Desert Island Tricks

Michael Vincent

1 h 31 min · 5. juni 2026
episode Michael Vincent cover

Beskrivelse

Your magic can be technically flawless and still feel forgettable. This conversation with Michael Vincent hit us like a wake-up call: the real goal is the experience you leave with the spectator, not the applause for your hands. Michael opens up about stepping away from performing to care for his mother, then returning with a new approach built around purpose, discipline, and audiences who choose to be there.  The list becomes a deep dive into close-up magic and parlour magic fundamentals: Vernon’s Triumph as chaos versus order with the spectator doing the shuffling, Linking Rings built on crystal-clear conditions, Slydini’s Knotted Silks as pure visual impossibility, the Invisible Deck as shared fantasy made real, Roy Walton’s Smiling Mule as a lesson in timing, plus coin magic that leans on sound, story, and imagination.  We also go hard on a topic many magicians avoid: reading and research. Michael argues that the best secrets still live in books, that mastery can’t be bought and that a strong repertoire is a reflection of identity. He caps it with two recommendations that shape creative showmanship and resilience: Darwin Ortiz’s Strong Magic and Viktor Frankl’s A Man’s Search For Meaning. If you want stronger reactions, better structure, and a more honest path to becoming great, press play, then subscribe, share this with a magician friend and leave a review with your own desert island list. Michael Vincent’s Desert Island Tricks Care Package: Triumph  1. Linking Rings  2. Knotted Silks  3. Invisible Deck  4. Smiling Mule 5. Coins Through Hand  6. The Slot Machine  7. Marlo’s Repeat Card to Pocket  8. Your Card, My Card, Everybody’s Card  Banishment. Complete and utter laziness  Book. Strong Magic  Item. A Man’s Search for Meaning  Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

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Alle episoder

148 Episoder

episode Michael Vincent cover

Michael Vincent

Your magic can be technically flawless and still feel forgettable. This conversation with Michael Vincent hit us like a wake-up call: the real goal is the experience you leave with the spectator, not the applause for your hands. Michael opens up about stepping away from performing to care for his mother, then returning with a new approach built around purpose, discipline, and audiences who choose to be there.  The list becomes a deep dive into close-up magic and parlour magic fundamentals: Vernon’s Triumph as chaos versus order with the spectator doing the shuffling, Linking Rings built on crystal-clear conditions, Slydini’s Knotted Silks as pure visual impossibility, the Invisible Deck as shared fantasy made real, Roy Walton’s Smiling Mule as a lesson in timing, plus coin magic that leans on sound, story, and imagination.  We also go hard on a topic many magicians avoid: reading and research. Michael argues that the best secrets still live in books, that mastery can’t be bought and that a strong repertoire is a reflection of identity. He caps it with two recommendations that shape creative showmanship and resilience: Darwin Ortiz’s Strong Magic and Viktor Frankl’s A Man’s Search For Meaning. If you want stronger reactions, better structure, and a more honest path to becoming great, press play, then subscribe, share this with a magician friend and leave a review with your own desert island list. Michael Vincent’s Desert Island Tricks Care Package: Triumph  1. Linking Rings  2. Knotted Silks  3. Invisible Deck  4. Smiling Mule 5. Coins Through Hand  6. The Slot Machine  7. Marlo’s Repeat Card to Pocket  8. Your Card, My Card, Everybody’s Card  Banishment. Complete and utter laziness  Book. Strong Magic  Item. A Man’s Search for Meaning  Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

5. juni 20261 h 31 min
episode Stranded with a Stranger: David Rhodes cover

Stranded with a Stranger: David Rhodes

A lot of magic advice lives in theory. David Rhodes brings something better: a working performer’s list of eight routines he’d keep if everything else disappeared, plus one book, one non-magic utility item, and one thing he’d banish from the art. David’s story starts with a familiar arc, going all-in on magic in his twenties, stepping away for years into the corporate world, then coming back with fresh eyes and sharper taste. We dig into a lineup that leans heavily toward practical mentalism and audience-first structure: Telepathy Plus as a minimalist billet miracle, a memory demonstration that builds real credibility, and a Magic Square that can turn “confusion” into a perfect closer. From there we get into blindfold work and psychometry, where the impact comes from meaning, not props, plus fork bending with a clear stance on why less is more when you want it to feel genuinely psychic. We also talk borrowed-object impossibility with ring flight, and why the strongest close-up magic often lives in the spectator’s hands. Card lovers still get fed: Out Of This World gets its flowers as one of the most powerful spectator-driven effects ever, and David shares a sneaky multiple selection “cheat code” that lets you weave in favourites like Triumph. We round it out with Interpreting Magic by David Regal for the interviews, a corner rounder as an underrated weapon for short cards, and a banishment that every performer should consider: ditch hack lines that kill connection. Send in your list of 8 tricks, 1 book, 1 non magic item and 1 banishment to sales@alakazam.co.uk Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

