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Comic-magician Mike Hammer: From six years of struggle to his own show, theater..

Comic-magician Mike Hammer: From six years of struggle to his own show, theater..

Very nice interview by Robin Leach..

His sarcasm is stunning. His magic mystifies. Put the two together with a healthy helping of irreverence, toss in sassy and rude humor, and you have Mike Hammer, the Don Rickles of charismatic conjuring. Or the George Carlin of the unexplained.

The audiences at his comedy club in Four Queens downtown lap it up and return time and again for more of the silk-gloved insults of his comedy magic show “Get Hammered.” “It’s all in great fun,” said Mike the night I went to see him where one elderly gentleman who’d partied too much for his age fell asleep. It was as if a gift had dropped from heaven for the abrasive comic who wields a magic wand.

Mike leapt off the stage in fake offense and stood over the guest berating his sin of sleep. I haven’t laughed that much in a year of seeing shows here in Las Vegas. The off-kilter, hilarious humor is endless, and everybody was in stitches gasping for air.

Who gets away introducing one audience member as an axe murderer? Who gets away with deflating the tires of a Canadian tractor repairman on his first girlfriend date to Las Vegas?  Read more….

http://lasvegassun.com/vegasdeluxe/2016/mar/01/comic-magician-mike-hammer-from-six-years-struggle/

The science of magic: how tricks are changing real-life research..

The science of magic: how tricks are changing real-life research..

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The small yellow ball disappears from the magician’s left hand, reappearing moments later, plucked out of thin air, by his right.

Hardly a mind-boggling move at a magic show, but this is an academic meeting – and the disappearing act is being used to punctuate the finer points of taxonomy.

As the inaugural conference on the Science of Magic at Goldsmiths, University of London, revealed, the study of magic is not the stuff of Harry Potter – a character mentioned just once in the day, and sarcastically – but an actual research tool, studied in the pursuit of knowledge about perception, belief and even politics.

Such research was presented at the Science of Magic conference last week to around 80 attendees, made up of local students, visiting researchers, creative educators, and magicians themselves. (Where normally bored listeners fiddle with phones, this audience shuffled decks of cards.)

Many attendees were a hybrid of academic and magician. Conference convenor Gustav Kuhn is a senior lecturer in psychology at the south London university, but he’s also been a semi-professional magician since his teens. While the psychological principles used by magicians helped trigger his career path, he realised not far along in his studies that one could inform the other. “I started to draw these links between magic and psychology,” he said. “Quite a lot of the questions that magicians are interested in are actually really quite similar to the kind of things that psychologists study as well.” Read more…

http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2016-02/23/science-of-magic

Philly trickster Francis Menotti combines magic tricks with motivational speaking..

Philly trickster Francis Menotti combines magic tricks with motivational speaking..

Fancis Menotti keeps a deck of playing cards in his pocket at all times.

That simple fact is a sign of just how devoted 38-year-old Menotti, from Center City, is to his art form. To call him a “full-time” magician is almost to do his efforts a disservice. He travels internationally for about a quarter of the year, spends at least half of his week performing regionally, consults on magic scenes in movies like “The Immigrant,” writes for Magic magazine and, in his spare time, perfects new tricks – ones that often involve cards, coins, business cards or, as recently demonstrated in an episode of The CW’s “Penn & Teller Fool Us” reality show, Scrabble tiles. And if all that’s not enough, he’s earned his way into President Obama’s inaugural ball as a performer twice.

And still, he told PhillyVoice, he’s not convinced many people actually understand why magic is important.  Read more…

http://www.phillyvoice.com/francis-menotti-philly-magician-using-magic-motivational-speaking/