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POOL BALL MIRACLES
A collection of hard hitting routines using a normal ungimmicked pool ball
By Craig Petty
Contents PAGE 2 – Introduction PAGE 3 – Pool Ball Mentalism PAGE 7 – In The Corner Pocket PAGE 10 – The Hard Way PAGE 13 – Trade Show Hustle PAGE 17 – Trick Shot Change PAGE 19 – Black Eight; Corner Wallet PAGE 23 – Pool Hall Matrix PAGE 26 – Ink Today, Gone Tomorrow PAGE 30 – Clearing The Table PAGE 33 – 3D Pool PAGE 37 – 8 Ball Sandwich PAGE 41 – Essence Transposition PAGE 44 – Essence Deal PAGE 48 – Mental Dilemma PAGE 53 – Psychic Lighter PAGE 58 – Other Ideas PAGE 60 Credits
INTRODUCTION For several years now I have had a residency at a bar, which has a number of pool tables. When I first started at the residency I wanted to make sure that I was performing routines that the patrons would relate to. Everyone that visits this bar is heavily into pool and I decided the best option would be to develop a number of routines with pool balls. Over the years I have developed several tricks and effects with pool balls all of which started off being performed in this bar. I have found however that these routines play in every type of environment you could imagine. The game of pool is ingrained in popular culture the world over. People in every country either play pool or know of the game. I have performed these routines in corporate events, walk around fun days, restaurants, bars, nightclubs, weddings, private parties and more to every type of person imaginable. When you are performing magic ‘in the trenches’ you need to grab the audiences attention straight away. If you do not do this, your job will become a lot harder. The best way to capture someone’s interest is to have a good hook – something that you say or do at the beginning of your performance that the audience can relate to in some way. That is why magic with pool balls is so commercial. Many people know what a pack of cards are and coin magic is very good as everyone carries coins with them. However opening your performing set with a trick with a pool ball is so random – your audience will not expect it. We have all had that situation where you pull out a pack of cards and the audience says, “Ah, I’ve seen that one!” Your thinking “NO YOU HAVEN’T” but you can’t say that at the risk of coming across confrontational. So you have to carry on with your card trick hoping that you can win them over. Open your performance with an effect about pool and I guarantee that they will not tell you they have seen it before. I urge you to try these routines in the real world to real people. Whether you are a hobbyist, a professional or a semi professional there are routines in here for you. These routines really are powerful but the only way you can find out is by performing them yourself. Don’t allow them to sit on the pages without being tried, pick one routine learn it and see how it goes. I hope you have a lot of fun learning, practicing and performing these routines. I have included some additional ideas at the end of the book so you can create your own routines as well. If you see me around at a convention or a lecture come and say hi and show me what you developed so far, I would love to see. Finally, thanks for your support – I appreciate it. Craig Petty August 2008
Pool Ball Mentalism Effect The magician tells the audience he is going to show them the difference between magic and mentalism. A business card with a prediction is placed to one side and then 6 cards are introduced with different pool balls drawn on them. The spectator freely selects any one of the six pool balls and the magician shows the prediction, which correctly predicts the pool ball chosen. Following this the spectator signs the business card with the pool ball on and holds it. The magician makes the pool ball pop out of the business card and the spectator is left holding a real pool ball and a signed business card which is now blank. Requirements 1.) 2.) 3.) 4.) 5.) 6.) 7.)
A Black 8 Pool Ball A Red 3 Pool Ball A Stack of Business Cards (these should be blank on one side) An Thick Broccoli Elastic Band 6 Black Faced Red Backed Playing Cards A Pen A Packet Trick Wallet
Set Up 1.) On the 6 black cards you need to draw 6 pool balls. Try to draw the pictures as big as possible so they fill the whole card – this will help make the effect play to a larger group. One of these pool balls should be the red 3 and another should be a black 8. On the back of the playing cards write the numbers 1 to 6 in a thick black marker so again they will show up from a distance. The card with a red three should be marked on the back with the number four and the black eight should be marked with the number three. Once this is done take the six cards face up and place the red three on the face and the black eight second from the bottom. Therefore the order of the packet (face up) is Red 3, X, X, X, Black 8, X. Finally place this packet into the packet trick wallet and place it into your outer right jacket pocket. 2.) Place the Black Pool Ball in your outer right jacket pocket 3.) Place the Red Pool Ball in your outer left jacket pocket 4.) You are now going to prepare the business cards in order to set up for the out to lunch principle. Take a business card and cut it down the middle so that it is in two halves. On one of the halves draw a black eight‐pool ball and on the other half draw a red eight‐pool ball. These balls should be drawn as large as possible so they are clearly visible.
5.) Take 5 of the business cards and hold them blank side facing down. Now take another 5 business cards and place them on top of the first five with the blank side facing up. Now take one of the half cards and place it ball side facing out onto one side of the business cards. Hold this in place and take the other half card and place it ball side facing out onto the other side of the business cards. Wrap the elastic band around the cards to hold the half cards in place. If you now look at what you have set up it will look like a stack of business cards with an elastic band wrapped around the middle. One side of the business cards will show a black eight and the other side will show a red three. This stack of cards is placed into your left jacket pocket so that you know which side of the stack is which. 6.) Place the pen in a convenient pocket for later. Method Tell the audience you are going to tell them the difference between magic and mentalism and that you are going to use the game of pool to show the difference. Normally at this point I will talk about how pool is a great game to use in this demonstration because the game of pool is so random with thousands of possible outcomes. Having set up the premise of the effect bring out the packet trick wallet and take out the packet of cards making sure that the audience does not see the numbers of the back of the cards. Deal the six cards into a row from left to right so that the Red 3 is at position number 1 in the row and the Black 8 is at position number 5. When the cards have been dealt out place the packet trick wallet off to the side – you will need it later on. Tell the audience that mentalists make predictions and you have a prediction of something that will happen in a few minutes. Reach into your left jacket pocket and bring out the packet of business cards. Bring the packet out so that the Red 3 side is uppermost. Your fingers cover half of the packet up to the elastic band so that the audience cannot see the Red 3 at all. Tell the audience that you wrote the prediction on the back of one of your business cards and you do not want the audience to see what you have predicted which is why you are covering it with your fingers. Tell the audience you will place the prediction on the table and get back to it later. With the right hand pick up the packet trick wallet and cover the stack of business cards at the same time ensuring that the audience does not see what is on there. Once the stack is covered place everything to the side in full view. From the audiences point of view you have just placed a stack of business cards of the table and covered it over. You now draw the audience attention back to the row of playing cards. Explain that you will get a spectator to select a pool ball and hopefully the prediction will match. Select a spectator and tell them that you do not want them to just name a pool ball as they might have a favourite and therefore be influenced so instead we will have one selected at random. Ask the spectator to name a number between 1 and 6, whichever number they name you will perform a different
action, which will result in the spectator being forced to select either the Black 8 or the Red 3. 1 – If 1 is selected count the cards from left to right counting aloud “1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6”. Then tell the audience that they selected number 1 and point at the card in position 1 which is the Red 3 2 – If 2 is selected count the cards from right to left counting aloud “1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6”. Then tell the audience that they selected number 2 and point at the card in position 2, which is the Black 8. 3 – If 3 is selected tell the spectator there are numbers on the back of all the cards and turn all the cards over one at a time showing the numbers 1 through 6. Find number 3 and turn it over showing the spectator that the number they named corresponds to the Black 8. 4 ‐ If 4 is selected tell the spectator there are numbers on the back of all the cards and turn all the cards over one at a time showing the numbers 1 through 6. Find number 4 and turn it over showing the spectator that the number they named corresponds to the Red 3. 5 – If 5 is selected count the cards from left to right counting aloud “1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6”. Then tell the audience that they selected number 5 and point at the card in position 5 which is the Black 8 6 ‐ If 6 is selected count the cards from right to left counting aloud “1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6”. Then tell the audience that they selected number 6 and point at the card in position 6, which is the Red 3. Once the spectator knows which pool ball they selected gather up the cards into a pile on the table. Point out that you could not have known the selection ahead of time and then remind the audience about the prediction you made. Depending on the pool ball the spectator chose your actions alter slightly. If they picked the Red 3 all you have to do is life the wallet off the stack of business cards and the audience will see a Red 3 on the face of the packet. However, if they picked the Black 8 you pick up the wallet and stack of business cards and turn everything over which shows a Black 8 on the face of the stack. If this happens you then place the stack back on the table showing the Black 8. This turnover move works due to the time misdirection between when the prediction was made and when it is revealed. Either way you end up with a stack of business cards on the table showing a pool ball. Pick up the stack of business cards and explain that what the audience just experienced was mentalism but you will now show them what magic looks like. Hold the stack of cards in dealing grip and as in the standard Out to Lunch effect ask the spectator helping you to sign the business card with the prediction on it. Ensure that they sign the other side of the elastic band, which means that they are actually signing the blank card beneath the pool ball picture, however they
will assume they are signing next to the pool ball. Once signed turn the packet over and using your right hand slide the signed card out from underneath the half card on the bottom of the packet. When you turn your hand over make sure that your left fingers cover the pool ball on the other side of the stack, which is why the stack was held in dealing grip. Once you have slid the signed card out place it on the table in front of the spectator and place the remaining stack of cards back into your left hand pocket. Pick up the playing cards and place them back into the wallet, which will reset the effect as long as you place them back in the correct order. If the audience selected the Black 8 you will now place the packet trick wallet away in your right jacket pocket (where the Black 8 ball is). However, if the audience selected the Red 3 you will now place the packet trick wallet away in your left jacket pocket (where the Red 3 ball is). As you are putting the cards away ask the spectator to cup their hands together. Asking them to do this will provide you with the misdirection you need steel out the pool ball and conceal it in your hand. The ball could be palmed in your right or left hand depending on the ball the spectator selected. Once the spectator has cupped their hands together pick up the business card off the table with your free hand and transfer it to the hand palming the ball. The card is held between the side of your forefinger and thumb effectively hiding the palmed ball from most angles. Now bring the card over the spectator’s cupped hands and with your free hand extend your forefinger and push down on the top of the business card. At the same time allow the palmed ball to drop from palm position into the spectators cupped hands. When you allow the ball to drop do not open up your fingers, as this will telegraph what you are doing. Instead loosen the mussels of your right hand, which will allow the ball to drop without any visible movement. When the ball drops the spectator will be shocked. Allow this moment to sink in and then turn the business card over the show that the picture of the pool ball as vanished leaving just the spectators signature. Comments There are many advantages to this routine. Everything is reset for the next performance making it perfect for table‐hopping. The premise is very compelling, as most people have heard of mentalism but do not really know the difference between this and magic. At the end of the routine everything is left in the spectators hands to examine. In addition it also leaves your business card in the spectators hand, which is always good. Finally the visual of the pool ball falling off the spectators signed business card is great.
In the Corner Pocket Effect A blank card is shown to the audience and signed on the back by a spectator. This is placed under a spectator’s hand. A card is then selected from a deck of cards and shown to be a 3 of Diamonds. A second spectator signs this card. The ink is then visibly removed from the 3 of Diamonds and transferred to the card under the spectator’s hand. When the first spectator looks under his hand his signed card is now the 3 of Diamonds and the second spectator is left holding a blank card. Requirements 1.) A Red 3 Pool Ball 2.) A pack of red backed cards (red backers will mean the spectators signature will show up better on the back of the cards). 3.) A Marker Pen 4.) A Duplicate 3 of Diamonds 5.) A Blank Faced Red Backed Card Set Up 1.) Place the pool ball in your left jacket pocket 2.) Have the deck of cards in your left jacket pocket. The deck is set up with the blank card on top of the deck, followed by a 3 of Diamonds and then the rest of the cards 3.) Have the marker pen somewhere handy 4.) Place the duplicate card into your top pocket back outwards so that if you took the card out of your pocket the back would show to the audience. Method Explain to the audience you are going to perform a card trick. Take the cards out of your pocket, take them out the box (placing the box on the table) and shuffle the cards ensuring that the set up remains on top of the pack. Once you have set up the premise for the effect tell the audience that you have a very special card in your pocket. As you are saying this obtain a pinkie break beneath the top card of the pack. With your right hand reach into your top pocket and remove the 3 of Diamonds. Without showing the face of the card place it on top of the deck whilst asking if anyone knows what the card might be. No matter what the answer is perform a double turnover showing the card to be blank on the face. Allow this to register and then hand the pen to the spectator and ask them to sign the blank card on the back. Perform another double turnover and allow the spectator to sign the back of the card. They think they are signing the back of a
blank card however they are really signing the back of the 3 of Diamonds. Once the card is signed pick up the two cards as one in Biddle grip in order to blow on the back of the card (to apparently dry the ink). What you are actually doing is reinforcing to the audience that the signed card is indeed blank. Place the double card back onto the deck and immediately take off the top signed card and place it on the table in front of the spectator who signed it. Ask the spectator to place their hand on the card. You now turn to a second spectator and tell them that they are going to pick a card. Cut the pack (holding a break between the packets) and perform a riffle force to the break. When the spectator says stop cut the packet at this point and tell the spectator you will show them the card you just stopped at. Perform another double turnover to show the 3 of Diamonds. You will now get this spectator to sign the back of the 3 of Diamonds. Hand the spectator the pen and perform another double turnover bring the back of the card(s) into view. Have the spectator sign the back of this card and once again pick up the double in Biddle grip showing the signed card is the 3 of Diamonds as you apparently dry the ink. Once this is done place the double onto the deck and immediately thumb off the signed card onto the table. Take the remaining cards and put them into the card box and then place everything into your left jacket pocket. As you are doing this tell the audience you will attempt to transfer the red ink on the 3 of Diamonds off the card and onto the card under the first spectators hand. Ask the second spectator to cup their hands together and as they do bring out the pool ball palmed in the left hand. Pick up the signed card on the table (which the audience assumes is the 3 of Diamonds) you’re your right hand and transfer it to your left hand held in place between your thumb and side of the forefinger. In this position most of the angles are hidden and the audience will not be able to see the ball. Bring the left hand over the spectator’s cupped hands and as in the previous routine tap the top of the card with the right forefinger releasing the palmed ball at the same time, which will drop into the spectators cupped hands. After this production, turn the card over to show that although still signed the ink has vanished off the face. Tell the audience that although this looks like a red pool ball it is actually the ink of the selected card (which is why there is a 3 on the ball). Tell the audience that you will attempt to put it onto the blank card under the spectator’s hand. Once everyone’s attention is on the first spectator perform a false transfer apparently placing the ball into the left hand whilst actually retaining the ball in the right hand. Bring the left hand over the spectator’s hand and push down showing the ball has vanished. You are holding the ball out in the right hand so draw all attention to the card under the spectator’s hand. Ask them to turn the card over and as everyone is watching this dump the pool ball in the right hand pocket. The misdirection you have for this is very strong as everyone’s attention is on the table and the spectators signed card. The spectator will turn his card over and show that it is now the 3 of Diamonds to end the effect.
