Just the first post - it gives you a history of the shift in magic.
Now this:
what about the magic world, was different back when you were starting as opposed to now?
- Magic was more secretive, there was a respectful process where information was given to you because you earned it through showing potential...not because you acquired the ability to rip DVD's. It was really frowned upon to even dup information for another...not because the artist lost out on it, but because sharing the secret made it less valuable to you.
I find magicians are quicker at gaining a large arsenal of moves - yet do very few well, and don't understand the theory behind performance and magic to know when to use what move, or why. There is an overall lack of understanding what makes good vs. bad magic. I think this goes back to the post I linked - technology made creators king, and performers took a back seat. This means, Magicians are more interested in the new move, then how it applies to their magic.
what about todays modern magic (and the modern young magician) world bothers you the most?
Young magicians don't seem to be impressed with magic. I think it is because everything is so easy to access. When I was a teenager, I would watch magic just to experience how audiences do, and do my best to forget about method. Younger magicians I have met, though teaching and camps, don't so expression as muchto effects. it was like they were told the truth about "magical things" and it scarred them for life.
I also think that because they acquire this knowledge so fast, they want to do more with it sooner - often before they are ready to perform. They switch from learning mode, to money mode very fast. Ask any pro, he will tell you; once you start working, it is hard to focus on learning more material, as you are focused on your show.
what solutions do you see to these problems?
Ask more questions - take your time - realize that magic is like many other things (Chess, music, art) you can study it's depths forever, and never truly reach the bottom. See magic through the eyes of someone that doesn't know about magic. Have fun. Don't overvalue reactions, as their is more to magic than just how people react. Never stop learning, thinking, growing. It is important you continue to progress, or you will fall out of love with magic. Years in magic doesn't always correspond with knowledge, just like number of tricks known doesn't make you a talented magician. If you want people to see the beauty in magic, you have to as well. This means, you have to treat it with beauty - learn, love, think...critically think about what you show people, and always improve on perfection.
These are my thoughts for now - write soon.
Oh, one more thing - I don't think it is young vs old - I see it as experienced versus new - my essay from that thread discusses the actual changes in the magic scene, but little has changed in the approach...just more magicians in numbers really.
Any questions?