Tra-la-la-la-la
Sep. 10th, 2009 11:01 amA quick test. Read the question below. Then (and only then) click on the cut and read the poll question within.
What do you think of Mr Brown today?
[Poll #1455652]
I'm just curious.
What do you think of Mr Brown today?
[Poll #1455652]
I'm just curious.
no subject
Date: 2009-09-10 02:46 pm (UTC)So Friday night, not tonight. But double check a schedule near you :)
(Also:
Which is a week Friday).
no subject
Date: 2009-09-10 02:53 pm (UTC)Interesting to note he's revealing how he could have done it rather than how he did.
no subject
Date: 2009-09-10 02:57 pm (UTC)However, I think it's also how you can do it, if you so wish. Which, I presume, means "in your living room, in front of your aunt", and therefore precludes camera tricks. Because I don't think it's possible to fix your aunt's left eye, so she sees an unchanging image from it, while you swap the props around.
Well, unless you want to get your aunt a set of rigged spectacles, with an image already fixed to the lenses. In which case, you might as well go the whole hog, and just blindfold her. She'll never notice.
no subject
Date: 2009-09-10 06:56 pm (UTC)If he reveals a trick, surely it would only be as a "sacrifice move". I think the standard formula is "I'm going to do a trick". <does trick where woman appears out of box>. "Now I'm going to do it again, this time showing you how it worked". <moves camera behind box, does another trick which looks the same from the front, but from behind woman is seen to be concealed in hidden compartment of box all along. Disassembles box, woman has vanished>.
But I understood "I'm going to show you how to do it" to mean, "I'm going to present a one-hour show in which I do various effects relating to numbers, with the theme that I'm supposedly preparing to predict the lottery, and that with the same preparation you could do it too". Rather than "I'm going to present a one hour show in which I show you how to do that one effect".