Comments. If you have a Topit set up in your jacket you can use this to vanish the ball, which means that you can show your hands empty straight after. The use of the ball in this effect is interesting. Instead of being used for a production the ball is almost secondary to the rest of the effect. In this scenario it is being used to show the audience when the magical moment of the ink travelling from one card to another is actually happening. Additionally with a little thought this routine can be performed FASDIU (from a shuffled deck in use) just have the blank card and the 3 of Diamonds in your top pocket. When you wish to perform the routines cull the 3 of Diamonds from the deck you are using to the top and then when you take the card out your pocket hold the 3 and the blank card as one and place the card(s) on top of the deck. You can now go straight into the routine but without any set up of any kind.
The Hard Way Effect Two different spectators select two playing cards. The magician tells the audience he will find the first card the easy way and the second card the hard way. The first card is found when it appears under the magician’s shoe. To find the second card the magician reads the spectators mind and tells him the name of the card he selected. The magician then takes the pack of cards and turns it into a pool ball, which matches the card the second spectator selected. Requirements 1.) A Red 3 Pool Ball 2.) A Pack of Cards Set Up 1.) Have the pool ball in your left jacket pocket 2.) Have the deck set up with the three of diamonds on top of the pack. Place the deck into your left hand jacket pocket Method Tell your audience that magic like everything can be done the easy way and the hard way. Explain that you will show them the difference between doing something the easy way and the hard way. Bring out the pack of cards and have the cards shuffled retaining the 3 of Diamonds on top of the pack. Once the cards are shuffled you are going to have two people pick cards remember them and then put them back into the pack where they are apparently lost. While you do this however you are going to force the second spectator to select the 3 of Diamonds (the first spectator has a free choice of card). When you have the cards returned you are going to control the first spectator’s card to the top of the pack while the second spectator’s card (the 3 of Diamonds) is really lost in the pack. How I perform the force is to use a classic force. I find this the perfect place to use this force because you basically have two chances to make it work. So briefly cut the pack holding a break between the two halves. As you ask the spectator to take a card spread through the cards. As their hand approaches the deck spread all the way to the force card and they will be left with little or no choice but to take that card from the pack. If I miss on the first spectator I retake my little finger break in the middle above the force card and repeat the force on the second spectator. If I miss with the first spectator I never miss with the second. Although this forcing technique works for me any force can be used which will leave one of the spectators holding the 3 of Diamonds. The procedure I use to control the cards back to the top is very simple. I have the card I want to control put back first. Swing cut half the deck into the left hand
and have the selection returned. Then dribble the right hand cards onto the left hand packet keeping a break between the halves. I then double undercut to the break (bringing the selection to the top of the pack) and in a continuing action cut half the pack off with my right hand in Biddle grip (the selection will be on top of the cards held in the right hand). I then have the second selection (the 3 of Diamonds) replaced on the left hand packet and once again dribble the right hand cards onto the left hand packet but this time I do not hold a break. The force procedure and control procedure can be made very fair with this effect as you are only forcing and controlling one of the two cards. Therefore the second selection can be really fair looking which sells the fairness of the first selection even though it was a force. Likewise the way the second card is returned to the deck sells the fairness of way the first card was returned even though it was controlled. Now explain to the audience you will find the first card the easy way. As you say this palm the top card of the pack into right hand classic palm. Once the card is palmed hold the top of the deck with the right hand, which will provide cover for the palmed card. In a continuing action obtain a little finger break above the bottom card of the pack. Ask the spectator if they know why the first card is the easy one to find. Whatever their answer tell them the reason is you have already found it and it is under your shoe. As soon as you say this, the entire audience will look down at the floor and as they do several things are going to happen act once. Firstly you are going to body turn to your left so that the right side of your body is facing the audience. Secondly you are going to lift your left leg backwards towards your bottom. Your right hand is going to approach the sole of your left shoe as the leg is lifted up and as the shoe and hand meet the right hand is going to push the palmed card to the fingers as if you plucked it from the bottom of the shoe. As you are doing this everyone’s attention will be on your feet and the card being produced. Their attention will not on your left hand, which gives you a huge amount of misdirection. You are going to use this misdirection to ditch most of the deck and steel the pool ball. As soon as your body turns to the left place the left hand into your left jacket pocket and allow all the cards above the break to fall into the pocket. You will be left holding one card in your hand. In a continuing action pick up the pool ball under the left hand card and bring your hand out of the pocket. Although this reads as a lot it only takes a second to accomplish and everyone’s attention is elsewhere anyway. As soon as you have produced the card from under the shoe turn back to face the audience and hand the card to whomever selected it. The left hand is now holding just one card, which is covering a pool ball and masquerading as the entire deck. Do not worry about this situation; the last thing the audience is going to think is that you now only have one card and a pool ball. Make sure that you hold the single card like it is a full pack. The right hand can come over the cards from the top as well which provides more cover and makes the card look even more like a full deck. Tell the second spectator that instead of physically finding his card you will read his mind instead. Look directly into his eyes as if
reading his mind (this actually focuses the audiences attention away from the deck and up towards the spectators face). Using your best Derren Brown impression announce that the card the spectator selected is the 3 of Diamonds. Once the applause dies down ask the spectator to cup his hands together and bring the deck of cards over his cupped hands (you are still using both hands to hold the pack therefore shielding all the angles). In one quick action bring the right hand fully over the left hand and take the single card into a right hand classic palm. In essence this will leave your hands cupped together with the pool ball in between them. In a continuing action move your left hand to the left and the right hand to the right allowing the pool ball to drop into the spectators hands. Everyone’s attention will be on this ball dropping and you have all the time in the world to ditch the palmed card into your pocket. The production of the ball is so unexpected and powerful that nobody will catch the ditch. After I have read the spectators mind and told him his card I explain that it would be more impressive if I could find his card in the pack. I then tell him that I am looking for a red three and after I have performed the production of the pool ball I look at the audience and say, “there you are a red three”. Comments This routine is a real worker for me especially in walk around situations. I will typically end a series of card routines with this routine as after the climax from the audience’s point of view there is no deck of cards therefore how can I continue. The pool ball in this routine is used to give the effect an added kick at the end instead of being involved in the whole routine. This is the first time I have seen the entire pack of cards being turned into a pool ball. Most routines involve the surprise production of a pool ball but this routine goes further and I think benefits from that. You do not have to have the deck preset with the 3 of Diamonds on top. Most times when I perform this routine I will cull the three to the top as I am explaining the premise behind the routine. This way the routine becomes one you can perform FASDIU (from a shuffled deck in use).
Trade Show Hustle Effect This is a routine that is perfect to perform at a trade show. The audience is asked if they have ever seen or used a magic eight ball, the sort you can get in a toy store, which helps people make decisions. The magician then shows a real eight ball and the audience is told this is a real magic 8 ball that will tell people what they really want even if they don’t realise they want it. A flat bag is shown and the eight ball is dropped inside. The bag is then closed and given to the spectator to hold. A packet of double blank cards is then shown and the spectator signs one and holds onto it in their pocket. The spectator is then asked to think of something they really want and then open the bag and look inside. When they look into the bag they find that the eight ball has changed into something that relates to the company you are working for at the time (for example a coffee cup with the company logo). The spectator is told that this is because even though they don’t realise it they want to do business with the company you are working for. In order to facilitate this you tell the audience that you will give the spectator the company’s details. When they look in their pocket they see that the card they signed has been printed with the company’s details. History This effect was developed several years ago when I was employed by a gaming company to perform magic on their stand. They had promotional pool balls made with their company logo on and I wanted a way to incorporate these into a routine. The original routine that I performed for this company was to change an 8 ball into one of their promotional balls. The routines went down so well I looked into the cost of making up promotional pool balls for other companies that I was working for. The cost, however, turned out to be astronomical and therefore I shelved the idea. Then a few months later I realised that the ball could turn into anything not just another ball. Since then the routine has been a mainstay of my trade show act. In order to perform this you will need to be a little creative with regards to what you turn the 8 ball into. Depending on the company you are working for the item you use will be different. For example I recently did an exhibition for a company that sells Rotary Lobe Pumps therefore I turned the 8 ball into a lobe pump. When I did an exhibition for a joke wholesalers I turned the ball into a big branded box of itching powder with their company details on. It could be as simple as turning the ball into a coffee cup with the company details on which most exhibitors will have. The one rule is that the weight of the object should be roughly the same weight as the 8 ball and the size of the object should be roughly the same size as the 8 ball. You do not want to show an 8 ball to the audience and when it is dropped into the bag have it double in size and weight. The shape of the object does not really matter as once the object is inside the bag the spectator will not have the opportunity to feel the shape of it until the climax of the routine.
Requirements 1.) A Black 8 Ball 2.) 10 Double Blank Playing Cards 3.) A Packet Trick Wallet 4.) A Flat Drawstring Bag. This needs to be fairly big. I tend to use an old change bag, which I had lying around the house. 5.) An item from the company you are working for (as discussed in History). 6.) A marker pen (so the spectator can sign their name) Set Up 1.) I have stickers made when working a trade show, which are the same size and shape as a playing card. I print the company details onto the sticker along with a marketing tag line. You need to take on of these stickers for the company you are working for and attach it to one of the double blank cards. Place this card sticker side down on top of the other double blank cards. Then place this packet of cards into the packet trick wallet and put this away into outer right jacket pocket 2.) Place the 8 ball into your left hand jacket pocket 3.) Place the marker pen into a convenient pocket. This will be used for when the spectator signs their card. 4.) Place the company branded item inside the drawstring bag so that it is right next to the opening of the bag. This needs to be put where you can easily pick the bag up and grab the object inside, keeping it hidden from the audience’s point of view. When I am working trade shows I will normally have a table to my right with an open briefcase on top. Inside the case is where I keep the bag. From this position it is very easy to grab the bag and hold the object inside with the same hand that is holding the bag keeping it hidden from the audience. Method The hook line for this effect is asking the audience if they have ever seen or played with a magic 8 ball before. 99 times out of a 100 people will say yes, if not you can give a brief description of what they do and how they work. Explain that you have a real magic 8 ball that actually tells people their innermost desires even if they don’t realise they want them. Take out the ball and hand it out for examination. As this is getting examined reach into your briefcase and remove the bag making sure that you are holding it with your left hand. The thumb is on the outside of the bag and the fingers are on the inside holding whatever object
you are using against the side of the bag. In this position you can hold the bag very freely and it will look empty. There will be no perceived weight in the bag as the object is being held against the side. You can even use your other hand to smack the bag (like the egg bag) which again gives the audience the impression the bag is empty. I have lectured on this routine in the past and had magicians ask if the fact you cannot show the bag empty is a problem. The answer is no – at this point nothing has happened you do not need to over prove by attempting to show the bag as empty. As long as your general attitude no verbally says to the audience ‘I have an empty bag’ you will be fine. I do not even tell the audience the bag is empty I just introduce it and explain that I will be putting the 8 ball inside. Tell the audience that you will place the ball inside the bag. Take the ball back with the right hand and place it inside the bag but do not let go with your hand. At the same time allow the hidden object to fall inside. The audience will assume this is the eight ball. Withdraw the right hand (keeping the ball palmed) and grab the bag with the right hand as the left hand pulls on the drawstring fastening everything up. The bag is currently acting as a wand substitute – by holding the bag with the same hand that is palming the ball it allows the hand to appear natural and gives more cover, effectively removing any angle problems. Ask the spectator to hold out their hand and hand the bag to them making sure that they hold it at the top of the bag. Ask them to hold it high in the air this way they will not be tempted to feel around in the bag with their other hand. As you hand the bag to the spectator your right hand with the palmed ball drops to your side and out of the frame of action. Once the spectator is holding the bag tell the audience that you have something else for them to look at. Reach into your right pocket and bring out the packet trick wallet leaving the palmed ball in the pocket at the same time. It is important that you tell the audience you are getting something from your pocket before your hand moves as this way the action of the hand moving is motivated and not suspicious looking. Open the packet trick wallet and take out the blank cards. Tell the audience that they are just blank pieces of cardboard and spread through showing them all to be blank. Turn the packet over and spread through the other side showing the other side is blank as well. Make sure you do not spread through to the very end else they will see the card with the sticker. Finally turn the packet over again so that the sticker card is back on top of the packet. Explain that you need the spectator to sign one of these cards and that later on it will become important. As you are saying this perform two quick double turnovers apparently showing the top card is blank on both sides. Hand the spectator the pen and ask him to sign the card with his free hand. As the spectator needs to sign the card it is a good idea to get him to hold the bag with his less dominant hand so no readjustment is necessary. Once the card has been signed take it and without flashing the other side place it into one of the spectators pockets. As this routine is always performed at trade shows 99% of men will be wearing suits so I will typically slip it into his top pocket.
