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And my hypothesis is that interest will make you more inclined to take care of that secret and build relationships from it than degrade it. Magicians care about methods, outsiders might be fascinated by tricks, but they really don’t care beyond a perfunctory “how did you do that?” wonder squeak. It’s the cardinal difference between my friends inside and outside of the industry.
BRIAN BRUSHWOOD BOOK TRICK FULL
Any interest in method, at all, full stop. I’ll start: I believe that any inclination to find out how a magic trick works makes you a worthy of magic knowledge. I am not saying that Brian’s video was any magic secret, but we can work up from there once we understand the baseline. With the recent magic kerfuffle over Brian Brushwood’s Invisible Deck episode of Scam School this is something that I am curious to hear your opinions on.
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The goal here is to gather input on what the line is between teaching and exposure. Do they need to be fascinated by a trick and then ask how it’s done? Do they need to save up enough money to buy a trick from an online shop or Amazon? Do they need to borrow a book or video from a friend? Or a library? What makes someone a magician? Let me clarify this even further, what is the lowest possible requirement that has to be met for you to feel good about someone being entrusted with ANY magic secret?