REVEALED The UNEXPLAINABLE Penn and Teller Card Trick - Sigfried

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  • čas přidán 18. 12. 2018
  • In this video, I break down Sigfrieds Fool Us performance. As with all my videos, this is how I would do the trick, not necessarily how the performer does the trick. Tricks can be executed in many many ways and this is just one possible way it can be done.
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Komentáře • 203

  • @vapdesigns
    @vapdesigns Před rokem +5

    There's no force or peek, and only half of the deck is memorized! When you see the full extension of the cards you can see that every odd card belongs to Mnemonica 0:39 (I think there's another card trapped between the 4 of clubs and the 2 of hearts, but you can see that every other card belongs to the stack up until the king of diamonds). So when it's dealt in two piles, one of them ends up in Mnemonica 8:59. So with that pile he can look for the odd card and also look for the missing one in the stack! You can check that where the 8 of hearts should be, there's an 8 of diamonds. It's very clever to only use half stack and obtain two informations. The dribble and the movement to simulate a peek are red herrings

  • @bassicz
    @bassicz Před 5 lety +13

    More videos!!! Best walk-throughs !! Been looking for something like this and not just same ol’ stuff on reveals

  • @MikeRees
    @MikeRees Před 2 lety +5

    There's a nice way to confirm this theory, in his second appearance the order of cards in all his decks on that trick was remarkably similar. The 9 of hearts turned up after he showed the 6 of spades then 5 of spades, for example.

    • @qoph
      @qoph Před 2 lety

      I agree with you I think all his texts are in a similar pattern but the altar for each day

  • @wolfganghumboldt4830
    @wolfganghumboldt4830 Před 2 lety +2

    I learned this principle in Card College Light. It is taught the red/blue stacked way in Card College Light, but I use odd/even (counting the red Aces as even to make it 26/26) so I can reveal the cards to my spectators before I begin and just before the reveal and have them appear random and ordinary. You sit their with two stacks of all blue and another of all black cards after the reveal, and if your spectators have any interest in those piles after the reveal, you are left really dirty if you do it the red/black way.

  • @Terpe75
    @Terpe75 Před 3 lety +28

    The cards were not shuffled before the waterfall at all and when he spreads them out on the table you can clearly see the two red 8s next to each other roughly in the middle of the deck before the waterfall. Only thing I can think of is he knew the entire order and, if you look at the cards laid out at 0:52 there are a lot of patterns to the pairings of cards next to each other. It would not matter where it was stopped if he knew the entire pattern and was able to identify exactly where the stop was.
    I do not think it mattered where the stop was, he knew the card order and knew what 2 cards were picked no matter where the stop was and had some way of identifying the exact stop point. The trick was in being able to identify the stop point and knowing the order of the cards. No card force needed.
    Edit: The finger wave at 4:10 would be easy enough for him to glimpse the 6 spades to know that the 2 cards were the two red 8s. Think you are over analyzing the trick. The moment he glimpsed the 6 spades he knew the cards, the rest was just a pony show.....

    • @dhruvtiwari979
      @dhruvtiwari979 Před 3 lety +2

      nahh he didn't took a glimpse at the 6

    • @skylinedhandare9642
      @skylinedhandare9642 Před 2 lety

      I also came up with this idea but what if he never peeked at 6 of spades?

    • @gavsgav90
      @gavsgav90 Před rokem

      If he knew the entire order one by one, he also knew the number of each card, for example the 8 of diamond was card number 25 from right to left and 8 of hearts was 26. There for when dealing the cards all he had to do was count each card as it when down. Penn stop at 25 and Teller got 26 he knew from the start.

  • @talastra
    @talastra Před 4 lety +7

    There seems to be three continuous refrains about this trick: (1) he peeked at the card when talking to Alyson, etc., etc; (2) that it's some kind of force. All he "forces" is that Penn & Teller's cards are adjacent and reversed; there's never any riffling, and dealing them into separate piles also separates the cards. If you memorize the deck, then the cards in the wrong stack are indeed the cards, and you don't need to have forced anything, and you don't need a key card peeked. In any case, what no one ever mentions (if he's peeking) is that he turns over three cards from each stack while he's chatting. If he wants to know which "half" he's looking at, that is all it takes. Also, I really dig this guy.

