X-Nico

3 unusual facts about Keno


KENO

(John Heaton had operated KGIX from 1930-35, but low power and limited hours made it unprofitable.) For much of its early history, KENO broadcast out of the El Rancho Vegas on Las Vegas Boulevard.

Keno City, Yukon

Keno City was named after the gambling game Keno popular in mining camps at the turn of the 20th century.

Stephen Quartermain

Quartermain was married to Keno presenter Julie Quartermain from 1992 until their divorce in 2000.


Similar

Keno | Keno Davis |

Historical Society of Frankford

The Keno brothers (identical twins Leigh and Leslie) of Antiques Roadshow paid a visit to the Historical Society of Frankford at 1507 Orthodox St. “That day was incredible,” Leigh Keno recalled of the visit to the Historical Society during a recent phone interview with the Northeast Times.

Peter Jacobsen

Jacobsen is also the face of Peter Jacobsen Challenge Keno and Peter Jacobsen Challenge Poker, two video gambling casino games.

Raymond Lauchengco

Lauchengco was part of the Pepsi New Generation artists which help launch several careers of other artists such as Keno, Gino Padilla, JoAnne Lorenzana, Timmy Cruz.

Ronald Dale Harris

When Harris' accomplice, Reid Errol McNeal, attempted to redeem a high value winning keno ticket at Bally's Atlantic City Casino Hotel in Atlantic City, New Jersey, casino executives became suspicious of him and notified New Jersey gaming investigators.

Screeno

A 1937 romantic-comedic-musical movie entitled “Thrill of a Lifetime” featured a song called “Keno, Screeno and You.”

Slot machine

Having access to the PRNG code and seed values Ronald Dale Harris, a former slot machine programmer, discovered equations for specific gambling games like Keno that allowed him to predict what the next set of selected numbers would be based on the previous games played.

SS Keno

The HSMBC spent much of the following two years completing refurbishment and restoration work on the vessel, before the SS Keno was officially declared a National Historic Site of Canada on 1 July, Canada Day, 1962, during the opening ceremonies for the Dawson Festival.


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