You can find parts 1-3 around here somewhere, just search. Part 3 will be very helpful for you to understand this part.
The Art of Impossibility, pt. 4
When we as humans see anything we don’t understand, we immediately begin to look for explanations. We try to settle our minds as to the cause of the unexplained before we come to an unsettling conclusion. For instance, picture a dark, clear night. You gaze skyward to the stars and you see a light. Your brain, as soon as it recognizes the light as something other than a star, something foreign, something unexplained, immediately begins to search out an answer. Like a well-oiled machine, your brain automatically gives itself a list of common ideas to consider. Fireworks, a plane, a satellite, a shooting star, a planet, etc. One by one, as quickly as possible, your brain crosses each possibility out as it finds evidence against each certain conclusion. The light remained in the sky longer than a moment; it’s not a firework or a shooting star. It is very bright, it’s not a satellite. It is moving, it’s not a planet. The light is fiery red, it can’t be a plane. Once all normal and logical ideas have been eliminated, your brain will stop and forget the incident all together, or it will begin to ponder the less normal, more unsettling options. A UFO? A Spirit? Though you may refuse to believe it, your brain arrives at simple conclusion that puts a knot in your stomach and will be long engraved in your thoughts.
The way we manipulate a spectator into believing that an illusion is much more than an illusion is by discovering all possible explanations that may be reached by a spectator and one by one eliminating them by simple psychological subtleties. If we want our spectators to believe that our hands are empty, we need to act, very boldly but very casually, like our hands are empty. The way we hold our hands, the way we gesture with them, the way we look at them, and the way manipulate other objects with them must be completely natural, just as if they were, in reality, completely empty. This is the easy part. The hard part is dissecting a trick so thoroughly from a spectator’s point of view that we can cover every possible explanation of the feat we wish to perform. We need to be able to take ourselves out of our magician’s point of view and see things from the points of view of all kinds of spectators. We need to know what a person who has never seen a magic trick will think when they see our illusion. We need to know what a very magic-curious person will think. We need to know what a person who has dabbled around with sleight of hand will think. The same goes for the YouTube magician, the professional magician, the psychologist, the teacher, the actor, and every other kind of spectator there is. We need to know what will distract each kind of spectator so efficiently that they will not recognize being distracted as we perform a certain sleight. We need to know the patter and style of acting that will be convincing to our spectators. In short, we need to KNOW our illusions. We need to understand the workings of our art. As we come to be extremely familiar with the illusions we use and how to make them truly impossible, we no longer do magic tricks, we perform miracles.
We have discussed in depth in previous articles the process of short-circuiting an individual thought process of a spectator, however rarely will there be an illusion that requires a simple, one track application of this process. Most illusions will require multiple sleights, subtleties and distractions, which may render the application of the short circuiting process infinitely more complicated then the simplest situations we have discussed. The larger, more complicated illusions will require a thorough understanding of all the sleights, subtleties, and distractions contained in the illusion and the general thought processes arrived at by a general audience viewing your performance.
We will look at an ACR, or Ambitious Card Routine, for a simple study. We will be taking the moves and sleights we use, trying to discover what a spectator will be thinking, and working out a way to short circuit these thoughts.
Marlo Tilt
A card is selected from the deck and signed. While the spectator is distracted, the deck is prepared for a two-card Marlo Tilt. The card is inserted into the “middle” of the deck. In a quick series of events, the top card is turned over, apparently the signed selection, then re-inserted into the deck, only to rise to the top once more. This is repeated again. Twice the card is inserted into the deck, and twice it comes to the top.
The spectator watched you insert the card first into the deck. It looks like the middle of the deck from the front, and they are shocked and thrown off balance when it ends up on top. They begin to watch closer. The card is turned over and re-inserted into the deck. With no funny movements it is on top again. What? How? The exact same movement takes place. With no effort, the card is turned over to reveal, once again, the signed selection.
What is the spectator thinking? First time they didn’t know what was happening. They had no ground to stand on. They immediately begin to try to come up with a method in their own mind, but have to see things again to finish the trick in their imagination. They clearly see the next two cards inserted into the front of the deck and pushed in. This changes how they think about your trick. By the time the three rapid rises have occurred, they begin to take the idea that you are somehow fooling them by not putting their card into the center. They are planning on watching their card very closely to ensure that it goes in the deck. Time to short circuit their thoughts. While their mind is still in the process of creating a strategy to catch your sleight, you must do something that counteracts their idea before they can finish it.
Several strategies exist, but my personal choice is the LePaul Spread Pass.
The LePaul Spread Pass
This is not a series of rises, but a single one. The spectator is looking for evidence that the signed card is not going into the deck, but rather staying on top. You spread the cards between your hands. Breaking the spread in half, you put the signed card on top of the squared deck in your left hand, face up. The selection is clearly flipped over and then lost as the spread is squared on top of the rest of the deck. The top card is turned over to reveal the selection.
The spectator is once again caught off guard. Firstly, the performer is changing the routine. Secondly, the spectator clearly sees the signed card enter the middle of the deck. The same result occurred. What you as a performer just accomplished was to shoot out of the sky the possibility that you are using a “dummy” card and the real card is indeed entering the deck each time. The spectator comes to this conclusion “on their own.” In reality, you spoon fed them this suggestion.
Next, the spectator knows that their card went into the deck. They are looking for an explanation of how their card traveled from the center of the deck to the top. What better way to mislead them than with a false explanation of a true idea?