  • @MayC23
    @MayC23 Před 3 lety +37

    The comment section is gold. Ppl take the red/black example literally.

  • @geoffbooker2965
    @geoffbooker2965 Před rokem

    Just helping out the algorithm. Thanks, Gef

  • @KaplaBen
    @KaplaBen Před 4 lety +4

    I thought the trick was that at 4:10 he is looking at the bottom card. (we all get to see it too). If he has the deck order memorized, he can guess the 2 chosen cards because they are the two previous ones. But the method you describe seems most likely.

  • @mehmetzorlu2195
    @mehmetzorlu2195 Před 2 lety

    very good explanation!

  • @mangeshdevalapurkar5283
    @mangeshdevalapurkar5283 Před 2 lety +1

    Good one. You guessed correctly that it is stacked deck. Order will not change. So it was easy for him to find the odd card which do not follow the order as par stack. He only had to ask whose card in which pile as this was not possible.

  • @mehmetzorlu2195
    @mehmetzorlu2195 Před 2 lety

    clear presentation, 100 mate!

  • @net_lag
    @net_lag Před 3 lety +5

    Dude.. I can't understand why you have so many dislikes. I am genuinely thankful that I watched this. I am the kind of guy who enjoys magic more when I know how it's done.

    • @kennethhalbe2017
      @kennethhalbe2017 Před 3 lety +4

      Because most of the people who disliked the video (in my mind) didn't understand that he was using the red/black example as just an example of pre-setting up the cards in SOME order. They clearly saw the cards in the beginning were not in red/black order, and thought he didn't know what he was talking about. Had they been listening closely, they would have realized that he was using red/black only as an example of some specific way the deck was organized at the beginning of the trick.

  • @benhansen1474
    @benhansen1474 Před rokem

    This is brilliant

  • @mustangdru
    @mustangdru Před rokem +1

    He has the deck memorized. After teller takes his card he flashes the next card 4:10 as he's staring at Allison. He now knows what cards penn and teller chose

  • @joyjeetchowdhury
    @joyjeetchowdhury Před 2 lety

    Great observation man...

  • @zmblion
    @zmblion Před 2 lety +2

    I think judging by his next time on the show he stacked the deck and memorized every card

  • @darylmsimpson
    @darylmsimpson Před rokem +9

    The “impossible” part happened at home when he memorized the deck.
    But the trick happens at 4:10 of this video.
    He knew the order of the deck and he simply looks at the card in his hand when he tells “Allison I’m still on you right”… Done… he now knows which cards they are holding, the rest is all for show.

  • @Syndicate_LS
    @Syndicate_LS Před rokem +1

    My favorite order of cards is Chased. It’s easy to figure out, but for more simplistic tricks that really don’t require showing the deck, it’s a great setup. CHSD. This can be paired with counting up by any number do the Colors are the only issue, which you could block push, but there is no sequence of numbers noticeable. For example CA, H4 , S7, D10, CK, H3, S6, D9, CQ, HA, and so on. That way you can look at any card and read the entire deck in seconds

    • @nicholasclark5094
      @nicholasclark5094 Před rokem +1

      In the event that some joker gets wise or is familiar with the chsd pattern. switch it up to shocked, shucked, schooled, "so he can dance" SHCD. its hard for my eye and brain(we fear change) this helped me get used to it or at least decipher it faster
      1 pointed tip of the Spade, 2 arches of the heart, 3 pedals of the Club, and 4 sides to the diamond.(or 4 corners).

  • @GeorgeG90
    @GeorgeG90 Před 4 lety +1

    thanks for sharing the general idea of how it works. This act was a joy to watch, as that guy was fluid and really funny.

  • @Morgan423Z
    @Morgan423Z Před 2 lety +2

    I do like how a lot of the successful performers on this show have flashed decoy methodology during their acts. I've seen this be as little as one, like here with the waterfall force selection that never actually was (well, I didn't catch anything else, but I'm not an expert either) to one I watched the other day, who swapped at least three red herring props during his trick (all of which the performer ruled out as being the method in the comments on the video... many of these go up on the performer's own CZcams channel).
    It's an ingenious idea. If you're using misdirection to conceal anyway, why not also use it to make them guess incorrectly? Seems like a solid strategy to employ.
    Edit: As I read the comments I see a lot of people mention the card flash at about 4:10, but I don't think that was how this was done either... another laid decoy trap like I'm talking about here... I missed it the first time I watched it.

