.... Thanks Dr
@bthomson
@bthomson Год назад
Yes! I knew others felt the same!
@carriejones8413
@carriejones8413 Год назад
Totally fantastic right.
@denlaf
@denlaf 7 месяцев назад
Love that you added a personal story! That was the best part!
@susansandler8429
@susansandler8429 Год назад
Loved the personal story and how you told it. Please more.
@carriejones8413
@carriejones8413 Год назад
Totally agree!
@mzliberty7647
@mzliberty7647 Год назад
great little bonus at the end there Dr Grande.. always a pleasure.. x
@wot4me2
@wot4me2 Год назад
Great anecdote at the end- thanks for sharing!!
@chaughten
@chaughten 7 месяцев назад
Loved the anecdote thanks for sharing
@bettinabarry8423
@bettinabarry8423 Год назад
Interesting case and topic. Enjoy the analysis, Dr. Grande! I had a friend who loved gambling for the trill and the satisfaction of winning more than the monetary gain. She told me I was lucky because the first time I bet I lost. That reminded me of what you said that he was unlucky for winning.
@noswim
@noswim Год назад
Love your experience stories Dr. Grande
@christinley5213
@christinley5213 Год назад
Love how you put your humor in the add:) i enjoyed it! Also .. i realy enjoy hearing your experiences.. that was educational:) i think it’s important to understand peoples lack of free will.. if no one taught you how to speek.. why should i be mad and surprised you cant speek like i can? Understand we all have sum kind of lack of free will… wether its gambling or anxiety..etc!
@fumanpoo4725
@fumanpoo4725 Год назад
Every morning I don't wake up dead, I consider that a win!
@zenawarrior7442
@zenawarrior7442 Год назад
Interesting guy. Loved your therapy story and the 'do you want to bet" comment🎰🎲. Happy Veteran's Day🇺🇲 Thanks Dr G❤🤍💙
@bthomson
@bthomson Год назад
Zena - Exciting idea ( not that he already does SO MUCH for us! ). But I for one would absolutely love story time of experiences!
@zenawarrior7442
@zenawarrior7442 Год назад
@@bthomson I agree. His "story time" of sessions would be very interesting & funny😊Thx for your comment 👍...he does do alot already for us with all these lessons & laughs.
@annwethenorth
@annwethenorth Год назад
This reminded me of " number 28". I find it very interesting the way it presents. Interesting case, thanks Dr.Grande cheers ✌️♥️🇨🇦
@cottontails9003
@cottontails9003 Год назад
Good morning Dr Grande .A gambler and his money are soon parted. Obviously he didn't have the financial brain. I believe he used the mental health issues too get out of consequences. Thank you Dr Grande . Brilliant analysis and informative topic
@victoriawilliams2786
@victoriawilliams2786 Год назад
This iteration of a gambling addiction is frightening to someone like myself, whom doesn't gamble. Because it apparently consumed every aspect of his life.
@christopherderrah3294
@christopherderrah3294 Год назад
As a jail nurse, I have found that using humor can be very helpful in breaking down barriers. But, as you said you have to be very careful how its used and who you use it with, as it could trigger someone and make them feel very offended.
@joshwyble6558
@joshwyble6558 Год назад
Anyone here remember that episode "The Fever" from the original Twilight Zone? Franklin Gibbs lost everything due to gambling. His money, his savings, his sanity and ultimately his life.... love the classics
@carriejones8413
@carriejones8413 Год назад
GREAT conclusion. Hope you can share more personal experiences with both colleagues and clients in future uploads. Sounds like both will prove educational. Stay cool friend and take a vacation.
@gerry2345
@gerry2345 Год назад
I like this vid. Good insight and Great Analysis.
@MDWD
@MDWD Год назад
Well done Dr Grande. Never Heard of this one. Txs
@sincerelyrob4240
@sincerelyrob4240 Год назад
It's interesting he knew that one number, earlier in the story, was going to win and he even told his friend about it and his friend won, also.
@alansewell7810
@alansewell7810 Год назад
This is an interesting story that prompted me to do some research. It turns out that the Michigan Lottery did run a predictable game called "Winfall" whereby if there was no winner of the big prize after a certain number of days, the money backfilled into the next lowest tier of numbers, boosting the odds of winning from negative to +80% (i.e a tranch of mathematically predicted tickets bought for $1.00 at ticket paid off $1.80 on average per ticket, but only on "winfall" days, not all the time). An unassuming hicktown couple from Evart, Michigan named Jerry and Marge Selbee figured out the odds and won $26 million in nine years legitimately by playing the Michigan and Massachusetts lotteries: "A retired couple explain exactly how they used math skills and a lottery loophole to win $26 million in 9 years." Mr. Selbee had a mathematics degree and cyphered it out. It could be that Victor Gjonaj intuited the favorable odds enough to win a couple times, but did not do it with mathematical rigor the way Mr. Selbee did, to win consistently. Michigan and Massachusetts no longer run predictable games, but it took them 9 years to figure it out. The Selbees and Gjonaj worked hard on their lottery systems, spending hours each day cyphering the numbers on computer spreadsheets, but the Selbees did it in a mathematically correct way.
