Magician REACTS to PENN TRICKING TELLER (?!?) on Penn and Teller FOOL US 2020
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- Опубліковано 25 лип 2024
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Penn VS Teller!! Magician reacts to Penn SURPRISINGLY Teller by suddenly performing a card trick to try and fool him... all on their show Penn & Teller Fool Us 2020. Teller is shocked and surprised that Penn orchestrated this whole card magic trick set up to fool him, behind his back! Very funny reactions. Will Penn fool Teller and become one of the Fool Us Winners?? Is his magic trick a fooler winner?? This video shows the reaction of someone familiar with magic so you can see how someone in this field feels about the performance! This is Fool Us Season 7 2020.
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Yeah tellers face was soooo surprised and stunned
Well, Teller seemed in fact surprised...
Regarding the trick itself, I believe he had to have 4 different kinds of signals in the cards. Perpahs even more, for example, one kind of «tell» for each suit, so that he could rule out the suit that didn't had the card fastly enough. Then, perhaps a second signal, to see the order, at least that, or even 4 or 5 different «tells» total, one for kind of different approaches he had, suit, face/number, odd/even, etc. Very cool, but effectively the deck might have been in a specific order to be easy to catch up those «tells»...
Keep bringing them up! And like I've mentioned you on FB, try to react to some of Shin Lim's magic videos too, with his friends... Who knows he invites you too to be there!
@Love it when they Call me Big Papa LOL
Enjoy your videos man. As to the trick, we never see the faces of the deck penn uses. maybe it’s loaded with 7d and he has a way to get the rest of the cards he needs. i missed it too though because of the shock of him bringing teller up to watch. the viewer automatically grants him that the deck is legit, which is a crazy good form of misdirection on penn’s part.
Youve been killin it with the rapid fire vids... Thank you for your entertainment...
I got it. The dragon can talk because it is actually a man in a costume. Didn't fool me at all.
😆
You're wrong. He's a dragon disguised as a man disguised as a dragon
Precisely. Its Mushu inside of there
He's the man in the dragon costume,
He's poutry man's best friend
@@yiguozhang2921 grian!!!!!!!!!!!
I love Teller's reactions to really good magic. Even when they figure out how the trick was done, he still smiles, laughs, gasps, and sometimes bounces around in his seat like a little kid. You can see it here.
Penn has a deck of cards. Can you believe that?
I love that Teller has a wireless microphone on him given he doesn’t speak for the show…Kinda a shame cause he’s extremely well spoken and a genuinely great dude!
It's refreshing to see new magicians featured on Fool Us. Looking forward to many good things from this young guy!
This was super cute. I felt the love and caring between them. A true friendship.
after second watching i realized that he didn't even shuffle and cut at all and IM ABSOLUTELY sure Teller knew it and Penn knew he knows
The order of the cards appeared to matter a great deal, so I am guessing it is a very advanced math-based counting trick.
Look at my answer it may have a few more things involved but I think that it forms the basis.
this is actually a very basic (but nice one, I really liked it) math-based counting trick: the cards are initially ordered red/black (then suits, then face/numbers, even/odd) and Penn performs kind of a binary search for the missing card by counting half each time with the help of these weird phrases "... so per-fect-ly wrong ..." (about 25 syllables in the complete first phrase -- then the middle card #26 tells the opposite color from the missing card, and so on)
@@mr.username But Teller also cut the deck once
@@NomTom twice: once before he takes the card out and once after. which is why Penn (normally) needs only a few cards to cycle to fully recover the initial state before he puts his hands under the jacket.
Tom he cut the deck but also flipped the cards. Teller didn’t. This gives him the starting point.
My guess:
Penn had a prepared deck of cards consisting only of diamond sevens, which Teller picked.
He also had the "wrong" cards in his sleeve and pulled them out under Teller's coat to put them on the table.
He switched out the prepared deck of cards below the coat with a regular one sans the 7 of diamonds to give Teller in the end.
I thought the same thing
@@a.j.8926 i as well thought this when i saw it. because at no point does penn show that each card is different. it would be super easy to do a deck swap under the coat too if teller had asked to see the cards afterwards. combine that with the fake shuffles, this seem like the most "penn gilette" way of doing this
while he's doing his fake shuffles and cuts you can see some faces
Tom yeah... i thought that as well... but you get to see the 3 and 4 of spades... that at least suggests they were in some order. And he could undo a pair of cuts if he had som tactile clues
No, that's not it. The effect was taken from Second Thoughts by Ramon Rioboo. It's available from Penguin Magic. The trick is called "I Always Miss and I Never Miss" . There's a bunch of really fooling magic in the book.
