Did the routine at a corporate gig for two different groups. Both times. BOTH TIMES, it didn't work.
And by that I mean, one person from each group didn't know a club from a spade. Is this the fault of
the trick? Nope. But, it isn't fool proof either, and when I'm performing at a corporate gig, I
can't have something that doesn't work 100%. Will never perform this again. Seemed like a great
concept, but unfortunately, it depends on your audience being able to read a card.I don't get to
edit like a marketing video.
This has absolutely zero to do with the trick, and therefore it shouldn't influence the rating. If a spectator doesn't know the difference between a club and a spade, that makes thousands of card tricks obsolete. Audience management is a simple way to solve this problem, and it's why I always have more than one person look at a chosen card when performing.
Why are you testing a trick and performing it for the first times at corporate gigs should be the main question?
I don’t own this but I definitely wouldn’t be just trying effects out at a corporate gig I’d do some bar and street performances first to see how the trick plays and see where I could fail with it
That doesn’t make this a bad effect
If the trick failed because the spectator didn’t know the difference between suits than that is the magicians fault not the tricks. There are so many ways that you can make sure that doesn’t happen. Don’t blame the trick.
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