Bisonkid wrote:So DB buys his tricks "off the shelf"?
1) How many tricks you perform can you claim true original authorship of? For me the total is zero.
2) Do you credit the true inventors of each and every illusion you can do? I hope not - it would be ridiculous and contrary to the spirit of good magic as it reveals the conceit.
Amateurs slating Blaine etc on a magic chat site are a bit like football fans on the terraces shouting "instructions" to world class players.....
Every time you stand in a bar and perform a trick you can thank Blaine for helping reignite interest in impromtu magic - his pre-prep work in readying your audience for believing in off the cuff moments of mystery is helping you every time!
1: Yes, most of the effects I like to now perform are actually my own creations, with the obvious interjection of facilitating learned moves and sleights. Perhaps the fact that your repertoire includes only 'off the shelf' stuff is indicative of the fact that you are not a creative magician, and moreso simply a performer. (See note below about 'one man and his drum machine')
2: Yes, if I create an an effect, and sometimes even perform an effect, I will attribute the effect to it's author, e.g., when I perform a Laser Deal based effect, I will actually TELL my audience that "This is a baffling illusion performed by a Swedish Magician called Lennart Green". It not only gives the audience some insight into other lesser known non-mainstream magicians, but it also gives them a sense of my honesty and modesty.
People on chat forums don't slate Blaine. He's quite simply the magical equivalent of the guy who performs down your local pub on a Friday with a Drum Machine and a Sequencer Keyboard: Yeah, he's a performer, he may even sing well, but he can't replace the feeling you get from a full live band. It's the difference between passive performance and hands-on artistry. A creative magician will shine. However, sadly, most magicians do not write their own material, and the inventors/creative forces behind them are little known, maybe even totally anonymous.
The 'slating' Blaine on the most part is because most of us knew his tricks and illusions' methodology and execution even before he came on the scene. Ergo, a lot of the 'Blaine Bashing' comes from the green eyed monster, because why the heck didn't WE think of doing what he did... our bank balances would certainly have thanked us for it.
Blaine did not re-igninte anything, he merely captured a new, modern audience: Magic throughout the ages has been very much modal and faddish.
I certainly wouldn't say working pros have much to thank him for. Bar workers and restaurant workers now, I think, have a much more DIFFICULT time in using age old effects to baffle people, because the Blain-ism 'cult' has de-sensitised us all to magic—especially now that a lot of the 'secrets revealed' shows are airing.
I have several times seen an artist performing walkaround magic such as the revered and staple-diet of most walkaround cardies—the Ambitious Card routine—and heard the background chatter as "Oh, that's easy, it's just the one David Blaine does..." and such like.
Blaine has caused an eruption, yes. But as I have said before, the eruption has it's pros and its cons. On the good side, it has got magic a huge new audience. On the down side, it has de-sensitised and more often than not diluted the working professional magician's repertoire.
As stated: The Healed and Sealed effect, plus the Balducci Levitation, plus the Ambitious Card, plus most of the other "Blaine" effects are all actually tricks which have been in the repertoires of magicians for many years pre-Blaine.
He should not, and IS not credited with these effects as being his own.
And as I have said before, the camera trickery he uses to enhance his effects totally and utterly spit on the graves of his peers and mentors—as many of the effects he uses are very much purist, impromptu effects which were NEVER MEANT for television audiences.
By bringing such effects to the TV screen, he has given them the NEED to look glossier than they really are. Fakirism, street magic and close-up illusion should be left to real-world performance, in my opinion. There is no greater thrill than BEING THERE. The TV can, and does, in my opinion, facilitate the dilution and over-hyping of many great magic effects.
THAT is what we have to thank Blaine for.