  • @PrashantDeshpande29September

    Loved the explanation. You've explained it and yet didn't allow non serious ones to understand. Good job.

  • @rishabh8765
    @rishabh8765 Před 2 lety

    Ok I understood you can identify the two cards. But how would you tell which 1 belongs to whom?

  • @fattimiv
    @fattimiv Před 3 lety +1

    Rather than go red/black, which would be obvious to an observer if you fanned it out, you could put all hearts and spades in one and all clubs and diamonds in the other. They can be randomised otherwise and so there would be no easily discernible order.

  • @narvaezmusic5527
    @narvaezmusic5527 Před 2 lety

    This trick is called "Neither blind nor stupid", by Juan Tamariz. It's explained in Tamariz's book "Sonata". You are welcome.

    • @narvaezmusic5527
      @narvaezmusic5527 Před 2 lety

      Also there is a video with Tamariz performing the same trick, in the black-red way. Siegfried Tieber does the same, but with another key, not black - red.

  • @lemonadebusinesssolutions8499

    I have been searching for a stacked deck and do not believe it is or a mesmerised deck so the easiest way to do this is simple, half the pack as a very subtle mark on the back and the trick is done using the black and red method described in this tutorial, he would need too count at what position the card out of place in the one pile is when he deals them out to know where both are although he was speaking while dealing which i am not sure if that is possible as i cant do that but without speaking a have duplicated it, also duplicated by creating a seemingly random stacked deck by pairing even low cards with odd high cards (above and below 6, black kings being odd) also worked well.

  • @chintanshaparia7300
    @chintanshaparia7300 Před 4 lety +1

    A much better explanation is that it is an impromptu card trick where no set up is done just tells penn to select a totally random card , what he does is that he remembers the last card on upper half as penn says stop and both card are placed on top of bottom half, now he just needs to see the remembered card and the card next to it would be penn's card... and tellers card would be at the same count on the splitted half...

  • @TheLeftRbabieskillers
    @TheLeftRbabieskillers Před 4 lety

    Your expectation makes a lot of sense.

  • @draugnaustaunikunhymnphoo6978

    I'm one of those people who prefer knowing the complicated engineering behind the trick anyways. If I don't know how it was done, I remain unimpressed.

  • @Flo_xy
    @Flo_xy Před 3 lety +2

    What I dont understand is, what happens if one cuts the deck right between penn's and teller's card? Wouldnt that shift the order? Sorry, I'm not a magician nor understanding anything XD

    • @lforlight
      @lforlight Před 3 lety +1

      It shouldn't be an issue, since their positions are reversed in comparison to the deck itself. When splitting the deck in that alternating fashion, the reversed cards will appear in the wrong stack. It doesn't matter if the cut was done between the two chosen cards, because they would still be in the wrong stacks, just at the top/bottom. Remember, a sequence of a sorted deck of cards is cyclical, so it doesn't matter how many times it gets cut.
      Assuming the guy memorized the cards' order, and knows which 26 cards should appear in either stack, the chosen card would be the one that doesn't belong, and the other would be the one that's missing.

  • @AndrewAHayes
    @AndrewAHayes Před 3 měsíci

    I noticed he also got a peek at the bottom card, whether this was integral in his trick or to throw P+T off I don't know

  • @cado3335
    @cado3335 Před rokem

    WHAT?!?! Your guess is as good as everyone else's...lol!

  • @qoph
    @qoph Před 2 lety

    I did the same routine but with a different method I used another card as a mark

  • @Lergenmuller
    @Lergenmuller Před 2 lety

    If he didn't peek when gesturing to Alison, there is a simpler way than memorising the whole deck. For example you can alternate (black-even and red-odd) with (red-even and black-odd) so in the end you should have one pile with all black-even/red-odd cards and one with all red-even/black-odd cards. I don't know if that is the method but it's easier than memorising and almost impossible to notice.

