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Dougini Inner circle The Beautiful State Of Maine 7130 Posts |
Oh, by the way, just to let you know...David Copperfield's staff DOES read this board. That's how they contacted me and warned me. Just TALKING about his methods (not exposing them, mind you), can get me sued.
They were very specific. Not a road I want to go down... Doug |
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pepka Inner circle Uh, I'm the one on the right. 5041 Posts |
Cool, I'm friends with both Chris and Homer. They know how to get a hold of me.
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daffydoug Eternal Order Look mom! I've got 14077 Posts |
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On 2010-08-11 12:19, Dougini wrote: He's got a bunch of people assigned to do nothing but read the magic Café? I'm floored!
The difficult must become easy, the easy beautiful and the beautiful magical.
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Josh Chaikin Inner circle Kansas City 1430 Posts |
Well, two people who work for him are members of the forum. On topic, though, and pardon my ignorance, but is there a difference between MacDonald's Aces and the Ace Assembly plot?
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pepka Inner circle Uh, I'm the one on the right. 5041 Posts |
MacDonald's Aces IS an ace assembly. It's just one of the most popular versions using gaffed cards. Other popular versions would be Vernon's Slow Motion Aces, Jazz Aces, Camirand Academy's Dream of Aces and David Regal's new Streamlined Red Convertible. Ricky Jay's well known Exclusive Coterie, with the script from Erdnase is also an assembly, although he uses Queens instead of Aces. They are all Ace Assemblies. And no matter what any advertisement, or post on this forum says, Dream of Aces IS NOT the same trick David Copperfield did on TV.
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pepka Inner circle Uh, I'm the one on the right. 5041 Posts |
Also, I just remembered a GREAT trick by Daryl and James Swain in his book 21st Century Card Magic. It's called Shipwrecked and it FINALLY adds a funny story to the assembly plot. Look it up.
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Dougini Inner circle The Beautiful State Of Maine 7130 Posts |
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On 2010-08-31 04:20, pepka wrote: We agree on this. Totally different. Doug |
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Paul Inner circle A good lecturer at your service! 4409 Posts |
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On 2010-08-31 04:26, pepka wrote: Shhhh. I used that in the restaurant the other night. At the time it was published I thought the joke too well known so skipped the effect, but now several years later it seems fresh to most. Not the best assembly for those conditions but I can do the slower stuff for my regulars. Of course, there's no reason why you can't with a little thought use MacDonald Aces with picture cards and use the same joke, or indeed some of the other assemblies out there. Paul. |
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pepka Inner circle Uh, I'm the one on the right. 5041 Posts |
Hey Paul,
I forgot to tell you, I was at your restaurant a few months ago. Saturday morning, just passing through. Nice place, GREAT breakfasts! |
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crestfallenLyric Veteran user 307 Posts |
Hey guys, I have a question about the use of the gaffed MacDonald's Aces - how would you transition back into using a regular deck after you've finished the routine?
"It is better for a man to honor his profession, than to be honored by it." - Robert-Houdin
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SmaltrabTheAverage New user Waiting for a positive comment from Pegasus for 60 Posts |
Hi guys, sorry to bring up this old thread, but I used to do a McDonald Aces routine years ago, with 3 double sided aces a regular ace, and four regular aces too, but I cannot think for the life of me whose lecture it was that I attended. I have a feeling it may have been John Archer who gave the lecture, as I know he was there but it was around 9 years ago.
Does anyone know which routine this may be? Any other workable McDonald ace routine would be great if you can point me in the right direction. Cheers! |
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jimgerrish Inner circle East Orange, NJ 3209 Posts |
You might want to check out "McFiki's Jumbo Aces" in The Wizards' Journal #23. Based on Jon W. "One-arm Mac" McDonald's $100 Ace trick from the 1950's, Qua-Fiki's version, inspired by John Guastaferro's Famous Aces has JUMBO aces vanishing and reappearing right from and to the hands of the spectators holding the cards. The routine can be performed as a stand-up stage or platform effect using no table, or using just one table or music stand to initially hold the cards until you load up the hands of the spectators. Although he describers the routine using Jumbo Cards, it can also be done with regular size playing cards.
Jim Gerrish
magicnook@yahoo.com https://www.magicnook.com Home of The Wizards' Journals: https://magicnook.com/wizardsTOC.htm |
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SmaltrabTheAverage New user Waiting for a positive comment from Pegasus for 60 Posts |
That sounds great, thank you Jim.
I'm looking at doing some cabaret/stage presentations at the end of strolling, so this may work well. Cheers! |
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MagicKingdom10 Veteran user 316 Posts |
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On Aug 7, 2010, Vlad_77 wrote: Awesome as always
I Love You God
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Vlad_77 Inner circle The Netherlands 5829 Posts |
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On Dec 26, 2014, MagicKingdom10 wrote: Thanks MagicKingdom, but in reading over that post, I saw a HUGE mistake! AAARRGGGH. "Impossible" is by Larry Jennings, not Simon Aronson. But since I am ALSO a huge Simon Aronson fan who is aching for his new book Art Decko, a great Simon Aronson effect (truth be told, I never met a Simon Aronson routine I didn't like) is Prior Commitment which is the very first routine in Try the Impossible. It begins a chapter devoted to a really diabolical principle that IMHO still hasn't been thoroughly explored. |
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MikeMgc Regular user 180 Posts |
I currently perform both Macdonalds Aces and Aces in their faces.
Does anybody know any good resources for for a collection of Macdonalds Aces Vanishes. I currently use several variations of sleight and non sleight vanishes that I have gleaned from various sources "Worlds Greatest Magic", "Aces in their faces" (Variations), Fun Inc DVD (Macdonalds Aces etc) and some which I have invented myself. I was just wondering if their is good resource or collection of different types of vanishes. |
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J Christensen Regular user 130 Posts |
Two great vanishes are in Frank Garcia's book "SuperSubtleCard Miracles". They are the Super S Vanish and the Bob Elliot's Vanish. Both are very convincing.
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MikeMgc Regular user 180 Posts |
J Christensen,
Thanks for the suggestion I will take a look at the Frank Garcia book. I am currently revisiting my Mac Aces routine. |
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jimgerrish Inner circle East Orange, NJ 3209 Posts |
It's hard to believe a teen-ager could improve on old "One Arm Mac's" $100 Ace trick, but I think Qua-Fiki has made a significant improvement by eliminating the random cards that hide the Aces amid confusing piles of cards. Instead, he makes sure you know and remember the three cards piled on top of each ace, and then has the ace completely disappear, rather than just turn into some random card in the crowd. His work is called "Mc-Fiki's Jumbo Aces" and is found in The Wizards' Journal #23. There's an imperfect video (because I have to play all four spectators who get to hold and handle all the cards) but if you can overlook the fat man and imagine it being performed with four real spectators, you can see why I think it's such a knock-out version of the trick.
Jim Gerrish
magicnook@yahoo.com https://www.magicnook.com Home of The Wizards' Journals: https://magicnook.com/wizardsTOC.htm |
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RiderBacks Loyal user 251 Posts |
Well, this got necroed, so why not add this here:
Lance Pierce: https://vimeo.com/60859878 Save for the add-on at the end, I consider this handling to be near perfect. (I swap one of his swaps for an EC version. Still debating the merits of that.) |
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