The4thCircle wrote:I find this a little confusing too... I'm learning magic, have been for about 6 months now and one or two of the things I've been practising are just about ready to start showing to the general public. That said I'm still polishing the patter, timing routines and presentation.
I've often wondered, if I could squeeze out a 10-20 minute set whether I could get a professional gig table hopping or something, but have no idea how I would go about getting into such work.
How can you have secured a gig before even learning any effects? How did you do it? There are skilled, polished, well presented magicians out there who simply cannot find work. Rather than asking us for tricks, you should be sharing your marketing secrets!
-Stacy
A good salesman can get a gig, magic or no magic, unfortunatly that has nothing to do with it. Which is why if you find a good promotor for yourself you will have a leg up.
The problem with getting yourself booked without any real knowledge of magic, or a routine or any of the other things you need to pull off something like that is not the first booking. It is the second that will be the problem. If you book a gig and have nothing to back your booking then you will not get a second.
Don't worry judging by the comments and question of the original poster (and that is all I have to judge by) is that he is not ready for a magic gig, unless sitting in the audience. And if he does get one, he won't get many more. Unless there is more to the story then he is letting on.