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Desert Island Tricks

Each week we invite one of the biggest guests in the world of magic to maroon themselves on a desert island. They are allowed to take with them 8 tricks, 1 book, 1 banishment and 1 non magic item that they use for magic! We discuss their 'can't live without' lists and why those items were chosen. Episodes are uploaded every Friday and are available via all Podcast service providers! To find out more about the team behind Desert Island Tricks, please visit: www.alakazam.co.uk 

Publisher-supplied feed metadata · PodParley refreshed Jun 12, 2026 · Source feed

  1. 149

    Christopher Carter

    If you’ve ever watched mentalism drag under too much procedure, Christopher Carter brings a refreshing counterpoint: move fast, stay direct and make the audience feel the mind reading before they think about the method. We talk about why attention spans are shrinking across the board, how that shift changed the college show market and what still holds up when you’re working corporate events, theatres and even cruise ships. Christopher walks us through the core pieces of his working act, from a high-speed playing card memory demonstration to a tossed out deck that pulls the entire room onto the stage. We get into his three-billet routine built to erase explanations phase by phase, plus his take on Pegasus Page where staging and pseudo-hypnotic framing create a surprisingly intimate moment in a large venue. Then we go deep on the blindfold question and answer act, why Q and A is the “major effect” audiences expect and how structure is what makes improvisation feel confident instead of risky. We also hit the practical tools that keep a pro show dependable: utility devices like Real Die, wallet strategies that delay the dirty work until no one is watching and “pack small, play big” thinking with Scrabble Memories and Bruce Bernstein’s Eat at Joe’s as a customisable, corporate-ready finale. Finally, Christopher explains why he’d literally bury magic apps on the island, drawing a bright ethical line around phone scraping and audience trust and he shares why a voice recorder is his most powerful non-magic weapon for capturing ideas and sharpening scripts. Subscribe, share this with a performer friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.Christopher Carter’s Desert Island Tricks Welcome package: Playing Card Memory Tossed Out Deck Three Billet Routine Pegasus Page Blindfold Q&A ActReal Die Stealth Assassin Wallet Scrabble Memories Eat at Joe’sBanishment. Magic AppsBook. Unreal Item. Voice Recorder Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  2. 148

    Pete Heat

    A billionaire builds a Star Wars-shaped house in Portugal, hires a team to stage a “mind-reading” AI, and throws a party so convincing that guests keep asking how to buy the fake technology even after the reveal. That’s where we start with magician and consultant Pete Heat, whose career spans TV, theatre, brand campaigns, and immersive events where belief is the real special effect.We get into the unglamorous but career-changing truth behind getting booked: people need to see you working. Pete explains why solid performance video and a real showreel beat polished photos, how his early YouTube street magic clip led to TV opportunities, and what it takes to capture magic on camera without killing the method or the moment. If you care about social media magic, television magic, or high-end corporate events, this part is pure strategy.Then we run his “desert island” list of eight hard-hitting pieces: an ambitious card routine that builds to a full deck vanish, a lightning-fast pocket index, a ring to sealed envelope inside a zipped wallet, loops for haunted deck and PK Touches, coin under watch, a sealed drink can transformation, the Unbelievelope for stage predictions, Acidus Novus for bulletproof peeks, and a closer with Double Cross plus the tiny handling choices that make it feel impossible. Along the way, Pete banishes one habit he thinks is quietly wrecking modern magic: overconfidence about angles and flashing.If you like practical magic theory, behind-the-scenes consulting stories, and worker-tested routines that get real reactions, you’ll want this one. Subscribe, share it with a magician friend, and leave us a review with the single strongest trick you think every performer should learn.Pete’s Desert Island Tricks: Welcome pack: Ambitious CardCheater Index Item to Sealed Envelope Loops Coin Unique (with a normal 50p) Too Hot to Handle Unbelievalope Acidus Novus Double Cross Banishment. Overconfidence in angles Book. Art of Astonishment Item. Magnets Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  3. 147

    Stranded with a Stranger: Tim Ambrose

    A single moment can reboot your creativity and for Tim Ambrose, it happened in a Las Vegas hotel mall while everyone else went out for the night. He wandered into a magic shop, watched the free demos again and again and felt the same rush he’d had as a kid seeing his brother perform. That spark turned into years of collecting, performing for friends and building friendships through local magic shops, the kind of brick and mortar spaces that feel like a clubhouse for close-up magicians. We walk through Tim’s desert island list of eight tricks, packed with practical, high-impact effects that lean into prediction magic and mentalism. From the classic “magician in trouble” charm of an Insurance Policy reveal to movie prediction routines, photo-based predictions and clean, brain-melting card mysteries, this is a blueprint for powerful reactions without complicated handling. Along the way we talk about why tactile reveals feel more “real,” how presentation does the heavy lifting and what makes an effect strong enough to become part of your core set. Then the conversation turns to something bigger than methods: Tim’s banishment is magic egos and attitude. We dig into why the best magic communities are generous, why hands-on help matters and we challenge you with a question: what’s your reputation maker trick, the one people talk about after you leave? If you enjoy magic storytelling, practical close-up advice and thoughtful takes on the culture of magic, subscribe, share this with a friend and leave us a review.Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  4. 146

    Steve Faulkner

    Often, it feels like you have total control when performing magic. But what if everything depended on a split second? That’s where Steve Faulkner begins his desert island journey. He’s a British Close-Up Magic Champion, a working performer and the face behind Real Magic Reviews, which means he sees more new magic tricks than most of us could learn in a lifetime, then has to decide what’s actually worth doing for real people.We put Steve on the desert island and build his essential set from the ground up, starting with a straight-up classic from Royal Road to Card Magic and moving through effects that have never stopped “storming” for him: Maxi Twist, Slidini Knotted Silks, Nate Leipzig’s cigar routine, linking rings that still fool even when the method is “known,” and billet work like Acidus Novus that delivers huge mentalism reactions when you’ve got the nerve to commit. We also get modern with Inject and the Legacy QR approach, not as a gadget flex but as a practical way to create layered miracles and leave spectators with a souvenir they’ll actually show people later.Then we get honest about the thing Steve wants to bury: magic dogma. The rule-policing, the “no one would do that,” the opinions dressed up as laws. If you’ve ever avoided a trick you loved because someone said it was “wrong,” this conversation is your permission slip to go try it anyway.Steve Faulkner’s Desert Island Tricks: Welcome package. Cards Across Maxi-Twist Slydini Knotted Silks Nate Leipzig Cigar RoutineInject Linking Rings Acidus Novus Optix Pro Paper Balls Over The Head  Banishment. Dogma in magic Book. Talk About Tricks Item. Kennedy Half Dollar Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  5. 145

    Guy Hollingworth

    A magic classic finally gets its next chapter and the creator is as thoughtful as you’d hope. We’re joined by magical royalty, Guy Hollingworth to talk about More Drawing Room Deceptions, the highly anticipated follow-up to his legendary Drawing Room Deceptions, plus the re-release of the original book with a new chapter that shows how his routines have evolved through real performance. If you care about strong plots, clean handling and material that lasts beyond the hype cycle, this conversation is packed with gold.We also invite Guy onto the Alakazam island and talk about his eight essential pieces of magic, one book, one banishment, and one everyday item he’d still use for deception. Along the way we dig into The Reformation (his signature torn-and-restored signed card), why slowing down can make an effect feel more impossible and how he designs methods like puzzles when there are no obvious “building blocks.” Expect practical talk on cups and balls, coins across, Professor’s Nightmare rope magic, stage manipulation, linking rings, gypsy thread, and even a modern phone-light miracle.You’ll hear behind-the-scenes stories from the Magic Circle, what Guy looks for before he’ll perform someone else’s creation and where to find the Drawing Room Grand Tour details through the publishers at Vanishing Inc and Mike Caveney’s Magic Words. If you enjoy the show, subscribe, share it with a magician friend, and leave a review so more people can find it.Guy Hollingworth’s Desert Island Tricks Welcome package. The Reformation Cups and Balls Half Crowns & Shell Professors Nightmare Billiard Balls Linking Rings Gypsy Thread Silhouette Luc Apers’ Chinese SilverBanishment.Mutilated ParasolBook. Expert Card Technique Item. Jacket Check out all of the details regarding his new book ‘More Drawing Room Deceptions’ here: https://www.vanishingincmagic.com/magic-conventions/drawing-room-grand-tour/Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  6. 144

