Mike,
Both videos were great examples for our current TDA rule. I have always contended that the rule was perfect for an all-in situation for head-to-head. The multi-player videos made it more interesting and easy to understand. I guess I am looking for language that would support every all-in situation; multi-player activity, with players contending for side pots right to the river. In these situations I instruct the dealers to ask the all-in player, or players, to kindly not table their cards until the pot they are contesting is being decided. Training dealers is my concern and this is a very important topic that I discuss with student dealers on a regular basis.
My thoughts: I would enforce the rule whenever there was an all-in situation with more cards to be dealt, and no further betting possible. I would not burn and turn until the all-in player's showed their hands. If a player refused to turn their hand, because of some superstition or something to that affect, I would insist that the cards must be tabled before the deal could be completed. This is our tournament rule.
The concerns that I have with the videos are:
Player's have released their cards. I realize this makes for good television coverage and it gets spectators more involved.
In one of the videos, the players pushed their stacks forward and the separation of pots was not decided until all board cards were placed on the table.
Both situations were easy to resolve and didn't seem to cause any real problem. The hands that I'm concerned with are the ones when a player goes all-in pre-flop and action continues with multiple player's. There are too many times when mistakes are made at the showdown if the all-in player tables his hand at the same time as the side-pot player's. We had a situation on the forum a while ago that was created by this exact situation. The side-pot player's (both of them), mucked their hands when they saw a hand that had them beat. The bad part was, the better hand belonged to the all-in player who was not contesting the side-pot! Both player's mucked (that's another story) and the floor was called to decide how to award the side-pots.
I realize that tournament poker is much different from cash games because of all players having an interest. Cash game player's (that are all-in) usually just muck their hands at the showdown when they see a side-pot player's hand that has them beat. They don't have to show. This I understand.
When I teach dealers, I always tell them; whenever we are at the showdown, with a side pot, do not allow the all-in player to show his hand when the side pot is being decided. It can only cause problems.
Side pots should always be decided before the main pot. I just don't see that issue being covered by our current rule. I sure don't see it as "cut and dry" that's for damn sure

I believe that there must still be a specified order for showdown, whether player's are all-in or not, and I'd like to see a simple addition to our all-in rule that could better suit every all-in showdown.
Thanks for all your time, Mike. It's nice to know that you're there.