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DEVIN KNIGHT
Marble Sight
Copyright © 2018 Devin Knight Magic
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MARBLE SIGHT
SEE WHAT CAN’T BE SEEN
To do these effects, you will two sets of marbles, different colors.
These can also be the flat glass pebbles sold for use in vases for
decorations. These are available in all colors, but I prefer the blue
pebbles and white pebbles. These are usually sold in bags of 500. You
can buy these in craft stores, toy stores, or off Amazon. You will need
one bag of each color.
Also you will need a big opaque drawstring bag or pouch to hold
the marbles or pebbles needed for the effect. You can buy these off of
Amazon.com. The bag has to be big enough for a person to put his hand
into and remove marbles. See Photo 1.
PHOTO 1
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Finally, you will need three small cereal bowls. If I am using the
blue and white marbles, I will use a blue bowl, white bowl and a clear
bowl. If you can’t find matching color bowls, then it is alright to just use
three identical bowls of the same color.
All these effects are variations of Stewart James’ Miraskill found
in Jinx #24.
Some mentalists may wish to perform these routines as a
demonstration of remote viewing. This is my preferred presentation. The
effects are basically self-working and very baffling to an audience. This
was a feature in Jason Michael’s psychic act.
AN UNCANNY PREDICTION - FIRST EFFECT
The audience is told that on a table in the next room is a drawstring
pouch full of glass marbles, both blue and white plus three small bowls
on the table.
A person is chosen from the audience (no stooge) to go into the
next room and reach into the pouch and blindly remove two marbles. If
both marbles are blue in color, he is to put them into the blue bowl.
If both marbles are white, then he places both of them in the white
bowl. If the two marbles are both blue and white, then they go into the
clear bowl.
This is repeated until all the marbles have been transferred into
each of the three bowls. Your spectator is cautioned to pick the marbles
at random and not choose which ones to pick, but to ensure the marbles
are removed at random.
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In the meantime, the mentalist is sitting in an apparent trance as he
remote views what is happening in the other room; he writes a prediction
on a slip of paper and leaves it in full view.
When the spectator is done, he is to bring the three bowls back into
the main room. I like to have the three bowls and the drawstring bag on
a tray for ease in doing this.
Once the spectator is back in the room, the performer reads his
prediction: You will have two more blue marbles in the blue bowl,
than the white marbles in the white bowl.
The spectator counts the marbles in both bowls and it is seen that
the mentalist is 100% correct. The performer doesn’t touch the bowls or
marbles before the spectator counts them. This eliminates the possibility
of the mentalist using sleight of hand.
The marbles are placed back into the pouch and the effect may be
immediately repeated with different results with a second spectator!
Positively no skill or tricky counting, the spectator does everything in a
fair manner. This looks like real remote viewing!
If you prefer, you can have a prediction in full view of the
audience that predicts the results beforehand instead of apparent remote
viewing. No secret writing of any kind and nothing is gimmicked!
METHOD
You start with 30 marbles in the pouch; you don’t tell the audience
how many marbles in the bag, just refer to it as a bag full of blue and
white marbles.
16 are blue marbles and 14 are white marbles, making 30 marbles
all mixed. From now one, the method is self-working, believe it or not.
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The spectator will always end with two more blue marbles in the blue
bowl than white marbles in the second bowl. It’s a mathematical
principle.
The mixed colors in the clear bowl are ignored.
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puts into the paper bag. It could be a combination of blue/blue,
white/white or blue/white as long has he takes two marbles at a time. He
must do this several times, say about four or eight times, and he is to
remember how many times he dipped his hand into the marble pouch to
remove two marbles. This is important!
The spectator is then told to return to the main room, bringing both
his paper bag and the pouch containing the marbles.
He is then asked to tell the audience what he did and how many
times he dipped his hand into the marble pouch.
The mentalist then asks, “Do you know how many blue marbles
are in the paper bag.”
The spectator should answer, “No”, provided that he didn’t look
inside the paper bag before entering the room.
“I do!” says the mentalist, “I know the results of what you did.”
The mentalist concentrates for a few seconds and then says, “You
will have four less blue marbles in your paper bag, then there are white
marbles in the marble pouch.”
Another way to put it is, “You have left four more white marbles in
the marble pouch than you have blue marbles in your paper bag.”
The spectator with the paper bag is told to count the blue marbles
inside the bag while someone else count the white marbles left inside the
marble pouch. It turns out the mentalist is 100% correct. This is done
without the mentalist touching either of the two bags.
METHOD
The key number is 18 (half of 36, the total number of marbles)
when the spectator tells how many times his hand was dipped into the
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marble pouch, say 4, the mentalist doubles that number to make it 8 and
subtracts 8 from 18 to arrive at 10, which is the number of how many
more white marbles are the pouch than there are blue marbles in the
paper bag.
Another example, say the person dipped his hand into the pouch 7
times, the mentalist doubles that number to make 14 and subtracts 14
from 18 to arrive at 4, which is the number of how many more white
marbles in the pouch than there are blue marbles in the paper bag.
There are also 4 more blue marbles in the pouch than there are
white marbles in the paper bag. It works both ways.
The important thing in this presentation is to instruct the
spectator to place only one hand into the marble pouch and to only
take two marbles at a time and place them into the paper bag with
noticing the colors.
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known amount since you placed them beforehand in the second
compartment.
The mentalist now VISIBLY counts the number of white
marbles in his bowl. Assume there are 4 white marbles. The
mentalist subtracts 4 from 13 (the high number of the two he
memorized and gets 9 which is the number of white marbles the
first spectator has in his paper bag. Subtract 9 from the total the
total of marbles (17) and you get the number of blue marbles
(8).
The mentalist need only count his white marbles in the
bowl and disregard the blue ones.
NOTE: You may wish to use the Nelson Paper change bag as
described in his: Miracles in Mentalism. This bag is used to hold
the 24 marbles instead of a standard change bag.
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