    Oscar Leonard

    A cruise ship theatre looks glamorous from the outside but the work is brutally practical: your show has to reset fast, pack down smaller than you want and still hit like a full-scale stage production. We sit down with Oscar Leonard, resident magician on Virgin Voyages for the past three years and newly named an Associate Member of the Inner Magic Circle with Silver Star, to unpack what that reality teaches you about building commercial magic and mentalism that actually lands.  Oscar shares how he got the job, what “guaranteed performance spots” every day does to your material, and why recording shows and chasing the right feedback beats guessing. We talk about the problem mentalists obsess over: making mind reading visual. His solutions include a story-driven Fourth Dimensional Telepathy, a dartboard routine that creates instant intrigue, Liquid Forks for fast visual impact, and a standout ESP experiment staged with lab coats and clipboards to make small props feel huge.  Then we go deeper on craft and ethics: Q and A as a closer, how coincidences become fuel for astonishment and why he’d bury most of a stage camera on his desert island. Cameras can help visibility but overuse can turn live theatre into a movie and we dig into where that line sits for modern stage magic.  If you care about cruise ship entertainment, stage mentalism, visual reveals and building a portable show that plays big, this one is packed with workable ideas. Subscribe for more, share the episode with a performer friend and leave a review with the one routine you’d take on your own desert island.Oscar Leonard’s Desert Island TricksWelcome Package. Multiple Selection Routine / Mentalism Reveals Fourth Dimensional Telepathy The Dart Lottery Liquid Forks ESP Cards / 4 Lab Coats / 4 Clip BoardsLocation, Location, Location Three Billet Routine Book Test Q&A Banishment. Using a camera for the majority of a stage performanceBook. The Jinx Bound Collection Item. Debra Dale Blank Index Card Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  7. 143

    Michael Vincent

    Your magic can be technically flawless and still feel forgettable. This conversation with Michael Vincent hit us like a wake-up call: the real goal is the experience you leave with the spectator, not the applause for your hands. Michael opens up about stepping away from performing to care for his mother, then returning with a new approach built around purpose, discipline, and audiences who choose to be there. The list becomes a deep dive into close-up magic and parlour magic fundamentals: Vernon’s Triumph as chaos versus order with the spectator doing the shuffling, Linking Rings built on crystal-clear conditions, Slydini’s Knotted Silks as pure visual impossibility, the Invisible Deck as shared fantasy made real, Roy Walton’s Smiling Mule as a lesson in timing, plus coin magic that leans on sound, story, and imagination. We also go hard on a topic many magicians avoid: reading and research. Michael argues that the best secrets still live in books, that mastery can’t be bought and that a strong repertoire is a reflection of identity. He caps it with two recommendations that shape creative showmanship and resilience: Darwin Ortiz’s Strong Magic and Viktor Frankl’s A Man’s Search For Meaning. If you want stronger reactions, better structure, and a more honest path to becoming great, press play, then subscribe, share this with a magician friend and leave a review with your own desert island list.Michael Vincent’s Desert Island TricksCare Package: Triumph Linking Rings Knotted Silks Invisible Deck Smiling MuleCoins Through Hand The Slot Machine Marlo’s Repeat Card to Pocket Your Card, My Card, Everybody’s Card Banishment. Complete and utter laziness Book. Strong Magic Item. A Man’s Search for Meaning Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  8. 142

    Stranded with a Stranger: David Rhodes

    A lot of magic advice lives in theory. David Rhodes brings something better: a working performer’s list of eight routines he’d keep if everything else disappeared, plus one book, one non-magic utility item, and one thing he’d banish from the art. David’s story starts with a familiar arc, going all-in on magic in his twenties, stepping away for years into the corporate world, then coming back with fresh eyes and sharper taste.We dig into a lineup that leans heavily toward practical mentalism and audience-first structure: Telepathy Plus as a minimalist billet miracle, a memory demonstration that builds real credibility, and a Magic Square that can turn “confusion” into a perfect closer. From there we get into blindfold work and psychometry, where the impact comes from meaning, not props, plus fork bending with a clear stance on why less is more when you want it to feel genuinely psychic. We also talk borrowed-object impossibility with ring flight, and why the strongest close-up magic often lives in the spectator’s hands.Card lovers still get fed: Out Of This World gets its flowers as one of the most powerful spectator-driven effects ever, and David shares a sneaky multiple selection “cheat code” that lets you weave in favourites like Triumph. We round it out with Interpreting Magic by David Regal for the interviews, a corner rounder as an underrated weapon for short cards, and a banishment that every performer should consider: ditch hack lines that kill connection.Send in your list of 8 tricks, 1 book, 1 non magic item and 1 banishment to [email protected] out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  9. 141

    Jean Luc Bertrand

    The magic that stays with you isn’t always the trick you can describe, it’s the feeling you can’t shake. That’s where our conversation with French magician, creator, hypnotist and theatre performer Jean-Luc Bertrand begins: the rare moments that make a seasoned performer feel like a five-year-old seeing impossibility for the first time, and how we can build shows that give audiences that same hit of wonder. We get into the effects and performers that shaped Jean-Luc’s taste and philosophy, from Garrett Thomas’ legendary ID-style miracle to David Blaine’s extreme commitment and Derren Brown’s masterclass in scripting, structure, and hypnosis. Along the way we talk misdirection as intention, how to avoid performing on autopilot, and why the best professional magic is really about “writing memories” for people at the most important events of their lives. Jean-Luc also shares what he would banish from the magic industry: the lack of meaningful copyright norms and the casual attitude toward copying. We explore why originality is harder than buying the latest trick, and why ethics matter if magic is going to evolve. Plus, we tease Jean-Luc’s upcoming Murphy’s Magic release, the JLB Coin, and what makes it feel like real superpowers in the hands. Jean Luc’s Desert Island Tricks: Welcome Package. Card Under Tablecloth Drivers Licence Trick by Garrett ThomasDavid Blaine’s Frog From Mouth Derren Brown’s Card Under BoxCreating a moment for a single audience member French Fries Production JLB Coin Yann FrischMusic Box Effect Banishment. Lack of Copyright in the Magic Industry Book. The Alchemist by Paulo CoelhoItem. BIC Lighter Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  10. 140

    SOS: Harry Nardi

    We’re drawing a line in the sand: self-working tricks are not a guilty pleasure. If the audience can’t backtrack the method and the moment feels impossible, it’s real magic where it counts.We bring Harry Nardi back after the Alakazam convention to rebuild his desert island lineup using the only criteria that matters on paid gigs: trust. That means effects that reset fast, pack small, play big, and stay strong when conditions are messy. You’ll hear why Instant Paper To Money beats Extreme Burn for freedom and fairness, why MD Mini keeps destroying even after time off, and how Coins Across and Stand Up Monty earn their spot as reliable, high-clarity crowd winners.Then we get into the meaty stuff: PK Touches routining and the “less is more” debate, plus a swap that turns the set personal with Lover’s Waltz as a fused, signed souvenir. We also break down why Castle Wallet feels like the closest thing to real mind reading, including the framing of “fake mind reading” versus a prediction that people never see coming. Add in an island guest pick (Chris Harding), a replay-worthy performance memory, a painful first-gig lesson, and a shoutout to a perfect convention show from Tom Wright, and you’ve got an episode packed with working pro insight.If you enjoy practical close-up magic, mentalism, and smarter thinking about what audiences actually experience, subscribe, share this with a magician friend, and leave a review. What’s one “easy” trick you think deserves more respect?Harry Nardi’s SOS Substitutions : Extreme Burn for Instant Paper to Money Imagine for Lovers WaltzBig Reaction for Castle Wallet (with a sneaky Foreshadow) Banishment. Discounting self working tricks Guest. Chris Harding Memory. BGT Semi Finals Horror. Asking a person with a disability to help when they couldn’t Show. Tom Wright’s Show at the Alakazam Convention Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  11. 139