I like that part of the show, it is so great to see Teller genuinely surprised and excited.
The fact that Piff the Magic Dragon has been in so much stuff that they do after performing for them is amazing. I absolutely love his act and it's great to see them bring him on XD
Eric leclerc said before his act was 2 bad magicians.its why they loved his act and was refreshing to see. I never knew they had bad acts.i thought only the ones we saw , were the only ones who were on the show.
Well, given the fable you shared, I think I have to say I appreciate you doing these reaction videos. They're interesting. Thanks!
Glad you like them!
You look like the nicest guy, I really hope your channel grows as much as you seem to deserve.
I don't usually comment on videos, but I saw that you still have not that many comments and thought it would be good to show that your work was appreciated.
It's always great to watch someone with good intentions doing a great work as an entertainer.
I sincerely wish you the best.
I appreciate that!
I see two ways this could be done:
1: an ordered deck, with 1 or more cards having a touch-based tell. Then it's just a matter of counting for Penn to figure out Teller's card and perform the rest of the story.
2: We never get to see the cards before Teller makes his selection. It could just be a deck of 7 Diamonds. Then, when Penn's hands are under the jacket, he pulls out some other cards (sleeve, plant, doesn't matter). Then, he just uses those extra cards to perform the story, knowing the whole first deck was just 7 Diamonds.
That second theory would mesh with Penn repeatedly telling audiences for years that everything they see magicians do is based on lying and cheating. Sounds plausible.
my thoughts too
Watch as Teller is splitting the deck, the card on the bottom looks like a 7 of Diamonds. I think you're right.
I think given that he only allows Teller to use cuts it's a pre-sorted deck. Penn sneaks a peak at the cards as Teller is taking off his jacket and cuts the deck back to get a known card to the bottom of the deck, I catch a flash of it being black - so probably the Three of Clubs.
I've spent a bit of time reverse engineering it this evening and could perform the same effect as Penn, although it may not be his method.
The top half of the deck is red, the bottom half is black. You reveal the 26th card from the deck, if it's red you know he's not picked the card from the red half, this is your first miss. I think this is why he's being so precise with his words, it's probably 26 syllables or words he's using to help count the cards.
You put the top (red) half to one side and reveal the 13th card from the black deck (which again, is sorted into clubs/spades). This is your suit miss, and you take the appropriate other half of the black deck.
The next step doesn't cut into half, each suit is sorted KQJ/Odds/Evens, so when you have narrowed down the suit, you take the third card, if it's a face card (which will be a jack) then you take the 10 non-face cards.
Take the fifth card from that pile shows if it's odd or even and then the remaining half it's from is all of the odd/even cards it isn't.
@@patio87 Look at when Penn splits the deck
I Always appreciate the bonus content
Im so glad you said that about allison, I thought I was alone in that feeling! 😂😂
AESOP: If all you have to give is lead critique then give the golden gift of _silence_
“ I exaggerate more than anybody in the world”😂😂😂😂
Well I’ve watched this for the first time and I’m amazed that Penn really fooled Teller with this already published effect. I love Penn and Teller but the real creator should get all the credit it is a superb stack from a great thinker in Magic.👍😊👍
Yes, Ramon Rioboo is a genius! Everyone here should support him and purchase his book from Penguin Magic. The trick is called "I Always Miss and I Never Miss" from Second Thoughts. He deserves the credit!
As well as being able to tell which card was Teller's, he also had to identify all the "wrong" cards as well. Since his hands were covered, that was quite a feat as well.
As for the fable, I have always said, "If you give a group of people a plate of cookies, someone will always annoyingly ask, 'Where's the Oatmeal Raisin?'" Good point about us being grateful as well! :-)
Seems like he can feel by touch the cards, which means they are marked. He took a very long time talking slowly and concentrating on going through the deck and accounting for all the cards that are left while memorizing them. It's very impressive and must have taken a long time to learn. This also explains how he pulls out a card from under the jacket and already knows what it is without looking.
My guess is that it is a simple marking system. So you stack the deck in a pre-memorized order. Then you, for example, put a dot you can feel on the top left of every other card. Then you feel around until you find the place where there is either two dotted cards in a row or two non-dotted cards in a row. That is the missing card. And since the deck is in a pre-order you can just go a certain number past it to get to a card of different suit, different color, so on... you can do that with CHSD order but there are many differen't creative ordering systems.