The remainder of the routine is all presentation. Put the blank cards back in the pocket trick wallet and place it away. Tell the spectator to concentrate on something that they really want. Make sure that you build this up and don’t rush – I can say from personal experience the effect of the transformation of the pool ball in the spectators own hands is really strong. Finally ask the spectator to open the bag and take out what is inside. This is quite a funny moment; the rest of the audience always reacts when you take out some random object branded with the corporate identity that you are working for. It is at this point that I take the opportunity to go into a short pitch about the company I am working for. For example if I was working for World Magic Shop I might say something like “What’s that a World Magic Shop Coffee Mug. To be honest I am not surprised, this means you really want to do business with us. Lets face it who wouldn’t we are one of the leading magic dealers in the world, we have excellent customer service and a great track record”. At the end of your pitch (almost as an afterthought) tell the spectator that if he really wants to do business with the company you are working for he will need their contact details. Smile then tell him to take the card out of his pocket that he signed. When he does he will realise that the company contact details are now on his signed card. When he shows this to the rest of the audience you are guaranteed to get a huge round of applause. Comments This routine is probably my favourite routine to perform at a trade show. It is a fun routine with a load of audience interaction and really gets the message across without ramming it down the audience’s throat. The premise behind the routine is also very commercial. Everyone can relate to a magic 8 ball and has probably used one at some time so this makes the routine even stronger. I have found that clients love this routine as well. It gets company branded merchandise out in front of prospective clients, their contact details end up in their client’s hands and it is an excellent lead in for their sales staff to take over and seal the deal.
Trick Shot Change Effect A pack of cards is shown and a playing card is chosen (lets assume it is the 2 of spades) and then lost in the pack. The magician gives the cards a fancy cut and tells the audience he has cut to the card. The card is shown to be the 10 of spades, which is wrong. The magician asks what the card was and after being told that it was the 2 of spades makes a black 8 ball fall visibly from the card. The magician tells the audience he has removed 8 spots from the 10 and that should fix things. The card is now shown to be the original selection, the 2 of spades. Requirements 1.) A Black 8 Ball 2.) A Pack of Cards Set Up 1.) Put the 8 Ball in your left jacket pocket 2.) Set up the deck of cards with the 2 of Spades on top of the pack and the 10 of Spades second from top. Put the cards in the case and place these in your right jacket pocket Method Take out the cards from the case and shuffle them retaining the top two cards in position. You are now going to offer the spectator a choice of card whilst in reality forcing the 2 of Spades. Any force will work; I would recommend a simple riffle force. Have the spectator show their card around and reassemble the deck ensuring that the 10 of Spades stays on top. Once the spectator has shown their card around swing cut half the cards into your left hand and have the selection replaced on top. This means that the selected card is being replaced onto the 10 of Spades. Dribble the remaining right hand cards on top of the left hand making sure you hold a break between the packets. You now need to control the bottom packet to the top so that the 2 and 10 of Spades end up on top of the pack. Normally I will perform a classic pass however and control will work including a double undercut. Tell the audience that you are going to find the selected card the hard way using your super duper sleight of hand skills. Now perform your best looking false cut that keeps the top two cards in the same position. There are hundreds of fancy looking false cuts published and anyone reading this will have their own
favourite. However, for the record I perform a Butterfly Cut, which looks great and gives the impression of real skill. Tell the audience you have now found the selected card and perform a double turnover to show the 10 of Spades. The audience will waste no time in telling you that you are wrong. Hold this position for a moment – you want to ensure that everyone in the audience can see that you have cut to the wrong card. After a suitable pause turn the double face down and take off the top card of the pack (which is now the selected card). Ask the spectator if you got the suit of the card correct and they will tell you that you did. As you ask this place the rest of the pack in the left hand jacket pocket, leave the cards there and as you withdraw your hand steal the pool ball palming it. Drop your hand naturally to the side so that it does not arouse suspicion. As this steal takes place you must be engaging the audience by asking them questions about their card. This will misdirect away from the steal of the ball. Eventually ask the spectator if they will tell you the name of their card and they will say it was the 2 of Spades. Act frustrated and tell the audience you were only 8 spots off getting it right. Then act like you have an idea and ask the spectator to cup their hands together. Transfer the card to the left hand where it covers the palmed ball. Bring both of your hands up and over the spectators cupped hands. In one continuing action bring your right hand upwards and slam down on the card held in the left hand. At the exact same moment allow the palmed ball to fall into the spectators hand. As with previous routines do not move the fingers when you release the palmed ball else the illusion will not look as deceptive. From the spectators point of view a pool ball as just appeared from nowhere. Tell the audience that you have just knocked the cards spots off and slowly turn the card over to show that it is now the 2 of Spades. Leave everything in the spectator’s hands to end the effect. Comments This routine is great in a walk around or table‐hopping situation. It resets almost instantly and can be performed at any time in a card set. It makes a great opener as it is very visible and engages the audience almost immediately.
Black Eight; Corner Wallet Effect The magician shows a pack of cards and takes out one of the black eights. The audience is told that the ink on a black eight is very volatile and to prove this the magician slaps the black eight turning it blank and at the same time producing a pool ball. This ball is then handed to the spectator and the now blank card is placed away in the magician’s wallet. Another spectator now selects a card and it is lost in the pack. The eight ball turns invisible and is smashed down onto the deck of playing cards. When the magician runs through the cards face down one card is shown to have a black eight printed on the back – the spectator’s card. To finish the selected card is now tapped against the magician’s wallet and the black eight vanishes off the selection. When the wallet is opened the card inside is printed once again. Requirements 1.) A Small Himber Wallet 2.) A Pack Of Red Backed Cards 3.) A Blank Backed Eight of Spades 4.) A Duplicate Eight of Spades 5.) A Marker Pen 6.) A Black Eight Ball 7.) A Red Double Backed Playing Card Set Up 1.) Take the duplicate 8 of Spades and place it into one side of the Himber wallet. Place this wallet into your inside jacket pocket making sure you know which side is which when you take the wallet back out again 2.) Take the double backed card and on one side draw a black 8 ball. Make the drawing look as good and as big as possible. This card is placed second from the face of the deck of cards so that if you are holding the pack face up the 8 ball side is facing down. Take the blank backed 8 of spades and place this card into the middle of the face up deck so that the eight side is visible. Therefore the order of the pack from the face is X, Double Backer Drawing Side Down, X cards, Blank Backed 8 of Spades, Remaining X Cards. Make sure that the regular 8 of Spades has been removed from the deck. 3.) Place the marker pen somewhere convenient. This will be used later to have the spectator sign their name on their selection
4.) Have the 8 ball in your left hand jacket pocket Method Start off by telling the spectators that you are going to perform a card trick and that they can select any card except one. As you say this remove the cards from the case and hold them face up in right hand Biddle grip. Use the left hand to place the card box away in your left jacket pocket and steal the 8 ball out of the pocket as the hand is removed. In one continuing action place the deck in the right hand into dealing drip in the left hand, which effectively covers the palmed ball from the audience. All this is done on the off beat, from the audience’s point of view nothing has happened yet. By the time you have finished setting up the premise the deck will be in dealing grip and the 8 ball will be hidden underneath it. Spread through the deck face up making sure you spread a clump of cards at the beginning so you don’t flash the double backer second from the face. Continue spreading the pack till you reach the 8 of Spades. Up jog this card as you tell the spectator that he cannot pick the 8 of spades, as the ink is very volatile. Offer to demonstrate and ask the spectator to cup his hands together. As this is being done strip the 8 out and hold it in your right hand at the inner end of the card between your forefinger and thumb. Several actions will take place at once. The right hand will swing upwards with the card and then swing back down again hitting the 8 onto the deck (which is now held by the left hand). The larger motion of the swing will hide the smaller motion of the forefinger and thumb turning the card over. You have to make sure that the turnover is completed as the right hand swings upwards. This will result in the blank side of the card facing the audience as the card comes downwards. The audience will not perceive this change until the card has hit the deck. The illusion is perfect – it looks just like the card becomes blank as it hits the deck. As the card hits the deck the left hand releases the ball into the spectators hands. As with previous routines ensure that the fingers of the left hand do not move as the ball is dropped. Combining the right hand and left hand actions makes it look just like an eight ball drops from the eight of spades as it is hit against the deck. Have the eight ball examined and tell the audience that is why the eight of spades should never be picked. Reach into your pocket and take out the Himber wallet opening it so the empty side is on view. Tell the audience because the card is so volatile you will leave it in your wallet so it cannot be picked. Place the wallet on the table turning it over at the same time so that when it is opened later the 8 of spades in the other side will show. Pick up the deck again and hold it face down in left hand dealing grip. As you tell the audience they are now going to get to pick a card double undercut the bottom card of the deck to the top. This places the double backer on the bottom
of the deck. Spread through the cards and have the spectator take a card (obviously they cannot take the bottom card). Hand the spectator the marker pen and have them sign the card. Once the card is signed start a Hindu shuffle asking the spectator to say stop at some point. Try to time the shuffle so that they say stop somewhere in the middle of the deck. Have the selection placed onto the left hand portion and place the cards remaining in the right hand on top of everything. What this has done is to place the selected card in the middle of the deck with the double backer on top of the selection. Hand the spectator the cards to hold and tell the audience you will find the card in a really unique way. Take back the 8 ball and hold it in the right hand. You are now in a position where you have to make the 8 ball vanish. This situation has been dealt with in a number of routines previously so you will realise there are a number of options. If you are confident with your false transfer you can pretend to place the ball into the left hand and palm it in the right hand. Then as you come forward towards the deck you can body turn and ditch the ball in your pocket. Another option is to use a topit and ditch the ball as you swing your hands together. Another option is to false transfer and as you go into your pocket for something (a lighter, a magic wand etc) ditch the ball. It is up to you which option you use the net result should be however that you slam the ball down on the deck of cards and as your hands hit the top of the deck the ball disappears. Most of the time I will use a topit as I feel this is the cleanest and most efficient way to achieve the desired result. From the audiences point of view you have just taken the ball they examined and made it disappear into the deck. Take back the pack and spread through the deck face down until you come to the card with an 8 ball drawn on the back. Spread through the rest of the cards so the audience can see that there are no other cards with 8 balls on them and then cut the cards so that the 8 ball card is on top of the pack. Ask the spectator the name if his card and then double turnover to show that this card is actually the signed selection. Due to the double backer you can immediately thumb this card off into the right hand and a back will show underneath. The spectator is convinced at this point that their signed card has a picture of an eight ball on it. Focus all attention on the signed card. I normally place the deck away into my left pocket at this point so the audience do not get confused and look elsewhere. Tell the spectator you cannot keep that eight ball on the back of their card and so you will put it back where it came from. Focus attention on the wallet on the table and then hit it with the signed card. Wait a beat and slowly turn over the signed card to show that the 8 ball has gone. Hand this card to someone to examine and let him see that the 8 ball really has vanished. Now for the final kicker slowly open the wallet and show that the blank card that was inside has now been reprinted with the 8 of spades. Take the card out of the wallet and put the wallet away to end the effect. Comments What I like best about this routine is there is kicker after kicker after kicker. Every time the spectator believes the routine has ended they are shown that something else has happened. It comes to a point that the audience are willing to
believe anything as they have seen so many magical moments in such as short period of time. This alone makes the effect a great one to perform when you have a limited amount of time to show the audience a trick. So much is compressed into the one routine they will feel like they have seen more than they actually have. Due to the way that this routine starts it makes a great opening routine and really does make the audience sit up and pay attention.
