by Rufio » Sep 10th, '11, 19:56
Outlandish lies are particularly great for, as Penn is said to have highlighted in Sleights Of Mind, sucker tricks, in which a bogus explanation apparently curries favour with the spectator, who feel as if they have been let in for an effect, only for the second repeat to blow that out of the water. There is a similar effect by Greg Wilson somewhere where he exposes the idea of palming by showing how, raised up at a certain angle, you can see the palmed card, and how if you lower it down, it is less of an issue (also saw the bar guy at Manchester Illusions Bar use this in patter), again for a surprise finish to follow.
Most magicians, myself included, feel as if (occasionally) downloading a torrent or working out an effect through calculated guesses feel immoral, but would happily spend close to a hundred pounds on a gimmick that probably cost a few pounds to make, and whilst such magi would not entertain exposure to the lay public, amongst themselves candidly discuss sleights or secretly consider asking a magi friend outright how the secret works. I guess the same situation applies in magic shops. Like illegal downloads, piracy and sales of CDs, sometimes the collector and hoarder facet to our magic bug is to say that X Effect deserves to be in our physical collection, in the same way X CD is an essential part of one's music collection.
Slight tangent, but some effects in replicated form do not work as well as the original marketed effect. Take Jim Pace's The Web, for instance: I knew how it worked as a friend showed me, and whilst it would be very easy to source the necessary items as opposed to purchasing the effect (which can be satisfying in itself, like cracking a puzzle), I'm sure many here feel that the original materials use make the effect superior. Having said this, there is a certain DIY approach to purchased effects that involve ultra expensive "official" refills, or alternatively sourced materials. Morally, I'd be thinking that as I had spent a lot on the effect, it is acceptable to find my own alternatives to refills. This includes gimmicks that break or are lost: it would seem equally immoral to expect magis to simply purchase the effect again where they would be disregarding the DVD and instructions, but simply paying for the gimmick. Unfortunately, magic creators would be unable to benefit if they sold the effect at a cheaper price minus instructions, but for just the gimmick alone, as those who lack the moral obligation to purchase the original effect, but simply torrent or youtube the secret will realistically miss out on the magic creator's original intentions: that the paying customer takes onboard the nuances and respect of his effect to the full.
Admittedly, what I have said above is hypocritical as whilst I do purchase a lot of original effects, I admit I have downloaded torrents of magic previously....
But here's the rub, the paradox. Had I not downloaded those (in retrospect naff) Ellusionist torrents, I wouldn't have developed my fascination and interest in magic. Using what I downloaded as a springboard to some hefty expensive purchases, I feel that I would not have been so addicted within a short space of time. Therefore, ironically, it is exposure that creates interest, as if magic really was a cloak-and-dagger-secrets-based community, newbies would find it offputting to spend £100s on a DVD that may well spark their interest.
Just two cents' worth.