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Tell Monte

John Hostler

(Based on 1 review)
Tell Monte was born of the desire to marry a convincing “tell-reading” demonstration to a kicker prediction climax… something so unexpected and baffling that it just might convince an audience the performer read minds rather than tells.

The magician places a row of five different, readily available objects on the table top — let’s say a wedding ring, folded dollar bill, cell phone, car key, and a wristwatch. These serve as positional markers for the demonstration. He then hands a packet of five standard ESP (Zener) cards to a volunteer and turns his back to the table. The volunteer freely shuffles the cards — consisting of a Circle, Cross, Wavy Lines, Square, and Star — and deals one in front of each object. She then fixes one of the five symbols in her mind, without in any way indicating its position or identity. The magician claims to identify the volunteer’s verbal “tells” by instructing her to 1) swap various cards and 2) repeat statements verbatim about these swaps. (These statements may be true or false; only the volunteer knows.) Upon fully calibrating the volunteer, the magician again instructs her to move cards and repeat statements such as “My card is now in front of the watch.” This time, he unfailingly differentiates truth from lie. Cards are eliminated until the volunteer’s selection is successfully identified. To conclude, the magician reveals that he has also predicted the selection and another personal fact about the volunteer first divulged during the course of the demonstration.

Of course, in the tradition of all self-respecting magic copywriters, I’ve omitted something critical from the above description: The prediction has been sitting in plain sight, contained in (or written on) one — yes, ONLY one — of the five objects.

No equivoque, multiple outs, electronics, magnets, threads, granules, daub, pre-show work, stooges, secret partners, trap doors, or flying monkeys are employed — and the bulk of this demonstration is genuinely conducted “sight unseen.”

Reviews

Jeff Stone

Official Reviewer

Jan 24, 2016

Random I-Tunes Song of The Moment: Centuries by Fall Out Boy


Tell Monte Review


One booklet (PDF), One routine/concept, $15 bucks and one Tell Monte Review. Is it gem or is it rubble

Tell Monte Review: Effect


The effect is a combination prediction and lie detector routine. Five random objects are placed on the table. Five ESP cards are given to the spectator to shuffle and place on the table, one in front of each object . . . truly random. Your back is turned the entire time. You then ask the spectator to make a few choices. When all is said and done, you are able to divine a thought of ESP symbol. You then show a prediction that's been sitting on the table the whole time. It reveals the thought of shape and some personal information about the spectator.


Tell Monte Review: Method


The method relies on some very clever concepts from Bob Hummer and Paul Curry. The combination of these along with some very smart subtleties added by John Hostler makes for an extremely deceptive and relatively simple method that will even fool magicians . . . if you're into that kind of thing. This is a very simple effect to perform. However, it will take you a little bit of time to wrap your head around the method. My suggestion is to simply read the book with props in hand. It'll take about an hour to go through the entire book and understand everything.

Probably the best thing about this PDF is how John was able to take some very "procedural" methods that have the potential for feeling overly contrived and turn them into something that makes perfect sense. The procedural part is almost completely hidden in the presentational premise. Every little piece harmoniously fits together to create a well rounded, deceptive method and effect.

Tell Monte Review: Ad Copy Integrity


The ad copy is very accurate. In fact, they've taken it a step further by offering to let you read the first 5 pages for free. You can link to the free pages directly from the product description. They are being about as transparent as you can be without totally giving away the entire effect.

Tell Monte Review: Product Quality


You receive a 24 page PDF that is very well written, well thought out, and very detailed. The effect is taught in great depth and with great clarity. Further, at the end he drops in a few tips and ideas that drastically add value to the routine and the concept. You're taught an impromptu version and a more "prepared" version. For $15 bucks, assuming you like the effect, you'll have a solid 10 minute or so piece of mentalism that only requires you (for the "prepared" version) to bring the 5 ESP cards, dollar bill, notepad and pen.

Tell Monte Review: Final Thoughts


Assuming you're into this type of effect, you will be a) very impressed with the method, b) surprised at the deceptiveness and very happy with your purchase. For everything you're getting, $15 bucks is a small price to pay.

Final Verdict:
5 Stars with a Stone Status of Gem.


Available from Vanishing Inc. and Lybrary.com

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