The Art of Impossibility, pt. 4
When we as humans see anything we don’t understand, we immediately begin to look for explanations. We try to settle our minds as to the cause of the unexplained before we come to an unsettling conclusion. For instance, picture a dark, clear night. You gaze skyward to the stars and you see a light. Your brain, as soon as it recognizes the light as something other than a star, something foreign, something unexplained, immediately begins to search out an answer. Like a well-oiled machine, your brain automatically gives itself a list of common ideas to consider. Fireworks, a plane, a satellite, a shooting star, a planet, etc. One by one, as quickly as possible, your brain crosses each possibility out as it finds evidence against each certain conclusion. The light remained in the sky longer than a moment; it’s not a firework or a shooting star. It is very bright, it’s not a satellite. It is moving, it’s not a planet. The light is fiery red, it can’t be a plane. Once all normal and logical ideas have been eliminated, your brain will stop and forget the incident all together, or it will begin to ponder the less normal, more unsettling options. A UFO? A Spirit? Though you may refuse to believe it, your brain arrives at simple conclusion that puts a knot in your stomach and will be long engraved in your thoughts.
The way we manipulate a spectator into believing that an illusion is much more than an illusion is by discovering all possible explanations that may be reached by a spectator and one by one eliminating them by simple psychological subtleties. If we want our spectators to believe that our hands are empty, we need to act, very boldly but very casually, like our hands are empty. The way we hold our hands, the way we gesture with them, the way we look at them, and the way manipulate other objects with them must be completely natural, just as if they were, in reality, completely empty. This is the easy part. The hard part is dissecting a trick so thoroughly from a spectator’s point of view that we can cover every possible explanation of the feat we wish to perform. We need to be able to take ourselves out of our magician’s point of view and see things from the points of view of all kinds of spectators. We need to know what a person who has never seen a magic trick will think when they see our illusion. We need to know what a very magic-curious person will think. We need to know what a person who has dabbled around with sleight of hand will think. The same goes for the YouTube magician, the professional magician, the psychologist, the teacher, the actor, and every other kind of spectator there is. We need to know what will distract each kind of spectator so efficiently that they will not recognize being distracted as we perform a certain sleight. We need to know the patter and style of acting that will be convincing to our spectators. In short, we need to KNOW our illusions. We need to understand the workings of our art. As we come to be extremely familiar with the illusions we use and how to make them truly impossible, we no longer do magic tricks, we perform miracles.
We have discussed in depth in previous articles the process of short-circuiting an individual thought process of a spectator, however rarely will there be an illusion that requires a simple, one track application of this process. Most illusions will require multiple sleights, subtleties and distractions, which may render the application of the short circuiting process infinitely more complicated then the simplest situations we have discussed. The larger, more complicated illusions will require a thorough understanding of all the sleights, subtleties, and distractions contained in the illusion and the general thought processes arrived at by a general audience viewing your performance.
We will look at an ACR, or Ambitious Card Routine, for a simple study. We will be taking the moves and sleights we use, trying to discover what a spectator will be thinking, and working out a way to short circuit these thoughts.
Marlo Tilt
A card is selected from the deck and signed. While the spectator is distracted, the deck is prepared for a two-card Marlo Tilt. The card is inserted into the “middle” of the deck. In a quick series of events, the top card is turned over, apparently the signed selection, then re-inserted into the deck, only to rise to the top once more. This is repeated again. Twice the card is inserted into the deck, and twice it comes to the top.
The spectator watched you insert the card first into the deck. It looks like the middle of the deck from the front, and they are shocked and thrown off balance when it ends up on top. They begin to watch closer. The card is turned over and re-inserted into the deck. With no funny movements it is on top again. What? How? The exact same movement takes place. With no effort, the card is turned over to reveal, once again, the signed selection.
What is the spectator thinking? First time they didn’t know what was happening. They had no ground to stand on. They immediately begin to try to come up with a method in their own mind, but have to see things again to finish the trick in their imagination. They clearly see the next two cards inserted into the front of the deck and pushed in. This changes how they think about your trick. By the time the three rapid rises have occurred, they begin to take the idea that you are somehow fooling them by not putting their card into the center. They are planning on watching their card very closely to ensure that it goes in the deck. Time to short circuit their thoughts. While their mind is still in the process of creating a strategy to catch your sleight, you must do something that counteracts their idea before they can finish it.
Several strategies exist, but my personal choice is the LePaul Spread Pass.
The LePaul Spread Pass
This is not a series of rises, but a single one. The spectator is looking for evidence that the signed card is not going into the deck, but rather staying on top. You spread the cards between your hands. Breaking the spread in half, you put the signed card on top of the squared deck in your left hand, face up. The selection is clearly flipped over and then lost as the spread is squared on top of the rest of the deck. The top card is turned over to reveal the selection.
The spectator is once again caught off guard. Firstly, the performer is changing the routine. Secondly, the spectator clearly sees the signed card enter the middle of the deck. The same result occurred. What you as a performer just accomplished was to shoot out of the sky the possibility that you are using a “dummy” card and the real card is indeed entering the deck each time. The spectator comes to this conclusion “on their own.” In reality, you spoon fed them this suggestion.
Next, the spectator knows that their card went into the deck. They are looking for an explanation of how their card traveled from the center of the deck to the top. What better way to mislead them than with a false explanation of a true idea?