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Teller Awarded $545,000 in Magic Fight..

Teller Awarded $545,000 in Magic Fight..

By Matt Heuer for Courthouse News Service..

LAS VEGAS (CN) – A federal judge ordered a Belgian magician to stop selling a magic prop that infringes on a trick created by Raymond Teller, of Penn & Teller, and awarded Teller $545,000 in damages and costs.
     Teller prevailed in a copyright case that accused Gerard Dogge of stealing his “Shadows” magic trick and selling it online.
     Dogge also goes by the name Gerard Bakardy. He demonstrates the trick-designated as copyrighted by him – on a YouTube clip called “ The Rose and Her Shadow .” At the end of the 9-minute clip, Bakardy offers to sell the props needed to perform it.
     Teller claims that his own magic trick, called “Shadows,” uses a “spotlight trained on a small vase containing a single flower, a rose, which is set on a table. The light falls in such a manner that the shadow of the rose is projected onto a white screen” and “the magician enters the otherwise peaceful scene with a knife and proceeds to use it to dramatically sever first the leaves and then the petals of the rose’s shadow on the screen.
     "Slowly, correspondingly, one by one, the leaves of the real rose casting the shadow fall to the ground, breaking from the stem at exactly the point where the magician severed the shadow projected on the screen.”
     U.S. District Judge James Mahan on March 20 granted Teller’s motion for summary judgment on copyright infringement liability but denied his motions for unfair competition and damages.
     Mahan said Dogge did not participate in pretrial procedures and refused to attend the trial in person, so Teller asked the court for a default judgment against Dogge for willful infringement and unfair competition, a permanent injunction and attorney’s fees.
     Mahan found that a “ default judgment is appropriate ‘when a party against whom a judgment for affirmative relief is sought has failed to plead or otherwise defend.” On July 9 he adopted the magistrate judge’s recommendation to impose sanctions in accordance with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 16 and 17.
     Teller also sought statutory damages, which Mahan said could range from $750 to $150,000.
     Because Teller sought a permanent injunction, Mahan said, the maximum statutory amount is “unnecessary to deter” Dogge’s “further violations.”
     "It is unclear whether defendant sold any of the offered illusions,“ Mahan found. "Because this court may award damages ‘even for uninjurious and unprofitable invasions of copyright,’ the court finds damages in the amount of $15,000 appropriate.”
     In approving a permanent injunction , Mahan said Teller “is likely to suffer irreparable injury” because Dogge’s “infringement is likely to continue.”
     Teller asked for $989,568 in attorney’s fees.
     Mahan found Dogge to be “exceptionally difficult and unresponsive, necessitating numerous motions and responses” to force his cooperation.
     Mahan awarded Teller $30,000 in costs and $500,000 in attorney’s fees for a total judgment against Dogge of $545,000.

http://www.courthousenews.com/2014/10/08/72232.htm

Illusionist Uses Magic Skills to Help Disabled..

Illusionist Uses Magic Skills to Help Disabled..

By Julie Taboh for Voice of America..

Kevin Spencer saw his first magician perform when he was five years old. He remembers vividly telling his mother, ”When I grow up, I’m going to be a magician.”

He has been a magician for more than 30 years, performing on stages around the world with his wife, Cindy, bringing tricks and magical illusions to millions of people.

But early in his career, a bad car accident changed the focus of his work.

“The car I was in was crushed by a tractor trailer,” he recalled. “I woke up in neurological intensive care with a closed brain injury and a lower spinal cord injury and spent almost a year in therapy just trying to regain the skills I’d lost as a result of the accident.”..

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Get ready for a wand-erful time at first Old Sacramento Magic Festival..

Get ready for a wand-erful time at first Old Sacramento Magic Festival..

By Alex Hernandez for The City..

Do you believe in magic? Jump into a world of imaginative illusions, hypnotizing trickery and spellbinding sleight of hand this weekend, when the Delta King and its surrounding cobblestone streets transform into a playground for some of the country’s most celebrated magicians at the Old Sacramento Magic Festival.

The three-day event—the first major magic festival on the West Coast—will begin with a free opening celebration on Friday, Oct. 17, followed throughout the weekend with performances and lectures by prominent illusionists like Society of American Magicians president Ice McDonald, Andrew Goldenhersh (whom the Los Angeles institution Magic Castle recognized as its 2009 and 2010 Parlour Magician of the Year), and the single-monikered card maestro Daryl (whose tricks have earned him a world magic title from the International Federation of Magic Societies).

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China conjures magical future better than Vegas..

China conjures magical future better than Vegas..

By Calum MacLeod, USA TODAY

CHANGPING, China — And for its next trick, China’s ruling Communist Party plans to save the magic industry worldwide and silence dissent among magicians everywhere.

A massive venue will arise next year near Beijing for magic shows starting in 2018 that officials say will be better than Vegas, while pirated products, the scourge of America’s magic men, will simply disappear.

Traditional magic may be losing fans in the West, but China thirsts for spectacle and sleight of hand. Conjuring snow blizzards on stage and teaching wannabe wizards how to blow dollar bills in the air, U.S. magicians joined dozens from around the world at the second Beijing International Magic Carnival last month.

There officials announced a global magic alliance and the transformation of little-known Changping district into “Magic City.”..

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