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Edited on Wed Jan-12-11 12:15 AM by Zavulon
If you have a chance to do a trick in a familiar setting like a kitchen where there will be a notepad and some standard pencils, prepare the following:
Pick the name of any card you intend to force your victim to pick, say, the seven of diamonds. Take a pencil and rip off one of the pieces of the notepad (so as not to leave impressions on the next piece when you write), and write the name of the card on the piece of paper. Do this opposite-handed so that it looks barely legible and nothing like your handwriting - it adds to the effect. Then break off the tip of the pencil on the piece of paper and crumple up the paper with the piece of lead in it. Keep that wadded-up ball of paper handy. Now you're ready.
When it's trick time, force your victim to pick the seven of diamonds (if you don't know how to do it, search Google: how+to+force+a+card There are dozens of methods, most quite simple and no skill required, so just pick one you like.
Once the victim has the intended card, tell him or her to grab that notepad next to the phone and to grab a pencil, too. Instruct the victim to break off the tip of a pencil on the paper and to crumple it up with the lead inside. Once done, ask to see it to make sure the lead is still in there - this will be your guise to switch the victim's wadded-up ball of paper with the one you've prepared.
Now that the switch is made and you're "satisfied" that the lead is still in the ball of paper, tell him or her to make a fist and hold the ball tight inside. Say "I want to concentrate on your card, and I'll command the piece of lead to write out the name of it. Do you feel it? Can you feel it writing?"
Regardless of the answer, wait about five more seconds and say "Let's see if it worked." Have him or her open up the paper, and the name of the card will be written on it :)
Once you're good at forcing cards, the possibilities are limitless. You can seal "predictions" in envelopes, for example. Magicians often use the force of a card to make said card magically reappear in their wallets or yours (if they can get advance time alone with your wallet to put a duplicate card in yours) and then, when you're looking at your wallet in amazement, they use that time to switch the deck they used to force the card on you and substitute that deck with an identical one that's missing the duplicate card the victim just found (so that when you say "Wait a minute, give me that deck" and look for the card you picked and just found, it's no longer in the deck).
Another example: modern magicians now like to force a card on you, and the VERY SECOND you see what card you've picked, you get a (prepared beforehand and saved in drafts on the magician's phone, obviously) text message on your cell phone telling you what it is. The effect, being as instantaneous as it is, really shocks people. The second you even SEE the card you just picked, your phone goes off telling you that you have a text message, and the text has the name of your card in it. As long as you have a draft saved and are ready to send it to a particular person's phone, you can do this trick on the spot.
About twenty years ago for a very special occasion my father used a card force in the following manner: it was my aunt's 50th birthday, we (the whole family) were all in an expensive restaurant, so right in front of the entire family he had her pick a card, seemingly at random, but in fact he "forced" the eight of hearts on her. While he had his back turned, she showed the card to the entire family, put it back and shuffled the deck to her heart's desire. He then took back the deck and went through some comical chants, pretending to concentrate on the deck, when he suddenly called a waiter over. He gave the waiter a $50 bill, made a loud spectacle of pointing out that it was one dollar for every year of the guest of honor's age (to much laughter, including the waiter's), and asked him to go buy him a newspaper, bring it over and keep the change. He then explained that he was going to cover the deck with a newspaper and make it appear in a way none of us have ever seen before.
The waiter brings back the paper, my dad covers the deck with it, does a few more comical gyrations and chants, and then says "Ah, fuck it. I can't find it. Here, you do it." He then threw the paper at my aunt and told her to look in the personals under birthdays.
After a couple minutes of searching the paper, at first thinking she was looking for an actual playing card, she finally noticed the following want ad in the paper in huge block lettering, and just exploded into laughter: "Happy 50th Birthday, LM, you wretched old hag. By the way, you picked the eight of hearts." :) This one shocked everyone in the family who wasn't in on it.
(For that trick my dad needed two confederates: 1.) me, to drive over to my aunt's house at five in the morning to steal her newspaper so that she wouldn't see the ad in advance, and 2.) my uncle, to keep her distracted enough with birthday stuff so that she wouldn't have time to go buy another copy. As soon as they arrived at the restaurant and my uncle nodded at me and my dad, we knew she hadn't seen the paper and the trick was on. Obviously, the newspaper itself was a third confederate given that my dad bought the want ad about a week in advance and made it clear that it HAD to run on a certain day and on that day only.)
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