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The participants played a standard game of poker, but with an explicit twist—losing hands meant shedding clothing on camera, all while competing for a cash prize.
Denotes either the second episode of the series or part two of a split multi-part video file, utilizing the standard Audio Video Interleave (.avi) container. The Tech Nostalgia: The Xvid Revolution
Xvid emerged in early 2002 as an open-source competitor to DivX. It allowed users to compress full-length television episodes or movies down to microscopic file sizes (often targetting exactly 175MB, 350MB, or 700MB to fit cleanly onto standard CD-Rs) while maintaining relatively clear standard-definition quality.
In 2002, however, if a foreign viewer wanted to witness a controversial late-night television trend from Helsinki, peer-to-peer networks were their only bridge. Räsypokka remains a fascinating footnote in television history—a show that tested the limits of broadcast television right at the moment the internet began capturing everything permanently. Rasypokka Finland-TV-Strip Poker Nov.2002 Xvid -2.avi
Here is a blog post exploring the show's place in early 2000s media.
Pinpoints the exact month and year the content was recorded off the air. Video compression codec
For internet users who grew up in the era of streaming services like Netflix or YouTube, the string "Rasypokka Finland-TV-Strip Poker Nov.2002 Xvid -2.avi" looks like gibberish. However, in the year 2002, this was a highly standardized naming convention used by digital archiving and piracy communities (often referred to as "The Scene"). The participants played a standard game of poker,
: The content is from or pertains to November 2002.
The show launched the career of the host, Jaajo Linnonmaa. He landed the gig in 2002 through a chance opportunity when he stepped in to host a pilot episode, and it became his first major TV role. While Räsypokka remained a significant part of his public image for years, he later went on to become one of Finland's most beloved TV personalities, hosting a wide range of programs including the Finnish version of "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?"
The Audio Video Interleave container format, which was the standard file extension for desktop video playback in the early 2000s. The P2P Sharing Boom and Digital Archiving It allowed users to compress full-length television episodes
Geographical and medium tags used by international digital archivists to categorize the origin of rare or regional media broadcasts.
Instead of betting money, players wagered their clothing.
AVI (Audio Video Interleave) is a multimedia container format. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, it was one of the most common file formats for storing video and audio, especially for content shared online.
, who served as the dealer and presenter. Linnonmaa, then a young and relatively unknown host, became known for his "coarse" and "unabashed" commentary. This bold style eventually propelled him to become one of Finland's most successful radio and TV personalities. A Different Time for TV
The show’s concept was straightforward, provocative, and built specifically for late-night commercial television:
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