Pool Hall Matrix Effect A stack of business cards is shown to the audience. In full view the magician draws a black circle in each corner of the card, which he tells the audience represents black 8 balls. The spectator then signs the business card. The magician then causes the four 8 balls to assemble in the corner of the card matrix style. As a kicker ending, the balls are made to vanish off the card and become real – turning into a real 8 Ball. History This was the natural extension of an effect of mine called BCM (Business Card Matrix) and makes a great routine especially with the final production. I have been performing this for well over two years now and I have opened many times at a table with this routine as it leads very nicely into any other effect. The idea of making the pictures of balls real is something I had been working on with a different routine, having been inspired by an effect in Richards Almanac. Requirements 1.) A stack of business cards, which are blank on one side. 2.) A Frixon pen (this is a special pen – the ink vanishes when heat is applied to the paper it has been used on. It is available in most stationery shops) 3.) A regular pen with different coloured ink (I use a red pen) 4.) A thick elastic band 5.) A lighter 6.) A Black 8 Ball Set Up First you are going to take one of the business cards and cut it in half. This half card will be the cover card used in the out to lunch principle. Next take all the cards (holding them in a landscape direction) and using the Frixon pen put 4 blanked out circles in the upper left corner of each card. These circles should all be neatly arranged in a little square. Now place the half card over the stack of business cards hiding the circles you placed on them and use the elastic band to hold the half card in place (as per the standard out to lunch effect). You now have a stack of business cards, which look blank on one side whilst in actual fact, have circles drawn on each one. Place this stack of cards into a convenient pocket. In another pocket place the Frixon pen, the regular red pen
and the lighter. Finally have an eight ball in your right hand jacket pocket. Method Tell the spectator you are going to give them one of your business cards but before you do, you are going to show them a minor miracle. Take out the stack of cards and point out that one side is blank. Hold the cards horizontally ensuring that the half card is orientated to the left of the cards. Take out the Frixon pen and openly draw four blacked out circles, one in each corner of the business card – when you are doing this make sure the circles you draw match in size and shape the circles you pre drew during the set up. Show the card to the audience so they can clearly see the situation. Now tell the spectator that you want them to sign the card as well. Go to hand them the Frixon pen and just before the spectator takes the pen, pull back and comment that it would be best if they signed in a different colour so that the circles stand out on the card. Put the Frixon pen away and take out the regular red one ‐ get the spectator to sign the card. Obviously the spectator has to sign on the card, not the half card and they should not go over the circles. To be honest this is more a case of audience management than anything else. Put the red pen away, turn the packet of business cards over and pull out the card with the spectator’s signature on. Place the remaining stack of cards away as they will not be used again during the routine. You are now going to grip the card in a particular way which will allow you to flash the other side of the business card and give the impression that there are still 4 circles in 4 corners on the spectators signed card. To do this, turn the card so the face is towards you – there should be 2 circles on the right hand side of the card, a cluster of 4 circles in the upper left corner and nothing in the lower left corner. Hold the card in the left hand with the left thumb covering the entire left side of the card. Position the pad of the thumb so that it covers 3 of the circles in the corner (leaving the circle at the extreme outer left uncovered). Now if you flash the other side of the card to the audience they will see their signature and a circle in every corner of the card except the lower left corner (and they will assume there is a circle there as well). I flash the other side of the card as I tell the audience that in order to make the magic happen I need a magic wand ‐ I then ask if anyone has a magic wand they can lend me. Obviously the answer will be no, at which point I explain that sometimes fire can be very magical and I take out my lighter. Hold the card face towards you again and light the lighter, waving the flame over the side of the card nearest the audience. Make sure that you wave the flame around the right side of the card not the left side – you want the circles on the right side of the card vanish not the circles of the left side! There is no reason for the audience to suspect that anything has happened at this point, but in reality the effect is over; the circles have gone from the each corner and there are four circles in the corner. Next put the lighter away and ask the spectator to hold their hand out. Place the card face down into the spectator’s hand and ask them to concentrate on moving the ink. After building up the effect, ask the spectator to turn the card in their hand over and look at it. They will be surprised to see the circles have all
assembled in the corner. Reach into your pocket and take out the lighter again and heat up the card once more, so that the remaining circles melt away as well (obviously you do not show this to the audience just yet). Your motivation for doing this is you tell the audience if you heat up the card some more the balls will move even further. Put the lighter away and as you do palm the 8 ball in the right hand. Hold the business card face down in the right hand (which will help the right hand to look natural) and tell the audience that even though that was a great trick it would have looked even better with a real 8 ball. Luckily being a magician you should be able to make the drawings of the balls real. Ask the spectator to cup their hands together under the business card and with the left hand forefinger push down on the back of the business card. At the same time allow the 8 ball to fall out of finger palm into the spectators cupped hands and immediately turn the business card over to show that it is now blank and the drawings of the balls have vanished. To reset you need to get the circles you drew on the half card off. The best way I have found of doing this is by using the other end of the Frixon pen to run the circles of the card. You could use your lighter but I have found that this can leave scorch marks on the card so I prefer to use the pen. As soon as the circles have been taken off the half card the trick is reset. Once you have finished with the coins place them away in your pocket again. Comments To be honest I prefer this handling of the effect rather than the original BCM. There is something really magical when an effect is performed with drawings and then those drawings are made real as a kicker. It reminds me in many ways of a scene out of the film ‘Who Framed Roger Rabbit?’ The effect is also a great way to give out your business card. There is a discrepant moment in the routine as there are four balls on the card and you only produce one real 8 ball. However, this is not an issue – once that ball is produced that point is totally forgotten by the audience.
Ink Today, Gone Tomorrow Effect 8 cards are shown, four 3 of diamonds and four 8 of spades. These cards are alternating in red / black order. Four cards are dealt onto the table, which leaves four cards in the magician’s hands (still alternating red / black). After a second the magician shows that now in his hand he has all the black cards and on the table are the red cards. The magician explains that the trick works because the ink on the cards is volatile and moves. In order to prove this he takes the black cards in his hand and makes a black pool ball appear (apparently the ink) and shows that the cards are now blank. He then takes the red cards on the table makes a red pool ball appear and shows that the red cards are now blank. He is left with all blank cards and two pool balls. Requirements 1.) A Red 3 Pool Ball 2.) A Black 8 Pool Ball 3.) 2 Blank Backed 8 of Spades 4.) 2 Blank Backed 3 of Diamonds 5.) A Regular 8 of Spades 6.) 4 Blank Faced Cards 7.) A Packet Trick Wallet 8.) A Ball Holder 9.) You Must be Wearing a Jacket Set Up 1.) Take the 4 blank faced cards and lay them face up onto the table. On top of this pile place the regular 8 of spades (again face up). Take the 4 blank backed cards and arrange them in alternating colour order red/black with a black eight on the face. Take this pile of four cards and place them on top of the pile of cards on the table. The order of this packet from the face is 8S, 3D, 8S, 3D (all blank backed), 8S, 4 Blank faced cards. Take this packet of cards and place it in the packet trick wallet and place this wallet inside your right jacket pocket. 2.) Place the black eight ball in the inside right jacket pocket
3.) Have the ball holder fitted to the back of your jacket on the left side. This should be placed so that the left hand can reach down and steal the ball without fumbling. You will need to experiment with exactly where the ball holder should be placed. Inside this holder place the red pool ball. Method Tell the audience that you want to show them some magic with just a few cards and take out the packet trick wallet, removing the cards. As you take out the cards you have to grab the ball in your pocket and drop it down your right sleeve. This ball will stay in there until the end of the routine where it will fall down the sleeve into the right palm ready to be produced. When you drop the ball down your sleeve do not fumble try to make it one quick action so from the audiences point of view it just looks like you reached into your pocket for a little wallet. The ball actually gets held under the armpit, although I know some performers hold the ball in the crook of their elbow. Either is fine and you should experiment and find the best place for you. Make sure you do not drop your right hand down to your side till you are ready to produce the ball. Keep the arm bent, if you drop your arm down the ball will make a much earlier appearance than planned! Explain that you have a whole bunch of 8’s and 3’s and they alternate in order (do not mention exactly how many cards you have). Hold the cards face up in Biddle grip in the right hand in preparation for the Hammond Count. This count is used to apparently show that you have eight 3’s and 8’s by hiding the blank faced cards at the rear of the packet. To do this use your left thumb to pull the first card off the right hand cards into left hand dealing grip. Pull off the next card from the right hand packet onto the left hand card in the same way. Continue this action until you have pulled four cards from the right hand into the left hand. As you apparently take the fifth card in the same way you will really switch the packets, taking all the cards in the right hand into the left hand and stealing the cards in the left hand back into the right hand. To do this as your hands approach each other grip the right hand packet between the side of the left forefinger and thumb. The ring finger and thumb of the right hand grips the packet of cards in the left hand. Now as you apparently pull the next card over take all the cards in the right hand into the left hand and use your right hand ring finger and thumb to pull the left hand packet back into the right hand. To finish off the count pull off the remaining cards in the right hand one at a time onto the left hand packet. The important thing to making this count work is to practice the rhythm. Each card (including the switch of the packets) should be done at the same tempo. That way the switch will not look suspicious because it will blend into the overall counting procedure. Also do not count out loud as you execute the sleight instead just tell the audience that you have some cards and they are in red / black order all the way through.
Turn the packet face down and count the top four cards onto the table on at a time into a pile of cards. The audience believe that these cards are red 3’s and black 8’s however there are actually the four blank faced cards. Turn the remaining packet of cards over and spread the five cards out as four holding the last two cards together as one. This will display black, red, blank, red cards. As you display this spread of cards you are going to carry out a simple displacement, which will set you up for an Elmsley Count in a minute. Basically you are gong to switch the positions of the second and third card from the face of the spread. To do this place your left thumb on the card second from the face and hold it in position as your right fingers under the spread shift the card third from the face to the right under the face card. You will be left holding two black cards in the right hand and two red cards (with an extra card hidden) in the left hand. Hold this position and square up the packet. The order of this packet of cards is now (from the face) 8,8,3,3,8. Tell the audience that are going to try and make the cards jump and then perform some sort of action that means the magic has happened (snap the fingers etc). Now perform an Elmsley count showing that all four of the cards are black 8’s. To perform an Elmsley count hold the cards in the right hand pinched at the right side. Take the face card of the packet into left hand dealing grip. As you approach to take the next card push all the cards in the right hand above the bottom card to the left with the right thumb. The left hand now takes all three of these pushed over cards as the right fingers steal the card in the left hand under the card remaining in the right hand. Now take the third card from the right hand onto the cards in the left hand making sure that you hold a little finger break under this card. Finally count the last card onto the packet in the left hand as well. The key to this count is the same as the Hammond count make sure that you are counting each card at the same tempo. This count will show all the cards in your hands are black 8’s and at the same time leave you with a break under the second card from the face. Tell the audience that obviously if the black cards are all over in your hand then the red cards must be on the table but before you show them you will teach them how the trick works. As you are saying this cut the cards above the break to the bottom of the packet and then turn the packet of cards face down obtaining a break under the top card of the pack as you do so. Tell the audience that the ink on the cards you are using is volatile and as such can move from one place to another. Continue by saying that you can slow the process down and show them the ink leaving the cards. Ask them to cup their hands together. As soon as they do this you are going to use this misdirection to perform two secret actions. Firstly you will execute a half pass of all the cards under the top card (which you have a break under). A half pass is basically turning over a certain amount of cards without the audience being aware. In this case you are going to turn all the cards over under the top card. The best place to learn a half pass is Card College by Roberto Gobbi, however briefly your right hand holds onto the top card in
Biddle Grip. As this is being done the left fingers pull all the cards below the top card down swing them over and then replace them under the top card. There is a lot of built in misdirection with the spectator cupping his hands together, which covers this action totally. The second secret action you are going to perform is to drop your right arm to the side. This will cause the ball, which has been lodged in the armpit to fall down the sleeve into the hand where it is taken into a palm. This should be done as the spectator holds their hands out. Immediately put the packet of cards into your right hand covering the ball from all angles. The right hand and the left hand come over the spectator’s cupped hands and the left forefinger pushes down on the top of the packet of cards. At the same time the right fingers release the palmed ball allowing it to fall into the spectators hand. As with all the other routines do not move your fingers when releasing the ball, instead allow it to fall by relaxing your hand. As the spectator is looking at the ball tell him that is represents the ink on the playing cards. To prove this turn the packet of cards over and spread through them (holding the last two together as one) to display four blank playing cards. Place the blank cards squared up onto the table in a pile blank side showing and as everyone is looking at the 8 ball steel the other pool ball from under your jacket. Due to the ball holder this is very simple, all you have to do is drop your hand to the side and take the ball directly into a left hand palm. You have all the misdirection in the world as everyone is looking at the black 8 ball you just produced. Ask another spectator to hold their hands out and tell the audience it is harder to slow down the red ink but you will try. Pick up the cards off the table with the right hand and transfer them into the left hand, which will cover the palmed ball. Bring your hands over the spectators cupped hands and repeat the actions you performed during the first production to produce the second ball. The only difference here is that the actions are reversed – the ball is being dropped from left hand palm instead of right hand palm. After the second ball as been produced slowly turn the cards in your hands over to show that these cards are also blank. You can actually leave these cards in the spectators hands as they can be examined which indirectly says to the audience that all the cards can be examined. Comments This routine is very strong. When the first production happens they are stunned but when you produce the second ball the audience will have no clue what to think! I also like that there is a less powerful effect (the red black separation), which sets up the stronger finish. I also tell the audience that the red cards are on the table but never show them. This is not a problem; if they really believe that the black cards are in your hand of course they will believe the red cards are on the table. If you do not wish to use a ball holder you can place one ball in one sleeve and another ball in the other sleeve. This way you can drop the right hand ball first and then the left hand ball. I have played with this approach and prefer a ball holder as I find holding out two balls in my sleeves can be a little constricting.
