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Magic From Tenyo of Japan |
In this puzzling magic trick, the audience is invited to participate in a police line-up and help solve the crime. A number of suspect cards are shown, illustrating various criminal characters, and one is secretly chosen by a spectator to be the thief. The cards are mixed up and placed in the magic Profiler, which the magician explains is a space-age computer device used to catch criminals. The spectator enters some data about the criminal into the magic Profiler which amazingly identifies the correct suspect.
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A spectator is given three coins, a penny, a nickel, and a dime. With the performers back turned the spectator seals one of the coins inside the vault. From the remaining coins he is then instructed to place the highest value coin in his right hand and the other in his left. The performer turns around and can immediately tell which coin is where.
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The famous Zig Zag illusion in close-up. A cigarette or rolled up dollar bill is placed inthe Zig Zag box and the center portion is slid sideways. The cigarette remains visible at all times yet it is visibly shown to be three separate pieces. Easy To Do!
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A coin is placed into a small holder at the end of a key chain. The holder is inserted into a frame. Then the key is pushed right through the center of the coin: metal through metal. Then the coin is shown to be unharmed. Easy to do and seems impossible.
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A spectator selects and remembers one card. After the card is returned, the magician makes a magical gesture towards the deck. Mysteriously, the selected card rises by itself up from the deck! You can even make the spectator's card rise without touching the cards at all. The Rising Card trick is truly one of the best gimmicks ever created in the history of card magic. You can make multiple cards rise one after the other, increasing the number of spectators who are involved in your performance.
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