  • @freddiethesortofok7186

    Rather than memorize anything, to organize the cards in an "undetectable" way, I sort 2 stacks which consist of:
    Stack one: evens spades and diamonds + odds hearts and clubs, shuffle cards (EsdOhc stack)
    Stack two: odds spades and diamonds + evens hearts and clubs, shuffle cards (OsdEhc stack)
    Then combine both stacks into one by alternating cards one-by-one from each stack. Card trick ready to begin.
    After the trick, an OsdEhc (ie 8 hearts) card will then be in the Esd0hc stack, and an Esd0hc (7 clubs) card will be in the 0sdEhc stack. (not as hard to detect as it sounds).
    The beauty in Siegried's trick is he doesn't even look at the second stack, therefore, he not only identifies the card that didn't belong in the first recreated stack, but also figures out which one is missing to identify the second card.

  • @groundzero1198
    @groundzero1198 Před rokem

    I think you're wrong: at 0:50 you can see that the cards are not stacked in a simple black/red order, BUT he doesn't shuffle the deck before letting Penn and Teller pick a card. This means that he could simply memorize the order of the cards in the deck, so that if he knows Penn's card he also knows Teller's card. How? simple: at 4:09 he can see the card that was on top of Penn's card.

  • @MiyuSawai
    @MiyuSawai Před 4 lety +6

    Again, Penn selected the 8 of diamonds & Teller selected the 8 of hearts

  • @MagnarNordal
    @MagnarNordal Před 4 lety +19

    The magic happens at 4:10 when Sigfried holds up his hand towards Alison and can see the card in his hand. This card ends up on top of the cards from Pen and Teller. The rest is discrete card counting.

  • @gatovillano7009
    @gatovillano7009 Před 3 lety +2

    at 4:11 he raises his left hand to make a gesture that he is looking at Alyson's eyes. But by doing that, he sees the card that comes before Penn's card. If the order is pre-determined, he knows at this point which card Penn took.

  • @Ajithjanny
    @Ajithjanny Před 4 lety

    More videos plss

  • @Alberto7tube
    @Alberto7tube Před 2 lety +1

    You don’t just need a deck break you can have a card short but that wasn’t the case

  • @rudyvictorino5333
    @rudyvictorino5333 Před 4 lety

    The move I'm referring to happens at the 2:07 minute

  • @MiyuSawai
    @MiyuSawai Před 4 lety +14

    The cards selected were the eight of hearts and the eight of diamonds

    • @lixydead3665
      @lixydead3665 Před 3 lety +1

      So that Mr i know how he did his trick is a dumb ass

  • @bernhardma6367
    @bernhardma6367 Před 2 lety +4

    I have tried to improve the trick and want to share my thoughts. First sort the cards to this order - it looks really random but it isn't at all:
    Hearts 10
    Spades 6
    Cross 5
    Diamond Jack
    Hearts Ace
    Spades 2
    Cross 9
    Diamond 7
    Hearts 4
    Spades Queen
    Cross King
    Diamond 3
    Hearts 8
    Spades 8
    Cross 3
    Diamond King
    Hearts Queen
    Spades 4
    Cross 7
    Diamond 9
    Hearts 2
    Spades Ace
    Cross Jack
    Diamond 5
    Hearts 6
    Spades 10
    Diamond 10
    Cross 6
    Spades 5
    Hearts Jack
    Diamond Ace
    Cross 2
    Spades 9
    Hearts 7
    Diamond 4
    Cross Q
    Spades King
    Hearts 3
    Diamond 8
    Cross 8
    Spades 3
    Hearts King
    Diamond Queen
    Cross 4
    Spades 7
    Hearts 9
    Diamond 2
    Cross Ace
    Spades Jack
    Hearts 5
    Diamond 6
    Cross 10
    Then you have to remeber Hearts - Spades and Diamond - Cross are pairs. Jack is 11, Queen is 12, King is 13 and Ace is 14.
    Now if you take a random card from the list. Check if the card is black and has an even value or if the card is red the card plus 1 is even. If true, the card below is 16 - the cards value and it is the opposite card of the pair. The card above is the card below + 9 (if over 14 then substract 14), the same color but the other sign. If the check was false, the card above is 16 - the cards value and it is the opposite card of the pair. The value card two below is the card - 9 (if under 10 then add 14 first). The card below is 16 - the card two below and the same color but the other sign than the card.
    Only exception is Spades 10 is followed by Diamond 10 and the other way round (you will see the calculation above is failing for these two cards).
    Why do you need these rules? Because after you have found the first card, you just need to think if you are searching the card above or below and you are able to tell the other card without having a look at the cards.
    To find the first card: The card values (red ones + 1) are even - odd - even - odd.