Finally instead of using a packet trick wallet you can use a Himber wallet. This way you can put the cards away at the end of the routine and if people want to look at them switch them out for 8 blank cards. Personally I do not bother, as the production of the balls is so strong the audience does not care about the cards anyway. Plus as half the cards have been left with the spectator anyway they feel everything has been examined.
Clearing the Table Effect The magician tells the audience about the time he was playing pool and cleared the table. A Joker is placed on the table to represent the corner pocket (where all the balls were sunk). Three other cards are shown and small post it notes are stuck onto the back of each of these cards. A green ball is drawn on the first post it note, a blue ball on the second post it note and a red ball on the third post it note. These cards are dealt out face up into a row on the table. The audience is told that the three cards represent the last three balls on the table. The magician then points out that he cheated when playing the game and used magic. As way of explanation the magician makes the post it notes vanish off the back of the three cards and when the Joker is turned over all three post it notes are now stuck to the back of it. The magician then points out that the Black 8 was the hardest ball to pot but that was done as well. In order to prove this the magician magically produces a real eight ball from between the cards to end the effect. Requirements 1.) A small post it note pad 2.) A Thick Red Marker Pen 3.) A Thick Green Marker Pen 4.) A Thick Blue Marker Pen 5.) 3 Double Backed Playing Cards 6.) A Pack of Playing Cards to Match the Double Backers 7.) A Black 8 Pool Ball Set Up 1.) Draw a large blue circle on one post it note, a large red circle on a second post it note and a large green circle on a third post it note. Place these three post it notes on the back of the Joker and place this into the middle of the pack of cards. Ensure that you remove the other Joker from the deck so that you don’t get confused during the routine 2.) Place the three double backed cards on top of the face down deck. Place the set up deck into the case and put the case into your inner left jacket pocket 3.) Place the pool ball into your inner left jacket pocket 4.) Have the post it note pad and three different coloured marker pens in a handy pocket so they get accessed during the routine.
Method Reach into your inner left jacket pocket and take out the pack of cards. As in the previous routine as you take out the cards take the pool ball and drop it down your left sleeve holding it out in either the crook of the elbow or under the armpit. Take the cards from the case and spread them face up allowing the spectators to see that it is a regular pack of cards. Set up the effect by telling the spectators about the time you cleared the table in a game of pool. As you are saying this up jog the Joker and tell the spectators that it will represent the corner pocket where you potted the last three balls of the game. Take the Joker out the pack being careful not to flash the back of the card (you do not want them to prematurely see the post it notes on the back of the card). Hold the Joker in your right hand and use your left hand to flip the deck face down into dealers grip. Place Joker face up onto the deck and while doing this obtain a little finger break under the top card of the pack (a double backer). This means that you will have a little finger break under two cards. As you patter about the Joker perform two quick double turnovers flashing the apparent back of the Joker and ending with the Joker face up. Thumb off the Joker and place it face up on the table in front of you. Next tell the audience that you need three cards to represent the last three balls in the game. Spread the cards face down and have a card touched by the spectator. Up jog this card and flip it face up onto the deck catching a little finger break under the original top card at the same time (therefore setting you up for a double lift). Perform a double turnover apparently turning the selection face down and stick a post it note onto the back of the card. I normally hand the post it note pad to the spectator and ask them to hand me one of the notes. Once the note is in place take the red marker and draw a circle onto it. Make sure that when you draw the circles in performance they look as similar as possible to the ones that were pre drawn. Perform another double turnover and deal off the card face up onto the table placing it above the joker already there. The audience will assume that this has a post it note sticker on the back however really there is nothing there. Tell the audience you need another playing card and as you say this double undercut the top card (the double backed card with the post it note on one side) to the bottom of the deck. Now you repeat this exact same sequence twice more each time double undercutting the top card to the bottom of the deck after you have dealt the new top card out onto the table. Basically during this sequence you have rather convincingly made it look like you have dealt out three cards on the table with a post it note sticker on each one. In reality three cards on the table have nothing on them, the post it notes in reality are stuck on the three double backers which are currently located at the bottom of the deck. When you deal these three cards onto the table ensure that you deal them into a row above the Joker forming the classic T formation. The technical side of the effect is over. All that remains is to perform some action to account for the magic and then turn over the three cards on the table showing that there are no longer any post it notes. Then finally turn over the Joker and show that all three post it notes are now on the back of the Joker. As all this is
happening you have all the time in the world to drop your left arm to the side and allow the pool ball ton secretly fall into your cupped hand where it is palmed. Once you have shown that all the post it notes are on the Joker allow the spectator to look at the Joker and as they do pick up the other three cards off the table and hold them in a fanned condition in the left hand (therefore hiding the ball from most angles). Finish the routine by commenting that in order to win at pool you need to pot the 8 ball. Shake the fan of three cards over the table allowing the pool ball to drop at the same time revealing the production of a real 8 ball. Comments One of the strengths of this routine is the presentation. Most people love pool and love hearing stories. I present this routine in an almost conversational manner talking about a pool game I played in the past where I did really well but I cheated and used magic. The hook is very enticing and really gets people ‘into’ what I am about to do. I also think that the actual effect is a nice version of the classic ace assembly. Rather than the cards moving the stickers move. In many ways this is more impossible as they are stuck onto the cards, from the spectator’s point of view how can they move. You do not have to have the ball up your sleeve; it could be on a ball holder or in your pocket. If you have it in your pocket the best time to steal it is before the ending is revealed. Put the pack of cards away in your pocket and steal the ball as you bring your hand out. Then all you have to do is hold out the ball until the end of the routine. Finally, the ball in this routine is used plain and simple as a kicker ending, kind of how a jumbo coin would be used in a coin routine. This is not a bad thing however and there is a lot of merit for performing a routine this instead of a more involved routine centred on the pool ball itself.
3D Pool Effect A business card is shown with a number of pool balls on it. The spectator is asked which of these balls is used to finish the game. Obviously the spectator answers the 8 ball and the magician circles the eight ball with a pen and leaves the card on the table. Next a blank business card is shown and signed by the spectator. This is placed on the table and the spectator is asked to put their hand on it. The magician announces that he is going to attempt a trick shot and pot the 8 ball off the card without touching it. A piece on paper is shown and placed onto the card with all the balls on it. The paper is lit and in a flash the eight ball is shown to have gone leaving all the other balls on the table. The magician then explains that the card under the spectator’s hand is the pocket and when they look at their signed card it now has the 8 ball drawn on it. History This routine is slightly different to any of the other routines in the book, as it does not actually end with the production of a real 8 ball. I wanted to include this however as it is a really commercial routine that is super easy to do. The routine can be adapted to include the production of an 8 ball but I don’t think it is needed. This is definitely a case of less is more. Requirements 1.) A Stack of Business Cards (these cards must have a blank back) 2.) A Frixon Pen 3.) A Regular Pen 4.) Several Different Coloured Pens 5.) A Large Elastic Band 6.) A Flash Pad 7.) A Lighter Set Up 1.) Take one of the business cards and draw 8 to 15 small circles all over the back in a haphazard manner. Each circle should really be done with a different coloured pen. Make sure that one of these circles is drawn with the Frixon pen. The circles will represent pool balls and the one drawn with the Frixon pen will represent the black 8 ball. Make sure the 8 ball is drawn in a prominent position on the card so that it is easily visible. Also ensure there is a little space all the way around the 8 ball (so that no other balls are touching it) so that you can draw a circle later around it later. Place this business card in your wallet. If you are wanting to perform this
routine more than once in an evening you will need to prepare a few of these cards. 2.) Take one of the business cards and cut it in half. This half card will be the cover card used in the out to lunch principle. Next take all the cards (holding them in a landscape direction) and using the regular pen draw a large 8 ball on one side of the card (the side that will be covered with the half card. Try to make the drawing of the 8 ball look as good as possible. Now place the half card over the stack of business cards hiding the drawing of the 8 ball and use the elastic band to hold the half card in place (as per the standard out to lunch effect). You now have a stack of business cards, which look blank on one side whilst in actual fact, have an 8 ball drawn on each one. The reason for preparing more than one card is that this way the trick will have an instant reset. Place this stack of cards into a convenient pocket. 3.) Place a regular pen where you can get to it later. This pen should really contrast to the black of the Frixon pen (I use a blue biro). 4.) Have the flash pad and the lighter somewhere accessible as well Method The Opening Procedure Explain to the audience that you are going to show them how to perform a trick shot in pool but using real magic. Take out the prepared business card from your wallet and hand it out for examination. Ask the spectator if they know which is the most important ball in a game of pool. Most people will say the 8 ball, if not tell them. Explain that as it is the most important ball you will try to pot the 8 ball but without even using a cue. Take out your pen and circle around the 8 ball on the card so that everyone can see where it is. Leave this card on the table with the balls in full view Having the Business Card Signed Take out the stack of business cards and just like the normal out to lunch effect ask a spectator to sign one of the cards. Turn your hand over sliding out the bottom card from under the half card and place it on the table. Ask the spectator to place their hand on the card and place the remaining stack of cards away in your pocket. Introducing the Flash Paper Tell the audience to make a shot as hard as this you will need to use magic. Ask if any audience members know a magic word you could use. Take out the Flash Pad and the pen again and write one of the magic words offered on a piece of flash paper and tear it out the pad. Put the pad away; show the word on the paper and crumple it into a ball. Place the crumpled paper onto the card so that
it is directly over the eight ball. Take out your lighter and after suitably building up the effect light the paper. There will be a flash and when he smoke has cleared the audience will be able to see that the eight ball has vanished. Revealing the Other Eight Ball Tell the spectator that they might not believe that you potted the eight ball and that instead you just made it disappear. Offer to prove that you did indeed pot the ball. Point out the card under the spectator’s hand and tell them that card represents the corner pocket. Ask them to turn the card over and they will see that on the card they signed is now the eight ball. Hand out both cards to your assistants to end the routine. Comments I love this routine, its just one of those effects I do where I can have fun with the audience and concentrate on the performance. The routine is so easy but plays so strong. The initial hook of asking if the spectator would like to see what a trick shot looks like by magic is great. People love pool anyway; the whole concept of it is ingrained in popular culture so combining this with magic is just a real winner. I mentioned earlier that I do not produce an 8 ball and the reason is I feel the effect is so strong adding that final kicker takes away from the magic that has just happened. You can produce an 8 ball (after reading the routines in this book you will certainly know how) but I would not recommend it.
Eight Ball Sandwich Effect The two black aces are removed from a pack of cards and another card is selected (lets assume it is the Eight of Spades). The two black aces are used to find the selected card not once bit twice. The selection is then shuffled into the deck and placed away in the box. The magician states he will find the card one more time despite all the cards being in the box. The two aces are waved over the box and a real black eight ball appears in between the cards. History This was one of the first effects I developed with pool balls. Obviously John Bannon’s production out of a card box was the inspiration for the effect. I wanted to turn that one moment of magic into a multi phase routine where the eight ball appearing is the kicker. At the same time I was becoming worryingly obsessive about sandwich routines. I realised that if you hide an eight ball beneath two sandwich cards you can create the illusion of the ball appearing between them. Requirements 1.) A pack of cards 2.) A Black Eight pool ball Set Up 1.) Have the pool ball in your left jacket pocket 2.) Have the cards in the case and put them into one of your pockets Method Opening Procedure Explain to the audience that you are going to show them the same trick three times. Each time you will be progressively faster until you are performing the fastest trick in the world. As you say this take out the cards and hand them out to be shuffled. You can put the box away if you wish it should not be used again until the end of the routine. Introducing the Sandwich Cards Take the cards back and spread through the deck looking for two black aces. As you do this cull the black eight to the top of the deck. If you do not know how to cull you could simple cut the deck at the black eight as the aces are being removed. Explain to the audience that the two aces will find any card in the pack and that you are going to prove it. Hand the two aces to the spectator to hold for the moment.