    Marc Lavelle

    A great magic set isn’t the one with the fanciest props. It’s the one you can do when the pockets are empty, the room is loud and someone says, “Go on then, show us something” with zero warning. That’s why Marc Lavelle’s return hits so hard: after stepping back from the magic and convention scene for years, he comes back with a clearer view of what actually works for real audiences. We put Marc on the “Desert Island Tricks” hot seat and build a survival-ready lineup: stack work with the Shadow Stack for named-card miracles, a fast one coin routine that snaps attention to the performer, plus ring on string and elastic band magic that can be done with borrowed or everyday objects. Along the way, he shares a wild Maldives story where one simple band-through-thumb moment gets demanded on repeat for ten straight minutes, proving that impact often beats complexity. From there we move into bulletproof interactive pieces like Mark Elsdon’s Tequila Hustler, a multi-spectator drawing duplication, and practical working tips like using Five Guys cardstock as free billets. We also talk Ring Thing, PK touch, and why Paul Harris style “organic magic” still matters when everything is filmed in slow motion. Then comes the spicy banishment: should the Omni Deck be retired for a while because spectators have seen it too often? Marc makes the case for variety, smarter endings, and building effects that don’t arrive pre-spoiled by social media. If you enjoy close-up magic, walk around work, mentalism principles, and real-world gigging advice from a working pro, hit subscribe, share this with a magician friend, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show.Marc’s Desert Island Tricks: Welcome Package. Any Card Named (Shadow Stack)One Coin Routine Ring on String Band Through Thumb Tequila Hustler Multiple Spectator Drawing Duplication Ring Thing PK Touches Torn and Restored Leaf Banishment. Omni Deck Book. Art of Astonishment Item. MagSafe Selfie screen Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  12. 138

    Damien O'Brien

    A great magic set isn’t about having the fanciest props. It’s about having material that survives real-world conditions: bad lighting, tough angles, quiet tables, camera pressure, and the sudden moment when someone says, “Do something,” and you’re already empty-handed. Damien O’Brien knows that reality first-hand, from reaching the finals on Britain’s Got Talent during the pandemic to performing close-up in immersive theatre at the Magician’s Table.We’re kicking off season three with Damien’s “desert island” list: the single card routine he’d repeat forever, the phone-based mentalism that creates bulletproof fairness, and the pieces that hit with pure visual shock. He breaks down why Ambitious Card still kills, how Digital Force Bag and Hypernesia turn a normal smartphone into a miracle machine, and why effects like Haunted Deck and Invisible Deck stay in a worker’s case for years. We also dig into Lumen Mini for deeply personal revelations, plus the bolder side of close-up with Pyro Perception and iCandy, where the reaction is instant and unforgettable.The conversation goes beyond methods into performance mindset: banishing negative energy, building a small trusted creative team, and finding inspiration through story with Carter Beats the Devil. If you’re into modern magic, mentalism, close-up performance, Britain’s Got Talent behind-the-scenes, or immersive magic shows, this one is packed with practical takeaways you can use immediately. Subscribe, share the episode with a magician friend, and leave a review telling us the one trick you’d take to your own magical island.Damien’s Desert Island List:Welcome Package. Ambitious CardDigital Force BagHypermnesiaHaunted Deck Lumen Mini Pyro Perception Eye CandyInvisible Deck Pk Touches Banishment. Negative Energy Book. Carter Beats the DevilItem. Phone Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  13. 137

    Stranded with a Stranger: John France

    You can learn a lot about a magician by the eight tricks they refuse to live without, and John France’s list is built for the real world: restaurant tables, family events, and close-up sets where you need fast impact, clear plots, and resets that don’t slow you down. John’s also a refreshing reminder that you don’t have to start young to start strong. He didn’t perform until his mid-50s, got a buzz from fooling one coworker, and turned that spark into a working, practical card magic toolkit.We dig into why each choice earns its spot, from a super-visual sandwich routine that grabs attention instantly, to a stacked-deck Five of Spades sequence that escalates into an ace-finding kicker people won’t forget. There’s also a dose of pure close-up shock with Sharpie Through Card, plus a simple, direct “one card reversed” selection reveal that proves how far strong handling and timing can go with a normal deck. Along the way we talk about building a mental library of dependable card tricks so you’re never stuck when someone inevitably says, “Show me something with cards.”The set widens into walk-around strategy and audience management: Sudoku 2.0 as a souvenir mentalism-style leave-behind that doubles as a business card, and The Grail as a versatile card-at-any-number tool for those awkward table revisits. Then comes the curveball John insists on: spooky, bizarre magic with Dead Man’s Hand, where story and multiple reveals change the energy in the room. We also hit a topic that matters to every performer and creator: what John would banish from magic forever, and why originality and credit are non-negotiable.Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  14. 136

    End of Season 2 Special with Peter Nardi

    355 different tricks. Only six people sharing the single most popular pick. And a top item that only three guests chose. Season two ends with the kind of recap that every magician, mentalist, and close-up worker secretly loves: the real numbers, the real patterns, and the real reasons behind what performers actually keep in their pockets.We’re closing with the official season two rankings plus the moments that made the year. A Deck Of Cards takes the top spot, with PK Touches and Invisible Deck right behind it, followed by classics like Cups And Balls, Coins Across, and Sponge Balls. We also unpack the tied cluster of powerful “worker” effects that share the lower spots, plus what the spread teaches about originality, overexposure, and choosing material that actually suits you. We round things off with the season’s top banishment (yes, it’s ego), the most loved magic book (The Mind and Magic of David Berglass), and the surprisingly revealing “non-magic item” choices.The Season 2 Top Tricks: 1. Deck of Cards - Beau Cremer, Steve Gore, Keith Barry, Joel M, Marvin Berglas, Alan Rorrison 2. PK Touches - Vince Wilson, Jamie Daws, Christopher Taylor, Looch, Kay Dyson3. Invisible Deck - Harry Marlin Piper, Steve Gore, Keith Barry, John Archer 4. Cups and Balls - Erik Tait, R Paul Wilson, Nikola Arkane, Michael Ammar 5. Coins Across - Erik Tait, R Paul Wilson, James Brown, Ben Williams6. Sponge Balls - Nikola Arkane, Kay Dyson, Roddy McGhie, Mark BennettJoint 7 & 8. Double Levitation - Harry Merlin Pipar, Rodney James Piper, Russ StevensFork Bending - Rodney James Piper, Neil Henry, Phill SmithDestination Box - Craig Petty, Jon Allen, Noel QualterMultiple Selection - Tom Bolton, Ben Hanlin, Daniel ChardDouble Cross - Tom Bolton, Luke Oseland, James BrownToxic + - Tom Bolton, Jamie Daws, Harry De CruzCard Under Box - Daniel Chard, James Brown, Neil HenryQ&A - Looch, Marc Paul, Daniel ChardTOP BANISHMENT - Ego - Tom Bolton, Ben Williams, Dave Loosley, James Brown, Leo Smetsers TOP BOOK - The Mind and Magic of David Berglas - Rodney James Piper, Marvin Berglas, Tony Antoniou, Neil HenryTOP ITEM - MUSIC - Nikolas Mavresis, Oliver Tabor, Matthew Pomeroy / WIFE - Chris North, Michael Ammar, Jonathan Goodwin Season 2 Stats: 355 Tricks named - 48 Banishments - 46 Books - 46 Items Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  15. 135

    SOS: Dean Leavy

    If you work gigs for a living, you know the quiet fear: doing the same “sure-fire” routines until you start performing on autopilot. Jamie sits down again with UK magician Dean Leavy to find out what actually makes a trick worth keeping for life and what gets cut when you’re performing corporate events, weddings, trade shows, and parties week after week.Dean walks us through the real reasons a professional close-up magician updates a working set, starting with repeat clients who want to see something new. We dig into the practical choices behind swapping Extreme Burn for a hard-hitting chop cup routine, why Ring Flight Revolution still gets reactions people talk about years later, and how a wallet can be more than a prop when you treat it like a utility device for impossible locations. We also get nerdy about routining ProMystic MD Mini as believable “psychology,” not just a reveal.Then we get into the surprisingly smart business side of magic: Liquid Forks replacing phone-based tricks when reliability matters, leaving spectators with a souvenir that keeps your name alive. Dean shares a brutal performance mistake from Phantom Cutout and what he’d do differently now, plus his banishment choice for the magic community, his dream guest, and the one show he’d rewatch forever.Dean’s Desert Island Substitutions: 1. Extreme Burn for Chop Cup2. Digital Force Bag for Liquid Forks 3. Billiard Ball Manipulation Act for Floating TableBanishment. Magicians Ego Guest. David Blaine Memory. Performing at the Young Magician of the YearHorror. Revealing the wrong celebrity Show. ShowmanFind out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  16. 134

