jamesthemaniac yeah that must mean a lot to them. I think penn and teller are probably some of the greatest men out there. They have their passion and they love others peoples passions.
@@iamapokerface8992 Sounds like a comment that a psychologist would make, "I'm ok with that"...accepting circumstances and our imperfections, not having unrealistic expectations
This'll be a bit random, but I've seen Penn & Teller's Vegas show twice, and every time after the show they take pics and sign autographs for everyone who came. Only performers in Vegas who I've seen take the time to do that for their fans. The last time, just as Covid was starting up, I noticed Teller sat for it, the first time he stood. So I think he was dealing with a lot of pain or discomfort, and still he did the show and meet & greet for everyone. So major respect for those two, especially Teller dealing with likely pain. And FYI, yes Teller speaks! I was shocked after the show how he greets everyone and talks with them. Not only get to meet him 2x and get autographs and pics, got to hear his voice as well. So anyway, am really fond of them. Class acts.
That is for the off-stage judges to listen in during the time he and Penn are discussing the trick. The judges know the trick and decide if there is a fool, so the performer can't cheat by bluffing.
@@wupme That would not be a smart way of setting it up. You want the decision to be absolutely clear, without relying on interpretation on what is said in code. That is owed to the performers. Also, please provide a better use for that mic if it is not used for the judges to listen in.
@@wupme Nope, theres been at least one time where they thought they knew how the trick was done and the performer thought they were right then the judges said it was a fool.
I absolutely love /love/ love the concept of tying magic with helping patients with mental illness, especially depression, by showing them what they think they see, or what they think is real, isn't everything, isn't the whole picture, isn't static. That is such a beautiful analogy to me, esp as someone who has been to therapy for depression n such
That's probably actually something to be really fucking careful with. Playing with mentally unstable and schizo people's sense of trust and stability during their recoveries and trials, as a "professional" who they are either seeking help from or in his case actually locked in with, simply because you want to be a magician and can't take your job seriously is unfathomable to me. I'm not saying there's no time for fun and if seeing a magic trick solves your mental illness, great, just remember that in a locked psychiatric unit like he mentioned many people probably do not care about a magic trick so I'd really leave it to the patient and even then they might react or internalize it poorly. It's selfish and immature is what it actually is, but given that our entire psychiatric care system is as heinously fucked as our legal and prison system, at least in USA, which is incredibly fucked btw as its run by nitwits at best and childish sadists and crooks on average, you're all fucked and I just hope I'm wrong and there really is a Hell for y'all. Take care.
The last thing an unstable person doubting reality in a locked unit needs is some asshat who pretends he has a clever lesson about reality. Fuck off, who are you lying to? That's not a valuable lesson for anything beyond the most average form of depression or anxiety. Profound? Give me a fucking break. It was a dumb pretentious thing to say, that appeals to dumb pretentious people like you who want to comment how beautiful you think it is. I personally don't see the true value. It's fun when you don't attach some bullshit miracle to it.
@@jacobisaacmiller8056 Dude, get some therapy. I agree that he's wrong, he's not going to be able to change anyone's perception of reality with a magic trick. But you just totally lost your shit over a random comment on the internet, you clearly have serious issues. Best of luck.
@@daniel4647 it's a real person in the world and it's on the front page of a video. might as well call it as ridiculous as it is before the bandwagon effect motivates 100 other people to think it's normal to humble-brag about their miracle cure for things that they know nothing about. to them- have some backbone and be real with yourself. who is it really for?
This wasn't about fooling Penn and Teller. It was about getting himself out there and letting people know about his efforts and his goals. And I'm okay with that. It's an honor to get on a show like this where millions of people will see you, and maybe a few of those people will remember the name and need what a psychologist who also happens to be a magician can provide to whatever that other person has going on in their life. Perhaps there's profit there, if nothing more than new life experiences and new journeys upon which to embark and explore. Also, for a modern day suburban world, who doesn't love office supplies? They're practically universal.
