So maybe that last part of the title is a bit harsh, we will get to that and you all can determine if its accurate.
*Disclaimer* This is very long, if you don't like essays, then don't read. For those of you who take the time to read and respond to this, thanks in advance for your time, I really appreciate it.
Anywhoo... I was in Memphis this weekend for a Thespian Conference (no, not lesbian- thespian
) it's basically a mass gathering of theatre kids.
It was such a great time, but I just stick with the magic stuff.
My friends had a camera and went around doing random interviews to kids, then I asked if I could do magic and they totally agreed. I got a ton of performances in, some on camera some off, and pretty much everyone of them went great. There were no nerves, no shaking, nothing, I had a lot of fun.
I only did primarily three tricks the entire time I was there (Friday afternoon and all day Saturday.) Which was a bit odd because I usually try to mix it up throughout different performances, but these tricks worked so well I just stuck with them.
I performed Carbon Paper (my new favorite trick), a sandwhich effect using the jokers, and the invisible deck. I also did two other tricks that I'll talk about in the breakdown.
So here's how each effect played out.
Carbon Paper: Like I said before, I LOVE this effect. I performed it at least 10 times, probably way more, I really wasn't keeping count. This trick got me the best reactions, not just from the person holding the card, but the whole crowd around me as well. I tried different little presentation ideas each time to see what worked the best, and I found that having them imagine it gets colder, then have them imagine the burn mark slowly dissolve from the card got the best reactions for me. I say "Well it had to go somewhere right?" and by then they have an idea as to what is going to happen. I have them lift their top hand slowly (most were pretty reluctant to out of sheer disbelief that it was possible
) to confirm that their signiture is still on the card, then slowly turn it over. The rest is up to them, I've had screams, speechless-ness, even dropping the card and running away, even my film crew (not the best, but hey, we had fun), after seeing it all those times still was in awe by it. This is for sure my favorite effect, I can't see myself getting tired of it, its so much fun to perform and the reactions make it worth it.
Sandwhich Effect: I would go through the deck and say "now all the cards are different-oh wait, except for these, hold on to them for me." They pick a card, I lose it in the deck, then I do my favorite reveal. I swap the jokers from them for the deck and have them shuffle, then I have them hold the deck and riffle the front while I stab the jokers in and catch the card. I hold the sandwich there for a bit to let what just happened sink in, once people start reacting I ask what the card is, then turn it over. Again, the reactions for this were really solid, just the instant "bam! your cards right there" stuns them for a second, plus they got to hold the deck- I love involving the spectator in my effects. This was a good walk around effect for me, never failed.
Invisible Deck I only did the invisible deck about 3 times. The first performance I did it for just a solo person. He was really into shuffling the invisible cards and wasn't embarrassed, which is how most people feel. I revealed the card and had him take it out. Without a word he looks at his card, throws in on the ground, and walks away. It was great, he comes back freaking out and draws a crowd, so then Carbon Paper came in for someone else. Whoops, got off topic. So we do it for someone else and that went well, then for the third performanc...uh oh. The card selected was the three of hearts, and I revealed the three of spades, not really thinking. My friends were like "Jacob! come on man!" I had to think fast, "no no no, hold on a second. three right?" I wave my hand over the deck "At first it was one card, but now..." Three more cards are face down "take them out." They are all three's. That got a good reaction, but not as good as if the card had been right in the first place. I was proud of myself to recovering, but disappointed for messing up the first time (How do you screw up an invisible deck? come on now.
)
Now I did two more tricks, just to add variety, Devestator and Card to Mouth. Guess how they went? Here we go.
