Just For Fun

One of the world's most popular card tricks

If someone has shown you a card trick at some point in your life, odds are it was this one. It's not popular because it's necessarily the most miraculously astonishing thing you've ever seen. You probably wouldn't see it on a David Blaine or David Copperfield special, but it has the advantage of being one of those tricks that is knowledge-based rather than skill-based. 

Often after a show someone will ask me how much I have to practice certain things. Some of the pieces in my show are extremely difficult. If I don't practice for more than a day, I start to feel rusty. But in other tricks, the secret does absolutely all of the heavy lifting for me. Once I know the secret, I could put the trick down for years and pick it up again the next time. (Although I'd probably forget what I was supposed to say, the trick would still work!)

This trick (if you're interested in learning) is especially rewarding for kids to learn because you can learn the steps and remember them and when you try it, you get immediate feedback. (You either have the right card or you don't.) So if you're curious to add a bit of magical mind-reading to your next social gathering, you can try and pick up:

The Fabulous Twenty-One Card Trick

(Hope you like math nerds with British accents.)

You'll notice she mentions modular arithmetic, but for whatever reason, they skip that part of the explanation. Which is ok, because six years ago, they already explained it five years ago with a slightly more advanced version that requires a bit more mental arithmetic, but still manageable:

FISM 2021

It was just announced that in 2021, Canada — more specifically Quebec City — will be hosting "FISM". Short for Fédération Internationale des Sociétés Magiques, it is an international organization of magicians and their conference, which happens every three years, is a combination of get together and a competition which is informally known as magic's Olympics. The news was made earlier today at the current conference in Busan, South Korea. 

logo.png

This is the first time that the conference has come to North America. 

And the Award goes to....

The Allan Slaight Awards recognize outstanding achievement in the pursuit of the impossible. The Slaight Family Foundation established the awards in 2015 and has pledged to give $50,000 a year, over five years, to celebrate exceptional work in five distinct categories. Each recipient receives not only a cash prize, but also a specially engraved iPad to commemorate the achievement.
— Magicana.com

The Allan Slaight Awards are distributed every year, celebrating extraordinary talent and accomplishments in the world of magic. This year, the recipients are being announced online, spread out over a week. The first award was announced this morning is the Canadian Rising Star:

The recipient is absolutely one of my favourite performers on the planet, Nick Wallace. His 2016 show Séance remains one of the finest live productions I've ever seen. When I was hosting Magic Tonight, Nick was a welcome guest many times. I once described him thusly:

He may pretend to look all sweet and inocent, but I am starting to suspect that he may, in fact, be the devil. Pure evil wrapped in Mr. Rogers’ sweater.
— Me, ca. 2015

Congratulations, Nick, on this well-deserved award. Stay spooky. 

Magic with Physics

The extremely popular YouTube channel Numberphile (popular among nerds at least), they often tread into magical territory. Here one of their frequent guests Tadashi, explains an amusing technique for levitating a pingpong ball (and the physics behind it.)

When I was the host of Magic Tonight in Toronto, the comedy magician extraordinaire Wes Zaharuk used to use this as a bit in his show to great effect: 

Wes Zaharuk

Wes Zaharuk