Prepare to be amazed! Luke Jermay’s “Three Cheers For The Underrated” unveils modern mentalism. Download the PDF and unlock mind-blowing routines and clever thinking! #Mentalism #LukeJermay
Product information
Three Cheers For The Underrated by Luke Jermay
Discover the brilliance of Luke Jermay’s Three Cheers For The Underrated, a PDF manuscript that redefines classic mentalism with innovative twists. This collection features three meticulously crafted routines, each designed to captivate and astonish your audience.
What’s Inside?
Luke Jermay presents three masterfully routined effects, each building on classic mentalism plots but enhanced by his ingenious thinking and deep understanding of methods. These routines are perfect for both casual and formal performances, offering a fresh perspective on timeless techniques.
Routine Highlights
- Three Questions: Uncover a spectator’s star sign by asking three seemingly unrelated questions. This method avoids progressive anagrams, showcasing Luke’s clever thinking with no risk or guesswork.
- The Ultimate Add A Number: Four spectators write numbers, a fifth adds them, and the total matches a prediction. This routine combines methods to create an unexplainable mystery that will leave your audience in awe.
- Strength: A spectator struggles to perform simple tasks with a deck of cards, creating a series of baffling and entertaining moments. Illustrated by Michael Paehler, this routine is both visually and mentally engaging.
Why Choose This Manuscript?
Luke Jermay is renowned for his innovative approaches to mentalism. In Three Cheers For The Underrated, he revisits classic routines with fresh, exciting methods that will inspire and elevate your performances. Whether you’re a seasoned mentalist or new to the craft, this manuscript offers valuable insights and practical routines that you can start using immediately.
1st edition 2008; 37 pages.
Word count: 12381, equivalent to 49 standard pages of text.
PLEASE NOTE: This item is a digital download. Gimmick not included.
Luke Jermay – Three Cheers For The Underrated
Luke presents three wonderfully routined and thought through effects, all building on classic mentalism plots, improved by his ingenious thinking and knowledge of methods.
From the introduction:
In this manuscript we are going to examine three routines. The first, “Three Questions,” is something that I have made use of in casual settings for a while now. I think it really showcases some interesting thinking that creates a very pleasing outcome. I really hope you enjoy this and use it in your own casual performances and walk around settings. The second routine, “The Ultimate Add A Number,” is something with which I am very pleased. I think this routine really illustrates my drive in recent years.
I have become known within the magic community for coming up with new premises and plots that I have achieved in performance, with the employment of unusual methods. As flattering as this reputation is, it is not actually where I find myself in my more recent creative explorations. In more recent times I have found my drive to be in finding new and interesting ways to re-examine the classics of mentalism.
One of the standards of mentalism, “The Add A Number” routine (in which the performer predicts the total of seemingly random numbers) has long been a mainstay within mentalism performances. It has, however, pretty much always left me feeling cold and unimpressed.
I set out to change that and in “The Ultimate Add A Number Routine” I have found something that makes me excited about the classic routine. I hope you will share my feelings on this.
The final routine detailed within this manuscript does indeed include a touch of the unusual methods I have become known for. However for the most part these methods are mechanical in nature and are not based only in suggestion.
This final routine is my rendition of the classic “Light & Heavy Chest,” for a walk around situation. With that said, it could easily be staged for a larger performance. Nothing more than a deck of cards and a few minutes of one time construction is needed.
The effects in more detail are:
- Three Questions: You will discover the star sign of a spectator by asking three seemingly unrelated questions. The method has nothing to do with progressive anagrams, which Luke doesn’t really like much. This is fiendishly clever thinking. There is no risk or hit and miss.
- The Ultimate Add A Number: Four spectators write four numbers. A fifth adds them and the number matches a prediction as well as every spectator’s result who participated in the experiment. A combination of methods cancels each other to make this an unexplainable mystery.
- Strength: A spectator is unable to first remove the cards from a pack, although another one can easily do so, then he can’t lift the deck of cards off the performers hand, and finally he is too weak to hold a single card. (Illustrations for this effect provided by Michael Paehler.)
1st edition 2008; 37 pages.
word count: 12381 which is equivalent to 49 standard pages of text
PLEASE NOTE: This item is a digital download ,Gimmick not included