Watching Piff just nonchalantly eating popcorn makes this great.
Honestly, they are so cute together. You can tell they've enjoyed their nearly 4 decades working with each other.
I like your micro-braille theory. I do think Penn was feeling-figuring it out with the process of elimination. I very much enjoyed your candid explanations. Getting the mind in motion in this way will lead to new ways to expand the art.
He's not feeling anything out. It's an ungimmicked deck. The effect was taken from Second Thoughts by Ramon Rioboo. It's available from Penguin Magic. The trick is called "I Always Miss and I Never Miss" .
My first guess was that, since Penn never actually showed the cards in the original deck to anyone (though we did see two cards that weren't the 7 of diamonds), the original deck could have had only 7s of diamond, and then Penn did a simple deck swap under the jacket. But that doesn't explain how Penn could ensure that Teller not pick one of those two cards we saw (double-sided tape on the bottom card before the cut doesn't really solve much), and it also doesn't explain how he could ensure that Teller not accidentally see that there were multiple 7s of diamond during the selection. I'm fooled.
Clément Mihailescu I‘d say, you got half of the trick. I think I figured out the other half. Please check my comment 5 minutes if you want to compare thoughts.
The effect was taken from Second Thoughts by Ramon Rioboo. It's available from Penguin Magic. The trick is called "I Always Miss and I Never Miss" . There are many fooling routines in that book.
The cards had all the faces in order, but they were sorted according to their own code (everyone can come up with their own so that the sequence is not visible, and yet you can determine the next or previous card.). However, the cards must be special, which you can buy in every magic shop. We don't take Penn's shuffling of cards seriously, just turning half the deck 180 degrees. You will then offer cards to cut. Then you spread the cards about 1/3 and let Teller pick any card. You group the cards and offer them again for cutting. What happened? The features of the special cards and this precise procedure will allow you to easily discover the dividing plane in the form of a small number of cards. The upcoming card (+1) is the first card of the small number that is the divider, and the previous card (-1) is in front of this dividing plane, or in front of the first card. The selected card was between these two specific cards. All you have to do is place these two cards on the table and deduce the missing card from your own sequence made before the performance. It's a good idea to lay out a few more free cards and talk about even or odd cards and colors. This trick can be done very quickly, but in order not to reveal special manipulations with special cards, it is necessary to do it secretly. That is all. Mr. Jason was wrong to say that Penn knew from the beginning which card Teller had chosen. Penn didn't know until he put the first two cards on the table. The rest was a matter of fantasy.
I have tried this trick several times with success, but I am not tempted to have special cards with me. I would rather choose the "plants" option, ie provide the required card to a friend before the performance, which he will then reveal. Any card you choose would remain hidden in your pocket. To avoid suspicion of an agreement or the supernatural, you can perform the same theater as Penn for a long time - it intensifies the illusion that the card is actually sought by a special algorithm. Never trust television, notabene entertaining shows. ))
You can see at 1:49 that there is a 3 and a 4 in the deck.
@@richardnewell8478 I think in 2:40 penn put those in the deck. Originally deck has only 7 of diamonds. 2:28 you can see a diamond at the bottom. 2:30 its also a diamond at the bottom, Which was hard to recognize, its not much clear. Try in slow motion.
I love Fool Us....best magic "series" ever
You nailed it again JP !
Brilliant effect. 👏👏👏👏👏
Teller looks like an emoticon 😯😄😮 ha ha!
Penn and Teller - anything they do is *mezmerizing* l was hooked from the outset
It’s really magical how the 7 of diamonds keeps appearing as the card in question 🧐
Cool! That was pretty unexpected
Great video again, jason.
Yes, Penn fooled us all.
Maybe a bit beyond the 'simple' moral of the story, but I like your last interpretation: Don't wait till it's too late to tell someone you're grateful for, happy with them.
Enjoy your pizzaS ;-)
Love your vids!!
Jason, any response to the question "When will you React to ASI WIND's stellar performance on Fool Us from their 2019 Christmas episode that aired 6 months ago?" ?
I think it is one of the best and most obvious tricks I have seen on fool us
This trick is called "I always miss, so I never miss" created by Ramon Rioboo who passed away in 2021. It is based on the “The Black-Hole Principle,”
When card is removed from a particular stack, you know about the characteristics of other cards at certain positions.
Well apparently that was a surprise that teller did not see coming
AESOP: When your life goes smoothly its easy to forget those who made it so.
waiting for you to go on this show! hurry before they end it maybe
I played the shuffle in slow motion. That is crazy! I don’t even know how that worked. It doesn’t seem like it should work. It sounded like a shuffle. I now have to go play around with this myself.