  • @Sheamus72
    @Sheamus72 Před 2 lety

    This is a way he could of done it but I'm still convinced he saw the bottom card and he "memorised" the deck. We all know it was the 6 of spades after P&Ts cards and we see it when he lifts the deck between him and Alyson while he has them looking at there cards. Good trick but nowhere near the greatest pick a card tricks
    PS his second P&T appearance was literally "memorising" every deck over like 70 days of lockdown so I think this guys just a huge brain

  • @FrankRoosevelt32
    @FrankRoosevelt32 Před 4 lety

    I am surprised this fooled Penn and Teller. Maybe they knew it was one or the other and had to guess, but if they did, I feel like the two stacks dealt out would have given it away.

  • @swtpeteswtpete1515
    @swtpeteswtpete1515 Před 3 lety +1

    Quite simple method! I wonder if p&t are ever kicking themselves later after a show. I learned the red black trick and return them together in the deck reversed trick when I was a little kid!

  • @xray364
    @xray364 Před 4 lety +1

    Good explanation but wouldn’t it be easier if he knew the identity of the card that he places on top of the two cards and then when he splits them he’s looking for the identified card and it would be the next card

    • @alexmontanus
      @alexmontanus Před 4 lety +1

      xray364 and indeed he waves the bottom card for a moment, so that moment he knows everything if he has memorised the whole deck

  • @marlonzaklit8887
    @marlonzaklit8887 Před 2 lety

    You're wrong he has the deck memorised. All the trick resided on seeing the card on the bottom after has pen chosen in his left hand.

  • @PanSkrzynka_
    @PanSkrzynka_ Před 2 lety +1

    I love how people in commends spamming with peeking card at 4.10 because they don't understand simple math. :>

  • @patereekoelectrik842
    @patereekoelectrik842 Před rokem

    I think it was a force ,, when he said stop he went to where he wanted and not wheretthe stop was ,, plus the next card

  • @serg15101983
    @serg15101983 Před 3 lety

    On 4:10 he is showing the next card to the public. Some of them could pass the information back to him. That’s it.

  • @rouge9082
    @rouge9082 Před 2 lety

    I'm surprised Penn & Teller didn't notice that the deck was not shuffled so it was clearly set up 🤔

  • @TheFurious74
    @TheFurious74 Před 3 lety +10

    4:08 Sigfrieds waves his hand so he can see the card above the 2 cards already taken. If he remembers the order the trick is sooooo easy!

    • @TheFurious74
      @TheFurious74 Před 3 lety

      @@christopherfigueroa3083 Anyway trick is easy done

    • @robertovergara8221
      @robertovergara8221 Před 2 lety

      You have no idea man

    • @coolyoutubename16
      @coolyoutubename16 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes YOU can see it, he can't. He does that as misdirection to make you THINK that's how he did it. To fool Penn and teller. Successful magicians on this show do this a lot, they fake using known methods to keep Penn and teller guessing

  • @pietpatat8421
    @pietpatat8421 Před 2 lety

    At 9:06 you can see the mnemonica stack order

  • @VoIcanoman
    @VoIcanoman Před rokem

    The cut could have separated the cards. Then, they would not be next to each other. The deck was cut four times, meaning that there is about a 1 in 13 chance that the cards were split up and no longer reside next to each other. Now, the nature of cutting means that even if they were split up, one would become an odd card and the other an even one. Obviously, if he knows which card Penn selected, he automatically knows which one Teller selected. But how does he find out which one Penn selected if the cut split the cards up? There has to be some mathematical mumbo jumbo wherein he could tell from the disrupted pattern which was Penn's card, no matter what the cuts did to the deck.

  • @gabet3754
    @gabet3754 Před 2 lety

    Title should be “Guy who doesn’t know trick tries to explain trick”

  • @jessetellez3924
    @jessetellez3924 Před 2 lety

    Evens and odds. Thats what he did.

