“It’s amazing to me how Slydini must have studied human psychology in order to perfect this trick. He knows not only how people see, but how they think. The magic is not in his hands, but in your mind. I never tire of Slydini, there will never be his equal, and I’m so happy he touched my life with his art.”
Kostya Kimlat is a beast. But its difficult to rank, because magic is a completely different culture than what Slydini worked in. Sadly, he would likely go largely unnoticed today, simply because of how many decent magicians there are sucking up all the bandwidth.
Best misdirection ever! I could watch him for hours. Blackstone Junior did a version of this in his stage show. An assistant would pop out from behind the curtain at just the right moment to catch the ball behind the subject and duck back off stage completely unnoticed. Audience went crazy. An unbelievable routine
The phrase “deaf and mute” is as offensive to the deaf as the N word is to the Black community. There are many deaf who can speak passably well in spite of hearing little or nothing.
My lady friend and I encountered a magician performing tricks on the street and he picked her to sit down and do a version of this trick. It was hilarious to hear the crowd laugh louder and louder as she was amazed the items kept disappearing. Yes., the trick is obvious to the audience, but it still takes real skill to pull it off smoothly.
I watched so many tricks and stuff. Jugglers, cards tricks, illusions etc. but this, this one is my favorite. When ever i want to get entertain, this video is always here.
@@CenKyne Some people perhaps, not me. I don't fall for these exaggerated and pointless movements. I'd be like "hey what are you doing, why did you move your hand over there?" He might get the paper toss out of my peripheral, but I would still see the hand move.
Thus proving that what YOU think is about as astute as a drunken tramp rolling in the street. Useless and not worth anything of anyone's time. Have fun.