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One of David Copperfield's most impressive illusions was making the Statue
of Liberty vanish. He raised a curtain in front of the crowd, made a very poetic speech, dropped the curtain and the statue was gone, with just a couple of helicopters circling overhead shining spotlights on the bare base of the monument. Heavy sigh I don't suppose he could do this trick again. Everybody would be up in arms about the helicopters flying too close to the statue and over a crowd of people. I suppose he could still make a Lear jet disappear. -- Christopher J. Campbell World Famous Flight Instructor Port Orchard, WA If you go around beating the Bush, don't complain if you rile the animals. |
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![]() "C J Campbell" wrote in message ... One of David Copperfield's most impressive illusions was making the Statue of Liberty vanish. He raised a curtain in front of the crowd, made a very poetic speech, dropped the curtain and the statue was gone, with just a couple of helicopters circling overhead shining spotlights on the bare base of the monument. I saw that program, must have been twelve to fifteen years ago. As I recall they used a split screen; one side was supposed to be a live TV picture, the other was supposed to be a live radar image. I thought it odd that the helicopters were not displayed on the radar image as they should have been. |
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One of David Copperfield's most impressive illusions was making the Statue
of Liberty vanish. He raised a curtain in front of the crowd, made a very poetic speech, dropped the curtain and the statue was gone, with just a couple of helicopters circling overhead shining spotlights on the bare base of the monument. Heavy sigh I don't suppose he could do this trick again. Everybody would be up in arms about the helicopters flying too close to the statue and over a crowd of people. I suppose he could still make a Lear jet disappear. -- I saw one of those 'Magician's Secrets Revealed' shows one time and they showed how this illusion is performed. The object never actually disappears of course, its done by moving the camera to a different scene without the TV audience realizing it. Contrary to what the magician says, the people present in the live audience are in on the joke and only pretend to be amazed. Maybe he can make the TFRs disappear instead. He has apparently already given the illusion to our government that their domestic security policy over the last two years have made any difference other than to annoy everybody and waste the taxpayer's money. |
#4
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![]() "Bill" wrote in message ... One of David Copperfield's most impressive illusions was making the Statue of Liberty vanish. He raised a curtain in front of the crowd, made a very poetic speech, dropped the curtain and the statue was gone, with just a couple of helicopters circling overhead shining spotlights on the bare base of the monument. Heavy sigh I don't suppose he could do this trick again. Everybody would be up in arms about the helicopters flying too close to the statue and over a crowd of people. I suppose he could still make a Lear jet disappear. -- I saw one of those 'Magician's Secrets Revealed' shows one time and they showed how this illusion is performed. The object never actually disappears of course, its done by moving the camera to a different scene without the TV audience realizing it. No, he had a special stage constructed that revolved very slowly and quietly while the curtains were drawn. When they reopened the curtains the statue appeared to be gone as the curtains themselves were obstructing the view. It was well thought out with even the chairs being bolted into position to have the audience at the perfect angle to pull off this illusion. It was also very expensive :-) Contrary to what the magician says, the people present in the live audience are in on the joke and only pretend to be amazed. Maybe he can make the TFRs disappear instead. He has apparently already given the illusion to our government that their domestic security policy over the last two years have made any difference other than to annoy everybody and waste the taxpayer's money. |
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C J Campbell wrote:
One of David Copperfield's most impressive illusions was making the Statue of Liberty vanish. He raised a curtain in front of the crowd, made a very poetic speech, dropped the curtain and the statue was gone, with just a couple of helicopters circling overhead shining spotlights on the bare base of the monument. CJ, it wasn't David Copperfield, it was Ashcroft/Bush/Ridge. The book that Lady Liberty had been clutching to her chest all those years - it turned out to be an almanac, so they hauled her ass off to Guantanamo. David H Boeing Field (BFI), Seattle, WA - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Visit the Pacific Northwest Flying forum: http://www.smartgroups.com/groups/pnwflying |
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"C J Campbell" wrote in message