  • @russellbonell
    @russellbonell Před 6 měsíci

    I worked out how to do this trick and it is not a stacked deck. It's actually a lot simpler than that. He could of got them to shuffle the deck and maybe didn't so they would think its a stacked deck aswell and lead them in the wrong direction. I figured it out when watching it straight away.

  • @andreasg723
    @andreasg723 Před 3 lety

    you are thinking too complicated. When Penn and Teller took their cards he only hat to have a peek at the last card of the upper part of the deck (which is the 6 of spades, you can see it at 4:10). When he has separated the cards in 2 piles he starts to count the cards until the 6 of spades appears (6:54 it is in the left pile and it is the 3rd card of the pile) and now he knows that the choosen cards are at the position 4 in the left pile and in the right pile. There is no need of memorizing he only has to count.

  • @KristoferBlue
    @KristoferBlue Před 4 měsíci

    There would be no way to guarantee the 'red/black' order when cutting. You could easily grab it at a spot that leaves you with a red top card and a red bottom card. So...

  • @jakebaker4066
    @jakebaker4066 Před 3 lety

    What if jerry do magic?

  • @gianandreaspinozzi2332
    @gianandreaspinozzi2332 Před 2 lety +2

    This Is a Tamariz effect.. there Is no force, so simple yet so powerfull 😂

  • @huskiec24
    @huskiec24 Před 4 měsíci

    I disagree I think its a form of chased order and you can see when he sneaks a peak at the bottom card when penn and teller have their cards in hand

  • @razzamatazz1974
    @razzamatazz1974 Před 5 lety +10

    So, what you're saying is you don't know how he did it, but here's how he would have done it if he hadn't done it the way he did? This was ten minutes of my life I'll never get back.

    • @USAlien234
      @USAlien234 Před 5 lety +1

      From his explanation, although incorrect, I figured out how the trick was done. It helped allow me to breakdown the steps and process which in turn helped me understand what I believe to be the way he preformed the trick.
      I relized it was a stack, and I relized that once he knew Penns card he automatically knew Tellers card. Pretty simple trick with a lot of showmanship.

  • @hillbillycardshark6603

    He probably used odd even instead of red black

  • @abrr2000
    @abrr2000 Před rokem

    easier solution... at time 4:10 he shows the 6 of clubs to the audience. Penn and Tellers cards were directly below that. by knowing that and the order of the cards, all that needs to happen is he needs to have some feed back from someone who saw that in the audience and all the rest is meaningless.

  • @sdgb5363
    @sdgb5363 Před 2 lety

    I wonder how many of you watching this explanation could perform the trick? NONE!!!!! Nice walk through that lasted just as long as the trick itself, and taught us nothing. Thanks.

  • @BMF6889
    @BMF6889 Před 2 lety +1

    The problem with the card order being red black red black, etc. is that when the cards are spread out on the table initially, they are not in that order. There are a number of places where there are multiple red cards and multiple black cards together in the spread.

    • @gamegyro56
      @gamegyro56 Před rokem

      He talks about this at 7:47.

    • @balazsritzinger5762
      @balazsritzinger5762 Před rokem

      It was just for an examplanation for easier understanding of the trick. Even a child could do it if it was red black red black etc because thats easy to memorize. But it doesn't need to be, just needs to be memorized.

  • @robertosoler2444
    @robertosoler2444 Před 4 lety

    Como lo veo yo es diferente

  • @GaryEllis-yg3xd
    @GaryEllis-yg3xd Před 8 měsíci

    You said that Penn had red and Teller had black. But they both had red 8’s.

  • @davidkillen2236
    @davidkillen2236 Před 3 lety

    He flashes the bottom of the cut deck revealing the 6 of spades which was next to the 2 8s at 4:10, I think everything else was just show.

    • @lforlight
      @lforlight Před 3 lety

      That is unlikely. Even catching a glimpse of that card, he cut the deck and split it before getting a good look at half the cards. The marker could have been lost in the cuts and could have landed in the other half of the deck. And that is assuming he actually saw the card, which I don't think he could even if we could. The fact that the two cards were reinserted in the wrong order is a lot more suspicious and obvious.