Devestator: Now before I did a hard hitting effect like Devestator, I did some other quick stuff to some kids to show I was good, (building prestige I think its called. I believe crystal baller talked me about it, its from Strong Magic.) So I get into devestator and its all going well-and then the reveal. They count down 2 cards, and I have them reveal it. The card is correct, but I got NO reaction at all, nothing, nada. It was just "cool." I have no idea why it was like that, but my camera men afterwards said "Dude that was SICK! I have no idea how you do that." I was glad they liked it. I only did Devestator once because a table was hard to access and you really can't do it in the hands.
Card to Mouth: I have a group of kids around me and my friend walks behind me and whispers "Do the mouth one." Alright, thats a good one, let's do it. She says stop, I show the card, she pushes it in, I shuffle, I turn over the top card-its not there. I give it a second, then motion upwards. Everyone looks up and..."wait what? I missed that, do it again." Great...nothing again. I guess they were distracted and didnt fully pay attention. Well then, here comes Carbon Paper
.
Alright, now the first part is done-on to Michael Trautman. For those of you who do not know, Trautman is a physical comedian, telling stories through his body and actions. He did some ping-pong ball magic, like having them vanish and come back, popping out of his mouth at the most random times, and just making everyone laugh. I got called up onstage with him to hit the balls back to him to catch in his mouth after he spit them out at me. If you want to know the details of my time on stage, you can PM me, I don't want to make this longer than it has to be
. Overall, Mr. Trautman was a fantastic performer and I got to talk with him afterwards and he's a really cool guy. If you get the chance to see him, do it. Or book him for something, you will not be disappointed.
Now the final piece-the punk magician. Another kid was holding cards so I asked him if he does magic (they were the really crappy plastic cards-but since when do the cards tell the skill of the magician?) He's like "yeah I do!" "Alright, can you show me something?" So we sit down and use the folders we got as a makeshift table. He proceeds to show me This-n-That with Jack, King, and Ace. Now his patter, althought a bit choppy, was obviously thought out and rehearsed. His sleights-far from it. You could easily see everything, and his doubles, not the best. Nonetheless, I still said "good job" when the hidden card, the ace, was revealed. I'm not gonna say he sucked and kill his confidence, I thought he was just a beginner. He then does the trick where you end up with a packet of about 6 cards and slaps them to leave one and it's their card. (Iron fist I think? Not sure.) Again, he spoke pretty well, but he sleights were terrible, he didnt even do the one thats ment to be used and it was blantantly obvious. He didnt slap the cards either, he had me hold the packet, close my eyes, think of my card, turn the packet over, and open my eyes. "Cool...?" I really didn't know how to react, but again I'm not gonna say he sucks. I asked him how long he's been doing magic- he says for two years. I've been doing magic for 2 years, and he's at the stage I was when I first started. I offer to show him something, so I do my joker sandwich effect. After the reveal he's like "cool, but I know how you did that." Ummm...so do I? I did the effect. Now I could've ripped him and said all his effects sucked and he's terrible and everything, but that would get me no where. So I just said "ok, nice to meet you." And walked away. His hypothesis on how it was done was incorrect anyway. It was just aggrivating how I'm responding to his tricks and being nice, but he only focuses on the method of mine. Oh well, some people are just like that. I really doubt he's been doing it for two years because he can barely riffle shuffle.
This was in no way to slam him, I'm just stating what the experience was, even my friends said he was really boring, so it wasn't just me.
Whew, that was long. If you got this far, give yourself a cookie, you deserve it.
Thanks for reading, and any response is welcome on anything I talked about here.
Your boy,
Fez
*Disclaimer* This is very long, if you don't like essays, then don't read. For those of you who take the time to read and respond to this, thanks in advance for your time, I really appreciate it.
Anywhoo... I was in Memphis this weekend for a Thespian Conference (no, not lesbian- thespian