29. mai 202624 min
episode Jean Luc Bertrand cover

Jean Luc Bertrand

The magic that stays with you isn’t always the trick you can describe, it’s the feeling you can’t shake. That’s where our conversation with French magician, creator, hypnotist and theatre performer Jean-Luc Bertrand begins: the rare moments that make a seasoned performer feel like a five-year-old seeing impossibility for the first time, and how we can build shows that give audiences that same hit of wonder.  We get into the effects and performers that shaped Jean-Luc’s taste and philosophy, from Garrett Thomas’ legendary ID-style miracle to David Blaine’s extreme commitment and Derren Brown’s masterclass in scripting, structure, and hypnosis. Along the way we talk misdirection as intention, how to avoid performing on autopilot, and why the best professional magic is really about “writing memories” for people at the most important events of their lives.  Jean-Luc also shares what he would banish from the magic industry: the lack of meaningful copyright norms and the casual attitude toward copying. We explore why originality is harder than buying the latest trick, and why ethics matter if magic is going to evolve. Plus, we tease Jean-Luc’s upcoming Murphy’s Magic release, the JLB Coin, and what makes it feel like real superpowers in the hands.  Jean Luc’s Desert Island Tricks:  Welcome Package. Card Under Tablecloth  1. Drivers Licence Trick by Garrett Thomas 2. David Blaine’s Frog From Mouth  3. Derren Brown’s Card Under Box 4. Creating a moment for a single audience member  5. French Fries Production  6. JLB Coin  7. Yann Frisch 8. Music Box Effect  Banishment. Lack of Copyright in the Magic Industry  Book. The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho Item. BIC Lighter  Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

22. mai 20261 h 42 min
episode SOS: Harry Nardi cover

SOS: Harry Nardi

We’re drawing a line in the sand: self-working tricks are not a guilty pleasure. If the audience can’t backtrack the method and the moment feels impossible, it’s real magic where it counts. We bring Harry Nardi back after the Alakazam convention to rebuild his desert island lineup using the only criteria that matters on paid gigs: trust. That means effects that reset fast, pack small, play big, and stay strong when conditions are messy. You’ll hear why Instant Paper To Money beats Extreme Burn for freedom and fairness, why MD Mini keeps destroying even after time off, and how Coins Across and Stand Up Monty earn their spot as reliable, high-clarity crowd winners. Then we get into the meaty stuff: PK Touches routining and the “less is more” debate, plus a swap that turns the set personal with Lover’s Waltz as a fused, signed souvenir. We also break down why Castle Wallet feels like the closest thing to real mind reading, including the framing of “fake mind reading” versus a prediction that people never see coming. Add in an island guest pick (Chris Harding), a replay-worthy performance memory, a painful first-gig lesson, and a shoutout to a perfect convention show from Tom Wright, and you’ve got an episode packed with working pro insight. If you enjoy practical close-up magic, mentalism, and smarter thinking about what audiences actually experience, subscribe, share this with a magician friend, and leave a review. What’s one “easy” trick you think deserves more respect? Harry Nardi’s SOS Substitutions :  1. Extreme Burn for Instant Paper to Money  2. Imagine for Lovers Waltz 3. Big Reaction for Castle Wallet (with a sneaky Foreshadow)  Banishment. Discounting self working tricks  Guest. Chris Harding  Memory. BGT Semi Finals  Horror. Asking a person with a disability to help when they couldn’t  Show. Tom Wright’s Show at the Alakazam Convention  Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

15. mai 202659 min
episode Marc Lavelle cover

Marc Lavelle

A great magic set isn’t the one with the fanciest props. It’s the one you can do when the pockets are empty, the room is loud and someone says, “Go on then, show us something” with zero warning. That’s why Marc Lavelle’s return hits so hard: after stepping back from the magic and convention scene for years, he comes back with a clearer view of what actually works for real audiences.  We put Marc on the “Desert Island Tricks” hot seat and build a survival-ready lineup: stack work with the Shadow Stack for named-card miracles, a fast one coin routine that snaps attention to the performer, plus ring on string and elastic band magic that can be done with borrowed or everyday objects. Along the way, he shares a wild Maldives story where one simple band-through-thumb moment gets demanded on repeat for ten straight minutes, proving that impact often beats complexity.  From there we move into bulletproof interactive pieces like Mark Elsdon’s Tequila Hustler, a multi-spectator drawing duplication, and practical working tips like using Five Guys cardstock as free billets. We also talk Ring Thing, PK touch, and why Paul Harris style “organic magic” still matters when everything is filmed in slow motion. Then comes the spicy banishment: should the Omni Deck be retired for a while because spectators have seen it too often? Marc makes the case for variety, smarter endings, and building effects that don’t arrive pre-spoiled by social media.  If you enjoy close-up magic, walk around work, mentalism principles, and real-world gigging advice from a working pro, hit subscribe, share this with a magician friend, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show. Marc’s Desert Island Tricks:  Welcome Package. Any Card Named (Shadow Stack) 1. One Coin Routine  2. Ring on String  3. Band Through Thumb  4. Tequila Hustler  5. Multiple Spectator Drawing Duplication  6. Ring Thing  7. PK Touches  8. Torn and Restored Leaf  Banishment. Omni Deck  Book. Art of Astonishment  Item. MagSafe Selfie screen  Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

8. mai 20261 h 12 min