Southwind17
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 6, 2007
- Messages
- 5,154
Certainly the case with Billy Connelly, for example. Brilliant stand up in his heyday, but has been regurgitating the same old now for the last 10 years - even when live. Shame.He's got the problem that many variety acts have these days once they make it "big" on TV, you need so much new material for every new show. You can't just keep recycling your old stuff.
I remember hearing an interview with a comedian touching on this, he was being asked why he didn't do as much TV these days and his response was along the lines of "One TV show uses up as much material as you need for 10 years of live shows."
Intersting thought. I certainly think there's something to Darren going all quiet on us.As far as DB stopping talking, why can't that just be so the production team kills all the on stage mics and feeds the sound from the TV pictures directly to the output so as to mask completely the sounds being made by whatever method was being used at the time to switch/mark the balls.
Sorry - I assume a lot! Good luck if you're on the look out. Otherwise, lucky bastard!Southwind:
what makes you think I *have* a day job![]()
Don't hold your breath - nobody will get a result.I wonder if anyone who has taken the supposed technique involving the groups of 24 as real will attempt it.
Then those who happen to get a result will be vocal and get reported , those who don't , won't figure in media reports very prominantly, if at all.
"I won using Derren's method!....etc etc"
Hey, come on man. I could make a rack in less than an hour that has just the right width so as not to allow the balls to move enough to be detected from a camera sitting around 5 metres away, but not so tight that the balls don't fit in properly. These guys planned for a year!Surely if the rack wasn't tight it would could have resulted in the balls moving laterally after being repalced by Brown's assistant? This would have shown up after the split screen was removed.
All the guy had to do was slot them in the tight rack evenly for the balls to match perfectly (a longer rack would have been much harder). Sadly it didn't quite work out like that.
Don't follow. Wouldn't a one-pixel movement show as a "jump" given a 50Hz refresh rate?Someone asked why the misplaced ball seems to "rise up". That's a result of a mix from the overlay back to the live feed. On-screen, the ball is only a pixel or two above where it was in the overlay, so it appears to rise slowly up.
Absolutely. Very sloppy, if you ask me, unless a tight tolerance is critical to the stunt!!!It could just be that they should have had just a little more tolerance in the width of the rack, and that those particular balls happened to add up to be slightly too wide for the rack.
How about this for an unneccessary complicated way of doing the trick? Balls made of, or painted with, some kind of photosensitive material that can be "printed" by laser from outside of frame. Doable?![]()
You kidding? A year's planning wouldn't overcome all of these "risks"?!Sure. Thermo-paper like coating, and a strong enough laser could do that. But there is a high risk in that. Having a laser around that is strong enough to do that over such a distance is strong enough to hurt a person badly. Some slight glitch in the controlling or the setup, the beam bounces of some reflective surface and hits someone. Or hits someone directly.
"Quite complicated" will suddenly become "quite brilliant" if DB shows the split screen to be false. Surely for magicians to continue to innovate the "complication" factor needs to increase.Another possible way would be to use e-ink "paper". Small digital radio receiver in the ball and outside on the ball a spot with such an electronic paper could do the job as well.
However, these are quite complicated ways to do it, and in addition the laser is risky. Split & freeze sounds far more easy.
This was definitely the piss on the fireworks for me. As soon as he uttered those "convenient" words I almost went back to observing cloud shapes.Usually, Derren has impressive tricks. This one was not. I wonder how many people actually believed his story about not being able to show the prediction before the lottery was drawn for legal reasons.
Does anybody have a view as to why the numbers on the balls are seemingly printed "mechanically", i.e. not very aesthetic, why they're all angled upwards slightly and not very neat? These last two aspects certainly seem to indicate a hasty human insertion (sorry, just came out like that!), supporting the split screen theory.