    Harry Merlin Piper

    A 15-year-old magician walks down a street in Los Angeles and strangers pull cars over just to have a photo with him and demand a trick. That’s the level of spotlight Harry Merlin Piper is living in after placing as runner-up on Netflix Star Search!We sit down with Harry to get the real behind-the-scenes story: the Instagram message that kicked it off, the intensity of a competition TV schedule, and the nightmare scenario every illusionist fears, props delayed in transit while directors are waiting. He shares what it takes to rehearse major stage illusions on a ticking clock, how being a kid means mandatory schooling and strict set hours, and why constant live performing at the House of Illusion in Salou, Spain gives him an edge most young performers never get.Then we dive into the magical island game: Harry drafts the eight tricks he’d keep forever, from his monkey vent routine and high-energy manipulation act to double levitation, suspended animation, Invisible Deck, fire spiker and chop cup. Along the way we get a sharp take on exposure culture, why revealing methods online damages creators and audiences, and why magic matters most when it helps people forget real life for a while.Harry’s Desert Island Tricks: 1. Monkey Vent Routine2. Manipulation Act3. Double levitation4. Invisible Deck5. Suspended Animation6. Fire Spiker Y7. Chop Cup 8. His DadBanishment. Magicians who Reveal Magic Book. People around himItem. Black Velvet Material Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  17. 133

    Rodney James Piper

    Magic gets weaker the moment it feels like a “performance mode” you turn on and off. Rodney James Piper joins us with a profound, refreshing belief: if you’re a magician, you live it everywhere you go. That single idea ripples through everything we talk about, from pocket props and borrowed objects to stage illusions that can stop a room cold.He explains why the Stealth Assassin Wallet is a constant-ready miracle machine, how fork bending becomes a lifetime souvenir, and why the best magicians make people forget methods and just feel wonder. We also dig into practical show-craft for today’s social media era, including how to design a clean “photo moment” so the audience shares the image you want, not a messy screenshot mid-move.Then we go bigger: Fire Spiker, double levitation, and a dream idea involving a yacht appearance that might finally make it into the House of Illusion show in Salou, Spain. Rodney also flips the script on what the “real trick” is, arguing that the venue, the welcome, the pacing, and the full audience journey can be the most powerful illusion of all. We close with his banishment for the magic industry, his pick for the one essential magic book, and the one item he won’t do any of it without.Rodney’s Desert Island Tricks: 1. Stealth Assassin Wallet2. Forks 3. Borrowed Watch 4. Boat Appearance 5. Matt Edwards 6. Fire Spiker 7. Double Levitation 8. House of Illusion Banishment. The word jealousy Book. The mind and magic David Berglas Item. Family Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  18. 132

    SOS: Adam Dadswell

    This week Adam Dadswell returns to rebuild his list years after his first visit to the island. Some picks stay because they still hit hard in real shows, others get replaced by newer pieces that fit the way Adam performs now, with clearer premises, cleaner handling, and bigger moments for spectators.We dig into what actually makes a trick worth keeping for life: the satisfaction of a sneaky method, the freedom to go hands-off, and a premise that sparks real conversation instead of a “look how clever I am” vibe. Adam talks through switching Sneak Thief for Sentinel, his drawing duplication approach that uses a childhood imagination hook and a table display that creates instant intrigue. He also trades Big Kick for InstaCaan, a card at any number routine that escalates into a blank-deck shocker, and updates the Diabolical Principle with Loki for that unforgettable key reveal.Then we go past the trick list into the culture of magic. Adam banishes magician-wins routines that make audience members feel small, shares a wedding performance horror story and how he recovered, picks Theodore Annemann as his dream island guest, and chooses Darren Brown’s Enigma as the show he’d replay forever. We’re thrilled to meet with Adam once again! Adam's Desert Island Substitutions: 1. Sneak Thief for Sentinel 2. Big Kick for InstaCAAN3. Diabolical for LokiBanishment. Magician Winning Routines Guest. Theodore Annemann Memory. Go back to the first time he saw magic live Horror. Built up a reveal and didn’t quite go to plan Show. Enigma Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  19. 131

    Stranded with a Stranger: Jim Aitken

    This week we sit down with Jim Aitken, an Aberdeen magician, longtime club member, and retired paramedic, to explore eight effects that balance practicality, heart, and lasting impact. From a self-working “last two cards match” that crushes in the real world to a smiley-sticker miracle that guests remember years later, Jim’s choices remind us that method is only half the story; the rest is the way you make people feel.We trace his journey from yogurt-pot cups and balls to modern coffee-cup chops, then talk about when it’s worth investing in a premium timepiece like the Bluether Infinity Watch. Jim’s philosophy is simple: buy reactions, not just props. Rope magic makes a case for clear visual storytelling, while the invisible deck debate sparks fresh ideas for framing choices and scripting reveals. Along the way, we celebrate society life, hidden gems in books and DVDs, and the small tweaks, like personalised stickers or trial runs, that push classics into unforgettable territory.Mentalism fans will love Jim’s pick of Eclipse ESP cards and a sleeper routine that proves clean structure beats complicated method. He caps the list with Copperfield’s Flying, a nod to pure astonishment and the joy that first pulled many of us toward the art. Jim also draws a hard line on professionalism: never make child helpers the punchline. His recommended read, Simon Lovell’s Billion Dollar Bunko, opens a trove of swindles and bar bets to sharpen your handling and patter, while his must-have non-magic item, a computer for nonstop study, champions lifelong learning.If this sparks ideas for your own desert island set, share your eight tricks, one banishment, one book and one non magic item. Send it to [email protected] and we can get your very own episode! Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  20. 130

    Chris Webb

    A brass cap on a table. A ring hovering between hands. A deck that turns to glass. From a childhood trip to Hamleys to late‑night jams at Blackpool, we sit down with Chris Webb to map the eight routines he’d keep for life and the trend he’d bury in the sand.Chris is a working magician who splits time between gigs and releases, so every choice has to earn its pocket space. We start with coin powerhouses, Garrett Thomas’s Imagination Coins for clean, spectator‑in‑hand moments and the engineering elegance of Dynamic Coins that sparked Chris’s journey. Then we pivot to card thinking that invites conversation rather than eye‑rolls: Omni Deck as a closer framed as solidity, not vanishing, and Director’s Cut, a stack of film cards that turns tables into instant movie clubs while the method hums beneath the chatter.The visuals get bolder without getting fragile. Distortion by Wayne Houchin delivers a pip migration that feels like analog CGI, and Chris’s own Flash bill change turns receipts and doodles into spendable currency with a reliable, no‑fuss gimmick you can keep in your wallet or phone case. Thread work widens the texture: Venom’s dual system powers a ring sequence where time literally pauses mid‑drop. For stand‑up or family crowds, Fibre Optics by Richard Sanders adds rope momentum, snapping from unequal to equal lengths with the kind of rhythm that photographs well and resets even better.We talk taste and boundaries too. Chris banishes Rubik’s Cube magic presented as speed‑solving skill, arguing for plots that feel impossible rather than merely practiced. His book pick, Jay Sankey’s Unleashed, explains the eclecticism: practical, quirky, audience‑tested ideas across coins, cards, keys, and everyday objects. Even his “non‑magic” item, a screen-less, disposable‑style camera, echoes a core value: be present, capture honest moments, and let artefacts tell the story later, exactly what strong routines do after you leave the table.If you want a set that plays at weddings, restaurants, and corporate walk‑around, clear, commercial, and photogenic, this conversation is a blueprint.Chris’ Desert Island Tricks: 1. Imagination Coins2. Omni Deck3. Directors Cut4. Venom Reel 5. Distortion 6. Dynamic Coins 7. FLASH8. Fibre Optics Banishment. Rubik’s Cube Magic as a Skill Book. Unleashed Item. Disposable Camera Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  21. 129