It was such a great time, but I just stick with the magic stuff.
My friends had a camera and went around doing random interviews to kids, then I asked if I could do magic and they totally agreed. I got a ton of performances in, some on camera some off, and pretty much everyone of them went great. There were no nerves, no shaking, nothing, I had a lot of fun.
I only did primarily three tricks the entire time I was there (Friday afternoon and all day Saturday.) Which was a bit odd because I usually try to mix it up throughout different performances, but these tricks worked so well I just stuck with them.
I performed Carbon Paper (my new favorite trick), a sandwhich effect using the jokers, and the invisible deck. I also did two other tricks that I'll talk about in the breakdown.
So here's how each effect played out.
Carbon Paper: Like I said before, I LOVE this effect. I performed it at least 10 times, probably way more, I really wasn't keeping count. This trick got me the best reactions, not just from the person holding the card, but the whole crowd around me as well. I tried different little presentation ideas each time to see what worked the best, and I found that having them imagine it gets colder, then have them imagine the burn mark slowly dissolve from the card got the best reactions for me. I say "Well it had to go somewhere right?" and by then they have an idea as to what is going to happen. I have them lift their top hand slowly (most were pretty reluctant to out of sheer disbelief that it was possible

Sandwhich Effect: I would go through the deck and say "now all the cards are different-oh wait, except for these, hold on to them for me." They pick a card, I lose it in the deck, then I do my favorite reveal. I swap the jokers from them for the deck and have them shuffle, then I have them hold the deck and riffle the front while I stab the jokers in and catch the card. I hold the sandwich there for a bit to let what just happened sink in, once people start reacting I ask what the card is, then turn it over. Again, the reactions for this were really solid, just the instant "bam! your cards right there" stuns them for a second, plus they got to hold the deck- I love involving the spectator in my effects. This was a good walk around effect for me, never failed.
Invisible Deck I only did the invisible deck about 3 times. The first performance I did it for just a solo person. He was really into shuffling the invisible cards and wasn't embarrassed, which is how most people feel. I revealed the card and had him take it out. Without a word he looks at his card, throws in on the ground, and walks away. It was great, he comes back freaking out and draws a crowd, so then Carbon Paper came in for someone else. Whoops, got off topic. So we do it for someone else and that went well, then for the third performanc...uh oh. The card selected was the three of hearts, and I revealed the three of spades, not really thinking. My friends were like "Jacob! come on man!" I had to think fast, "no no no, hold on a second. three right?" I wave my hand over the deck "At first it was one card, but now..." Three more cards are face down "take them out." They are all three's. That got a good reaction, but not as good as if the card had been right in the first place. I was proud of myself to recovering, but disappointed for messing up the first time (How do you screw up an invisible deck? come on now.

Now I did two more tricks, just to add variety, Devestator and Card to Mouth. Guess how they went? Here we go.
Devestator: Now before I did a hard hitting effect like Devestator, I did some other quick stuff to some kids to show I was good, (building prestige I think its called. I believe crystal baller talked me about it, its from Strong Magic.) So I get into devestator and its all going well-and then the reveal. They count down 2 cards, and I have them reveal it. The card is correct, but I got NO reaction at all, nothing, nada. It was just "cool." I have no idea why it was like that, but my camera men afterwards said "Dude that was SICK! I have no idea how you do that." I was glad they liked it. I only did Devestator once because a table was hard to access and you really can't do it in the hands.
Card to Mouth: I have a group of kids around me and my friend walks behind me and whispers "Do the mouth one." Alright, thats a good one, let's do it. She says stop, I show the card, she pushes it in, I shuffle, I turn over the top card-its not there. I give it a second, then motion upwards. Everyone looks up and..."wait what? I missed that, do it again." Great...nothing again. I guess they were distracted and didnt fully pay attention. Well then, here comes Carbon Paper

Alright, now the first part is done-on to Michael Trautman. For those of you who do not know, Trautman is a physical comedian, telling stories through his body and actions. He did some ping-pong ball magic, like having them vanish and come back, popping out of his mouth at the most random times, and just making everyone laugh. I got called up onstage with him to hit the balls back to him to catch in his mouth after he spit them out at me. If you want to know the details of my time on stage, you can PM me, I don't want to make this longer than it has to be

Now the final piece-the punk magician. Another kid was holding cards so I asked him if he does magic (they were the really crappy plastic cards-but since when do the cards tell the skill of the magician?) He's like "yeah I do!" "Alright, can you show me something?" So we sit down and use the folders we got as a makeshift table. He proceeds to show me This-n-That with Jack, King, and Ace. Now his patter, althought a bit choppy, was obviously thought out and rehearsed. His sleights-far from it. You could easily see everything, and his doubles, not the best. Nonetheless, I still said "good job" when the hidden card, the ace, was revealed. I'm not gonna say he sucked and kill his confidence, I thought he was just a beginner. He then does the trick where you end up with a packet of about 6 cards and slaps them to leave one and it's their card. (Iron fist I think? Not sure.) Again, he spoke pretty well, but he sleights were terrible, he didnt even do the one thats ment to be used and it was blantantly obvious. He didnt slap the cards either, he had me hold the packet, close my eyes, think of my card, turn the packet over, and open my eyes. "Cool...?" I really didn't know how to react, but again I'm not gonna say he sucks. I asked him how long he's been doing magic- he says for two years. I've been doing magic for 2 years, and he's at the stage I was when I first started. I offer to show him something, so I do my joker sandwich effect. After the reveal he's like "cool, but I know how you did that." Ummm...so do I? I did the effect. Now I could've ripped him and said all his effects sucked and he's terrible and everything, but that would get me no where. So I just said "ok, nice to meet you." And walked away. His hypothesis on how it was done was incorrect anyway. It was just aggrivating how I'm responding to his tricks and being nice, but he only focuses on the method of mine. Oh well, some people are just like that. I really doubt he's been doing it for two years because he can barely riffle shuffle.
This was in no way to slam him, I'm just stating what the experience was, even my friends said he was really boring, so it wasn't just me.
Whew, that was long. If you got this far, give yourself a cookie, you deserve it.
Thanks for reading, and any response is welcome on anything I talked about here.
Your boy,
Fez