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Klangster1971 wrote:Barefoot Boy wrote:In impromptu situations I KILL with the Centre Tear!
I'm still conflicted about the Centre Tear - It just seems too obvious. Why would you get somebody to write something down only to then tear it up? I can see the justification in getting someone to write something down "so you don't change your mind or forget it" but then I have never seen the justification in tearing it up.
I'd love to hear some ideas on it because I fear I'm missing a huge swathe of opportunites by not using the technique (although the Stealth Assassin Wallet is on me at all times, which provides a suitable alternative!)
cheers,
Sean
Beardy wrote:e people. They write it down to show everybody else 'so I don't hear them whispering' which is also a good guise of getting them to write it clearly
Klangster1971 wrote:Barefoot Boy wrote:In impromptu situations I KILL with the Centre Tear!
I'm still conflicted about the Centre Tear - It just seems too obvious.
themagicwand wrote:Beardy wrote:e people. They write it down to show everybody else 'so I don't hear them whispering' which is also a good guise of getting them to write it clearly
Brilliant thinking Chris! That would also justify the tearing up - "So I can't sneakily peak at what you've written down!"
themagicwand wrote:Master cold reading and you don't need owt else.
Relish wrote:What about Sensory Perception? I still haven't had the courage to perform that yet but I've heard it kills.
Magick wrote:It has got to be Equivoque/Magicians choice for me. It always goes down well.
Robbie wrote:Magick wrote:It has got to be Equivoque/Magicians choice for me. It always goes down well.
I love Docc Hilford's "streamlined" equivoque technique. It can be done anywhere, any time, with whatever comes to hand, and it works equally well as a straight prediction of the future, a sort of mind/personality reading, or an application of subliminal influence -- however you want to handle it.
Hilford says he likes to ask the spectator to select and gather up the objects himself, anything from 5 or 6 to maybe 20 or so items, and lay them out. This provides an extra flourish: "you chose the things yourself, they're not my things, you arranged them yourself, I never even touched them". It also gives him time to write the prediction while the spectator is still fetching items, which can become a memory of the prediction being written even before the stuff was selected.
themagicwand wrote:Stephen Ward wrote:
Palm reading!
He really can read minds!!! But cold reading in general actually. Hugely under-used by both magicians and mentalists. Master cold reading and you don't need owt else. Honest. It is mentalism in its purest form - just ask Corinda.
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