    Vince Wilson

    What makes a trick live past the applause? We say it’s story, meaning that travels with people when real life hits them in the face outside the venue. With Vince Wilson, we unpack the craft of bizarre magic as a storytelling engine that any performer can use to make their show unforgettable. Vince traces his path from paranormal investigation to skeptical, theatre-first magic and explains why narrative, metaphor, and mood beat out raw method when you want your work to stick.Together we build an “island set” that doubles as a masterclass in framing. An Okito doll becomes a Blair Witch-flavoured parable, a tea reading paints initials with ash and memory, and Odyssey transforms under the lens of folklore “glamour,” turning a visual illusion into a lesson in influence. We go deep on repurposing mainstream props like Prestige through alchemical “equivalent exchange,” proving that originality often lies in language, not hardware. The Witches of Glastonbury lands a portable fable about choice and fear, while a Grim Fairy Tales book test and Pegasus page highlight staging, justification, and the art of not overselling examinability.For scale and pace, tossed-out tarot unlocks room-wide engagement and even a nimble Q&A, powered by ethical cold reading and sharp observation. Then the closer: a lean, consent-forward PK Touches that’s devastating precisely because it’s simple. Vince shares practical guidance on consent lines, pacing, and why over-verification breaks the spell. He also makes a bold case for burying published patter so every magician must find their own voice, because sincerity can’t be borrowed, and booking agents can spot stock lines a mile away.If you want your magic to be remembered tomorrow, this conversation gives you the tools today: justify every choice, give your props provenance, and let your script reflect who you are!Vince’s Desert Island Tricks: 1. Voodoo Doll Stickman2. Tea3. Odyssey 4. The Prestige 5. Witches of Glastonbury 6. Sandman Book Test7. Tossed Out Tarot 8. PK TouchesBanishment. Published scripts Book. Daemon’s DiaryItem. Chinese Fortune Coins Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  22. 128

    Erik Tait

    What makes a close-up set survive bars, restaurants, conventions, and The Magic Castle without breaking stride? We chase that answer with Erik Tait, who lays out eight pieces that hit fast, reset instantly, and leave images people actually remember. From a safer, sleeker ring-to-keys in Flight 101 to a signed card to pocket born from pandemic constraints, Erik shows how speed and clarity beat complexity when you’re performing in the wild. Every choice earns its space, not for novelty, but because it delivers a clean effect under pressure.We dig into the unexpected power of the reverse-cut Mental Photography deck and how to frame “experimental” props so they impress and then disappear before the heat. We rethink cups and balls as a crisp five-minute routine with decisive phases and bold loads. We turn sugar into a 3D-printed salt elephant that guests keep and talk about for years. We even give ambitious card a new spine by using an odd-backed selection, making each rise unmistakable while exploring timing and display in ways that feel fresh and visual.Erik’s coins across opens every table he works, direct, quick, and in their hands, proving the set before a wordy intro can get in the way. Then a handsome wooden update to the classic colour-vision box, Mental Block with a die, fools magicians and invites itself to be performed from a living room mantel. Along the way, Erik banishes rope magic for looking like puzzles, champions The Secrets of So Sato for elegant card thinking, and reveals the humble nail file that quietly shapes his decks and once confounded a precision scale.Erik’s Desert Island Tricks: 1. Flite 101 2. Card to Pocket 3. Mental Photography 4. Cups and Balls 5. Sugar Rabbit 6. Blue Backed Card, Ambitious Card 7. Coins Across 8. Mental Block Banishment. Rope Magic Book. Secrets of So Sato Item. Nail FileFind out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  23. 127

    Stranded with a Stranger: Mark Piazza

    Eight tricks, one book, one banishment and a lifetime of lessons packed into a single, fast-moving session with performer and author Mark Piazza. We trace his arc from 25 years of kids’ shows to a sharp mentalism repertoire, pulling apart the choices that still earn repeat bookings and real reactions. From the tactile honesty of Hundy 500 to the elastic power of propless tools like Quinta, Mark shows how method serves meaning when the script and structure are tuned for impact.We dig into the psychology behind equivoque that feels like prophecy, anchored by Max Maven’s unforgettable line about remembering something that hasn’t happened yet. Then we swing visual with a cap through a clear bottle, complete with a cork for extra conviction and talk about why organic, brand-familiar props beat shiny apparatus in the wild. Personalisation runs deep in Mark’s set: DMC Alpha markings enable a clean, hands-off four-of-a-kind, and a name-spelling revelation turns a quick card effect into a souvenir moment people photograph and share.Classic structure gets a modern skin with a Starbucks chop cup and themed baseball loads, proving that context can refresh method without sacrificing clarity. We close on confabulation, glass boxes, balloons, secret adds and why layered choices plus time misdirection make it so hard to unwind. Mark also shares the book that keeps his creativity sharp, Tractare by R. Shane, and the one technique he’d banish for good. If you care about framing, personalisation, and practical workers that travel light and hit hard, this lineup will sharpen your set and your thinking.Send in your list of 8 tricks, 1 banishment, 1 book and 1 non magic item you use for magic to [email protected] and have your list featured on an episode of Stranded with a Stranger! Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  24. 126

    Craig Petty

    If you’ve ever been told to perfect five tricks and repeat them forever, prepare to toss that rule out. Craig Petty joins us to make a fearless case for evolving your set, testing ideas in the wild, and embracing marketing as part of the craft. He opens up about the morning mantra that fuels his output, how to handle criticism without shrinking, and why passion beats cynicism every time.We move from mindset to mechanics with a desert-island kit that actually works: a Rubik’s Cube routine anchored by a tattoo prediction built for photo moments, the heavyweight surprise of an eight ball production, and Jon Allen’s Destination Box for clean, spectator-handled impossibilities. Craig digs into workhorse tools, rope and rubber bands, that scale from kids’ shows to banquets, with modular phases that survive interruptions and noisy rooms. Then he spotlights the Extractor E2 as a rare “method equals miracle” device, delivering signed-card power with zero heat.Card nerds will love the marked Mnemonica segment where a memorised deck turns pick‑a‑card into name‑a‑card, unlocks jazzing, and frames Darwin Ortiz’s “Test Your Luck” as a perfect opener. And for stage lovers, Split Press earns its keep as a 360‑friendly, roll‑in illusion that lets you control angles and pace a full show. Craig’s forced choice on his own work lands on Chop, and he explains exactly why that utility tool still defines his career.The heart of the hour is a banishment with teeth: cut toxicity and self‑doubt so more magicians create, publish, and perform with courage. We close with a nod to career-making reading, John Bannon’s Impossibilia and a deceptively simple non‑magic item, the humble paperclip, fuelling Jay Sankey’s Paperclipped. Hit play for hard-won insights, practical repertoire, and a reminder to back yourself.Craig’s Desert Island Tricks: Rubiks Cube - Tattoo Reveal Trick Shot Prediction Destination Box Fibre OpticsStrange Exchange E2Marked Deck in MnemonicaSplit Press Craig Petty Release. Chop Banishment. Self Doubt Book. ImpossibiliaItem. PaperclipFind out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  25. 125

    SOS: Peter Nardi

    A sliced finger, a kiwi, and a lesson in checking your props, our cold open sets the pace for a no-fluff, real-world rethink of the “eight tricks for life” challenge. Two years on, Peter Nardi returns to keep what still stuns, swap what no longer fits, and explain exactly why.  We dig into the pieces that survive time and venues: the elegance of Horizontal Card Rise, the open-ended power of Extractor, and iChange, the interchange Peter refined over two decades to make cleaner and easier without losing impact. Then we make bold substitutions. Predator Wallet steps aside for Sharpie Through Card, anchored by Rob Bromley’s ingenious method and the everyday logic of a Sharpie. Fourth Dimensional Telepathy yields to Andy Nyman’s Sophie Trick, where story and structure turn an old Monte idea into meaningful mentalism. Imagine stays because mental photography still crushes lay audiences when paced with confidence, while the Mirage Coin Set earns its keep with Craig Petty’s International Reverse Matrix, fully justified by Peter’s “return tickets” kicker.  The heart of this conversation is a challenge to “magician’s guilt.” Not every prop needs a five-minute alibi. Strong, simple methods often hit hardest when performed for real people, not theoretical critics. We talk audience psychology, why lay-folk don’t track what magicians do, and how to resist theory spirals that never reach a stage. Along the way, Peter swaps his book to Bob Cassidy for evergreen mentalism structure, names Tom Mullica as his dream island companion, relives the pride of 4MG on Britain’s Got Talent, and bottles a couple of horror stories, including that too-sharp knife, so they can drift away.  Looking for inspiration for your own set? This episode blends practical technique, audience-first framing, and candid stories from gigs, TV, and shop floors. If you’re reshaping your material for today’s rooms, you’ll leave with clearer criteria and a few routines worth revisiting. Enjoy the ride, then share your eight, your banishment, and your why. If you like this kind of deep dive into working magic, follow, share with a friend, and leave a review to help more magicians find us.Peter’s Desert Island Substitutions: Predator Wallet for Sharpie Through CardFourth Dimensional Telepathy for The Sophie TrickThe Magic Menu for Artful Mentalism of Bob CassidyBanishment. Magicians GuiltGuest. Tom MullicaMemory. 4MG on Britains Got TalentHorror. Knife Through Kiwi, Through FingerShow. Siegfried and RoyFind out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  26. 124