Thanks for your comment. I gotta say, both times I went on P&T were not really about fooling them. It was about trying to have fun and make something interesting. I'll also say that as a therapist in private practice, you hardly need to advertise at all because (unfortunately) the need is so great for psychological services. I am almost ALWAYS at capacity in my practice and this is true for every therapist I know and most of them have never been on Penn & Teller :)
@@krisrhodes5180 the oval sticker already has the O on it, he does a bubble at 5:19, then hides that he is putting an upside down G in the bubble. Then he flips the book revealing the O top right, and then he puts the G on it, you see him do the G
At 05:08 he writes Tellers dream in the corner, doesn't even try to hide it. Then be covers The Edge with his thumb (which is where he put the dream). Then he writes it again on something with the same color as the notes, a cut piece of another note or something transparent, idk. That he can move around and sticks to the note. Before the last move he simply removes the moveable piece of note/transparent paper one, and reveals the mark under his thumb that he originally made. That one is just regular marker on the note, nothing special so now the note is safe for inspection and is gifted to Teller.
The first trick is little bit more complicated. It seems to me like he had already prepared half of the heart with A letter prepared and covered behind some stick on which he drew the empty half of the original heart and then simply swept it away to reveal the A letter.
Playing cards are recognisable, but they are definitely not an everyday item (except for magicians and card players). My point however was that every magician does card and coin tricks, it's good to see some variety.
This is one that is less than interesting to magicians but excellent to spectators. To fool magicians is just a different (not necessarily superior) and often what intrigues magician doesn’t really interest laymen (i.e. that move was cool!). The detection of sleight no matter how difficult the move is what ruins it to laymen.. even if it took years to harness but if perceivable to laymen the magic is gone. Of which if the move is very difficult would impress magicians. So difficulty in sleights matter little to audience they just want a pure clean routine and are objective whether the move is hard or not. Magicians can respect difficult sleights but often lose the ability to see it from a laymen’s point of view which is an under appreciated fact. Great job Tyler i liked it.
i can't even remember the last time i used sticky notes(perhaps over 12-15 years ago) but i use coins almost everyday and cards quite often(if not everyday). and honestly i don't know one person who uses those sticky notes even once a month. i have degree in computers, i'm mentioning this because the most common place where those notes are found are the computer screens
@@tamiflu470 Your argument is a bit personal though... Here, let's flip it! I can't even remember the last time I used coins(perhaps before credit cards) but I use post it almost everyday and I honestly don't know one person who uses cards even once a month. I am an illustrator btw, I'm mentioning it because the most common place where coins are found are not artists pockets. ;)
At 5:18, he writes at the top right corner of the note. When he inverts it, the writing should be at the bottom left. But he continues to show the top right where a circle was already in place. All he needed to do was write the C while covering the bottom left with his thumb. One can confirm this by closely looking at the difference between the original letter and what he shows at the end. Easier to see these subtle moves on TH-cam at half the speed, but almost impossible to catch these moves live. Of course not hard for Penn and Teller. Well done by Tyler..🙏🙏
Hey Penn & Teller thanks for you to set up this show for people to display there brand of magic for the world to see I very much enjoy watching them on TH-cam a bit of magic does brighten my day and thanks for that
5:20 writes in top right corner and he flips it as he shows it to teller (so that the bottom left is now the top right while he covers what he just wrote)
You come off as exuding compassion, and it's not something you often see in performances, or in general these days. Your sincerity is really endearing and makes your performance very memorable. Great work.
I think I get the trick , when calls teller and write on the note. He didn’t actually write on the note but on a piece of paper that can slide on the note and is of same colour. That is how he is able to slide the written part. And he is hiding the actual writing with his fingers. In the end he removes the sliding paper and gives the note to Teller with the actual writing which he was hiding with his finger. Not sure but I think this how he is doing .
Don’t read if you don’t want the trick spoiled: 5:15 he pretends to start drawing the “bubble” and then sneakily flips the notepad over revealing the edge that his left hand was covering which had the movable bubble already underneath it
Yes but he did not pretened anything. He drew the final bubble with C in it. He had to draw the C upside down. Then flipped the notepad and showed the moveable bubble with predrawn circle, added C. It was quite cunning misdirection.
is it actually like using a sticker(which u can write on top of it) at first to move the initial and the last one is only real one(which he writes when he removes the sticker from teller for a sec or 2) which he covers with his thumb the whole act and removes the sticker at last
ive spent time in a mental hospital i wished someone like him worked there and did magic tricks. but it indeed is a good way to help people understand that what they experience might not be real (in case of psychosis)
at 5:20 he writes tellers letter on the top right and flips it over so that it is now bottom left and he covers it with his thumb during the trick. So the final letter is always in place on the bottom left
I was wondering why the hearts were so small. Then it dawned on me... so, that´s why there is an arrow, to even things out.. right? Don´t want to give too much away, but I don´t think I did.. I hope you are making a lot of money from the trick, because that is brilliant. It´s nice that you end up completely clean too and can give them the note to take home. That makes it extra magical. Now I´m gonna see if I was right and get my hands on some sticky-notes. The fact that you are using it for psychology should win you some points too. I think every psychologist should learn magic.
