RYAN HAYASHI - Episode 2: The Psychological Damage Magic Series - Invisible Coins
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- čas přidán 7. 11. 2018
- Ryan Hayashi, television magician, mindset speaker, transformational coach and lecturer at the University of Mannheim in Germany, demonstrates another fun psychology trick with "invisible coins". This time Ryan explains some of the neuro-linguistic programming techniques he uses to hack peoples' brains and influence their thought processes.
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These series of trick are amazing!
Hi Ryan, big fan here, i can see how much you love what you do in life weather it is magic or English courses. i just wish one day to do what i love and have meaningful life such as yours.
Cool! Hoping to see more of explanation.
If I learned something from Jay Sankey (and I learned a lot, actually), it's that presentation is everything. Well done, Master Hayashi! Amaze us more!!!
we need more of this :)
You have the perfect personality for hypnotism.
Very well done, incredible work. Just wish your spectators would react a bit more surprised at the reveals. 👍👍
Ryan thanks a-lot for all your time and your Videos! man Its crazy how many times people just don’t understand how impressive things are.
I see it happen a-lot with Lennart Green & Danny Daortiz...
this was amazing!
Awesome man 🤩 🤩your videos are the one that make my day fulfilling.. keep up your wonderful work 👍👍
How did this student manipulate him into writing the 20 cent heads on the card? Amazing.
Followed u here from p&t show.. 👌
You are an inspiration.
Hab noch nie etwas Vergleichbares mit einer deratigen Auswahl von freien Wahlmöglichkeiten gesehen
The look Ryan gives him at the end is so intimidating (twice!)! Great character and presentation. It made me laugh many times
Senpai Hayashi can you make english courses at the TU Dresden? I wish i had a teacher as cool as you!!
By the way, germans are very shy in front of cameras and english speaking people. Because we are a little embarrassed about our english skills and about making a mistakes in gernerell. Thats why the are especially reserved in these videos. i swear they will remember that moment for life though.
Oh man i need to drive to Mannheim now to see you :D!
Ryan, you're the best. Your students are as dead as door nails though :(
No they are not. They are germans. We are that way. I promise you, they were amazed and surprised.
@@pooroleostrich9553 Is this supposed to be a joke or are you serious?
@@DottMySaviour dead serious. it's their culture
@@pooroleostrich9553 Lol is that real
Dott it’s German Humor, it’s no laughing matter.
do you speak italian aswell? will you come to italy one day? Love watching you
Классно! Спасибо за это великолепное выступление.
„Yeah, it’s magic“ 😂😂😂
savage!
interesting.....
Brilliant! The coins may be invisible, but the prediction is in plain sight. Don't flip-out though, because even a pin-head like Penn could tell Ryan in code how he controlled the student's coin toss.
Exactly. I have the same idea about the coin toss.
Very enjoyable to watch.
In thevdescription it says "transformstional coach" what does this mean?
This is what I choose to call my own special brand of mindset and success coaching. I coach clients in ways of restructured thinking that allow for transformation. This is mainly for the US market, where motivational speakers and coaches are very popular.
@@HayashiTheMagicMan ok. Thank you for your responds.
Du bist ein unglaublicher Magier/Performer :).
Not exactly the same but reminds me of the book called Social Engineering:The art of human hacking.
It's startling how much we are manipulated in our everyday lives.
First, Ryan is one of my favorite magicians. but for this one, if he films this 12 times (6 coins, heads or tails for each), he will eventually get this right.
Now, if you can do this 3 times in a row, get it correct each time, and never stop filming, THAT would be impressive.
You really think he did this multiple times? N O. It’s all about skill.
I can get behind 2 out of the 3 steps, but I don't know how the 3rd step works.
There are three steps to determine the predictions.
The odd or even coins (111 cents or 222 cents).
The selection between single digit cent, double digit cent and euro.
The selection between heads or tails.
I know how he made him choose the even coins (and with know, I mean I guess this is how it's done, no confirmation xD).
I know how he made him choose the double digit cent coin (again, I only assume to know it xD).
But I don't know how he did the heads or tails one ...
I would assume that this is similar to the first step, but yet a little different as the first one is reversed psychology, which I didn't detect in the last one ...
it may work like the simple "tell me a tool, quick!" and most people will say hammer.
It's possible that this is exactly how this works, as most people will say heads if they can choose freely, not tails ... just my assumption though °J°
And the 2nd step is just illusion of choice.
At least this is just my humble and completely layman view on it xD
I could be completely wrong and it works completely different though xD
To coin a phrase there's a couple of sides to every coin there is, but when I flip coins, they tend to land vertically upright, on their third side . . . and on unlucky days, they roll away!
your german sounds really good, didn't even know you speak german :o
Ich lebe schon seit 18 Jahren in Deutschland.
@@HayashiTheMagicMan Ich muss Sie besuchen kommen :D!
i get the first part in which he has to choose the coin but i don't get the second part in which he guesses head or number correctly
It seems the student really didn't choose 20 cents himself, it was chosen for him. I am unsure about the heads part, but maybe it is because Germans are unfamiliar with the word "tails."
the drawing showing number. and probably the word "kopf" is hidden by the clipper. so it's also not the student choice. but the real skill is how to present it, mastering several language, and being able to be a confident public speaker, combine those and you get the man behind the gun.
At a guess: The number of fingers during the handshake determines higher or lower value picked (1's or 2's, in this case), the hand placement on the upper arm determine which coins are given back (Elbow for low, shoulder joint for high), and the hand on the head determines what side the coin will land on- with either the upper shoulder, upper back or no touch at all determining tails.
Anywhere in the ballpark?
Edit: Nnnope. I'm a dumb.
Good theory, but no. Ryan Hayashi
Wasn't expecting a response. Alrighty~.
Any psychology and neuropsychology resources, relevant or not, that you'd recommend? Not actually interested in the trick, so I won't hazard a second guess.
AH MY BRAIN!!!
good old ムルティパル・アウト. Still the charisma and presence of Hayashi is one of the best there is :D
dude that crowd does not deserve Ryan at all wtf man
I feel like with these lame audiences you got a strong self-training to be most entertaining as possible, so that it will be much easier to deal with normal ones😂
Lamest crowd ever.
Too bad you had very german germans😂
Manipulation of outcomes. Maybe the Germans are too clever to fall for this, and they aren't impressed.
I learned from David blaines early stuff that black people give way better reactions to this shit. Just a suggestion...
U hacked timo werner thats why he cant score goals lol