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Lazy Man's Card Trick

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Revision as of 12:35, 21 June 2011 by Jpecore (Talk | contribs) (References)

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Lazy Man's Card Trick is a "find a card" routine in which a card is selected by a spectator and then proceeds to cut the deck as many times as they wish. The whole deck is turned upside down and cut again several times. When the deck is turned back to face down position, the magician knows the position of the selected card in the deck.

It seems the method took its inspiration by an idea of Jack McMillen. In Marlo's Magazine, Vol. 3 (1979), page 329, we can read:

"Before proceeding the closest method to the four value cut and count appeared in a Larsen and Wright manuscript. This was a contribution by Jack McMillen in which, while he did not use it to have the spectator arrive at the four Aces, it was used to force one of four kings. ... McMillen's basic idea later underwent a change ... was used and adapted to an Annemann effect "Count Your Card". Still later .... was then used in an effect more closely resembling McMillen's approach in that the spectator cuts the deck: however, this cutting was done with the deck face up until the spectator cut to a card of the required suit after which the deck was turned face down and the value of the now bottom card was used to count from the top of the deck to arrive at a previous selection or at a predicted card. Now as far as I know the use of a run of cards to arrive at a specific card was first recorded by Jack McMillen but if anyone finds a source previous to the Larsen and Wright manuscript, I would like to know."

This manuscript seems to be The L.W. Card Mysteries (1928) and the McMillen's effect The Prophesied Leaper

Publications

  • That Number Down by Doc Miller in 50 Tricks You Can Do, You Will Do, Easy to Do compiled by Rufus Steele (1946)
  • Think Stop in Royal Road to Card Magic page 241 (the mechanics of the trick; no attribution) (1948)
  • The Lazy Magician Does A Card Trick by Al Koran in Abra No. 450 (September 11, 1954)
  • Lazy Man's Card Trick in Close-Up Card Magic by Harry Lorayne (1962) - which he notes that Al Koran taught him the trick for the book and that the original concept came from Prof. Jack Miller.
  • Lazy Man's Card Trick in Lorayne: The Classic Collection Volume 1. - which he mentions that he was told after the fact that basic mathematical component of the effect first appeared in Royal Road to Card Magic.

References