Brown
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2001
- Messages
- 12,984
One of the tricks I've recently developed is a combination of about four different tricks. Basically, the performer makes a prediction, and shows the prediction to some spectators, but not to others. (For better measure, one of the spectators signs his name below the prediction.) The prediction is placed in the center of the table face down, and is not touched by anyone until the conclusion of the trick.
The performer then invites a spectator (or two or more spectators) to select, one at a time, a certain number of cards from anywhere from a shuffled deck that is spread out before him. The spectator is invited to shuffle the cards he selected, and to select a smaller number of cards from this group. This smaller number of cards is shuffled, and a single card is selected from this group.
The performer then recounts all that has happened up to this point, emphasizing that everything has been done with the free choice of the spectator, and that there was no way the performer could know what cards would be selected at each stage. The performer then reminds everyone that, before the first card was selected, he made a prediction that has been sitting in full view the whole time, and has not been touched. The question is... will the chosen card match the prediction?
When the chosen card is turned over, the spectators who saw the prediction early on might start to laugh or otherwise disclose that the prediction that they saw was incorrect. The performer invites one of them to turn over the prediction, and incredibly, the prediction is indeed correct! (Even though the prediction is different from the one they saw earlier, the spectator's signature is below the correct prediction.)
The result is a surprise for all of the spectators, some of whom see that a freely chosen card was accurately predicted. For the spectators who saw the prediction ahead of time, they are doubly surprised, because they thought the performer goofed in making his prediction.
I doubt that anyone other than someone very knowledgeable about card magic could figure out how this trick is done.
I will not reveal how this trick is done. I will say, however, that the trick does not always "work" as I've described. If the spectator inadvertently fouls up the trick, there are techniques for recovery in which I nevertheless find the predicted card, and these techniques are almost as baffling as what I've described.
The performer then invites a spectator (or two or more spectators) to select, one at a time, a certain number of cards from anywhere from a shuffled deck that is spread out before him. The spectator is invited to shuffle the cards he selected, and to select a smaller number of cards from this group. This smaller number of cards is shuffled, and a single card is selected from this group.
The performer then recounts all that has happened up to this point, emphasizing that everything has been done with the free choice of the spectator, and that there was no way the performer could know what cards would be selected at each stage. The performer then reminds everyone that, before the first card was selected, he made a prediction that has been sitting in full view the whole time, and has not been touched. The question is... will the chosen card match the prediction?
When the chosen card is turned over, the spectators who saw the prediction early on might start to laugh or otherwise disclose that the prediction that they saw was incorrect. The performer invites one of them to turn over the prediction, and incredibly, the prediction is indeed correct! (Even though the prediction is different from the one they saw earlier, the spectator's signature is below the correct prediction.)
The result is a surprise for all of the spectators, some of whom see that a freely chosen card was accurately predicted. For the spectators who saw the prediction ahead of time, they are doubly surprised, because they thought the performer goofed in making his prediction.
I doubt that anyone other than someone very knowledgeable about card magic could figure out how this trick is done.
I will not reveal how this trick is done. I will say, however, that the trick does not always "work" as I've described. If the spectator inadvertently fouls up the trick, there are techniques for recovery in which I nevertheless find the predicted card, and these techniques are almost as baffling as what I've described.