by Sexton Blake » Sep 27th, '06, 17:58
I really hate the D/L. This isn’t because - though I picked up the pass instantly, effortlessly and, I have to say, pretty darn well, after seeing a single glimpse of the cards moving that way in a magician’s hands - I find it rather difficult. (In fact, scratch the ‘me’: I think is is difficult. It always irks me when some magician explaining a trick says, ‘Now, simply do a D/L...’) It also isn’t because, as is frequently said, it’s a vastly over-used sleight. It’s because it’s innately bad. It’s a sleight that, at the very least, even in the best hands, always looks odd (i.e. ‘suspicious’). As someone who knows about magic, there are all sorts of sleights that, in the hands of a true expert, will still get past you: yet you will always say, ‘He did a D/L there.’ Because a D/L always looks like one. Much more importantly, I recall watching TV magicians as a small child - four or five years old - and even then (though I didn’t know what they were doing) I would think, ‘He’s doing something fishy Right There,’ when they did a D/L. And I think it was Harry Lorayne who said that, if people see you’ve done something, even if they don’t see exactly what, they you haven’t really fooled them.
Hand a complete lay person a deck of cards and tell them to look at the top one. If the movement of your D/L doesn’t exactly match that - and I’ve never seen one that does - then it looks suspicious. Lay people can (more easily) accept weird/rapid shuffles (that may contain sleights) because it’s unfamiliar territory for them, so they have no benchmark for what’s odd-looking or not. Everyone, even the youngest child, will have looked at the top card of a deck. Often. They are perfectly, instinctively, aware of what’s natural, and natural the D/L never is.
What’s more, once you see that ‘something’ is odd (and you’re older than five), it doesn’t take long to figure out what it is where the D/L is concerned.
The other sleight I’d like to bark at is the double undercut. As that four-year-old child, that also signalled to me that something was happening. I’d never seen anyone except a magician do a double undercut. Decades later, I still haven’t. Many magicians compound the problem by doing it tremendously quickly too, which just makes it look even more fishy. And, though there are many tricks that absolutely require a D/L, I can’t think of anything that needs a double undercut - the same result can be achieved in lots of ways. So, there’s no reason not to show it the door completely.
Anyway, back to the D/L. Basically, for discussion, I’m proposing the idea that the D/L - rather than being seen as a classic, standard, essential workhorse - be regarded as a reluctant last resort. That, though it’s sometimes a necessary evil if a really great trick is to be done, it’s seen the same way as, ‘Now, I will just put the cards behind my back for a moment...’
What does everyone else think?