Nice, okay I see half of the trick. I still don't know how he moved the one symbol around and off the paper -- it seems to change slightly each time. Or how he did A+S in the heart in the first half.
@@xorbe2 I think the first he already had the arrow +A written, then when allison said S he wrote the S aswell and covered it up with another piece of the note ( the sticky part). I obviously couldnt reproduce or tell exactly how he did it, but I think he had some of these on a sticky paper that blends great with the note itself, and he just keeps rolling it on the already drawn things then takes it off and palms it.
@@priyansh1210 I think (not sure) the moving one is a sticker. The final position is covered with his thumb. He conceals and ditches the sticker by the end so that the person can leave with the little note which gives it a more legitimate feeling ("Look, it is just a normal piece of paper!")
I see what you're talking about but where does the first 'c' we see come from? The one he's not initicially covering with his thumb? When did he draw it?
@@krisrhodes5180 to me he shows teller where he is drawing the circle and in one motion moves up the pad as he is still drawing to conceal his actually drawing the final position of the circle as well. He just covers with the thumb the whole time. There is two circles drawn. The final position circle and the sticker version he slides off at the end
@@feelincrispy7053 The first circle he draws is actually the final position circle. The sticker is placed on the pad in the bottom left corner when he shows Teller that he has started drawing the actual circle in the top right corner. After he's drawn the circle and the letter in the top right corner he then flips the pad and rotates it moving the final circle from the top right where he showed teller he was drawing it to the bottom left corner and covers it with his thumb. What he shows to Teller is an empty circle in the top right corner where he showed he was drawing but it's actually the bottom left corner of the original post-it position and the empty circle is a sticker. He then draws Tellers letter in the circle and proceeds to move it around. When he moves his right hand thumb down to the corner for the final reveal he ditches the sticker into his hand by dragging it off the edge simultaneously ditching the sticker and revealing the original, drawn circle that has been there the whole time, covered by the left hand thumb.
5:21 he writes something on the left side (from our perspective) and on the non-sticky part. After turning around the Post-It block it should be down and left, but it is on the upper right side (on the sticky part)... I think with this tiny information the whole trick is clear. And if not, it is something you can try to figure out by yourself.
@@SmartWentCrazy yes it's just a piece he's sliding around. He ditches it into his left hand on the final move and pretends to move it down to the bottom left corner.
Idk but my guess is there was some kind of thing where when you rub it it shows for a brief period? Like a thermal thing? I don't know but keep up the great magic!
OK, this was absolutely beautiful, I don't even care how it was done. But to be honest this got to me. It's emotional, it's beautiful, it's a wonderful magic trick and also: OFFICE SUPPLIES!!!!!
you could see that after he wrote the letter of teller, he flipped the note, whereas the letter is originally at the bottom. thats why as he is moving the letter, his thumb covers the original letter.
O. Ram Trying to say he was using a piece of paper to either cover the drawings he wasn’t wanting to show, or to show the drawing he did want to show. Just a small piece of paper he can slide around to make it look like it’s moving.
I like posting on every single one of these videos about how awesome it is that they all get to post them on their channel. Off to post this 3729 more times
Static energy, sharp paper that is unnoticeable when on top of same background as foreground color, 2 drawings, thumb covered the bottom left of the actual sticky note and yeah pretty neat trick
Tyler you’re a cool guy with a great heart and awesome sense of humor. Keep up the great work man I enjoyed watching this snippet of the show 👍🏻 best wishes from NY
Enkel Bega i agree. This one is a trick for the person. I don’t think it appeals for parlor magic but to the person or spectator it must be a personal experience. It uses a classic principle that those in the know would recognize.
I like that the show lets each magician post their appearance to their own channel
jamesthemaniac yeah that must mean a lot to them. I think penn and teller are probably some of the greatest men out there. They have their passion and they love others peoples passions.
Oh that’s what’s going on!