  • @ASMR.g.withcards
    @ASMR.g.withcards Před 4 měsíci

    Its tamariz mnemonica order

  • @TWOTRANSITMISFITS
    @TWOTRANSITMISFITS Před 3 lety +2

    You still didn’t get it.

  • @MiyuSawai
    @MiyuSawai Před 4 lety +2

    The cards selected were the 8 of diamonds & the 8 of hearts

  • @gabriel-contentwriter5578

    But they are not ordered "red, black, red, black" because you can see the cards when he spreads out the deck....

    • @MegaD42
      @MegaD42 Před 3 lety +1

      That's just a simple example of how you could divide the cards. One way or another, in his mind the cards are split into two groups. Imagine taking a shuffled deck, writing A or B on each card, and then just memorizing the whole thing. However you split them up, as long as you start with the deck stacked A-B-A-B you'll always end up with one "A" card in a stack of "Bs", and vice versa.

  • @rogersalllike9133
    @rogersalllike9133 Před 2 lety

    Mneomonica stack

  • @vlogazon48
    @vlogazon48 Před 3 lety

    1 red 1 black... Then 2 red 2 black.. then 3 red 3 black.. and again repeat the order.

  • @beazleteats4031
    @beazleteats4031 Před 2 lety

    Your theory might be spot EXCEPT at point 6:52 when he flips over 3 cards cards from both separated deck they are ALL black (6:64) hence proving you wrong. I think he marked each card with a tiny piece of something sticky...notice how tactile he is when handling each decks...he's definitely feeling for something. BUT, here is a simpler answer which I think is BANG on: czcams.com/video/ugkhaJ2-QFc/video.html

  • @Hazzard0
    @Hazzard0 Před 4 lety +4

    NOT REVEALED, STILL UNEXPLAINABLE

  • @abdullahbabakir1148
    @abdullahbabakir1148 Před 5 lety +6

    Nice i like ur explinations and one more thing he could just simpy memorize the deck and at 4:09 he loos at the card,6 of clubs (might be 6 of diamonds its a little bot not clear), and the to beneath cards are pen and tellers😌️

    • @nagga123456789
      @nagga123456789  Před 5 lety +2

      Very good point. That flash there would have definitely been enough to immediately know the following 2 cards with a stack

    • @matteobravo2149
      @matteobravo2149 Před 5 lety +3

      but his eyes are on the womans eyes so she would've seen if he looked at it?

    • @jacktheripperstudios9897
      @jacktheripperstudios9897 Před 4 lety +2

      @@matteobravo2149 hi i knowits almost been a year but peripheal vision

    • @vivekgudise3379
      @vivekgudise3379 Před 3 lety +1

      I think that 6 can be seen by us.... But not him... It's a bit angled towards us which don't give him the space to take a peak of it....
      But the video explanation is definitely a good way and highly possible method....
      Thanks bro

    • @MaksKrivesko
      @MaksKrivesko Před 3 lety +1

      He clearly mentions that there are two big screens on each side of the stage at 1:24 and he's staring in that direction, so he must have been able to see the bottom 6

  • @udayarebi7966
    @udayarebi7966 Před 4 lety

    Think simple. Stack

  • @seanmcausland6491
    @seanmcausland6491 Před 6 měsíci

    Not read full comments and this is definitely not the way he did it

  • @sebastianbrandt1503
    @sebastianbrandt1503 Před rokem

    can u prof that i belif u

  • @shanegough5925
    @shanegough5925 Před rokem

    Pens card was not black it was the eight if diamonds Tellers was the eight of hearts.

  • @dr.ashishnegi1712
    @dr.ashishnegi1712 Před 2 lety

    Genius fyi penn said abt waterfall shuffle..he was wrong..

  • @KuKuKuK69
    @KuKuKuK69 Před 2 lety +2

    They both picked red cards... Penn 8 of diamonds and Teller 8 of hearts. When Sigfried first spread out the cards on the table, both of those cards are next to each other. He only have to remember "pairs", not the order of all cards in the whole deck. So much simpler than your red-black-red-black theory. When he found out what card Penn choose, then he allready knew that cards matching pair. That's why he didn't have to look at the cards when "guessing" Tellers card.. Duh!

