Before I continue...I have to first be sure. In that clip, do you recognize my point?
Your clip doesn't work for me so I can't comment directly - that's why I asked "Why shouldn't he explicitly lie about a trick and how he did it?"
Of course it's entertaining which is fine,
We agree on this.
and of course he used a magician's effect.
And we agree on this.
The problem is that he went out of his way to mislead the person and give them a false picture of reality after the fact.
...snip...
"After the fact" but in the same TV series, and in the show he states right at the start he was going to trick you. (As if we needed a reminder!) In other word within the context of his performance, his stage persona.
Especially using something that is on the fringes of science and can easily be mistaken for the real explanation.
...snip...
That's part of his performance, it is all about trying to mislead you from spotting his tricks like all magicians do. It's nothing more or less than a magician that tells you he did it with mirrors or that the effect will happen when he waves his wand. Paul Daniels (another well known UK magician) used to do something quite similar in part of his Saturday prime-time TV show in something called something like "Carnival corner" - he would show you how a carnival trickster used to trick people, but in fact his explanations were not always 100% accurate....
Before I continue, do you understand this above point that I am trying to make by posting and quoting that video?
As I said I can't see it so it may be I am missing your point.