... Heavy sigh I don't suppose he could do this trick again. Everybody would be up in arms about the helicopters flying too close to the statue and over a crowd of people. Since the helicopters weren't actually anywhere near the Statue, I doubt much of a fuss would have been made at all. |
#7
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Actually, John Carty is correct in how the illusion was performed. The
helicopters were actually there, though the pilots were in on the trick. One of the purposes of the helicopters was to shine lights in the eyes of the live audience to make sure that they were blinded. The basic illusion can be found in Poundstone. The stage consisted of seating for the live audience, two towers with an arch between them, and a curtain that could be lowered from the arch. The entire stage could be rotated. The audience was seated so that they could not move around and see what was going on behind the towers. The helicopters circling overhead helped disorient the live audience so they could not feel the stage turn. When the curtain was dropped, the statue had 'vanished.' What had really happened was that the stage was turned so that now the audience was just looking out to sea. The noise from the helicopters also helped to obscure any noise that the rotating stage might have made. One of the two towers had been repositioned to obscure the statue from the audience. Since the TV cameras faced the same direction as the audience, the TV audience would be limited to the same view that the live audience had. While the curtain was in place and the stage was rotating, assistants turned off the lights ringing the statue and turned on a second set of lights so that the audience would think that they were looking at the same lights that surrounded the statue. The lights on the ground and the spotlights from the helicopters served to blind the audience by destroying their night vision. The radar was only a video animation shown for the TV audience and it was not well executed. It just looks cheesy -- not even a real radar screen. The illusion would have been better without it. I have noticed this about Copperfield -- his grand illusions are very impressive and show a talent for showmanship, but he almost invariably degrades the whole thing by throwing in some cheap trick like this. Witness the awful penetration of the Great Wall of China illusion, for example, where somebody (probably Copperfield himself) keeps pushing against the cloth on the far side of the wall. It just looks dumb and adds nothing to the illusion. The Escape from Alcatraz had some of the same stuff. I really did not want to talk about how the illusion was performed. Most magic really consists of, well, pretty dumb stuff. Knowing how the trick is done really detracts from the show and often leaves people with the feeling that they have been had by a cheap shot, which is not fair to the magician or the other performers. |
#8
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C J Campbell wrote:
I really did not want to talk about how the illusion was performed. Most magic really consists of, well, pretty dumb stuff. Knowing how the trick is done really detracts from the show and often leaves people with the feeling that they have been had by a cheap shot, which is not fair to the magician or the other performers. I've no idea how many people fall on either side of the argument, but I don't agree with you. Rather, I find myself impressed knowing the mechanics of an illusion. It's kind of like flying to me (bringing this back OT {8^)...knowing how an airplane works doesn't make the engineering feat any less impressive...or the experience of flight any less wonderous. - Andrew |
#9
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"C J Campbell" wrote in message ...
One of David Copperfield's most impressive illusions was making the Statue of Liberty vanish. He raised a curtain in front of the crowd, made a very poetic speech, dropped the curtain and the statue was gone, with just a couple of helicopters circling overhead shining spotlights on the bare base of the monument. Heavy sigh I don't suppose he could do this trick again. Everybody would be up in arms about the helicopters flying too close to the statue and over a crowd of people. I suppose he could still make a Lear jet disappear. He didn't move the statue, just the audience. The audience was actually in on the trick (when I saw that in the "making off" I was pretty disappointed to see the audience was faking it). The audience sat on a moving platform that rotated so they were actually looking in a different direction. Some of these guys border on T.V. fakery. That David Blain guy claims he can levitate. He uses a pretty simple trick of hiding one of his feet behind the other leg to push himself up. However, when you see it on T.V. they actually lifted him with a cable to make it look more dramatic. So the audience is really (honestly) impressed but those of us at home are mislead into believing he was much higher than the audience saw. |
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