@@theCodyReeder Oh hi Cody. Fancy seeing you here.
Cody'sLab HI CODY!
@@theCodyReeder HI M❤️THERF❤️ICKING CODYS LABBBZ
imagine going to him for therapy cuz you depressed and mans starts pullin shit out your ear
Thats will help, i guess.
Hahahaha!
"I have a problem"
"Is this your problem?!"
"Dafuq man, put that back in!"
Your ear, if you're lucky! 😬
Imagine you’re giving therapy to a depressed man and he starts pullin shit out your ear
"I think they got it...and I'm ok with that" Spoken like a true psychologist
explain
@@iamapokerface8992 Sounds like a comment that a psychologist would make, "I'm ok with that"...accepting circumstances and our imperfections, not having unrealistic expectations
*I honestly thought you said “psychopath” LOL* 😂😂
@@SurahOnline Let's explore where that comes from in our next 50 min session 😉😆
I liked that he immediately said "No." when asked if he thinks that he fooled them. It's different and feels quite humble and honest.
This'll be a bit random, but I've seen Penn & Teller's Vegas show twice, and every time after the show they take pics and sign autographs for everyone who came. Only performers in Vegas who I've seen take the time to do that for their fans. The last time, just as Covid was starting up, I noticed Teller sat for it, the first time he stood. So I think he was dealing with a lot of pain or discomfort, and still he did the show and meet & greet for everyone. So major respect for those two, especially Teller dealing with likely pain.
And FYI, yes Teller speaks! I was shocked after the show how he greets everyone and talks with them. Not only get to meet him 2x and get autographs and pics, got to hear his voice as well. So anyway, am really fond of them. Class acts.
teller doesn't speak. penn is just a really talented ventriloquist
Why does Teller have a mic?
It's a magic prop.
That is for the off-stage judges to listen in during the time he and Penn are discussing the trick. The judges know the trick and decide if there is a fool, so the performer can't cheat by bluffing.
@@arifijan its not needed for that really. The judges judge by the code they talk.
@@wupme That would not be a smart way of setting it up. You want the decision to be absolutely clear, without relying on interpretation on what is said in code. That is owed to the performers. Also, please provide a better use for that mic if it is not used for the judges to listen in.
@@wupme Nope, theres been at least one time where they thought they knew how the trick was done and the performer thought they were right then the judges said it was a fool.
I absolutely love /love/ love the concept of tying magic with helping patients with mental illness, especially depression, by showing them what they think they see, or what they think is real, isn't everything, isn't the whole picture, isn't static. That is such a beautiful analogy to me, esp as someone who has been to therapy for depression n such
That's probably actually something to be really fucking careful with. Playing with mentally unstable and schizo people's sense of trust and stability during their recoveries and trials, as a "professional" who they are either seeking help from or in his case actually locked in with, simply because you want to be a magician and can't take your job seriously is unfathomable to me. I'm not saying there's no time for fun and if seeing a magic trick solves your mental illness, great, just remember that in a locked psychiatric unit like he mentioned many people probably do not care about a magic trick so I'd really leave it to the patient and even then they might react or internalize it poorly. It's selfish and immature is what it actually is, but given that our entire psychiatric care system is as heinously fucked as our legal and prison system, at least in USA, which is incredibly fucked btw as its run by nitwits at best and childish sadists and crooks on average, you're all fucked and I just hope I'm wrong and there really is a Hell for y'all. Take care.
The last thing an unstable person doubting reality in a locked unit needs is some asshat who pretends he has a clever lesson about reality. Fuck off, who are you lying to? That's not a valuable lesson for anything beyond the most average form of depression or anxiety. Profound? Give me a fucking break. It was a dumb pretentious thing to say, that appeals to dumb pretentious people like you who want to comment how beautiful you think it is. I personally don't see the true value. It's fun when you don't attach some bullshit miracle to it.
@@jacobisaacmiller8056 Dude, get some therapy. I agree that he's wrong, he's not going to be able to change anyone's perception of reality with a magic trick. But you just totally lost your shit over a random comment on the internet, you clearly have serious issues. Best of luck.
@@daniel4647 it's a real person in the world and it's on the front page of a video. might as well call it as ridiculous as it is before the bandwagon effect motivates 100 other people to think it's normal to humble-brag about their miracle cure for things that they know nothing about. to them- have some backbone and be real with yourself. who is it really for?
