I have to wonder about how well card tricks do in a Vegas theater, which is where they’ll be appearing if they fool P&T. Card tricks are better close up rather than in a large theater.
Of course, just because they do a card trick for TV it doesn’t mean they have to do one for the live show.
Yeah, I liked a lot about it. I knew about the deal with his partner in advance, but it was still a really interesting part of the movie. I’m glad they told us at the end that Randi gave them permission to use all the tapes, as it shows him asking for a certain portion to not be used. He obviously decided to go with the whole truth.
I rewatched the segment with Jen online. When she fans the cards to see which she has, they are in a different order than when she spread them on the table. However, all she has to do is ID which half he has and swap that half for a known order. Also, when he’s counting out, she’s not looking in that direction, she is looking upwards and away. She’d need some great peripheral vision and some fairly distinct markings to make them out. I think it unlikely.
The US is larger and more populated than the UK, and they film in Vegas now, which makes it a hot spot for performers trying to make a living at it. But most of the performers in the UK version were trying to make a living at it, unless they were still in school.
Duh, that’s why I added the qualifier. My point was if it’s an algorithm, it’s not a simple one of red 2, black 5, red 7, red Q, black 6, etc. I do think it’s selected to look random rather than actually being random.
That is true, all the time he’s standing up front and retrieving the handkerchief, and while he’s sticking his head out the curtain, that is all time the switch could be performed using just one box.
The same way they do them on this show, with big TV screens and cameras to show close up stuff? Because they film in the Penn and Teller theater, the same location Penn and Teller do their show. Note that some of Penn and Teller’s tricks require verification of small details as well.
Of course not, but some of these performers are specialists.
Jen makes an interesting point about having to adapt her tricks to work with more feminine outfits, just look at the long and shapeless jacket Teller is wearing for the rabbit trick - he could have an entire menagerie of small animals hidden in there.
Check out David and Dania and their quick change act from AGT Season 1. She has quite the voluptuous figure when the act starts, she’s quite a bit smaller on top when the act is done.
I found it. The point of the trick is that she keeps making a small silk appear and disappear, each time after removing another piece of clothing. The idea is that she’s leaving less and less places to hide the silk yet is still able to make it disappear. At the end, she’s totally naked but still manages to make it disappear and then appears to pull it out from between her legs. To anyone in the know it’s obvious what she’s doing, especially given the way she waves her fingers around after each disappearance.