Mark Smith wrote:The point I was making was that if Derren had done a traditional Out of this World card trick he wouldn't have got an award. He must have sat and thought for a while of how he could use the card techniques, without the preconception a deck has
Dan Harlan does a great effect called Photo Finish. A 'pack' of photos, each of which has been cut into fours, is used. Apparently without any significant involvement by the magician (only one choice is made, and it's made by a spec) two specs end up dealing not only four pieces that happen to make up a complete photo, but also the photo that (in some way) the magician had previously predicted they would. It's a laughably simple, laughably old trick, but the use of photos completely revitalises it. So much so that, when I saw it, I spent a good two hours laboriously cutting up pictures so I could do it myself.
I'm sure there are plenty of tricks you could do, impromptu, with a normal pile of photos. Perhaps to stave of suicide when friends come round with thirty thousand pictures of their holiday in Portugal. There are things you can do with beer mats too, and train tickets (esp. the small-sized ones, which DL easily).
Something that's just occurred to me, though, is the component of the 'performance' that's probably the most important - the audience. I vividly remember that I did a trick for my friend and her son (he's about eight). I'd dropped his jaw with some very basic coin stuff earlier in the day, so, when they were both there and were both eager to see a trick, I thought I'll pull out a real baffler and make his head explode. So, I did this impromptu thing with a pack of cards and a rubber band. At the revelation, his mother
screamed. Actually
screamed - and in the good way: not in the way I normally get, where women scream and then start to call the police. However, he just wrinkled his forehead and peered at us both, bemused. 'What? What happened? I don't get it.' Though not a complex trick at all, it simply wasn't right for him. That's a obvious example, of course - kids/adults - but I think it applies more broadly. There are some tricks that are better suited to one-on-one and some that are better suited to a group, don't you think? Also, I've noticed a male-female divide. Women tend to be more interested if you use talk of psychology and so forth - otherwise it's a dull, technical thing that doesn't really engage them, and is possibly a bit 'Tch - men,' too: like 'See how I make this card appear' is akin to 'Watch me do fifty press-ups'. Men (especially if you don't know them very well), on the other hand, are generally happy to see something baffling and curious, but don't want you implying that you can 'suggest' things to them or read their minds. I imagine it's a hierarchy thing: they can disinterestedly enjoy a trick, but baulk at any idea that you're 'mentally above them' or some such notion. I constantly have to remind myself that I'm doing stuff for 'lay people' too. That coin in soda can effect that has caused much discussion on this board would die in front of my friends, I just know it would. I'd do it, and they'd say, 'Yeah... But you simply [thing], didn't you?' The wonderful handling and invisible method and so on would be nothing to them. They'd merely realise, instantly, that it could only be done in one way, and that, unimpressively, would be that - the details of how it was done, would be irrelevant. As we haven't mentioned D Brown for a few sentences, it's worth bringing up that section in Pure Effect where he talks about redoing his cigarette-through-coin routine because everyone was dismissing it with a 'Nice... But, you know, obviously you did [thing].' And the cig-through-coin
doesn't use that thing to achieve the effect, in fact, but that doesn't matter. What matters is that everyone thought it did - obviously - and were therefore unimpressed because they'd 'worked it out'.
People, eh? Pesky things.