michaelgap1 wrote:Today we face an audience, that knows, has seen and can perform some really basic tricks. They are aware of the overused D/L and are suspicious about every deck we pull out. Because they know a trick or two they think they are on the same or higher level as you are and become arrogant. Many times after a routine someone says they know an even better trick and do some stupid key card trick without any talking or presentation.
People like this make me mad and I don't think magicians before us had to deal with so many ignorants.
But how many people actually do know about the D/L or any other sleight? I think we over worry about what people know and under estimate how much people want to be entertained.
I am a relative newcomer to magic and have a fairly limitted repertoire. I stood up at a dinner party on New Years Eve in front of 8 people (plus my wife who is my greatest critic) and performed for about 20 minutes. It was almost all card magic plus I used Coin Unique and Sankeys Holy Smoly to cover deck switches. The only time I was rumbled was when I performed an under rehearsed prediction effect using one ahead with a card force. And then it was quietly rumbled by one lady who told me afterwards that she knew how I did it because she had seen it done before and the performer had told her the secret.
TV programmes that reveal secrets, web sites that blatantly steal and reveal are actually not very well subscribed to and the chance that someone will have seen something that reveals method is small and still doesn't really spoil the effect in many cases because whilst they may know about a D/L they still can't see it happen if you do it properly. I have done tricks at a magic club where fellow magicians have known that I must have used a D/L, but they didn't see it actually happen because I practice a lot (obsessively actually).
10% of magic is done in the magicians hand and 90% is done in the spectators mind. They all know it is a trick. They all know that we have used a sleight or a gimmick. In most cases they don't care, they like to see a trick being performed well, they like to be tricked. They don't actually believe in magic (unless you are performing for young children which is a delight and privelege)
I firmly believe that we as magicians are becoming over concerned about the effects of tricks being revealed. It is a bore, it is bad behaviour when it is done. But relatively few people actually bother with it and even fewer will have the incredible bad manners to spoil a performance by making a public revelations. As I said, the lady who spotted my one ahead on New Years Eve only told me she knew about it afterwards, privately.
As to the instant fix magic junkies who have watched a TV programme or two, they won't last the course, they won't be interested in magic in a couple of years time. The potential audience out there who want to be entertained by a magician is still enormous.
As far as the television programmes are concerned, they will disappear overnight. A few years ago we couldn't turn the TV on without falling over gardening, make over or cooking programmes. All gone now! So will the fashion for debunking magic disappear and once it doesthe D/L, the TT and any other gimmick or sleight which has been revealed will be forgotten by the viewer who has moved on to celebrity self harm or whatever sick programme idea the TV companies come up with next.