The method he's using is from Second Thoughts by Ramon Rioboo. It's available from Penguin Magic. The trick is called "I Always Miss and I Never Miss"
Yeah like. Who gets the F and who gets the U!!! lmao, but that was very heart warming. Penn Jillette "The best a man can get!"
3:17 "I exaggerate more than anybody in the world" lol
i thought it was si stebbins stack mainly because at the beginning he never actually shuffled the deck it just looked like he did and second cutting the deck doesnt shuffle the deck it just puts the break point somewhere else and picked out the 'right cards' to decipher what his tellers card was
I feel like pen had a way to feel the cards to know what one is missing
Penn likes keeping his tricks simple. He also likes taping things to his forearm and dealing a loaded deck.
When Teller is squaring the cards after picking his own, you can see the bottom card looking very much like it's the 7 of diamonds. And so might the card on the bottom of the stack he cuts off the top after that. But as soon as Penn takes the deck and starts shuffling it, it shows black cards... so if he does have a 1 card deck for Teller to pick from, when does he do the switch?
I think you're probably the one who worked it out. He can switch to a different deck under the coat, can't he?
You got it!
@@IamGrimalkin yep.alot of movement under that jacket. Teller is smart.he knows alot about card magic
Well a seven could have been on the bottom since they were all 7
I like your idea but there is one problem: around 2:40 we can clearly see that there are 2x 4 of spades in the deck... so maybe the deck only contains 4 of spades and 7 of diamonds and Penn could somehow find out which one of the two Teller picked?
i watched something somewhere, if you are good enough, you can tell each card by its weight
might have been on fool us, not sure but i do remember watching it
I love to see that look of absolute wonder on Teller's face. I've commented on a few people's videos that I view it as more of a win than the FU trophy. When he realized that Alison was talking about Penn...priceless.
My first impressions:
Penn's "This shuffle is for the people at home" wasn't a shuffle, and "this cut is for people at home." wasn't a cut. So basically the only out of order cards were because of Teller's cut. The way he emphasized his words sounded kinda like an "Eeny-meeny-miney-mo" and it's possible he chose his words (or rather the length of sentences) very deliberately. I'd have to re-watch to be sure, but I think he legitimately didn't know which card Teller chose, and It wasn't magic, per se, so much as math. The whole thing reminded me of a computer program. If so, it was brilliantly executed.
After hearing your thoughts and Teller's (well, Piff's anyway.) I stand by my theory. There were an awful lot of red herrings that Penn pulled, but I don't think the card was forced. I don't think there was a deck switch or any sleight of hand (Teller's too clever for that and Penn, frankly, isn't good enough to pull that on Teller,) I don't think it's a special deck, or special cards, and I don't think they were marked in any way. I do think they had a special order, and he used some kind of mathematical algorithm to find the card. I can think of a few ways that I would do it, but on the whole I consider myself, like Teller, half fooled. Maybe I'm wrong and it's a deceptively *simple* trick.
My thoughts: he had 2 decks of cards, the one he showed was all 7diamonds so he could only pick 7 of diamonds, then under the jacket he swaps out the packs and uses the second pack of cards that were in order and penn just had to count out the right cards under the jacket
My first thought is that there was a mirror on the table that he used to the coat to cover and on the side teller sat on was the reflection on the lip of the table... so as he was under the coat he could pause or ramble or draw out his words as he quickly searches for the missing card.
I'm assuming it's a backwards svengali setup, or Si Stubbins, but in backwards order. The reveal seems to be similar to when you count out "color" followed by counting "number" then "matching card" (no space) and end up with the same card of the opposing suit.
Ur content is 🔥🔥
Love your channel. Great trick and it is in a book by a Spanish magician. RR are the initials.
If penn ends up doing this trick again in a future season of penn and teller fool us I want to see him do it to Alyson
Since the cards weren’t shuffled at all, they were likely in new deck order, making it easy for anyone who could see the deck, to know which one was missing.
Since Penn isn’t looking at the cards at all, and he is still pulling out the wrong cards, my guess is someone else under the table was handed the deck, and then fed Penn the cards.
I just can’t think of any other way. And Penn saying it’s just you and me, “one on one,” could also be a fun clue Penn through out there. He loves talking in code.
That what I was thinking too. I would assume he used a roughing-stick to have a set number of dots at the top-left / bottom-right corners of the cards. Awesome trick.
