Magician Marco Tempest Talks 'Open Sorcery'
bLanark writes "The BBC have a piece about illusionist Marco Tempest who uses technology to generate magical illusions. As he says in the interview unlike most magicians and illusionists he shares his techniques in an act that he calls 'open sorcery.' The techniques include using iPhone apps, and high-speed digital cameras. There is a growing band of people using and contributing to the field."
You know this is newsworthy, because it mention the iPhone.
And so it begins, the legends of the Technomages..
It's The Golden Rule: "He who has the gold makes the rules."
Given even a little of the technology becoming available now, it'd be very easy to 'cheat' at magic. For example, an e-paper playing card. The processor might make it a little thick to handle, but it'd look just like a normal card... except it changes face at the command of the magician or his assistant. Suddenly, every card trick is a joke.
Would this suck the fun out? While magicians may still take pride in their skill, it'd be much harder to impress an audience who realise that those tricks could be done with ease and gadgetry. I imagine television magicians have been through similar issues too: How can you convince the audience that what they see isn't all achieved with camera trickery, short of revealing your method after the trick?
Watched a youtube video of him doing a street magician style trick involving an umbrella. Was pretty obvious that it was a setup given that the woman just happened to have a plain bright red umbrella on what looked to be a warm sunny day. When a magician resorts to using tricks like I just can't enjoy the illusion. If you're going to use actors, off-camera interviews/questionnaires (so you can get info needed for 'psychic' tricks), you may as well go the whole hog and fake every aspect (you could even put in some CGI explosions) .
I would rather see a simple trick done very well than a complex, impressive seeming trick where an unknown amount is has been completely faked (well, technically as it's an illusion it's all fake but I'm sure you know what I mean). One of my favourite tricks is a simple slight of hand: Paul Daniel's Chop Cup.
The hypocrisy is strong with this one.
If you are using an IPhone... stop your bitching and preaching about "open".
why not? An open source windows application is still an open source application
why not? An open source windows application is still an open source application
Yes, but it is not Free as free in beer sense because it depends on proprietary non-free software.
He has two videos on TED, here's his TED profile.
As he says in the interview unlike most magicians and illusionists he shares his techniques in an act that he calls 'open sorcery.'
In related news, a magician working for Microsoft has issued a press statement claiming that this dangerous new trend could well destroy the magic industry.
Ezekiel 23:20
As a magic fan, it's incredibly annoying seeing so many street magicians using camera tricks. The whole point of street magicians is that you're not in a studio, you've limited avenues for preparation and you don't have control over your environment.
I blame people like David Blaine for popularising camera tricks, his 'hovering' trick is the worst. The actual trick is to position your feet in a way where the heel of the other foot blocks people's view of you standing on tiptoes on the other foot, giving the impression you're hovering a few inches off the ground. Neat trick but not impressive and it's very obvious what's happening when it's on camera. Knowing this, David then some point afterwards let himself lifted by a crane, got some actors to wear the same clothes as the people who were in the earlier trick and shot himself being lifted over their shoulders (wire was then CG'ed out). He spliced that footage with the people's reaction from the real trick and it gave the impression he genuinely performed an illusion where he hovered several metres off the ground in front of some random people.
Rule of thumb: if a street magician has any cuts in footage, something is up; there's only a single camera and he only gets one stab at a trick with a set of people, he shouldn't need to ever cut. Also, most "how did he know my birthday and get it in that passing bus?" trick almost always involved them having an interview when the camera isn't rolling or them having filled out a questionnaire beforehand.
If we're going by that logic, literally no software is free. You have to buy a computer, after all!
Yeah the beer isn't free if you have to provide your own container to carry it home (and transportation too).
I thought they'd be all over it!
why not? An open source windows application is still an open source application
Yes, but it is not Free as free in beer sense because it depends on proprietary non-free software.
Do you think Linux include the microcode of the CPUs it's been compiled for? Ask Intel and AMD. No software stack is entirely free. Get over it.
Write boring code, not shiny code!
There's an adage amongst magicians that "you can't misdirect a camera". There's a lot of truth in this, and it requires a shift away from the traditional approaches to magic, if you want to ensure that the audience is fooled. Tricks that can kill live, when the only visuals that are left over reside in the memory, frequently can suffer if your audience has a "replay" button.
So, yeah, take TV magic with a grain of salt, but keep in mind that the cheating isn't always full-on. With Blaine, for instance, he was filming legitimate reactions to a legitimate trick -- pardoning the jargon, but that was a huge paradigm shift in magic performance -- but the performance wouldn't have been sustainable if he was always using the same technique each time. The suspended shot added just enough mystery to keep people guessing about how he could have done it. And, in fairness, a lot of the people who were on camera freaking out, if they saw the suspended shot, would say "Yeah! It was just like that!" It's still cheating (magic always is) but it's still a bit fair, in its own way.
The new business model:
Free Beer
Coin operated loo
Profit!
Wait. Didn't MS already embrace and extend this niche?
Space that MS and HP can dominate?
https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/ILoo#i-Loo_controversy
There's a cross between a Zune and a Sony Robot Turd in there somewhere.
If it's open, it's not really magical anymore...
I'm suprised no one has mentioned that.
...than "magic". I mean, sure it's impressive use of modern techno-gadgetry to create cool effects, but there's nothing mystifying in the performances, just entertaining. Excellent performer. Bad promotion.
I'm unimpressed. To me, magic tricks are supposed to be 'hand-crafted', wherein the person learning the skill has it come from intelligence, predictions and natural sources. As someone else said, this is a form of performance art, not magic or illusion. It's probably cool to watch, but I wouldn't say it's sorcery. It's pressing buttons and standing there moving in time with prerecorded shit.
For anyone arguing that this is better than 'rabbit in the hat' magicians, go watch this.
You want to know how to help your kids? LEAVE THEM THE F*&K ALONE. --George Carlin
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technomage
It all starts at 0
Arthur C. Clarke's Third law states "Any Technology Sufficiently Advanced is Indistinguishable from Magic". The Corally to that law is "Any Magic Sufficiently Exposed is indistinguishable from Technology" and as Albert Einstein supposedly Said "Quantumn Physics is that Spooky Stuff" as he didn't like it. In reality, both Clarke and Einsteind are correct about Quantumn Physics and Events. It's magic under the hood and by another name.
Once we harness magic, we'll be doing Warp Speed and dealing with Vulcan's before you know it so "hang onto your bustles girls, the wicked witch of the west is dead and her sister is madder then a wet cat on a hot tin roof"
Mod me up/Mod me down: I wont frown as I've no crown
I dunno, aren't there lots of stuff being made nowadays that's open-source hardware? Sure maybe not something you can pick up in Best Buy, but I am pretty sure there are things like the Arduino with all the specs available. Unless you want to get pedantic about not having the blueprints for the chips in such a device that's about as open source as hardware can get.
Random Thoughts From A Diseased Mind (Not For Dummies)
> uses technology to generate magical illusions
That didn't fare too well with the audience in Kaleido Star, did it?
Sort of off topic but somehow linked, if you haven't seen it I recommending seeing this movie. It features magic, technology, and Nicolai Tesla. (So we also now have the obligatory Tesla reference as well). :)
putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
Brendan Patricks is billed as a close-up magician but I really can't see how this is done without some camera trickery http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6MRi7KNBALY (O2 advert)