And thats a beautiful comment.
I imagine that you did this just to hear Teller's voice.
100%
It's not like Teller has taken a vow of silence. Teller speaks all the time. He just doesn't speak when he is in character.
I imagine that’d be pretty dumb. There are ads right here on TH-cam that feature him talking.
You can just TH-cam that, or attend a live show. After the show you can speak with Teller yourself.
The biggest illusion is this guy’s penmanship.
This is still one of my favorite acts performed on P&T Fool Us. Just such a good trick and good presentation.
¡ǝʌɐp sʞuɐɥʇ
This wasn't about fooling Penn and Teller. It was about getting himself out there and letting people know about his efforts and his goals. And I'm okay with that. It's an honor to get on a show like this where millions of people will see you, and maybe a few of those people will remember the name and need what a psychologist who also happens to be a magician can provide to whatever that other person has going on in their life. Perhaps there's profit there, if nothing more than new life experiences and new journeys upon which to embark and explore. Also, for a modern day suburban world, who doesn't love office supplies? They're practically universal.
Thanks for your comment. I gotta say, both times I went on P&T were not really about fooling them. It was about trying to have fun and make something interesting. I'll also say that as a therapist in private practice, you hardly need to advertise at all because (unfortunately) the need is so great for psychological services. I am almost ALWAYS at capacity in my practice and this is true for every therapist I know and most of them have never been on Penn & Teller :)
S for Stifler.
Wrong. It's the shermanator
Hahahahaha
Pretty sure it’s Sarah Michelle Gellar
@@silverlightsinaugust2756 I was thinking the same
wrong, its the stiffmeister!
It is one thing to get fooled on person, but to get fooled by a video that you can rewatch 100 times is incredible
"The greatest magic happens at the smallest scale." Pretty much the definition of quantum physics.
Neil Judell nah the inside of my pants
Neil Judell uncertainty principle: true magic
That's my Tinder description
Definitely thought I was reading a penis joke in the first half
If you love quantum mechanics read the book dark matter by blake crouch great sci fi fiction
he writes like a doctor
He works as a psychiatrist I think?
He poops on paper?
@@h.plovecat4307 he can read minds
It's because he is Dr. Magic
I think he is
5:40 he is covering the final drawing with his thumb. The letter that slides on the paper is just a oval sticker that he draws on.
When Teller wants to shake your hand but you have to put the gimmick in your hand away first.
Its also obvious when he covers the pad while drawing the final picture.
@@Beck-Stein
5:18, he realizes hes let Teller get too close
When did he draw on the oval sticker though? I only see him ever draw the one that you're talking about, that he covers with his thumb at first.
@@krisrhodes5180 the oval sticker already has the O on it, he does a bubble at 5:19, then hides that he is putting an upside down G in the bubble. Then he flips the book revealing the O top right, and then he puts the G on it, you see him do the G
The fact, that this man uses his magic to help people with mental health issues is beautiful. I love you, dude. Thank you so much for existing.
At 05:08 he writes Tellers dream in the corner, doesn't even try to hide it. Then be covers The Edge with his thumb (which is where he put the dream).
Then he writes it again on something with the same color as the notes, a cut piece of another note or something transparent, idk. That he can move around and sticks to the note. Before the last move he simply removes the moveable piece of note/transparent paper one, and reveals the mark under his thumb that he originally made. That one is just regular marker on the note, nothing special so now the note is safe for inspection and is gifted to Teller.
The first trick is little bit more complicated. It seems to me like he had already prepared half of the heart with A letter prepared and covered behind some stick on which he drew the empty half of the original heart and then simply swept it away to reveal the A letter.
At around 6:00 you can see him pull it off and grab it in his fist so he doesn't drop it.
He's got balls to call Teller up close
magician code talk?
i think he's got balls pretty much either way
@@wolverineiscool7161 Underrated comment
@wolverineiscool Did you just assume his gender?
7:57 That dude in the back had an uncomfortable seat.
😂
Nah he farted
Im ded af
He shat himself..
Orrrr he tried to fart and shat himself :P
Way to go Tyler! Great performance of a great trick. As Penn said, it's so great, it's not a card / coin trick, but uses just an everyday item.
Playing cards are recognisable, but they are definitely not an everyday item (except for magicians and card players). My point however was that every magician does card and coin tricks, it's good to see some variety.
