nickj wrote:Are you sure about that? His version of OOTW is very clever and is certainly how that dead or alive was achieved.
No, I'm not 100 per cent sure. However, when I think about how OOTW works I can't imagine that it's the same effect. You have someone deal two sets of cards/whatever into two piles and the trick works because they can't see the faces of those cards until you reveal them.
In the DB D&A trick to which I think we both refer, the photos (equivalent of playing card backs) were all visible while the 'Dead' and 'Alive' labels (the 'faces' of the cards - black or red) were not.
I don't want to describe how the classic effect works, but remember that the point is that the participant sees unmemorable cards and is then shown that they have been dealt in a meaningful way.
In the DB version, the participant will remember the faces in the photos, while he would not remember the backs of the playing cards as they all look the same. The participant is even asked to explain why he chose certain photos, and there are only a few photos to begin with, so this is quite a different effect in my genuinely humble opinion.
In short: OOTW involves dealing unknown cards into two miraculously sorted piles. DB's D&A effect involves dealing known cards into two miraculously sorted piles. Do I know how it works? No. But I'm fairly confident that it's not OOTW, if for no other reason that the fine gentleman in question hints that it is

(And the idea that it is the same makes no sense to me.)
Furthermore, to labour the point, he does a very nice version of OOTW that cuts out the usual step where you have to stop and restart the dealing. Even this quite sophisticated twist does not help with the undertaker D&A effect. But, of course, I could be wrong. Which is why this whole thing is so much fun.