What's up guys,
I just wanted to write a bit about something I've been thinking about, and hopefully we can get a good discussion out of it
.
My point here is going to be simple. When watching a performance, Magicians are both the best and the worst audience at the same time. How is this possible? It's all about how we differ from the average layman. Note: Here, I'm talking about a legitimate performance, not a YouTube video where you have people trying to expose the magician in the comments and seeing who gets it right. A legitimate performance.
First of all, we are the best audience because we love what we see. We differ from laymen in this because we all have a higher passion for magic. After all, the reason we started practicing is because we had that drive to start learning the actual magic. We crossed that line because we really wanted to learn what goes on behind the actual trick. And for that reason, we began to eventually appreciate performances even more. When we see a performance, we immediately try and soak it in because we still have that same drive within us, not to figure out how it's done, but rather to know this new concept that we are seeing.
At the same time, there is a downside. Because we practice and have such a drive to learn, we don't watch like a normal layman. Yes, we can try our best to sit back and just enjoy the performance, which a lot of us do. I personally think it's messed up if we're trying to catch the performer. But at the same time, we end up noticing things that change the way the performer has to perform if he's performing for magicians. We notice things that are unneeded, like if a performer stands a specific way, or does specific moves. For this reason, the performance changes for the performer. If the patter isn't amazing, it is sometimes ignored. Other times, they can't do some things that they would do normally. And this is only the magicians that try and actually watch the performance. A lot of magicians watch a performance just to decrypt it (something that really annoys me).
Now this isn't necessarily a bad thing. The performer can make the show entertaining for both laymen and magicians, though it requires a lot of work. Take a look at P & T and you can see how they do one thing to for the audience whilst simultaneously adding things to mess with magicians and entertain both.
So while magicians will watch a performance with awe and truly enjoy it, the performer changes the way he does things, sometimes inadvertently to try and make the performance perfect. For this reason, magicians are (imo) the best audience that we can be, but to a performer, they can also be the worst spectators to perform for,
And yes, there are sooo many exceptions to this, but for the most part, this is how I feel. How about you guys? I'd love to know what you think.
I just wanted to write a bit about something I've been thinking about, and hopefully we can get a good discussion out of it
My point here is going to be simple. When watching a performance, Magicians are both the best and the worst audience at the same time. How is this possible? It's all about how we differ from the average layman. Note: Here, I'm talking about a legitimate performance, not a YouTube video where you have people trying to expose the magician in the comments and seeing who gets it right. A legitimate performance.
First of all, we are the best audience because we love what we see. We differ from laymen in this because we all have a higher passion for magic. After all, the reason we started practicing is because we had that drive to start learning the actual magic. We crossed that line because we really wanted to learn what goes on behind the actual trick. And for that reason, we began to eventually appreciate performances even more. When we see a performance, we immediately try and soak it in because we still have that same drive within us, not to figure out how it's done, but rather to know this new concept that we are seeing.
At the same time, there is a downside. Because we practice and have such a drive to learn, we don't watch like a normal layman. Yes, we can try our best to sit back and just enjoy the performance, which a lot of us do. I personally think it's messed up if we're trying to catch the performer. But at the same time, we end up noticing things that change the way the performer has to perform if he's performing for magicians. We notice things that are unneeded, like if a performer stands a specific way, or does specific moves. For this reason, the performance changes for the performer. If the patter isn't amazing, it is sometimes ignored. Other times, they can't do some things that they would do normally. And this is only the magicians that try and actually watch the performance. A lot of magicians watch a performance just to decrypt it (something that really annoys me).
Now this isn't necessarily a bad thing. The performer can make the show entertaining for both laymen and magicians, though it requires a lot of work. Take a look at P & T and you can see how they do one thing to for the audience whilst simultaneously adding things to mess with magicians and entertain both.
So while magicians will watch a performance with awe and truly enjoy it, the performer changes the way he does things, sometimes inadvertently to try and make the performance perfect. For this reason, magicians are (imo) the best audience that we can be, but to a performer, they can also be the worst spectators to perform for,
And yes, there are sooo many exceptions to this, but for the most part, this is how I feel. How about you guys? I'd love to know what you think.