This is one that is less than interesting to magicians but excellent to spectators. To fool magicians is just a different (not necessarily superior) and often what intrigues magician doesn’t really interest laymen (i.e. that move was cool!). The detection of sleight no matter how difficult the move is what ruins it to laymen.. even if it took years to harness but if perceivable to laymen the magic is gone. Of which if the move is very difficult would impress magicians. So difficulty in sleights matter little to audience they just want a pure clean routine and are objective whether the move is hard or not. Magicians can respect difficult sleights but often lose the ability to see it from a laymen’s point of view which is an under appreciated fact. Great job Tyler i liked it.
i can't even remember the last time i used sticky notes(perhaps over 12-15 years ago) but i use coins almost everyday and cards quite often(if not everyday). and honestly i don't know one person who uses those sticky notes even once a month.
i have degree in computers, i'm mentioning this because the most common place where those notes are found are the computer screens
@@tamiflu470 Your argument is a bit personal though... Here, let's flip it!
I can't even remember the last time I used coins(perhaps before credit cards) but I use post it almost everyday and I honestly don't know one person who uses cards even once a month.
I am an illustrator btw, I'm mentioning it because the most common place where coins are found are not artists pockets. ;)
Love just love how Penn explain magic
The most magical thing about this whole trick is how precise this man can write with a Sharpie.
At 5:18, he writes at the top right corner of the note. When he inverts it, the writing should be at the bottom left. But he continues to show the top right where a circle was already in place. All he needed to do was write the C while covering the bottom left with his thumb. One can confirm this by closely looking at the difference between the original letter and what he shows at the end. Easier to see these subtle moves on TH-cam at half the speed, but almost impossible to catch these moves live. Of course not hard for Penn and Teller. Well done by Tyler..🙏🙏
That doesn't explain everything.
Great act, and you have such a sweet and kind spirit. Thank you for sharing both.
Alyson, the most randomly selected audience member of all times.
Hey Penn & Teller thanks for you to set up this show for people to display there brand of magic for the world to see I very much enjoy watching them on TH-cam a bit of magic does brighten my day and thanks for that
5:20 writes in top right corner and he flips it as he shows it to teller (so that the bottom left is now the top right while he covers what he just wrote)
nothing explain por fa
Hey tyler, from someone with cptsd, thank you for all you do.
The S is for her daughter Satyana, I think 💖
It's for Satan
Nope Stinson as in Barney Stinson
S as in Stifler
S for Sarah Michelle Gellar
Or Scooter
His I
It was suppose to be. The i love you was found by an embarrasd child who changed the heart to an o. He says that.
You come off as exuding compassion, and it's not something you often see in performances, or in general these days. Your sincerity is really endearing and makes your performance very memorable. Great work.
I think it is awesome that you use magic with therapy❣
I think I get the trick , when calls teller and write on the note. He didn’t actually write on the note but on a piece of paper that can slide on the note and is of same colour. That is how he is able to slide the written part. And he is hiding the actual writing with his fingers. In the end he removes the sliding paper and gives the note to Teller with the actual writing which he was hiding with his finger. Not sure but I think this how he is doing .
4:45 _silently judging you_
Don’t read if you don’t want the trick spoiled:
5:15 he pretends to start drawing the “bubble” and then sneakily flips the notepad over revealing the edge that his left hand was covering which had the movable bubble already underneath it
Yes but he did not pretened anything. He drew the final bubble with C in it. He had to draw the C upside down. Then flipped the notepad and showed the moveable bubble with predrawn circle, added C. It was quite cunning misdirection.
Question is how did he move the circle on a piece of paper?
is it actually like using a sticker(which u can write on top of it) at first to move the initial and the last one is only real one(which he writes when he removes the sticker from teller for a sec or 2) which he covers with his thumb the whole act and removes the sticker at last
The fact the last one under his thumb looked different gave it away.
haha nope
@@Sarah_Gravydog316 so u know how?
@@navaneethsivakumar8716 you're not even close! watch again!
the magic trick was amazing
penn telling the magician how he did it without us understanding is next level
Your use of magic in your work is inspiring! 🙌
Really enjoyed this act ... not sure how you did any of that .. good job man.
That code would have been lost on him if he didn't know the guitarist from U2 is called the Edge
ooooooooohhhhh....now i get it lol
Or that U2 was a band lol. "You too".
