Contributing writer for The Artifice.
Junior Contributor I
How is the Internet Changing Magicians?Pre-internet, if someone wanted to learn a magic trick they would hunt down an old book or ask uncle Bob to teach the card trick he always does at family gatherings. Now, however, both the learning and performing of magic tricks has been dramatically changed due to video hosting and streaming sites. Scarcity is not the dominant obstacle in the pursuit of deceptive knowledge; rather it is the reverse: there are so many tutorials online that finding a trick which is both good and taught well is like playing 'Where's Waldo' x 100. Do these sites also remove the motivation for magician's to sell their original material online if it will only be pirated or taught for free on YouTube? Furthermore, if anyone can search the secret to a trick immediately after seeing it performed, what point is there for the magician to perform at all? This impact would be most interesting to explore.
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The most helpful strategy I have found in productivity is breaking down the day into 1 hr task segments with a break in betwwen in which ensues a small reward like the morning cup of coffee. Try it! | Attention Writers: The Myth of Writer's Block |
The two most beneficial sources I have found for doing sales today is the book ‘the Purple Cow’ and everything by Gary V. Basically it is about having a deep audience verses a wide platform of people who see but do not respond to content and offers. Great article! | The Art of Sales in the 21st Century |
The plot twist in ‘Beautiful Mind’ actually made me feel like I had been hit in the gut! (But in a good way). Also magic tricks usually have strong plot twists and surprise endings.