  • @yomyomcam
    @yomyomcam Před 21 hodinou

    3:17 your hypothesis is wrong, from the very beginning you can see it's not red-black. What's more, if that was the case, the hosts would have noticed. I do not think you got the trick.

  • @rudyvictorino5333
    @rudyvictorino5333 Před 4 lety

    Ok. Initially, both 8s were next to each other. I think this magician took a pick 👀 at the bottom card in his left hand while he was looking at Allison. I was unable to zoom to see the card. All I can tell it was a Black 6. In the minute 9:54 you can notice the 8 of Dymond next to the 6 of space. All he needs to do is count the spot of the card and the other 8 will be in the same order but a +/- a number. That's my theory. It's a trick with a great deal of skills. 👍

  • @sebastianbrandt1503
    @sebastianbrandt1503 Před rokem

    i think penn and teller whold have note is it if it whut u says it is and they dont so ar u better on magic then penn and teller dont think so how did he fool them dont gett it explane that

  • @talastra
    @talastra Před 4 lety +1

    Saying "he memorized the deck in a particular order and all the rest follows" isn't actually an explanation. However, at least I'm not bent out of shape or confused why you keep talking about red-black alternating when it's not. :)

  • @Godz111
    @Godz111 Před 4 lety +1

    I think it's some kind of mnemonica stack order...

  • @falsecopyrightsclaimsfight1475

    That's one of the first trick i ever learned but he does it way better.

    • @nothingnothing3211
      @nothingnothing3211 Před 3 lety

      but wait doesn't he predicted the exact card than penn and teller chose? how he did that?

  • @audemars8819
    @audemars8819 Před 5 lety +1

    If you look @ 2:56, seems to me, he marked the back of the card with some type of substance on his middle finger of his right hand.
    Then as he's separating the deck @ 6:00-6:50 he never take his eyes off the cards searching for the marked cards, also counting the position of the marked cards.
    @ 6:54 he turns over random cards, one from each plow to guarantee his count position of the chosen cards, when he turns them face up

    • @vinny142
      @vinny142 Před 4 lety +2

      "he marked the back of the card with some type of substance on his middle finger of his right hand. "
      A) If you can see that on a video then P&T would have seen that.
      B) The cards where shuffled and reshuffled so any substance would smear all over the ards
      C) In the end he picks the card by looking at the front, not the back.

  • @UtterMarcus
    @UtterMarcus Před 5 lety +1

    On 4:10 he look the card before the 2 chosen cards.

  • @phanjacky2418
    @phanjacky2418 Před 4 lety

    Cutting the deck can change the pattern dunno wtf you are saying there. If top card is black the card from cut can be either black or red so it can change the pattern

    • @zimmy9599
      @zimmy9599 Před 4 lety

      Every magician everywhere loves to shuffle the deck 90 million times as a prover. The absence of a shuffle here speaks plainly to the video author's theory. Any of the tricks involving the Si Stebbins stack, where the deck can be cut infinitely, but card positions can still be predicted, but not shuffled, could be used as an example.

    • @MayC23
      @MayC23 Před 3 lety

      Why comment if you dont even know difference between cutting and shuffling. Cutting does not change the order.

    • @filipsen2001
      @filipsen2001 Před 3 lety

      No it can not

  • @nicklasbertilsson2556
    @nicklasbertilsson2556 Před 4 lety

    i think you're wrong, their cards (8 of hearts and 8 of diamonds) were always next to eachother just look at the beginning of the clip and they didnt have a free choice, no matter where they wouldve said stop they would always have gotten the 8's and of course they would be in separate piles when dealt to the table.

  • @trentvlak
    @trentvlak Před 5 měsíci

    wow, this took less skill than even a force! haha. P&T got really fooled on this one.

  • @davidemonteleone8314
    @davidemonteleone8314 Před 5 lety +1

    I think it's not done like that, but with a key card

  • @MrConnorTV
    @MrConnorTV Před 4 lety

    Yea, the issue with your analysis is that they ended up with two RED CARDS. He is doing it at a very high level and sophistication.

    • @RicardoGarcia-sd1xb
      @RicardoGarcia-sd1xb Před 2 lety

      Change black-red for odd-even or whatever system and there you have it