I still don't get it ;-;
3:33 -> 3:46
Something other than the letters changed.
Explain pls
I like that he uses his magic to help, I thought that was pretty cool.
ive spent time in a mental hospital
i wished someone like him worked there and did magic tricks.
but it indeed is a good way to help people understand that what they experience might not be real (in case of psychosis)
I don't think I was fooled, but boy this is a great trick. Even with the close up camera it looks flawless.
After all this time, Alyson was thinking about Sylvester Stallone.
Woah reallym
I thought it was "S" for Shy Guy...?
S = Sarah (michelle geller)
5:31 You cannot ever hear "In the beginning" the same way after you've heard the legend, Jacob zuma
Humblest magician on the show
If you look at 5:42 and 6:01 you see the letters do not look the same
at 5:20 he writes tellers letter on the top right and flips it over so that it is now bottom left and he covers it with his thumb during the trick. So the final letter is always in place on the bottom left
@@2010RSHACKS that doesnt say how he moves it from top to bottom
That was really cool. Had me smiling the whole time.
I was wondering why the hearts were so small. Then it dawned on me... so, that´s why there is an arrow, to even things out.. right? Don´t want to give too much away, but I don´t think I did.. I hope you are making a lot of money from the trick, because that is brilliant. It´s nice that you end up completely clean too and can give them the note to take home. That makes it extra magical. Now I´m gonna see if I was right and get my hands on some sticky-notes.
The fact that you are using it for psychology should win you some points too. I think every psychologist should learn magic.
why put the pad away if he's going to take it out again? there's lots of space on the counter
7:07 the man is unique. Loved his humbleness.
Cool act Tyler!!! Very moving!
You know inviting Teller was a bald move! I loved it!
@3:52 the word 'perfect' is magicians code for 'not a chance'
So what did this guy actually write on those two post it notes?
He prolly has the best attitude ever. Graceful!
5:20 Nice way of turning it so you cover the one you drew on the paper.
Nice, okay I see half of the trick. I still don't know how he moved the one symbol around and off the paper -- it seems to change slightly each time. Or how he did A+S in the heart in the first half.
@@xorbe2 I think the first he already had the arrow +A written, then when allison said S he wrote the S aswell and covered it up with another piece of the note ( the sticky part). I obviously couldnt reproduce or tell exactly how he did it, but I think he had some of these on a sticky paper that blends great with the note itself, and he just keeps rolling it on the already drawn things then takes it off and palms it.
The only thing fooling me is that the sticky notes are actually staying on that little podium.
Obviously the podium had glue on it, there is no other explanation.
You drew a circle on the pad, flipped it over and covered it with your thumb right in front of Teller and you thought he would miss that?
but how'd he moved the circle from top to bottom the first two times?
@@priyansh1210 I think (not sure) the moving one is a sticker. The final position is covered with his thumb. He conceals and ditches the sticker by the end so that the person can leave with the little note which gives it a more legitimate feeling ("Look, it is just a normal piece of paper!")
I see what you're talking about but where does the first 'c' we see come from? The one he's not initicially covering with his thumb? When did he draw it?
@@krisrhodes5180 to me he shows teller where he is drawing the circle and in one motion moves up the pad as he is still drawing to conceal his actually drawing the final position of the circle as well. He just covers with the thumb the whole time. There is two circles drawn. The final position circle and the sticker version he slides off at the end
@@feelincrispy7053 The first circle he draws is actually the final position circle. The sticker is placed on the pad in the bottom left corner when he shows Teller that he has started drawing the actual circle in the top right corner.
After he's drawn the circle and the letter in the top right corner he then flips the pad and rotates it moving the final circle from the top right where he showed teller he was drawing it to the bottom left corner and covers it with his thumb. What he shows to Teller is an empty circle in the top right corner where he showed he was drawing but it's actually the bottom left corner of the original post-it position and the empty circle is a sticker. He then draws Tellers letter in the circle and proceeds to move it around. When he moves his right hand thumb down to the corner for the final reveal he ditches the sticker into his hand by dragging it off the edge simultaneously ditching the sticker and revealing the original, drawn circle that has been there the whole time, covered by the left hand thumb.
5:21 he writes something on the left side (from our perspective) and on the non-sticky part. After turning around the Post-It block it should be down and left, but it is on the upper right side (on the sticky part)... I think with this tiny information the whole trick is clear. And if not, it is something you can try to figure out by yourself.
