I really feel sorry for the seeming plethora of those hosting the defeatist attitude I'm seeing here... did anyone get the point I was trying to make earlier... how it is up to YOU to go outside the original script and even methods?
It's simply not that hard to do if you learn how to engage that grey ooze between your ears and make yourself practice magic... I don't mean the how to do an effect based on what the instructions said initially, but how to take that premise and shake it out and reconstruct it based on alternative resources, technology and skills... then again, having a good set of nads wont hurt either.
I'm all for protecting magic and its secrets, please don't think I'm being nonchalant on that point. I get exceptionally upset over hall easy it is for the average joe to get their hands on material that most really don't need any business with. It's all part of this instant gratification culture we live in and the lie that
"if I have the money to buy it, then I can do it..."
Trust me when I say that I've seen dozens of young little rich kids toss hundreds of thousands of dollars at a John Gaughan magic kit only to fall flat on their faces because they didn't know how to actually perform and be a "Magician".
... then again, that goes right back to what I pointed out earlier; how some of the worse exposure comes via half-wit "performers" who don't practice, don't rehearse properly, who refuse to accept constructive critique as well s direction, et al.
It really isn't that hard to find out the "basics" of magic. You will find books at the local library (that's one of those institutions we had long before the Internet) as well as on eBay, Amazon or Barnes & Nobel. My first "how to" books came from the traditional bookstores in the public shopping malls as well as ads set within comic books. Then too, in those long ago days, one would learn how to do tricks via Mark Wilson or any number of other Tv personalities of the time, via packages of Jiffy Pop Popcorn and any number of morning cereal boxes... most of this "exposure" being done by people bearing the names of Dunninger, Blackstone, Christopher and in latter years Henning and Copperfield.
For years there were "pitchbooks" sold to the children's performers such as
101 Tricks You Can Do, that were give-aways not to mention the catalysts that inspired many to take up magic as a hobby or more.
So when we weigh all of this I'd hope we could step back a few paces and recognize, as I've already pointed out, that exposure is here to stay and too, it's simply not that hard now days to get your hands on our secrets; just go to the U.S. Patent Office and you'll find all you need to know about the Copperfield Flying rig along with a myriad of other "exclusive" effects and it won't cost you a dime.
Are we going to give the U.S. Patent Offices the same hard time you want to give Wiki or YouTube?
What about the public library systems about the globe?
Would you go on the attack when someone like Copperfield or even Derren Brown signs a deal with some food product company, sharing a handful of simple mysteries... after all, I first learned the Center Tear from the back of a box of cereal in the late 1960s and found it as well as the Professor's Nightmare in the Boy Scout's Handbook as part of a merit badge study.
The bottom line is, where do we draw the line? When and where do we curb our paranoia and simply learn to
"accept the things we cannot change and have the courage (and tenacity) to change the things we can..."
and of course,
having the wisdom to know the difference 