    Tom Bolton

    A locked gate marked 19½, a tiny office, and a stubborn 19‑year‑old knocking on every bar and hotel in Durham, this is how The Magic Corner began. We sit down with Tom Bolton to unpack how a 10–12 seat room became a destination venue, why careful lighting and sound cues matter as much as sleights, and how seasonal shows keep locals returning with new guests in tow.Tom walks us through the show’s architecture: a bar‑hatch first half, a bookshelf reveal to a ring‑seated second half, and production choices that turn tricks into theatre. Hear how he frames a multiple selection using “principles of magic,” layers Double Cross so spectators can’t backtrack, and uses Inject and Toxic to deliver deeply personal, phone‑based impossibilities. We dig into Loops and PK Touch performed surrounded, Optix for a jaw‑dropping phone vanish, and a chop cup that pays off a promised “elephant” at the perfect moment.Then comes the signature piece: Goblet of Fire. A name is written, the ember rises in amber light as music swells, and the room fills with that hush only real wonder creates. Tom explains how QLab, DMX, and an Audio Ape remote let him run every cue himself, transforming small‑room magic into a cinematic experience. We also explore reviews and tourism wins, TripAdvisor recognition, Fringe lessons from Edinburgh and Adelaide, and a candid banishment of ego‑driven hype.If you love intimate magic, theatrical polish, and creative routing that turns constraints into strengths, this one’s for you. Subscribe, share with a magician friend, and leave a quick review to help others find the show. And if you make it to Durham, grab tickets to The Magic Corner and tell Tom we sent you.Tom Bolton’s Desert Island Tricks: Multiple Selection Double Cross Inject 2.0TOXIC +LOOPSOptix ProChop Cup Goblet of Fire Banishment. Ego in Magic Book. The Particle System Item. QLab Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  27. 123

    Jon Allen

    A great trick hits harder when the audience already cares. That’s the heartbeat of this conversation with creator and worker Jon Allen, where we unpack eight routines he’d take to a desert island and the principles that make them land: meaningful framing, suspense over flash, and full-circle reveals. We start with Silent Treatment, a cinematic cold open that resolves like a twist ending, then move to Destination Box, where Jon breaks down the film-school difference between opaque surprise and clear-box suspense. He shows how a prop can be more than a gimmick, it can be an engine for social chemistry that primes the finale.From there, we go deep on structure and control. Ring on shoelace turns audience assumptions into proof of impossibility. Double Back replaces “watch this” with fast, funny participation that lets spectators trap themselves in their own logic. Coin in Ball of Wool becomes theatre, not puzzle, distance, fairness, and a story you’ll retell for years. Then we shift tones with Pain Game, Jon’s safe, natural-looking Russian roulette where spectators make the choices. It’s danger with purpose, a metaphor for how often we trust others with our safety.We close with two powerhouse pieces. Card Stab blends playful business with a serious, jaw-dropping reveal. And Any Card at Any Number gets a full reframe: it’s not about where the card is, it’s why those two decisions matter. Jon weaves chance, discovery, and personal history into an eight-minute closer that earns every beat of anticipation. Along the way, he banishes ripoffs and empty patter, shouts out Michael Close’s Workers, and reveals the maker tool he won’t live without.Jon's Desert Island Tricks: 1. Silent Treatment 2. Destination Box 3. No Risk 4. Double Back 5. Coin in Ball of Wool 6. Pain Game7. Card Stab 8. Any Card at Any Number Banishment. Rip-off’sBook. Michael Close’s Workers Series Item. Polymorph Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  28. 122

    Stranded with a Stranger: Elliott Hodges

    What if the strongest magic in your set isn’t the flashiest or the fastest to reset, but the piece that shines where you actually perform. Coffee shops, classrooms, living rooms? We sit down with hobbyist magician and primary school teacher Elliott Hodges to explore eight effects that prove context and clarity beat pocket space every time.Elliott opens with Ambitious Jazz, a tight packet routine that builds phase by phase, and Elmsley’s Four Card Trick, a masterclass in logical endings powered by a single elegant move. He champions Quadratic, a lightning-fast calculation stunt that turns everyday calculators into proof of skill, and he shares how Wonder Spot paddles do more than amaze, used with care, they can calm a room and shift emotions. We also dive into the AAA Book Test, a clean, borrowed-book revelation that feels truly impromptu, and Tenyo’s Tower of Dice, a silent visual that doubles itself into disbelief.Along the way, we talk Card Warp as the ultimate everyday carry, adapting to whatever cards or tickets are on hand, and we spotlight Fred Kaps for timeless lessons in timing, expression, and audience command, even after the Beatles. Elliott’s stance is clear: ditch the snobbery that labels effects “beginner.” Foundational methods, smart structure, and honest framing still crush with lay audiences, and books like Scarne on Card Tricks are goldmines for adaptable, modern miracles.If you’re a hobbyist building a set that fits real life, or a pro who wants to refresh fundamentals with purpose, this conversation is your blueprint. Send in your list to [email protected] to have your own episode in the future! Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  29. 121

    SOS: Liam Montier

    Stranded for two years with a snooker table and a legendary list, Liam Montier finally gets a rescue and uses it to rethink everything. We revisit his original Desert Island picks and watch half of them evolve: Dynamic Coins gives way to Peter Kane’s Variant, Psycho Dice upgrades to Steve Cook’s The Gamble, Twilight Angels steps aside for Stephen Tucker’s Alpha to Omega, and John Bannon’s Royal Scam edges out Strangers Gallery. What stays says as much as what changes: The Kick survives on the strength of Gemini Twins, and Out of This World holds its throne as card magic that feels like life, not just cards.Liam digs into why direct plots hit harder, how to escalate fairness across phases, and the art of construction that lets spectators do the impossible. He shares a candid stance on failure, don’t catastrophes it and a pointed banishment: single-trick downloads. We unpack why multi-trick books, lectures, and deep-dive projects build better magicians, widen method literacy, and deliver more value per idea. There’s heart, too: a sliding-doors memory of leaving a hated retail job for Big Blind Media, meeting John Bannon, and finding a path where craft and community meet.For company on the island, Liam chooses Alex Elmsley, eager to talk structure beyond the count, and for a timeless watch he picks John Lenahan’s Stuff the White Rabbit, live-to-camera magic from Rene Lavand to Tom Mullica that proves clarity outlives editing. If you care about strong card magic, practical philosophy, and the choices that shape a repertoire, this rescue mission is packed with insight and inspiration.Liam’s SOS Substitutions: : 1. Dynamic Coins for Kane’s Variant 2. Psycho Dice for The Gamble3. Twilight Angle's for Alpha to Omega 4. Strangers Gallery for Royal Scam 5. Four Card Trick for Predictor Banishment. Single Trick DownloadsGuest. Alex ElmsleyMemory. First time working with BBMHorror Story. Don’t give importance to when things go wrong Show. Stuff the White Rabbit Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  30. 120

    Jamie Daws (& stand in host Peter Nardi)