I get that and it gives the endpoint, but how does he move the letter? Is it just a piece he is sliding around?
@@SmartWentCrazy i don't get it either although i can figure out most tricks in fool us
@@SmartWentCrazy yes it's just a piece he's sliding around. He ditches it into his left hand on the final move and pretends to move it down to the bottom left corner.
A great trick. Also a great smile, very infectious. You just want to stick around for that alone.
I thought they were gonna say "You didn't fool us because you're the first actual magician we've had on stage. We know how you did it, it was magic."
Idk but my guess is there was some kind of thing where when you rub it it shows for a brief period? Like a thermal thing? I don't know but keep up the great magic!
"The greatest magic happens at the smallest scales." As a physics person I can agree :D
Wow this honestly might be the best trick I've seen on the show
Third time seeing this trick and it still looks amazing to me. The second time I saw it was in the magic tutorial.
Where??
OK, this was absolutely beautiful, I don't even care how it was done. But to be honest this got to me. It's emotional, it's beautiful, it's a wonderful magic trick and also: OFFICE SUPPLIES!!!!!
All though I know how this is done. Is still a pretty act to see each time. Good work man 👨
This makes me very happy. Thank you!
He didn't fool them, but he fooled me. Plus, he got to meet Allison, so all is good for Tyler Twombly.
Asking Teller to join you on stage is brave as hell!
0:35 what is he trying to do?
It's a really stupid illusion, left foot on the ground, but right foot has two shoes as if both legs are in the air.
06:00 gives the trick away
you could see that after he wrote the letter of teller, he flipped the note, whereas the letter is originally at the bottom. thats why as he is moving the letter, his thumb covers the original letter.
"Office supplies." [Laughter]
Loved the performance man! Good luck with your career!
The code...
Something about moving fast and covering up while moving and hearts moving around.
Wonder how its done
I came from hs top
He uses your song pump it and i like it
Now I'm here
S = Stifler?
I think I was looking at the right place at the right time when I saw one of his “moves” and it was a good one! Clever trick!
This is the first time, after many many episodes, that I don't understand Penns code talk.
O. Ram Trying to say he was using a piece of paper to either cover the drawings he wasn’t wanting to show, or to show the drawing he did want to show. Just a small piece of paper he can slide around to make it look like it’s moving.
0:36. Seriously what was that illusion supposed to be???
It's a "levitating" effect. Yes, the way it was done isn't exactly selling it, but that is what it was supposed to be...
All I know is it has something to do with The Edge. Or humanitarian aid... and I'm ok with that.
I like posting on every single one of these videos about how awesome it is that they all get to post them on their channel. Off to post this 3729 more times
Why is Teller wearing a mic?
Thoughtful
Static energy, sharp paper that is unnoticeable when on top of same background as foreground color, 2 drawings, thumb covered the bottom left of the actual sticky note and yeah pretty neat trick
hes so shaky but yet still nails the trick. well done sir
I love this trick, I do a similar one, haven't perfected it, but I have my moments
Im still trying to figure out which letter was that...
I was sure the scribbled 'Teeth' and 'I blob U' notes were gonna be code for something in the end.
The magician: greatest honour if this ends up on your fridge
Allison after the show: piece of paper goes into the trash
I think I got the trick, and the execution is really smooth, which is the only thing that matters
I haven't finish the video but I feel the need to say I think he's left handed, just by looking at his drawings and letters
The second trick with teller also easy. Cmon this is child's play to figure out
5:29 caught u
what?
Yah
Winterhe4rt he wrote on one side of the paper, shows it to teller then flips it over to write again but the page is blank
Allison's trick ridiculously easy to figure out
Beautiful act
After watching a couple of Penn and Teller videos, i need to go rewatch american pie again.
She is great, isn't she?
I still would love to meet up with her at band camp
I like this trick i wish to know how is done , ita S-o much paper to work with
Cool to see some local talent on this show. Nice work
Tyler you’re a cool guy with a great heart and awesome sense of humor. Keep up the great work man I enjoyed watching this snippet of the show 👍🏻 best wishes from NY
Enkel Bega i agree. This one is a trick for the person. I don’t think it appeals for parlor magic but to the person or spectator it must be a personal experience. It uses a classic principle that those in the know would recognize.