Having the Selection Made As you are talking obtain a thumb break under the top card and undercut half the cards to the top of the deck. Once you have cut the cards convert the thumb break into a little finger break. The net result of this sequence is that you will be holding a little finger break below the Eight of Spades. Take the two aces back and place them face up onto the deck. Spread the top ace to the right for half of its length. Tell the spectator that the only cards they cannot select are the black aces and will therefore place them face up on top of the deck so they cannot be selected. Now perform a riffle force to the break apparently allowing the spectator a free choice of card whilst in reality forcing the Eight of Spades. Raise the right hand packet upwards so the audience can see the card they stopped on and ask them to remember it. As you assemble the deck use the left fingers to push the force card to the right for a third of its length. This is done as the right hand places its half onto the half held in the left hand. The audience will not see the side jogged selection as the side jogged ace on top of the deck will cover their view. Tell the spectator that the only thin you know about their card is that it is not a black ace. As you say this you will take the top ace off in the right hand as if you were displaying both aces. This action will cover the steal of the selected card and subsequent placement in between the aces. To do this your right hand takes hold of the right side of the top aces in Biddle Grip. At the same time the left fingers push the side‐jogged selection further to the right until it is gripped between the right thumb and right little finger. This goes unnoticed by the audience because it happens under the side‐jogged ace. Once the selection is gripped in place the right hand takes the top ace away and displays it as the left hand displays the other ace on top of the deck. In a continuing action replace the right hand card(s) onto the deck. The selection is now loaded face down in between the two face up aces. In practice this entire sequence takes literally a second or two to perform. Phase 1 – The Aces Find The Selection Because the control used also loads the selection in between the aces there is nothing you need to do once the card is controlled. Explain to the audience that the aces will find the selected card in one second flat. Tell the audience to watch the deck and after a second slowly spread the top three cards off the deck holding them in the right hand. The audience will be surprised to see a face down card between the aces. Wait a beat and then raise the fan of three cards up to the audience showing that the card in the middle is the black eight. Phase 2 – Sandwich Again Hand the aces back to the spectator and have the selection returned to the middle of the deck whilst making sure you retain a break above it. Using a double undercut control the selection to the top of the deck and then false shuffle keeping it in position. Whilst you are shuffling explain that you will repeat the trick but this time you will do everything slower.
Obtain a little finger break under the top card of the deck and place the two aces face up on top. You will now create the illusion that the aces vanish one at a time into the deck. Pick up the three cards above the break in right hand Biddle grip. Using the left thumb pull the top ace onto the deck so that it is flush with the rest of the pack. This will leave you holding a double card in the right hand. Place this double card in jogged onto the deck so that it is in jogged for half its length. In this position you will now use a paintbrush change to create the illusion that the first aces vanishes. To do this push the double card forward until it is flush with the deck and then in a continuing action pull back a single card. The face down selection will be left on top of the deck and it will look like the first ace just vanishes. Erdnase Change To make the second ace vanish you will use an Erdnase Colour Change. Square the second ace up with the deck so that it is face up on top. Hold the deck face up in dealing grip in the left hand. Bring your right hand over the deck with the fingers extended, hand flat and palm down. As the right hand covers the deck push Ace forward for about a third of its length. This is done by putting the tips of your fingers on the Ace near the outer end and pushing forward as you cover. This will expose the face down card second from the face. The heel of the right hand will be positioned over the blank card that is exposed. Push down with the heel of the right hand and pull your right hand backwards again. From the audiences point of view it will look like you are showing the Ace. However you are also pulling the face down card backwards from under the Ace. As you are pulling backwards you will hear a clicking sound, which indicates that the face down card has come out from under the Ace. Your right hand and left hand will now work in unison. Your left forefinger reaches forward and pulls the out jogged card inwards so that it is flush with the deck. At the same time the right hand moves forwards with the face down card hidden in the palm. As soon as the face down card is flush with the deck lift the right hand upwards and show that the second ace has disappeared. The Reappearance Once the Aces have apparently vanished spread through the face down deck telling the audience that they are looking for the selection. As you do this make sure that you push off a clump of cards at the start so that you don’t accidently expose the face up aces. Square the cards up again and tell the audience that if they wait a couple of seconds the aces should return with the selected card. To make the aces return you will just perform the Erdnase Change again. This will create the illusion of a face up ace instantly appearing on the top of the deck. Wait and beat and spread the top three cards showing that the two aces have returned and there is a face down card between them. Hand the aces to a spectator and slowly turn over the face down card to show the selected eight of spades. Phase 3 – The Pool Ball Kicker Explain to the audience that you will repeat the trick one last time except this time under test conditions. Have a spectator put the selection into the deck and
shuffle the cards till they are satisfied that there is no way you could know where the card is. Then ask the spectator to put the cards away in the box making sure you cannot perform any sleight of hand. Place the box of cards away in your left hand jacket pocket and at the same time ask the spectator that is holding the two black aces to hand them to you. The audience attention will focus on the spectator handing you the aces, which means that the left hand can palm the pool ball and come out of the pocket unnoticed. Allow the left hand to hand naturally at your side. You will now load the pool ball under the two aces while the audience are misdirected elsewhere. Hold the two aces fanned out in the right hand held in place with just the forefinger and thumb. Ask the spectator to cup their hands together as if they were about to catch something. As the audience attention is drawn to the spectator cupping their hands you will use a cups and balls style load to load the ball under the cards. Bring your right and left hands together so that they meet in front of your body. As the hands meet take hold of the eight ball with the right hand little, ring and middle fingers. The audience will not be able to see the ball as the fanned cards cover it from view. Tell the audience that the black eight will appear once more in between the black aces. Bring the fan of cards over the spectator’s cupped hands. The left hand will now take one of the cards from the right hand and move to the left. At the same time the right hand will let go of the ball and move to the right with the other ace. Done at the same time the pool ball seems to just appear in between the aces, hover for a moment and then drop into the spectators hands. The production of the ball is a real surprise and a great way to end the effect. Comments It is very important throughout this routine that you constantly refer to the selection as a black eight. If the audience do not realise why you are producing a pool ball at the end of the routine then the effect will fall flat on its face. This routine succeeds because a laymen’s natural instinct is to ask to see a trick again. They think that if they see the routine a second time they will be able to catch what you were doing. In this routine the hook line is that you will perform the same effect three times and each time you will make the effect more impossible. The best part is because of the way the routine is structured from the audience’s point of view the effect will look more impossible with each phase. It is important in any multi phase effect that the effect builds else it will get repetitive and ultimately boring. That has always been my problem with sandwich routines – they can be boring without an ending. The pool ball provides an ending to the routine and is very much like the final loads in a cups and ball routine – the audience never see it coming and are always blown away with the final reveal.
Essence Transposition Effect A spectator examines a handkerchief and whilst this is happening a white cue ball is shown to the audience. The cue ball is wrapped inside the handkerchief and given to the spectator to hold. A pack of cards is introduced and a card is selected (we will assume the card is the 3 of Diamonds). The performer tells the audience that he will perform a trick and slow it right down to give the audience a chance to see how it is done. The performer further explains that he will remove the essence from the selected card and transfer it to the cue ball that the spectator is holding tightly. The selected card is then shown to have become blank and when the spectator has a look at the pool ball they have been holding from the beginning of the effect it is now a red three. History I had been playing with the concept of switching balls under a handkerchief for some time. At the same time I was researching into effects for my Blank DVD. I realised that you could use a cue ball and a ball switch to magically print a white cue ball. The use of a blank card to enhance the effect was the next most logical progression of the idea. Requirements 3.) A pack of cards 4.) A blank faced card with a matching back 5.) An opaque handkerchief 6.) A white cue ball 7.) A red three pool ball Set Up 3.) Set up the cards in the following order from the top of the deck. Blank card, Three of Diamonds followed by the remainder of the deck. 4.) Place the deck away in your right outside jacket pocket 5.) Place the handkerchief in your left outside jacket pocket 6.) Place the red three pool ball in your right outside jacket pocket 7.) Place the white cue ball in your left outside jacket pocket Method Opening Procedure
Tell the audience that you are going to show them something with a handkerchief. Both your right and left hands reach into their respective jacket pockets. The right hand palms the red three pool ball as the left hand removes the handkerchief from it’s pocket. As all attention is on the handkerchief remove your right hand with the ball palmed and allow your right hand to drop to your side. Have the handkerchief examined by the audience taking it back afterwards with the left hand. Tell the audience you have something else to show them as well and transfer the handkerchief to the right hand. The handkerchief covers the palmed ball and allows the right hand to look natural. The left hand goes into the left jacket pocket and removes the cue ball which is also handed to the audience to examine. Switching the Balls Take hold of the handkerchief with the left hand and take the cue ball back from the audience with the right hand. Make sure that as you take this ball the audience does not notice that you have another ball in the palm. Hold the cue ball at the tips of the right fingers and in a continuing action throw the handkerchief over the right hand. Explain to a spectator that you are going to wrap the ball up inside the handkerchief and you want them to hold it tightly. Under the cover of the handkerchief use your thumb to push the palmed red three to the fingertips and allow the cue ball to drop into the right palm. You have all the time in the world to do this so do not rush. The audience cannot see through the handkerchief and therefore will not realise you are switching the balls. To further cover this action, as the switch is taking place reach over with the left hand to grab the red pool ball. As soon as switch is executed take the red pool ball and handkerchief away with the left hand. At the same time drop your right hand down to your side. Ask the spectator to take hold of the pool ball and make sure nobody can get hold of it. Ditching the Palmed Cue Ball Tell the audience that you will need a pack of cards. Reach into your right jacket pocket and remove the cards whilst at the same time ditching the palmed cue ball. Take the cards from the case and put the case away. Shuffle the cards making sure that the top two cards remain on top of the deck. Forcing the Three of Diamonds You will now force the top card onto the spectator. The best way to do this is to cut the pack in the middle, hold a break and riffle force to the break. Of course any force can be used in place of the riffle force. Assuming you use a riffle force cut the pack when the spectator says stop bringing the top stock back to the top of the deck. Perform a double turnover showing that the spectator has selected a three of diamonds. Turn the double down again and take off the top card holding it face down in the right hand. Place the remaining cards away in your pocket – they will not be needed again. Transposing the Essence
All that is left is to show that the card you are holding is blank and the pool ball has been printed into a red three. There are several ways to do this. You can make a magical gesture and turn the card over showing it is blank. Another way would be to place the card into a spectators hands and have them turn the card over. You could hit the card against the pool ball the spectator is holding and turn the card over at the same time to show it is blank. There are many ways to perform this final sequence. You should practice all of the ways of revealing the effect and try out the way you feel most comfortable with. Either way once you have shown the card and the ball the effect is finished. Comments If you try this routine to real people I think you will be surprised how strong the reactions can be. One of the most important things to consider with this routine is the hook line at the beginning of the routine. People have an inherent interest in learning how magic tricks works. If you open a presentation by telling the audience you will perform a trick and give them a chance to see how it is done the attention will be immediately peeked. Obviously when you ‘teach’ how the routine works you have your tongue firmly planted in your cheek. However by this time the audience have invested emotionally in the routine and therefore want to see what happens.. In my opinion hook lines are very important in a magic performance. Especially when you are performing in a restaurant or bar and have to fight to get the audiences attention quickly. Regrettably many performers do not concentrate on the hook and instead try to learn the latest sleight or move. Presentations and especially hook lines are as important as any sleight and should be practiced with equal diligence. I am sure you have realised from reading this effect but no table is required. Everything can be performed in the spectator’s hands. In addition the routine instantly resets and can be done with any shuffled deck (as long as you add a blank card in at some point). As a final point I am sure it has occurred to you but the card the spectator selects can be signed on the back and given away I its blank state. To be honest I don’t bother with having the card signed. I perform this routine in a cocktail situation and would much rather have the effect reset than need to add another blank card to the deck every time I perform.