The deck is a normal deck. The trick was taken from Second Thoughts by Ramon Rioboo. It's available from Penguin Magic. The trick is called "I Always Miss and I Never Miss" It's not the only fooling thing in the book.
He did buy a LOT of time while his hands were under the jacket. Maybe raised bumps like you suggested?
Miau Miau 🐈 Wuffi Wuffi boing boing 🐕
Mmmmm *Miau* 😏
The method is much more sophisticated than you might think. It was taken from Second Thoughts by Ramon Rioboo. The effect is called "I Always Miss and I Never Miss". The whole principle is interesting. It's available from Penguin Magic.
I actually guessed that he'd get the 7 of diamonds before the trick even started so that felt pretty crazy. Maybe because that's the card I usually force on people, or I just got super lucky.
I'm writing this directly after he finished his trick i swear . I think he had 2 Deck of card one with only seven of Diamond cards and the other one with these King , ace ....
That's an interesting theory! The effect was actually taken from Second Thoughts by Ramon Rioboo. It's available from Penguin Magic. The trick is called "I Always Miss and I Never Miss" .
My first thought on this trick was an assistant under the table. Penn passed them the deck while his hands are covered with the coat. They then sorted the deck quickly and passed Penn the cards he needed to make the trick work. He used the very slow cadence to his speech in the beginning to buy them some time.
Hahah, that's great! The effect was actually taken from Second Thoughts by Ramon Rioboo. It's available from Penguin Magic. The trick is called "I Always Miss and I Never Miss" .
My thoughts were exactly the same I thought it might be some sort of Braille
There is a disposition with the cards and when teller cut and take a cart cut the bottom part to the top and pen mixing look the top one and make the trick
Teller knew it was Penn before Allyson announce Penn name. The way he turn to Penn
Teller isss absolutely ADORABLE. 😃
Penn rocking those fan-backed Tally Ho! like a boss.
Easiest way to do it would be this: Stacked deck, half the cards are marked, false shuffle, peak at the bottom card of the deck, cuts don't influence the stacking of a deck anyway. Go through the deck until you find either 2 marked or 2 unmarked cards in a row - the one between them has been taken out. Also, if you stack it so it alternates colours, you can simply pick either of those 2 same cards in a row and they will be of the wrong colour. If you also alternate suits (D-S-H-C-D-S-H-C-...), it means that the suit after the card you've shown will not be the suit of the picked card. Now, because you've shown the adjacent card to the chosen one, as well as the one following that, knowing the stack you can figure out the missing card, so you just have to look for face or number depending on what you need (which again is fairly simple for someone like Penn in a stacked deck). The rest follows the same principle.
Someone under the table grabs the deck while hidden by the coat, finds the missing card and feeds the show cards back up to Penn, who is pretending to count cards to give them time. Magicians so rarely have hidden help like that, that I can totally see Penn arranging it, and also getting Piff in sort of as a hint. He /might/ even have had Piff be under the table and use a pre-existing fast-travel to the back of the theater, JUST to make it more of a magician’s joke.
I like you actually guessing what you think the trick is.
I'm a big fan... Been watching your videos and enjoy it... I'm sure you get asked all the time... I think you can get on the show.. Will you try to fool Penn and Teller?
I assume it's a stacked deck. Like CHSD order. Whenever you only cut cards then the stack doesn't change. Plus you can literally see and hear him count off cards under the jacket.
My dude. Keep this quality content up! Literally feel like I know you... Weird to say. :)
Yeah same. Jason is particularly personable.
@@colmwhateveryoulike3240 its kinda calming lol.
No it's not weird he really has an amazing personality that you feel comfortable watching there's really no stress one of my go to channels for when I feel miserable and Jason ever makes it to New York I'm definitely buying him a drink
@@unbroken1010 Yeah, his mood is infectious. Or maybe it's... MAGIC! :p
Aesop: Life comes once in our memory seize any chance to make them memorable
I'm thinking either shaved cards or clipped corners and then just a very in depth observation of that under the coat? However, to be that multi tasked while talking as you count cards would be a magic trick in and of itself. Either way, talent at it's best! These guys are Kings!
Aesop: Love a tree as you would a dessert or one day the world will be just like a _desert_ 🤔
🤣Sorry scraping the bottom of the barrell there🤣
Penn was talking very slowly at the beginning of the trick when his hands first went under the jacket. That might have been because he was trying to talk while also feeling the cards and that takes a lot of concentration
AESOP: When your companion tires you, don't be tempted to direct your anger on others
Agree with you on the micro braille, he had more than enough time to search through the deck to find the card missing and identify which cards he needed to pull out to lead up to the trick. Because Teller had been given the full deck to inspect, it might have been a variation of tactile markings which is why he got half credit.
