Tom Salinsky - Order This World
Tom Salinsky - Order This World
Tom Salinsky - Order This World
by Tom Salinsky
Introduction
Do we need another version of Paul Currys famous effect?
Well, maybe. I fell in love with the plot as soon as I heard it,
but I hated the idea of switching the markers. This, to me,
created a bump in the magical narrative which made the
spectators suspect that something fishy was going on, even
if they didnt know what.
Most of the other ultimate handlings I have read simply
move the bump to another point in the trick or introduce
extra delays or procedural infelicities which were not worth
it. Two which did come close (for me at least) were Paul
Harriss Galaxy and Avis & Joness Rack and Bled from
their book Ahead of the Pack. I have combined ideas from
both sources, together with a few little touches of my own,
to create a routine which is simple, workable and almost
entirely free of compromise.
Effect
From a shuffled deck, a spectator deals cards face down
onto two marker cards, one red and one black. As soon as
the deal is finished, the magician displays all the cards on
each pile. All the cards on the red marker are red and all the
cards on the black marker are black. Unwittingly, the
spectator has created order out of chaos.
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Working
I have two different versions of this effect. Initially, I came
up with a lovely way to stack the deck, inspired by Paul
Harriss Galaxy handling. However, I then came across an
obscure colour-separation in Expert Card Technique, with
which I have fooled a lot of magicians. Basically, I think if
you want to do just Order This World and then split,
stack the deck. If you want to use one ungimmicked,
unstacked deck to do a routine with, including (or more
likely, ending with) Order This World, use the colour
separation. Ill go through both
Stacking the deck
Stack your deck like this: make a pile of 13 face-up red
cards. On top of them, put a pile of 13 face up black cards.
Now add a black card with a corner short. I always keep the
King of Clubs short in my deck, so this is no hardship for
me. You can substitute a joker here, and separate the deck
visually at this point if you prefer. Now add two more black
cards (or three more if you are using a joker), then the
remaining red cards, and finally the remaining black cards.
So your deck has reds on top, then blacks (with the corner
short towards the end), then reds, then blacks at the face.
I open by talking about Order Out Of Chaos, and explain
that this ability makes humans unique. I then go on to say
that sometimes we wish to create chaos for example to
make a card game fair we shuffle the deck. By way of
demonstration, I give the deck a riffle shuffle. My corner
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short means I can easily riffle down to the half way point,
split the deck and riffle the two packets together. This
action looks almost identical to my regular shuffling action.
If you are using the joker, toss it out and split the deck
visually before commencing the riffle.
The way the deck is stacked, red cards riffle into red cards
and black cards riffle into black cards. This idea is from
Galaxy, including the position of the joker (using the
corner-short is my idea). You may have a small jumbled area
in the middle, which we will address in a minute, but you
will definitely have a jumbled set at the top, thanks to the
extra black cards just past the half-way point. Alternatively...
Impromptu Colour Separation
Have an audience member shuffle the deck, and encourage
them to really shuffle the hell out of it. When you get the
deck back, ribbon-spread it across the table and comment
on the lack of order and the presence of chaos. I use the
same ideas in the patter above making order out of chaos
is a human trait, etc.
I then comment that in one way, however, despite the
excellent shuffling, the deck is still somewhat orderly, in
that all the cards are facing the same way. You now proceed
to perform a Slop Shuffle. Often associated with Triumph
routines, the Slop Shuffle is an effect in its own right the
cards appear to be mixed face up and face down, but right
themselves impossibly quickly.
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casually back onto the left half, so it falls face up, and turn
the left hand palm down to table the deck.
Click your fingers, wave a wand or whatever, and then
ribbon-spread the whole deck face down to wild applause.
Push a few cards out casually, make it look like youve got
nothing to hide, and then gather up the deck.
Out of this World
Whichever handling you have used, you are now in the
same position the deck is separated by colour except for a
jumbled portion at the top. If you stacked-and-riffled you
may also have a small jumbled area in the middle (fan the
cards briefly towards you to check).
I now talk about the fact the you can look at order and
chaos with respect to the colours of the cards. Ask a
spectator If I deal six cards off the top of the deck, how
many would you expect to be black and how many red?
Whatever they say, deal off six cards. You are now dealing
through your mixed stock, so their answer may be right, or
it may be wrong. Repeat this with just two cards Both
black, both red or one of each? And with just a single card.
Push the jumbled cards to one side, but keep them
somewhere in view. If you need to get rid of jumbled cards
in the middle you can use the same patter and pull cards
from the centre.
Thanks to this display and the earlier shuffling of the deck,
it will never occur to your audience that the deck is stacked.
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The display
Both Paul Harris and Avis & Jones begin by displaying the
cards one way, and then switch to another method for no
real reason. Avis & Jones provide a nice psychological
subtlety, but in this version, you display every single card in
exactly the same way.
Position check: there are two face up cards, black on your
left and red on your right, about 18 inches apart. Each has a
pile of face down cards on it. Both piles have black cards on
top and red cards underneath. You are going to start dealing
cards from the top of the black pile and you need to know
when the black cards are going to run out.
Briefly fan the supposedly black pile towards you and say
something like I think youll be quite pleased with this.
You need to note the last three or four black cards - just the
sequence of values will do. I have a running gag in my
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you will exhaust the black cards and be left with only reds.
Try to catch a glimpse of the face of each card before you
deal it, enabling you to smoothly deal the first red card in
the correct position, next to the red marker. Carry on
dealing all the remaining cards, to create two parallel rows,
each next to the appropriate marker. This takes a little
while (but not more then 30 or 40 seconds) but it is so
clean and so strong, it is worth the extra time. You could
spread the red cards to create a parallel row if you want,
but I love having all the cards dealt in exactly the same way.
Sit back and watch the dropped jaws and bugged-out eyes.
Then ask your spectator how did you do it?
Thanks
Thanks to Simon Coronel for helping to workshop this with
me and to Ian Rowland for providing me with a copy of
Ahead of the Pack.
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while dealing blacks. Instead you exhaust the black pile and
then pick up the red.
Drawbacks
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