    This week we flipped the format and put our host in the hot seat to reveal a set that can carry an entire career: intimate close‑up, parlour storytelling, and full‑blown stage moments that stick. The choices are surprising, practical, and deeply audience‑first, from Richard Sanders’ Identity, retooled to fit holiday crowds, to ProMystic’s MD Mini and Inception, a duo that turns mind reading into a shared experience people can’t stop talking about.Joined by guest host Peter Nardi, we dig into why some methods never die when they’re framed as real experiences. Pegasus Page To Lovecraft shows how a torn page can become a narrative anchor and a gift. Killer Elite Pro gets its flowers for transforming a classic mentalism principle into a cinematic micro‑thriller. And Toxic Plus (within the iThump ecosystem) proves that app magic can be invisible, fair, and scalable, whether you’re at a dinner table or in a thousand‑seat theatre, the audience does the work on their own phones while you drive the story.The finale? PK Touches, presented as the closest thing to “real” magic many spectators will ever feel. We talk structure, safety, and why it creates electric rooms where strangers lean in and whisper instead of just cheering. Along the way, we challenge a common fear: chasing only loud “wow” reactions. Magic is an art, and art earns permission to evoke different emotions, curiosity, unease, wonder, even quiet tears. For resources, we spotlight Seance, a bound collection rich with hands‑on séance methods and essays, and a humble non‑magic item, rope, to build a spirit tie and cabinet anywhere, proving that theatre doesn’t need heavy tech to feel impossible.If you love smart, reliable, and story‑driven magic that puts the spotlight on your spectators, you’ll find ideas here to reshape your set and your thinking.Jamie’s Desert Island Tricks: Identity MD Mini Inception Killer Elite ProSpiritPegasus PageTOXIC +PK Touches Banishment. Being worried about eliciting different reactions in an audienceBook. SeanceItem. RopeFind out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  31. 119

    Mark Elsdon

    Join us with today’s guest, creator and curator Mark Elsdon, who champions routines that pair ruthless clarity with stories that belong to the audience. We start where confidence meets courage: Timon Krause’s ‘Which Hand’, a method strong enough to fool Penn & Teller without ‘outs’. From there, we follow Mark’s guiding idea, call them “trips,” not “tricks”, because the goal is to shift someone’s state, not just their attention.Mark opens the vault on eight workers that cover close-up, mentalism, and visual magic. Francis Girola’s Icebreaker turns corporate “get to know you” cards into a clean truth detector with no props to ditch. Gordon Bruce’s legendary Card Under Drink shows how structure and timing can feel like real sorcery. Optix Pro by Tobias Dostal and Henry Harrius delivers a surreal moment where a borrowed phone vanishes and reappears in the spectator’s own hands. Angelo Carbone’s On Edge quietly silences a room as a card tower holds against gravity. Tamariz’s Collective Telepathy corrals free choices into a named icon. Lloyd Barnes’ Six gives you a real-world lottery prediction you can hand out. And Michael Murray’s Between The Lines lets someone read a torn page that mirrors a scene they only imagined seconds earlier.We also dig into language and taste. Mark banishes self-descriptive patter in favour of simple, participant-first phrasing that preserves memory and heightens mystery. His book pick, Gary Kurtz’s Unexplainable Acts, models idea-led routines with elegant construction. His non-magic essential, a laptop, powers The Metabolic Fig, his weekly curation that filters the flood of releases into five sharp recommendations and fresh hooks you can use now.If you care about routines that work in the wild, stories that feel human, and methods that respect the spectator’s memory, this conversation is a roadmap.Check out Mark’s - Metabolic Fig Mail-out: https://ametabolicfig.com/Mark Elsdon’s Desert Island Tricks: Which Hand Ice BreakerCard Under DrinkOptix Pro On EdgeCollective Telepathy SIX Between the LinesBanishment. Self Descriptive PatterBook. Unexplainable ActsItem. LaptopFind out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  32. 118

    Derren Brown: Revisited

    Did you know only one third of people who have listened to Derren Brown’s first episode have actually listened to his second half? We’ve stitched Derren Brown’s most-listened-to conversation into one seamless, ad-free cut and let the craft speak. Across two years of touring, decades of creating, and countless experiments with audience psychology, Derren lays out eight pieces that still earn their place on stage and why they matter: Card At Any Number that puts agency first, a watch stolen and revealed in a sock, a key routine that pays off at your front door, and the Oracle Q&A that proves presence beats method.We dive into the showstopper card-to-box sequence that made entire theatres miss a moment in time, then relive it on screen. Derren shares how he designed content warnings that protected vulnerable audience members without blunting the effect, and why responsible mentalism starts long before showtime. He also revisits an ESP match-up that scales beautifully, a three-card table routine that functions as an act-in-a-pocket, and coin-in-hand as the perfect opener because it feels like a game you’ve played forever. Threaded through it all: improvisation, pacing, tone, and a serious embrace of failure as a tool for making performances human.Along the way, you’ll hear practical insights on stagecraft, participant care, and scripting; why content beats cleverness; how to build moments that breathe beyond the trick; and how writing during a tour sharpens a show. Derren’s book, Notes from a Fellow Traveller, surfaces as a field guide to touring and performance ethics, while he teases a long-awaited mentalism release from Ted Karmilovich that has everyone excited.Stream this special re-release, share it with a friend, and tell us: which of Derren’s eight would make your forever list? If the conversation sparked ideas, subscribe, leave a review, and join us next week for more Desert Island Tricks.Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  33. 117

    Luke Oseland

    Three objects vanish in full view, a phone, a ring, a driver’s license and hours later a sealed box an audience member has guarded all night reveals them all. That’s the finale Luke Oseland built to feel like a live heist, and it says everything about his new approach: relentless clarity, stacked moments, and visuals that travel across any crowd.  We sit down with Luke to trace his pivot from publishing visual social media magic to performing 150-stage-show years across cruise ships and festivals. He breaks down the Fringe lessons that changed his pacing, why family-friendly shows can be both bookable and bold, and how he turns mentalism into a machine of multiple peaks. From a Wakeling-style sawing in half that puzzles long after curtain to a bottle production that buys instant goodwill, his choices reveal a framework: easy to describe, hard to reverse-engineer, and generous to participants.  Luke also opens up about the routines that anchor his set. A spectator-led Out of This World that makes kids the heroes. Double Cross as the one-minute credibility hit he never leaves home without. A signature blank deck sequence built for legibility in low light. A “wrong drink in a can” piece that uses temperature and texture to shock the senses. He reframes Pegasus Page so spectators read each other’s minds, and he explains when he shelves powerhouse effects like Toxic to avoid overlap in festival lineups.  Expect sharp takes and practical tools. He argues escapology often lacks believable jeopardy and offers a fun, life-ruining-stakes straightjacket alternative. He shares how FLIC buttons replaced expensive remotes for show control and why gaffer tape is the secret co-author of most stage solutions. We close with tour plans, accessible book design for neurodiverse readers, and the simple rule that guides his builds: if the audience can tell the story in one sentence, you’ve done the hard work.Luke’s Desert Island Tricks: Sawing In Half Bottle Production Out of this World Double Cross Blank Deck Routine Too Hot To Handle Pegasus Page Heist Banishment. Escapology Book. Self Working Card TricksItem. FLIC Button / Gaffer Tape Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  34. 116

    Harry De Cruz

    The motorbike appears four feet from the front row. A lady floats just beyond the lip of the stage. That proximity rewires what audiences believe about illusion and it’s exactly where Harry DeCruz loves to live: smiling, present, and letting pure astonishment carry the room.We dive into Harry’s journey from creative consultant to centre-stage performer, drawing on years with Derren Brown, Dynamo, and major West End productions. That backstage pressure, writing predictions, guarding contingencies, built a calm that now anchors his stage work. He explains why Ring Flight felt like real magic as a child, how Sneak Thief becomes a playground for storytelling (tattoos, perfumes, nicknames), and why stack work turns a deck into a quiet superpower. We unpack his silent celebrity painting reveal, an “invisible” drawing dusted into view and the subtle design choices that make silhouettes land from the stalls to the balcony.Then the dials turn up. Harry walks us through building a paintball bullet catch: rehearsing in a builder’s yard, safety layers that still leave bruises, and a presentation that balances danger with humour. We go deep on translating Dynamo’s phone-in-bottle from TV to arena stage, custom labels, bottle tolerances, timing, and choreography that lets the miracle read clean and fast. And we explore the “annoyingly perfect” mass phone effect that detonates in any room, giving every spectator a personal climax they can verify on their own device.Throughout, Harry champions props and methods that feel organic and modern, pushing back on dated optics that hold magic back. We talk books and real study (annotating Derren Brown’s Notes from a Fellow Traveller), the value of a trusted WhatsApp braintrust that pressure-tests ideas, and why the Young Magicians Club’s supportive culture is shaping the next wave of performers.If you care about building miracles that stand up at close range and still crush in a theatre, this conversation is a masterclass in design, discipline, and delight.Harry’s Desert Island Tricks: Ring Flight Sneak ThiefDeck of Cards in Mnemonica Silent Painting RoutineSpooked Paintball Bullet Catch Phone in BottleTOXIC +Banishment. Being More Mindful of Props / Large Ring on RopeBook. Notes From a Fellow Traveller Item. Phone with his Whatsapp Group ChatFind out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  35. 115