@gailkelly4651
@gailkelly4651 Год назад
Hello Dr. Grande ....nice to see you. Been tied up with medical but I missed you .....and your face ❤️
@deborahwinter5018
@deborahwinter5018 Год назад
“Victor spent his time betting on the wrong numbers, while his investor’s bet on the wrong Horse !”brilliant!
@visionaryventures12
@visionaryventures12 Год назад
This reminds me of Michael Larson on the game show Press Your Luck. He studied the patterns before becoming a contestant.
@starlord1637
@starlord1637 Год назад
Always enjoy your segs 👍👍
@dominickdolio2414
@dominickdolio2414 Год назад
Thanks for the bonus track Doc!
@valfletcher9285
@valfletcher9285 Год назад
lotteries are so ridiculous. Taking perfectly good money and throwing it away. Even IF a person would HAPPEN to win, the winnings apparently ruin lives. Every relationship you ever had will be changed...and NOT for the better.
@streetsoflaredo3432
@streetsoflaredo3432 Год назад
Dr. Grande - Would you ever consider doing a video on how to stop attracting narcissists into one's life? How to change behaviors to not be a magnet to narcissists?
@stephendoyle3542
@stephendoyle3542 Год назад
This is the most fascinating story I can remember hearing.
@matthewpeterson5281
@matthewpeterson5281 Год назад
He was a huge winner on numerous occasions, and still couldn't profit from it due to addiction in the end. A poster child for what happens when you try to make a lifestyle out of gambling. If it were a sure thing, it wouldn't be called gambling folks.
@Only1shenie
@Only1shenie Год назад
Thanks for the share and your insights. You have built quiet the gaggle of followers who can ‘r wait to hear your next vudeu free
@Bebecat477
@Bebecat477 Год назад
His behavior sounds exhausting. Thanks doc for the interesting case analysis.
@rhianirory7310
@rhianirory7310 Год назад
will you cover the case of Jared Lisiek once he goes to trial November 30th? i would like to hear more about the patterns of SA and learned abuse, which leads one child to abuse another after they themselves have been abused.
@purpleslurple5149
@purpleslurple5149 Год назад
Fascinating. I've spent hours connecting numbers and license plates, etc. I did it most as a child. I was once told it's a symptom of OCD, which I've also been diagnosed with. Could something like this (only speculating 😉), also be a perfect storm of OCD and gambling addiction?
@justus4685
@justus4685 Год назад
I live near Sterling Heights. Never heard of this case! Thanks doc!!
@kayakdog121
@kayakdog121 Год назад
The reason I know I'm not a good gambler is I invented a foolproof system where the worst that can happen is I break even. My system is I never gamble and the worst always happens.
@fixedguitar47
@fixedguitar47 Год назад
Excellent diagnosis!
@brockjensen2473
@brockjensen2473 Год назад
Can you make a video analyzing the Gabriel Hernandez case??
@btetschner
@btetschner Год назад
Very interesting story about that treatment facility, I have always wondered what types of strategies are used there. I can imagine a counselor would need a lot of patience, I can imagine how argumentative the people can be.
@DH-ve5bl
@DH-ve5bl Год назад
The counselor saying “Do you want to bet” to the gamblers is no help. It contains a double meaning and is nothing more than a head game. A lot of people who see counselors have enough confusion in their lives already.
@naturecreep8811
@naturecreep8811 Год назад
Pleeeeease do a video on manifesting / law of attraction and law of assumption. It's like a cult now
@knightstar1312
@knightstar1312 Год назад
I was thinking the same thing. I wondered what Mr. Grande has to say about that. And promonition, many lottery winners say they had dreams in their sleep that told them the numbers, or to play the lottery, or they won. I am wondering what Mr. Grande's thought on that.
@hojoman85
@hojoman85 Год назад
The anecdote at the end was interesting to hear.
@internziko
@internziko Год назад
Dr Grande is so awesome
@hosermandeusl2468
@hosermandeusl2468 Год назад
Not certain what the prisons are like in your state, but Sheridan, Oregon Federal prison offers NOTHING in the way of substance abuse treatment. Q: When are you going to do a piece on those stuck in prison & forgotten? As a caregiver, I have clients who are released years later, with NO vocational training, NO treatment, no housing, & with a criminal record have ZERO chance of gaining livable employment, more often than not returning to "the life".
@julieyoung3315
@julieyoung3315 Год назад
Good Day, Dr. Grande. 👌
@JeremyHelm
@JeremyHelm Год назад
15:12 I love this reflection on habits of engaging/speech which present awkwardness of interaction. I can relate to the experience on both sides... I wonder if there's a taxonomy of such things out there
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