The deck's a normal deck. The method he's using is from Second Thoughts by Ramon Rioboo. It's available from Penguin Magic. The trick is called "I Always Miss and I Never Miss"
After teller shuffled the deck pen did some shuffle and..
Mabye cards were in order.
One possibility is a remote RFID reader placed in Teller's jacket by the wardrobe department. Reader gets the card upon placement to jacket, relays to Penn (via radio or other means), Penn now knows the specific card and can complete the trick by knowing the undisturbed order of the cards.
The deck was in a cyclical order. The method he used to shuffle, taking a bunch of cards from the top and putting them on the bottom, doesn't change the cyclical order, it just changes where you start in the cycle. Same with a completed cut. Both are essentially the same as taking one card from the top & putting it on the bottom, but doing so multiple times. We'd have to examine the cycle he used to say anything beyond that
It looked to me like the shuffle was just OPTICS for the audience or a shuffle that you might see a farmhand do in a friendly game in a barn after someone is mowing hay. Day in day out, life being a cycle. And at the end of the day the farm hands finding their way home after enjoying a familiar bowl of punch.
Great video. Love your videos!! I think he did a fake shuffle they were all in order. Once they were under the coat all he had to do was count and separate piles of cards (spades, clubs, hearts, diamonds) his pulling out the king of spades was to deduce which pile of cards he had ordered under the coat and to get any reaction from Teller. This is just a fresh deck that has been fake shuffled and cut once for misdireciton. Once the cards were under the coat he could pull any card out (the top card) see his reaction and count to 13 until he arrived at a different suit and continue to do it until he deduced which card Teller pulled. No slight of hand, no force, just simple deduction and counting from a freshly new deck of cards.
Hope your Dominos was great!
I think he had two decks. One was all the same card except two cards in which he shows at the bottom of the deck while cutting/shuffling. The second he snuck under the jacket (or slipped in before the trick) that was organized so he couldn't alway pick the opposite color, suit, etc. Then revealed the card.
AESOP: Never be ungrateful: _any port in a storm is a haven_
Somehow, I don't know how but somehow I knew it was the 7 of diamond the moment he pulled out the first card...
Thats kinda freaking me out right now...
I think Penn did have the cards in order, but I also think he could peek under the jacket and see them.
Looked like the deck was cut the same spot both times. The movement under the Coat was for show.
8:24 Penn did say that the trick he was doing was pretty procedural, he was definitely doing something with his hands under the jacket, and he was speaking in a weird pattern (as if he was saying a word per card taken off the top, for example. What that could be? I have no clue, but that's my only guess.
ah! two separate deck of cards. The first deck was given to Teller was a force card which all assuming all seven of diamonds. Then, under the coat, Penn hides or ditching the first deck and swaps it with a new second deck which is a sequence card that he memorized.
My exact thought
Dont think so, as we were able to see one of the cards and it wasn’t the 7th of diamonds; therefore there would be a possibility if teller getting the wrong card
I see the four of clubs multiple times and the seven of diamonds appears to be visible in tellers second cut? Hard to tell but it’s a diamond of some kind
This is just a suggestion. It might be more interesting if there were some pictures shown time to time related to the fable to make it seem more like we’re going through a book :))
I think this trick involves the order of the stacked deck, what makes it fun is Penn vs Teller.
we want that special HMMMM effect :D
Marked deck, chased order. Possibly a custom chased type order.
Crazy idea
There is a stage hand inside the podium and the top has a pass-through pocket. He passed a deck with 51 cards to the hand, who quickly sorted it and handed him the reveal cards. Penn didn't actual know Teller's card until the end.
No, he can do this trick completely solo, and you can too lol.
The effect was taken from Second Thoughts by Ramon Rioboo. It's available from Penguin Magic. The trick is called "I Always Miss and I Never Miss" . There's a bunch of great magic in the book.
My guess: there was someone under the table. The table has a slit to pass the deck. The person down there has a machine to go quickly through the cards and in seconds finds out what the card is. The cards are given to Penn in the exact order he needs to show them to narrow down the selected card. They might even have told him what the card was in his earpiece
This act is like listening and laughing at your bosses jokes when you know he is not not funny. Proceeding.....
How so? It was a decent trick, if you ask me!