![]() ![]() “I have several people that, when we watched the first season, we were like, ‘I know we would have done better than that.’ I know we’d have beat all that. She came to the Brooklyn Bowl on Thursday night for the watch party of the first episode of season two, but felt she should have been a contestant on the show. I say that very arrogantly to anybody who reads this article and thinks that they can beat me: You can’t.”Īlycyn Roye believes differently. I’m not retired, but I don’t need to,” he said. He says he does not need to prove he is a champion. ![]() In the show, Coley does not play, but acts as referee. Since season one was released in September 2020, he says people ask him every day to teach them to play. True to spades braggadocio, Coley says he is now an unbeatable player. I was like, ‘Yo, I got this.’ He’s like, ‘Yo, if you mess up, I’m a beat your ass.’” You got to learn on your own,” said Coley. “Especially Black people, we don’t want to teach people how to play spades. Spades is rarely taught to children, rather it is absorbed. (Emma Lee/WHYY)Ĭoley grew up in Philadelphia’s Olney neighborhood, where he learned to play spades from his father. “That’s why I say, ‘Oh, this got to be on TV,’” he said.Ĭomedian Clint Coley launches the second season of his World Series of Spades with a watch party at Brooklyn Bowl Philly in Fishtown. In spades, every hand has something on the line. Don’t forget: Out of 20 hands, you may only play two. “Here’s the thing: In poker, you’re playing the long game. “Unfortunately, spades brings out, sometimes, the worst in us,” said Coley. WHYY thanks our sponsors - become a WHYY sponsor ![]()
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