Essence Deal Effect The magician offers to show the spectator a trick and then slow the effect down so that the audience can see how it works. A card is selected (for example the King of Hearts). Simply by shaking the card it becomes totally blank and then visibly becomes printed once again. The magician states that he is simply taking the essence off the card and then putting it back again. The magician continues by saying that he will perform the same effect again but slowly this time, which should give the audience a chance to see what happened. The King of Hearts is rubbed and becomes blank once again. However this time a small balled up piece of paper appears which is unfolded to reveal the King of Hearts printed on. The performer tells the audience that the piece of paper is the essence off the card. The card is then dealt face down onto the table and the piece of paper is lit. Instantly it vanishes in a flash and when the card is turned over it is printed once again. Requirements
Some flash cards (King of Hearts) A deck of cards A blank faced card A lighter
Set Up Crumple up a few of the flash cards into balls and put them into your outside right jacket pocket. Putting a few of these in your pocket will mean that you are reset to perform the routine several times in an evening. Set up the deck with the King of Hearts on the top of the deck and the blank card on top of that. Place the cards in the box and place this box in your outer right jacket pocket. Finally put the lighter in your outside right jacket pocket. Method OPENING PROCEDURE During the opening presentation reach into your right hand pocket and palm one of the flash card balls. The position this is palmed in is very important. The ball should be clipped between the base of the middle finger and ring finger. It is important that none of the paper sticks out the back of the hand. This ball is going to be held in this position throughout several card sleights and therefore you must ensure it is securely held in position. As soon as the card is in position bring out the pack of cards and display them to the audience. PHASE 1 – THE KING BECOMES BLANK Take the cards out the box and shuffle making sure that the top two cards stay in position on top of the deck. Cut the deck in the middle and hold a break between the two halves. Perform a riffle force cutting to the break whenever the spectator calls stop. Complete the cut bringing the original top half of the deck
back to the top. Perform a double turnover turning the top two cards over as one showing the King of Hearts. Tell the audience to watch the king carefully. Perform another double turnover turning the top two cards face down as one. Take the top card (which is the blank card) in the right hand and shake it back and forth in a magical gesture. Slowly turn the card around to show that it has become totally blank on the face. PHASE 2 – THE CARD IS PRINTED ONCE AGAIN You will now magically print the card again. Obtain a little finger break under the top card of the pack. Place the blank card face up onto the deck. You will now use the snap change to change the blank card back into the King of Hearts. The snap change is the perfect sleight to use in this situation, as it does not require the ring or middle finger of the right hand to move. This means that the paper ball can remain clipped in position. To perform the snap change grip the two cards between the thumb and middle finger at the bottom cards. The forefinger is pushing against the top of the card(s). Take the double off the top of the pack in this grip making sure you continue to hold the deck in left hand dealing grip. You will now use a larger action to hide the smaller action of turning the double over. The larger action is moving the double up the left arm to the elbow and then down the arm again towards the deck. As the right hand moves up the left arm pinch your thumb and forefinger together and let go with your middle finger. This will cause the double card to flip over bringing the King into view. In a continuing action move the right hand back down the arm and place the double back on top of the deck. The larger action means that the first time the spectators notice the card has printed again is when it comes to rest on the deck. Immediately take the King off the deck with the right hand and display it to the audience. PHASE 3 – ESSENCE REMOVAL You are now going to make the card blank again but this time you will actually produce the balled up paper at the same time. Hand the King to a spectator to examine, after what you have just done they will want to examine it. While the spectator is examining the King you will carry out a Braue Reversal to reverse the blank card under the face up card. To do this obtain a little finger break under the top card of the pack. Undercut half the cards from the bottom of the deck and rotate them face up onto the top of the deck. Continue by cutting the remaining cards from under the break and rotate the packet face up putting them on top of the deck as well. You will be left in a situation where all the cards are face up and the blank card is face down under the pack. Hold the deck in right hand Biddle Grip and take the King face down in the left hand. Place the King under the deck and immediately flip the deck over displaying the King. You will now carry out an Erdnase Change, which will create the illusion of turning the card blank again. The Erdnase change was fully explained in the routine ‘Stealing Essence’ earlier in the book. The only difference here is that you have to perform the change with a balled up piece of flash paper clipped between the ring and middle finger. However you will find that you can extend your fingers and perform the sleight without affecting the palmed paper. Just
before you perform the change ask the spectator to hold their hand out flat and palm up. As soon as the change is performed move your right hand in a grabbing motion as if you have taken something away from the card. Without pausing bring your right hand over the spectators open hand and drop the palmed ball. Have the spectator open the ball of paper to show that the King of Hearts is printed on it. It is important to note that this moment is very powerful for the audience. First of all the Erdnase Change is a very deceptive move when performed correctly. The moment you lift your hand and show that the card has become blank again the audience will react. This is especially true when you consider that they have just seen the card turn blank and are watching carefully trying to catch you. The best part is when you open your hand and show the balled up flash card. Firstly the audience will be confused and not understand. When the spectator opens the flash card and sees the King of Hearts the audience will react again. PHASE 4 – ESSENCE RETURNED, IN A FLASH All that you have left to do now is print the card one final time. Ask the spectator to hold their hand out. Turn the top two cards face down as one on the pack. Deal the top card face down onto the spectator’s hand and ask them to cover the card with their other hand. The spectator will assume that they have the blank card between their palms. In reality they have the King of Hearts. Tell the audience that the reason they can see the essence of the card is that you have slowed down the procedure used when the card turns blank. This means that they will actually be able to see the essence vanish and appear back on the card in their hands. Reach into your pocket and take out a lighter displaying it in the right hand. Take the flash card and hold it in the left hand. Now simply light the flash card and the essence will apparently disappear in a flash of fire. Put the lighter away and focus the audience’s attention on the spectator holding the card. Have the spectator show the King of Hearts to the audience to end the effect. Comments If you try this routine to real people I think you will be surprised how strong the reactions can be. One of the most important things to consider with this routine is the hook line at the beginning of the routine. People have an inherent interest in learning how magic trick works. If you open a presentation by telling the audience you will perform a trick and then show them how it is done the audience attention will be immediately peeked. Obviously when you ‘teach’ how the routine works you have your tongue firmly planted in your cheek. However by this time the audience have invested emotionally in the routine and therefore want to see what happens. Having said that I have had people believe what I am saying when I tell them I will slow down the process. In my opinion hook lines are very important in a magic performance. Especially when you are performing in a restaurant or bar and have to fight to get the audiences attention quickly. Regrettably many performers do not concentrate on the hook and instead try to learn the latest sleight or move. Presentations and
especially hook lines are as important as any sleight and should be practiced with equal diligence. I am sure you have realised from reading this effect but no table is required. Everything can be performed in the spectator’s hands. In addition the routine instantly resets and can be done with any shuffled deck (as long as you add a blank card in at some point). Overall this is a super commercial routine to perform and I am sure you will agree if you try it out.
Mental Dilemma Effect A business card is signed and placed away in a spectator’s wallet. Another business card is shown and left on the table. Five cards are introduced with a pool ball drawn on each one. The audience shuffles the cards and five spectators each take one. While the magician is facing the other direction the cards are gathered up and put away. Following this each spectator draws his or her chosen pool ball onto the blank business card. The magician now faces the audience again and by looking at the drawings tells each spectator which symbol they drew. The card is now handed to one of the spectators and they are asked to concentrate on their chosen pool ball. When they turn the card over the symbol they drew has vanished completely. Assuming they selected the black eight they are asked to remove the business card placed in their wallet from the beginning. Upon doing this they realise the card now has a black eight drawn on it. History For those of you that do not know the frixion pen is a pen marketed by Pilot. The ink from this pen can be made to disappear off a piece of paper or card using heat. A good example would be the heat from a lighter or the heat from some flash paper. Matthew Bich was one of the first performers to create routines with this principle when he released his manuscript ‘Sympathetink’. This routine evolved from another routine by Ethan Mark called ‘Misty’. I have combined the original Misty routine with Andy Nyman’s ‘Magician’s Graphology’ routine to create an effect I am very proud of. The vanish and subsequent reproduction of the symbol puts this routine into the category of mental magic as apposed to full on mentalism. Requirements
A Red Sharpie 5 Blank Faced Red Backed Cards A Black Sharpie 2 Pilot G2 Pens A Pilot Frixion Pen A Stack of Business Cards that have a blank surface on one side Some Elastic Bands A Pair of Scissors A Lighter A Packet Trick Wallet
Set Up Take the 5 playing cards and draw different pool ball on each one. Pick five pool balls with different numerical values and a combination of stripes and spots. Lets assume for ease of explanation you picked ball number 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5. Obviously you would not really want to do this as you want the balls to appear more randomised but these are the numbers we shall use in the explanation.
Draw one ball on each card making sure that the balls look as detailed as possible. For example if you are drawing the red three make sure you use a red pen. Likewise if you are drawing a stripe ball make sure you show the stripe on the ball. The backs of these cards should be marked so that you can tell one from the other very easily. I use a simple marking system that works well in the context of this routine. If you look at the back of a Bicycle Playing card you will notice that there is an angel in each corner. On the lowest value card I colour in one of the angels heads with a red Sharpie marker. On the next highest value card I colour two of the angels heads in. On the next highest value card I colour three of the angels heads in. On the next highest value card I colour all four of the angels heads in. Finally I leave the highest value card blank and do not colour in anything. This means I can very easily spot one card from another even from a distance although the audience will not be able to spot a thing. Place these cards into a packet trick wallet and place them away in your jacket pocket. Now you need to set up your Frixon pen. Basically the ink refill from a frixion pen can be taken out and installed easily into a Pilot G2. This will result in a normal looking pen, which will actually act like a frixion pen. Even better the frxion G2 can be switched for a regular G2 meaning you can write in normal ink or fixion ink just by performing a pen switch. Place both the regular G2 and the frixion G2 in your inside left jacket pocket making sure that you know which pen is which. Now take one of the business cards and cut it in half for the ‘Out To Lunch’ principle. Take a business card and on the blank surface draw a red three pool ball at one end. Repeat this with a few more business cards until you have a small stack of eight to ten. Now assemble a packet of business cards by alternating a red three pool ball card and a blank card all the way through. Therefore the face of the packet should have a red three pool ball on, followed by a blank card then a red three card and so on and so forth. Place the half card over the pool ball on the face of the stack and hold it in place with the elastic bands. You will be left with a packet of cards, which is set up to repeat the effect up to ten times. Place these cards away in your jacket pocket so they are accessible with your right hand. Finally place the lighter into your outside right jacket pocket. Method THE OPENING PROCEDURE Bring out the stack of business cards and tell the audience that before you do anything you will have the spectator sign a card. Take out the regular G2 pen and hand it to the spectator. Have them sign the face card of the stack of business cards but be careful they do not sign the half card. The spectator will assume that the card they have signed is blank whilst in reality thanks to the out to lunch principle the card has a cross on it. Turn the packet face down and pull out the regular card from under the half card. Place this into the spectator’s pocket making sure that they do not see that their
signed card now has a pool ball on it. Take the pen back and put it away in the same pocket it came from. Now flash the face of the packet of cards and pull out the next business card (which will be blank). Place this card on the table and tell the audience you will get back to it later. By placing this card on the table and letting the audience see it is totally blank it sells the audience on believing that the first card was blank as well. Place the stack of business cards away at this point, they will not be used again and are reset for the next performance. INTRODUCING THE POOL BALLS Take out the packet trick wallet and bring out the pool ball cards showing them to the audience one at a time. Hand the cards to a spectator to shuffle making sure that the audience knows that they are completely mixed up. During this procedure look at your audience mentally selecting five audience members that are going to assist you with the effect. In your head you are going to number these people one, two, three, four and five. In order to make things easy I like to pick five people sitting in a row and number the first person on the left number one and the last person on the right number five. Take the cards back that have now being shuffled and tell the audience that you are going to pick five people and each person will take a card. You want it to look like you are picked people at random and handing them playing cards. In reality you are looking at the marks on the back of the cards and giving them to specific people. The person on the extreme left you will give the lowest value pool ball to and you will continue to the right until the person at the extreme right has been given the highest value pool ball. For example if I look at the back of the top card and I notice one angel has been coloured in I know this is the lowest value pool ball and has to be given to the person on the extreme left. The important thing here is to act natural, it should not look like you are studying each card and then handing them off to specific people. You should act very laid back, tell the audience you are going to give cards out to different people. When the audience thinks back to this effect they will remember the cards were shuffled and then given out to the audience. This is also why the marking system can be so bold. Nobody really looks at more than one card at any given time so they have no chance to detect a system. THE DRAWINGS BEGIN Tell each spectator to look at their pool ball and put the cards away in their pockets. You will now tell the audience that one at a time they are going to draw their symbols onto the business card left on the table until all five symbols have been drawn. The important thing here is the last shape to be drawn has to be the red three which in our example is the third highest pool ball at therefore has been given to the person that I mentally assigned number three to. I therefore have to ensure that spectator number 3 is kept till last. Take out the G2 and hand it to one of the spectators telling them at the same time to pick up the business card and draw their pool ball. Make sure that they understand that they have to make the drawing as detailed as possible and include the number of the ball and any markings. Turn around as this is being done so that you cannot be accused of cheating or peeking. After they have finished drawing tell them to place the card drawing side down on the table. Turn back round to face the audience, take
back the pen and hand it to another spectator asking them to do the same thing. This whole procedure is repeated four times until there are four symbols drawn on the business card. After the forth person has drawn their symbol place the pen away in your pocket and start to explain that now everyone has drawn their symbols you can continue with the effect. One of two things will happen, either spectator three will say they have not yet drawn their symbol or the rest of the audience will comment. Either way apologise to spectator three and hand them the pen back. This time however you will take out the frixon pen. This means that the red three pool ball will be the only symbol on the card, which can be removed by heat. Turn back round after the spectator has finished drawing and take the pen back placing it in your pocket, the pens are now reset for another performance. DIVINING THE POOL BALLS The rest of the routine is just acting. Tell the audience that you can look at the drawings and get clues about who drew what. One by one start talking about the pool balls and how they have been drawn and reveal that you can tell who has which symbol. As you reveal each symbol have the spectator take the card out of their pocket and show it to the audience. This does two things, it shows that you are indeed correct and also serves as an applause cue. Leave the red three to the end so that it is the last symbol. Explain to the audience that revealing that you knew who drew the red three is not a great effect as there is only one person left. Continue to tell them that instead you will try to hypnotise the audience. Take out your lighter in the right hand and hold the card back to the audience in your left hand. Wave the lighter in front of the card back and forth telling the audience to watch the flame. The audience will assume that you are trying to hypnotise them whilst in reality you are using the flame to erase the ink off the card. You will find that after a couple of seconds the red three will have totally vanished. Put the lighter away and ask spectator two to hold their hand out. Place the card in their hand and tell them they will forget about the pool ball they chose. Wait a beat ask them what their pool ball is to which they will tell you they thought of the red three. Turn the card over to show that the symbol they thought of has vanished proving they never thought of anything. Wait another beat and then ask them to look at the business card, which was placed in their pocket from the beginning. When they do they will find their signed card now has a red three on it right across the face. Comments This is a very commercial effect. All you have to do at the end of the effect is put the pool ball cards away and you are reset. There are a number of climaxes each of which becomes more and more powerful. The actual revealing of the pool balls is a very powerful moment but when the last spectators chosen symbol vanishes the reactions are amazing.
