30 November 2021

Top 5 posts in November 2021

There were 33 posts at Canada's Magic this month.  Here are the 5 most viewed posts in the past 30 days: 

5. Magicana recipient of the 2021 Founders Award - Thank you Magicana, for all of the great work you do! 
4. It's the 11th blogiversary of Canada's Magic! - A lot of magic has happened in 11 years.  Thanks for being a part of it!
3. Goodbye to Perfect Magic -- the end of an era in Montreal - Wishing you the very best in the next chapter in your life Phil!
2. Top 5 posts in October 2021 - This list is getting meta.

and the most viewed post this month  ...



1. The 2021 "Readers' Choice Inspirational Canadian Magician of the Year" award - Waiting to hear back from the last nominee.  Watch this space for voting details in a couple of weeks!

 

29 November 2021

1ST.shop looking to Sponsor Magicians, Cardists and photographers

From the November 26th Instagram post by 1STdotshop:

🚨 We love our community and want to help showcase your talent!🚨

We are looking to Sponsor Magicians, Cardists and photographers.

What is a Sponsorship?
- receive cards/merch
- cash prizes
- create content to be featured on our page
- be the 1st to get the latest drops

How to enter: Show us your Skills!
- Must be following
- Tag @1stdotshop in a photo/ magic performance/ cardistry video
- Use #1stSponsor
- Be Creative!
- Bonus points for using our products

We’ll be selecting a few of you to become our 1ST Brand Ambassadors in the new year.

Good luck!

 

 

 

 

 

28 November 2021

[Guest post] BLAH! BLAH! BLAH!

The following is a guest post from an author who wishes to be known as The Magic Demon.

 

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Random rants and/or raves by readers

Today's Guest Fulminator: The Magic Demon
Exclusive to Canada's Magic


Whatever happened to printed instructions when you bought your magic? I miss them!

With printed instructions on paper you always had something tangible to immediately refer to. You could read them, put them down, practice some, reread the instructions, put them down, practice some more and so on. You could add notes, add reminders to yourself, and even get them personally autographed at conventions by the inventors.  

Printed instructions - some with illustrations, some without -  would always be there to read today, tomorrow and into the foreseeable future. You didn't need any extra devices, technology or encumbrances to access them - just reading glasses, occasionally.

Then, along came video-instructions on a DVD. These often accompanied printed instructions and sometimes didn't. These were fine too if you had a suitable player and if it was convenient to use it. Some instructions on video were rudimentary and amateurish; eventually they got more sophisticated and professional.  

But the point is, both forms of instruction were in tangible physical forms that you could access at any time on your own and wouldn't accidently or deliberately disappear on you.

More recently, many tricks no longer seem to come with any form of physical instruction at all. I mean the more expensive ones too.

All you get are some props, frequently requiring further extensive DIY,  and a link to an on-line video.

What a rip-off!

A lot of the time, in my experience, the links seem to be expired or faulty or the website is down, or else my connectivity to the internet is down, or else my digital device is acting wonky or else there are technical issues at their end resulting in various 404-y error codes. Or else I'm not able to access my laptop or tablet or smartphone - or - just simply prefer not to spend even more time on them than I have already for work. Whatever.

But even when the links work I still feel the instructions at the other end could evaporate in a flash. And sometimes they do. Especially instructions for older effects no longer being aggressively marketed by their manufacturers.

How often, by contrast, did printed instructions work? Gosh - 100% of the time!

And DVDs? OK, so not everybody owns a player anymore. But guess what? Plenty of us still do. Well-treated DVDs should last a hundred years.

So how much are manufacturers saving? (1) Not providing printed basic instructions? Maybe a few cents per unit. (2) Not supplying a physical DVD? More but not much more, assuming they'd already shot something for on-line. Are they now so desperate that saving even a few cents per unit is necessary for them to survive? I honestly don't know.

If the absence of physical instructions is to somehow appeal to the digital generation, connected 24/7 to the internet continuously from first yawn until final slumber, this I most reluctantly at least can understand.

DVDs and printed instructions seem so 20th century.  

But then so are most of the good things we enjoy! Why not continue to always provide at least basic printed instructions for those of us who choose not to be always on-line? (And yes, I am aware of the intrinsic irony making this request via email on an on-line blog.) Is it too much to ask magic manufacturers not to turn their backs on the rest of us while continuing to appeal to the cool kids?

I don't really blame the manufacturers. They just figured they were doing what we, the magic consumers, wanted.

And I certainly don't blame the dealers, they just sell what they are given to sell, as best they can.

I blame all of us, the magic buying community. We've quietly allowed this infuriating degradation of our purchases to occur.

It's not long ago one of the regular reviewers in Genii bemoaned the fact that physical instructions no longer accompanied the items being reviewed. I've not seen that enlightened attitude in print since. I guess even the reviewers have accepted the absence of physical instructions as the way it is.

Well, I'm here to say I'm fed up with constantly being presented with no choice when buying an expensive effect! I'm fed up always having to spend extra time and excess energy trying to find the streaming instructions on-line each and every time I want to look at instructions. (Downloadable instructions are perhaps less problematic but can be equally frustrating for the reasons I have outlined.)

Please understand: I'm not advocating for the abolition of such links. They're great for more advanced stuff and they have their advantages. Of course DVDs do too. I just always want the option of having the basic, essential instructions in print again at the time of purchase.

I'm actually at the point I think twice about making purchases that don't include printed instructions. Do I really want it? Give me a book any day.

To recap, for those of you surfing and watching five screens at once: I miss printed instructions accompanying my magic purchases. Even occasional actual DVDs. But mostly printed instructions.

What say you? Am I the only one left in the reading room or are there any others out there who feel the same way?

If we all make enough noise perhaps some manufacturers might notice.

Who knows? Getting printed instructions again one day might even become retro-cool.

Retro-cool? Woo hoo!

I should only live so long.

 

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We are also big fans of printed instructions.  Lovely to know we're not the only ones!

Thank you The Magic Demon for guest posting at Canada's Magic!

 

27 November 2021

Luc Langevin: Interconnectés [various]

From the November 12th Tweet by Luc Langevin:

Haven't you had the chance to see my "Interconnected" show yet? There are always premium tickets left, which allow you to interact with me and influence the outcome of the numbers!

For Canada 👉https://luclangevin.com/interconnectes
For Europe 👉https://luclangevin.fr/interconnectes



26 November 2021

SoMA Conversations: with Julie Eng, Kayla Drescher, and Mikayla Oz [Nov 28]

From the October 26th Facebook post by the Science of Magic Association:

Troubling gender and racial stereotypes persist in magic. What are they, what are their effects, and how are they perpetuated? How does the gender or race of a magician affect the reception of their performance? What can magicians do, both individually and collectively, to create a stronger, more inclusive magic community? 
A panel of experts, moderated by Alice Pailhès, will discuss these issues and take questions from a virtual audience. Panelists for this session will include:
- Kayla Drescher
- Julie Eng
- Mikayla Oz 
Register at https://forms.gle/EtsNNqHCwj1fPsXM6 to receive a link as the date approaches.
More details at https://scienceofmagicassoc.org/.