by Tom Lauten » Feb 19th, '06, 01:42
Bill Abbott’s Mind Control
Available from most magic retailers
Price: £13.99 (GBP) / $19.95 (USD)
Mentalism
Difficulty: 1 out of 5 You will need to learn a few steps but all the work has been done for you.
They say:
Imagine. You place three objects in a row on a table. A set of keys, a credit card, and a watch. You hand a willing participant a pen and ask them to touch the object they seem most drawn to. The participant makes an absolutely free choice of any object, They can even change their mind! You then reveal an indelible prediction left in full view from the very beginning that reveals their chosen object!
Mind Control is totally free choice! No forcing involved.
Guaranteed that you will always be correct!
Easy and convenient to carry with you everywhere
Performed with common objects supplied by you and your audience
Self contained and performable anytime, anywhere, and without a moments notice.
A prediction that is in full view of the audience from the beginning
Complete with everything you need to perform
So Easy to learn you will be performing it almost as soon as you open the package
The mind control method is so fiendishly diabolical that it can work in the very hands of an audience member. IN fact, you can even be standing at the other side of the room when the choices are made and at no time during the selection process so you ever need to touch the objects. Mind Control can be presented as a stunning demonstration of linguistics, psychology, and neurology to convince anyone you actually possess the power to control their minds!
Also included is Bill Abbott's Advanced Routine where the number of objects is increased to seven making the predicted outcome decidedly more impossible
I say:
Ok, ok…I know, but bless them, they’re excited!
Some people think this effect is too basic, to easy to work out or generally obvious. That may be true, for us anyway, but why would you base a judgement of a trick on performances for yourself or other performers?
I have presented this trick and had “lay people” totally stunned. “How could you have known what I would choose?! That‘s really weird, that‘s not ‘right‘.” They often jump to the simplest conclusion and in the process of investigating it, instantly prove themselves wrong…they themselves often provide a powerful, logical and (to my amazement) built in “convincer“! Sweeeeet!
It does “what it says on the tin“. With any trick (and dogs), if you go in unsure, scared or doubting they will smell your fear and you could be in trouble. That isn’t to say that Mind Control take nerves of steel, quite the opposite in fact. It’s kind of made to work by default and you can relax.
The ad doesn’t quite tell the truth, you do get most things you need but you don’t get a credit card or a watch…that would be too good a deal!!! The props you do get are very nice indeed, well made and simple. The instructions and routines are simple and direct with plenty of room for your own variables. My routine uses a drivers licence instead of a credit card and I handle the use of the pen differently…no biggie.
The effect plays out as it reads. The spectator does have a genuinely free choice and can change their mind up until the last second. There are no moves, sleights, formulas or “special things” you need to do. In fact a calm and friendly bearing helps the effect hit even harder.
The methodology is nothing new, I have had tricks like this one in a variety of forms, but Mind Control has a clean-ness to it that is refreshing. I don’t need to point out that it is often the simplest effects of techniques that yield the biggest spectator impact, we know that is true and has been cited so many times before.
You won’t be buying any ground-breaking methodology or high-tech gadgetry, you will be buying (at a very fair price) a clever variation of a time honoured methodology married with well made props and a refreshingly subtle approach.
Overall:
I really rate Mind Control…in fact I ALWAYS have it on me as the props are subtle enough to never be casually noticed, everyday enough not to garner suspicion if you did suggest “trying a little experiment” and cleverly integrated into a routine that has genuine impact.
Rating out of 10: 9/10