An important thing to note is that the routine should be done to the correct type of audience. A drunken bar crowd is not a very receptive audience for this type of effect. Likewise it does not make the best opener. However performed at the right time to the right group of people there really are few effects that are as strong as this.
Psychic Lighter Effect The magician announces that he has a lighter that is psychic and can read peoples minds. The performer then hands a silver Zippo lighter and a black handkerchief out for examination. The Zippo lighter is then wrapped up in the handkerchief and held by a spectator. The magician then shows various cards with different sports on them and has the spectator choose one of the cards. The spectator freely selects the card with ‘Pool’ on it. When the Zippo lighter is taken out of the lighter it is shown to have changed from silver to black with a black eight ball printed on it. The magician then says that you cannot play pool without a ball and reaches into the handkerchief and produces a real pool ball. As an added kicker the magician then tells the audience that you cannot finish a game of pool without an 8 ball and reaches back into the handkerchief to produce a ball eight pool ball. History My friend Ethan Mark has a wonderful effect called JFK ESP in which a half dollar becomes printed with a freely chosen singer. This was the inspiration behind this effect. I was looking through the Zippo Catalogue and saw a Zippo with an 8 Ball printed on it. At the time I was developing a lot of routines with 8 balls and thought there could be some way I could tie the lighter into an effect. After seeing Ethan’s routine I put two and two together and the following routine was born. Requirements 1.) A Silver Zippo Lighter 2.) A Black Zippo Lighter with a Black Eight Pool Ball printed on it 3.) Ten Black Faced Cards 4.) A Black Sharpie Marker 5.) A Ball Holder 6.) A Red Three Pool Ball 7.) A Black Eight Pool Ball 8.) You Must be Wearing a Jacket 9.) An Elastic Band Set Up
1) Use the Black Sharpie to write ten different sports on the faces of the ten blank faced cards. Try to make the sports as strange as possible as this will be really funny during the performance. I put sports down like Dodge Ball, Cheer Leading, and Professional Stamp Collecting etc. 2) Stack the cards making sure that the one that says ‘POOL’ is on top of the stack. Wrap the cards around with an elastic band and place them in your right jacket pocket. 3) Place the Silver Zippo Lighter in your left jacket pocket 4) Place the Pool Ball Zippo Lighter in your right jacket pocket 5) Place the red three pool ball in your left jacket pocket 6) Use the ball holder to hold the black eight pool ball in and place it under the right side of your jacket. 7) Put the handkerchief into your inner jacket pocket Method Opening Procedure Reach into your pocket and take out the handkerchief and hand it to a member of the audience for examination. As it is being examined tell the audience that you have a mind reading lighter and you would like to prove it to them. Both your hands go into your pockets as if you are searching for something. You right hand palms the black lighter whilst the left hand removes the silver lighter showing it to the audience. As all attention is on the lighter in the left hand take your right hand out your pocket and allow it to drape naturally at your side. Hand the lighter out for examination and using your left hand retrieve the handkerchief. Whilst the audience is focused on the silver lighter place the handkerchief over the right hand, which turns palm up underneath. The audience will not be able to see the palmed lighter as the handkerchief will be covering everything from view. Take the lighter back with the right hand and tell your spectator you want them to hold the lighter for now. You will now switch the lighters in the action of placing the silver lighter inside the handkerchief. This is done using a sleight called the Gypsy Switch. The Gypsy Switch Place the silver lighter onto the handkerchief so that it is resting on top of the hidden lighter underneath. Obviously make sure that the lighters do not make a noise when you place one onto the other. With your left hand reach over and grip the handkerchief just in front of the lighters. Fold a small piece of material over the top of the silver lighter and grip the lighters and the material with the left hand. The left thumb should be holding the material against the silver lighter
and the left middle finger and forefinger should be pushing up against the underside of the hidden lighter. In this position pick up everything and flick the handkerchief forwards with the left hand. In a continuing action place the handkerchief back into the right hand making sure the silver lighter goes into finger palm position. Done correctly this should look like you placed the silver lighter on the handkerchief and in a flourish wrapped it inside and placed the wrapped up handkerchief back into the right hand. Wait a beat then take hold of the ends of the handkerchief with the left hand and pull upwards taking the handkerchief away from the right hand. At the same time the right hand should rotate so the palm is away from the audience hiding the silver lighter from view. Allow the right hand to drop naturally to the side and hand the bunched up handkerchief to a spectator to hold. The audience will be convinced the spectator is holding a silver lighter whilst in reality you have switched it out. Introducing the Cards Reach into your right pocket ditching the silver lighter and bringing out the banded up cards in the same action. Take the band off and show the cards to the audience. Explain that each of the cards has a different sport and they are going to select one. You will now shuffle the cards, which will apparently randomise the order whilst in reality positioning your force card second from the bottom of the packet. To do this hold the cards ready for an overhand shuffle with the backs pointing to the audience. Milk the top and bottom cards off at the start of the shuffle and shuffle off the remainder of the packet. Your force card will now be second from the face. Of course if you wish you can move the card to this position using your favourite method. You are now ready to force the ‘pool’ card onto the spectator using the Paul Hallas Fortune Force. Fortune Force Start to deal cards onto the table one at a time slowly. As you deal the first three cards tell the spectator you will deal cards onto the table and that they can stop any time they like. Once you have said this do not say another word. You will have already have dealt three cards onto the table so the spectator will stop probably within the next three cards dealt. This will leave you with a packet of cards in your hand and a pile of cards on the table. Indicate the top card of the packet in your hand and explain to the audience that the spectator could have stopped anywhere but stopped right there. Now simply perform a block push off turning over all the cards above the bottom card of the packet as one. You should have no more than three or four cards that you need to turn over as one because of how you timed the force. The block turnover will show the card as being the ‘pool’ card. Continue by turning over the top card of the pile on the table and saying that if they stopped one card less there would have been a totally different outcome. Rotate your left hand and show the bottom card of the packet explaining that if they had waited till the end there would have been a different outcome again but they stopped on the pool card. Block push off the cards face down again and reassemble the packet. Wrap
the elastic band around the packet again and hold it in the left hand. You are now set for the reveal of the lighter. Revealing The Lighter You now build up the effect by explaining that the spectator has been holding the lighter from the beginning of the effect. Ask the spectator to unwrap the lighter and show it to the audience. As this is happening and therefore all the attention is on the spectator casually put the packet of cards away in the left hand pocket. Whilst in the pocket palm the pool ball and immediately bring your hand out from your pocket hiding the ball from view. Nobody will notice this as all attention is on the change of the lighter, which the audience will assume, is the end of the effect. Stealing The Balls Take the handkerchief back with the right hand and transfer it to the left hand covering the palmed ball from view. Immediately drop your right hand to the side and steal the second ball from the ball holder under your jacket. Wait for the audience to finish reacting to the lighter change and explain that pool is your favourite game and one other thing you need in a game of pool is a pool ball. Reach over with your right hand and take the handkerchief away revealing the red three at the fingertips of the left hand. As you do this make sure that you do not flash the palmed eight ball. As the handkerchief is taken away with the right hand it will cover the palmed eight ball from view ready for the second kicker. The Final Kicker Hand the red three pool ball to an audience member and explain that when you play pool there is only one way to end the game – with an eight ball. Wait a beat and then pull back the handkerchief with the left hand to reveal the production of a second pool ball. When you are producing these balls make sure that you position the ball so that it is held at the tips of the fingers. This is easy to do as there is a handkerchief providing all the cover you could possibly need. Having the ball at the fingertips looks more impressive than holding it in the centre of your hand. Hand out the second ball to end the effect. Comments This is a very strong routine with multiple moments of magic. Although it can be performed walk around I prefer to perform this more in a parlour setting on or big tables in a corporate environment. The routine makes a perfect opener as so much happens in quick succession. Having said that it would also make a great closer. You do not have to produce the balls at the end of the routine if you do not want to. To be honest the ending can be varied depending on the type of performer you are and your performing conditions. You could produce one ball, two balls or even three balls. I have toyed with using this effect in a competition act and producing six balls and a full sized triangle as well as a pool cue. I think that would really make an impression on the judges!
Finally the presentation for this routine is important – you will need to try the routine in order to find the best way to perform it that fits with your performing style. The routine starts out as a comedy mentalism and then moves into almost a manipulation style act. Normally this would not mesh although the way I perform the routine it works very well. I start very tongue in cheek and act surprised at everything that is appearing out of nowhere. If you choose to learn this routine you will have to find a presentation that suits you.
Other Ideas I wanted to give you a few more ideas that you could play with now that you have caught the ‘Pool Ball Bug’. Hopefully these ideas will help you think of your own routines with pool balls A FLURRY You could perform a David Roth style coin flurry with chalk instead of a coin. At the end of the flurry that is when you produce your jumbo load – in this case a pool ball A CHOP CUP Tell your audience that your chop cup is the corner pocket and the ball is a pool ball. Show the audience how easily you can pot the balls on the table because you use magic. At the end of the routine tell everyone that you cannot win without an 8 ball and then produce the 8 ball from the cup as a kicker ending CHINK A CHINK Chink a Chink is a classic routine so how about performing it with chalk cubes instead of the classic bottle caps. Chalk cubes are really easy to palm and if you have an 8 ball on a ball holder you can produce that for your kicker ending MATRIX This is the same idea as Chink a Chink. Use chalk cubes to perform matrix and at the end of the routine produce a real 8 ball BLACK BALLOONS David Harkey has an effect where you blow up a black balloon and then pull off the nozzle whereupon it turns into an eight ball. It was written up in his short series in Genii, appears in his video and was then published in his book, Simply Harkey. It’s a wonderful routine that you should look up but there must be more that you could do with black balloons. Depending on how you blow them up they look so much like 8 balls. Food for thought? NUDIST DECK How about performing the classic nudist deck routine but have a card selected first and force the 8 of spades. Have all the cards go blank instead of the card they picked and then take this card produce an 8 ball from it and show that card has gone blank. Then as a kicker all the other cards become printed again except for the card they picked. You could talk about how the cards being blank is an illusion unless you see the ink come off (produce the 8 ball) which means that the cards were never blank to begin with (show the deck is printed again). I’ll let you work out the details!
Credits Pool Hall Mentalism Michel Hout marketed a routine called Dirty Pool where the spectator picked a card with pool balls on and then a pool ball was produced from a card box. Garrett Thomas published a handling variation on his 3 DVD set through L & L Publishing where the pool ball was produced from a packet trick wallet. Although my effect was created independently I would like to acknowledge both of these wonderful routines. The advantage of Pool Hall Mentalism is that the prediction is shown on a business card and then the picture is brought to life as an added kicker. This also leaves then spectator with a business card, which is always nice. In the Corner Pocket This routine is original to me and no credits are required as far as I am aware The Hard Way This is based on a Matthew Dowden routine from his excellent DVD set ‘Party Animal’ published by Alakazam. The routine in question is called Sole Selection, and like most of Matthews’s work is brilliantly thought out. I added the ending where instead of the deck vanishing except for the second selection, the entire pack vanished and you are left holding just a pool ball, which represents the second selection Trade Show Hustle This is a pet routine of mine I have been doing at Trade Shows for years. As far as I am aware there is nobody to credit with this routine. Trick Shot Change This was based on a routine by Joshua Jay, which he published in his first book ‘The Magic Atlas’. In this effect the wrong card was changed to a correct card by knocking the diamonds on the card. With my routine the effect resets as instead of needing a pocket full of cut out diamonds you just need a pool ball. Black Eight; Corner Wallet The Initial production of the 8 ball is David Regal’s. It was published in his book Constantly Fooling under the title of 8 ball. The second half of the routine is based on Red Hot Momma (also known as the Chicago Opener). This is a routine conceived by Frank Everhart and popularized by Jim Ryan. Pool Hall Matrix M magicians have published effects with a Frixon pen including Mark Oberon, Alan Rorrison and Matthew Bich. Jay Sankey has published a matrix using the out to lunch principle and business cards, but his effect uses 4 business cards
and a completely different method. There have been many routines published where coins printed on cards assemble all onto the same card and in Richards Almanac there is a routine where the coins are popped off the card at the end leaving holes in the card – this uses a completely different technique and involves lapping. Ink Today, Gone Tomorrow This routine is based on Oil and Queens by Roy Walton, which was first, published in IBIDEM magazine No 34&35, page 812. It was originally published as Vanishing Water and later was renamed Oil And Queens. The use of blank cards changes the routine from an oil and water with a kicker to one of the ink vanishing off the cards. The pool balls really add to the effect Clearing the Table The idea of sticking post it notes on the back of double backed cards has been published by Liam Mortimer in his DVD set ‘The Wicked World of Liam Mortimer’ produced by Big Blind Media. 3D Pool I have been performing this routine for years. However on The Wicked World of Liam Mortimer Volume 2 there is a routine using a Frixon pen and business cards where a circle is drawn around a man drawn on a business card and he disappears. In some ways this is similar to 3D Pool so I wanted to acknowledge Liam’s wonderful routine. On his DVD he credits Alan Rorrison for his inspiration for a routine called Headless on his Fingers of Fury DVD (again by Big Blind Media