Those are all pretty long, but if you can get it down to a smaller list of which tricks you're most interested in, I can probably help you figure out where to learn much of what he's doing. I don't know the secret behind every effect he does, but I do know a lot of them.
Even if I show you where to find the information, though, you're still going to have to pay for methods and/or gimmicks for at least some of it. If the mods deem it necessary, they can edit this post and I can PM you the product information, but some of Blaine's tricks are actually sold here on T11. If we can't talk about where to buy particular tricks on a forum for a magic dealer that sells some of those tricks, this world is an even more confusing place than I thought.
Anyway, here are some sources that will help you learn magic that Blaine is known to use in his specials, starting with things I know to be available from T11:
Center Tear (Spidey has a version on T11 called "Shredder")
eXile
Invisible Deck
Commercial
Bite-off coin/folding coin
Cigarette Through Quarter
The Raven
Fraud
How to Do Street Magic
That's just a start. Aside from that, I fully recommend the sources Chris mentioned. Much of what Blaine does is actually just fundamental magic that he's dressed up for TV and filmed until he got crazy reactions, and those sources teach those fundamentals. In particular I recommend Royal Road and Mark Wilson's book
I also recommend that you take all the tricks you learn and make them your own. Feel free to learn some of Blaine's magic and to learn from his performances, but do your best to present your magic in your own way. If you come across as a carbon copy of another performer, people are less likely to appreciate your performance on its own.
PS: I understand that you guys are trying to make him a better performer by not spoon-feeding him, but showing him what ethical sources he can learn from isn't spoon-feeding. Many (if not most) of us get our start by imitating our favorite performers at least to some degree, and ALL of us get started by learning other people's tricks. The fact is that Blaine does his magic using tried principles and utilities that range from simple to advanced, and if that's what this person wants to start off learning, there's nothing wrong with that. It will give him a solid list of effects to start with, and many of them are effects he'll find in basic magic books that he should be buying anyway.