nowadays thanks to internet, you can get it any time, any place, anywhere...
Hi Dale...
Just out of interest, (and I know I have mentioned it over on the "other place" occasionally...), this also goes for a billion other subjects, so does that mean that everything is cheapened and devalued?
There are "secrets" in good cooking, good golf, in fact,
every interest group thinks it is special and has "secrets".
New technology has a place, and we have to adapt to it. The "book generation" and the "DVD/YouTube generation" are living together at the moment, and it is an uneasy existence. I have some amazing books, but I never "got" colour-changing knife routines (or found them interesting) until (as an example) I bought the Joe Mogar DVD and saw it in that format.
Very often, the "
...internet is killing magic" brigade are pi55ed off because, as Allen Tipton says so eloquently in his post, they are forgetting that personality and performance techniques are what builds the "tricks" into entertainment that people are willing to pay for, repeatedly if possible.
I have seen good magicians, and bad ones, (and also seen many bad ones that think they are good, but that is a separate thread...).
Stop worrying about the availability, it is there to stay. What can
YOU do to keep ahead of the game, and improve
YOUR game?
What did
YOU actually
DO in terms of
YOUR performance technique to reduce the impact of this (perceived?) issue
TODAY?
We can all sit around debating this issue, or we can all just do something about it by addressing our own approach. Too many magicians seem to find personal change too far outside their comfort zone, and just prefer to winge about the internet instead.
If magicians only put as much effort into answering that question the cr4p ones would dissappear off the scene anyway.
Just my 2p worth.
Bruce