    Ben Sidwell

    What if the strongest magic isn’t about flashy props, but about influence, structure, and respect for your audience? We sit down with magician Ben Sidwell to map an eight-trick card set that’s lean on gimmicks and heavy on intention, designed to scale from a noisy bar to an intimate parlour room without losing clarity or impact.Ben opens with influence-forward thinking, why “Anything” by Ben Williams plays better as a persuasion piece than a mind read and shows how Jay Sankey’s Paperclipped anchors predictions in an ordinary business card. We dig into wallet philosophy and why reframing “card to wallet” as “it was always there” preserves fairness while turning a daily-carry Orphic wallet into a quiet powerhouse. The conversation then pivots to skill-as-theater with Card to Pocket, where teaching palming mid-routine raises suspense instead of exposing secrets, because the frame is honest: this is a demonstration of timing and control.The Chicago lineage becomes the spine of his closer. Chicago Opener flows into Anniversary Waltz to transform an odd-back snag into a fused, impossible souvenir, fuel for repeat bookings and lasting memories. We expand the scale with spectator-led coincidences like Paul Wilson’s C3 and nods to Woody Aragon and Ben Earl, leaning into that “how could that happen?” feeling that reads mysterious without claiming skill. A final curveball, Chris Ramsey’s Voodoo, brings a touch of the bizarre: a signed blank card as a sympathetic link, a burned proxy, and a scarred signed selection waiting in the deck the audience guarded.Along the way, Ben banishes a habit too common in our scene: forcing magic on people who don’t want it. Consent beats ego. His book pick, John Guastaferro’s One Degree, champions small upgrades, like remembering names, that lift reactions. And his non-magic essential, an X-Acto knife, proves why practical tools keep live shows resilient.If you love card magic that feels honest, plays big, and leaves spectators with souvenirs and stories, this one’s for you.Ben’s Desert Island Tricks: Anything Paper-clipped Opening Act Card to Pocket Chicago Opener Anniversary Waltz Con Cam CoincindenciaVoodoo Banishment. Forcing magic on people Book. One DegreeItem. Exacto Knife Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  36. 114

    Beau Cremer

    A crushed can that heals, a coin that melts through metal, dinner pulled from a menu, and water that keeps turning into wine, this is the kind of night Beau Cremer builds from everyday objects. We invited Beau to share his desert‑island tricks and the result is a playful, punchy roadmap for close‑up magic that lasts beyond one performance. No glitter boxes. No over-talking. Just believable items doing unbelievable things.We kick off with the can trilogy: Anders Moden’s Healed and Sealed, Wayne Houchin’s Sinful, and Jay Sankey’s Stretcher. One can, many miracles, sound, sight, and touch all working to sell reality. From there, Beau serves Food to Go, producing burgers and drinks from a tri‑fold menu, then pours a round of astonishment with Magic Dream’s Infinity W, a repeatable water‑to‑wine transformation that feels iconic yet casual enough for a kitchen counter or a tiki‑style beach bar.For downtime, Sure Shot becomes the most addictive “one more time” dice piece you’ll ever carry, and a single deck powers an endlessly fresh stream of mind-reading and reveals through the “key card” principle. The finale is The Grail by Mike Rose, fast, direct, and devastating, a rare card at any number that keeps the focus on the moment, not the method. Along the way, Beau plants two flagpoles: stop over justifying props (trust the object, not the disclaimer) and keep your creative fuel topped up with the Vanish Magazine collection for bite‑sized essays, interviews, and routines.We even crown a non‑magic MVP: coconuts. Think shell game covers, ring‑in‑coconut reveals, nest‑of‑coconuts, and instant refreshments, all story‑rich and situationally perfect. And when Beau names the one creative partner he’d bring to the island, you’ll see how collaboration turns simple materials into repeatable wonder.If you love organic magic, creative thinking, and routines that hit hard without clunky props, this one’s for you. Press play, then tell us: which everyday object would anchor your dream set? Subscribe, share with a magician friend, and leave a review to help more listeners find the show.Beau’s Desert Island Tricks: Healed and SealedSinfulStretcher Jay Sankey Food to go Infinity WSure Shot Deck of Cards The Grail Banishment. Over justifying props Book. Vanish Magazine Item. Coconuts Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  37. 113

    Steve Gore

    What survives when you strip magic down to its strongest effects? We sit with creator-performer Steve Gore, known for Magic Castle highlights, family stage charisma, and a string of clever releases, to unpack eight routines that earn their spot in a working case and the stories that prove why. From a twin-deck Invisible Deck with a visual box appearance to a sweet, romantic handling of Gypsy Thread for weddings, Steve shows how small framing choices transform classics into fresh, heartfelt moments. He opens with Ambitious Card, complete with a 3D pop-up gag to release tension and explains why it’s his go-to icebreaker for strolling sets.On the stage side, Steve shares the music-driven power of closing with Losander’s Floating Table and the way he normalises the prop by gifting from the table’s box and letting spectators feel it rise. We dig into Together Forever, his misaligned Anniversary Waltz that fuses two signed cards at an angle, and the pinch-me night it drew David Blaine and Patrick Stewart at The Magic Castle. Versatility drives the rest: Axel Hecklau’s Easy Cube that plays the same close-up and on stage, and his “Anything to Anywhere” utility that lands signed objects in lanyards, balloons, shoes, or mailers with clean, motivated staging.We also tour the inventive back catalog, CasinoCon, GPS Deck, Amnesia Deck, Book To The Future and talk about practical philosophy: banishing dated, cheesy material, using organic props like USB cables for rope plots, and choosing a mindset book (Derren Brown’s Happy) to keep calm when the real world intrudes on show plans. If you perform close-up, parlour, or cabaret, you’ll leave with routining ideas, presentational pivots, and a sharper compass for what truly hits.Steve’s Desert Island Tricks: Invisible Deck Gypsy Thread Deck of Cards Floating Table Together Forever Easy Cube Anything to anywhere Linking RingsBanishment. Cheesy Tricks Book. Happy Item. USB CablesFind out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  38. 112

    Dan Baines

    A spirit pressed the bedsheets. A duvet peeled back on its own. And a mummified fairy hoax fooled the world. We sit down with artist and prop-maker Dan Baines to explore how subtle methods and rich storytelling turn haunted curios into unforgettable theatre. From forensics in London to Lebanon Circle’s museum-quality creations for BBC, Warner Brothers, and major exhibitions, Dan shares the craft choices that make bizarre magic feel real: distressed textures, believable provenance, and clever tech that hums quietly beneath vintage veneer.We dig into the roots of Victorian séance magic, spirit cabinets, slates that “write” with sound and vibration, and haunted keys that only move when the story has earned it. Dan shows how theatre informs his work, like the “corpse candle” inspired by fiber optic fireflies on stage, and why the best switches happen early, sometimes under a glass lid that lets spectators “watch” their choices the whole time. His celebrated From Hell take on Out Of This World replaces red and black with blooded blanks and mortuary photos, reframing a classic plot into something that lingers long after the reveal.There’s a wild journey through viral deception and ethics too: the Derbyshire Mummified Fairy that launched a million clicks, museum “relics” that began life in a studio, and the quiet power of letting myths breathe. We also time-travel to the Doomsday Gathering’s growth into a world-class bizarre magic convention, swapping notes on design constraints, stage noise, and why simple methods are a gift, they free your brain to tell better stories.If you love haunted aesthetics, old-school methods, and narrative-first magic that truly crawls under the skin, this is your Halloween comfort listen. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves the macabre, and leave a review telling us which effect gave you chills.Dan’s Desert Island Tricks: Spirit CabinetSpirit Slates The Corpse Candle ‘Haunted’ Effects Out of this World Switch Boxes ScurotLazy Booktest Banishment. Singing unannounced Book. Dunninger's Complete Encyclopaedia of Magic andThree Men in Search of Monsters Item. Bellarmine Witch BottleFind out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  39. 111

    Keith Barry

    A quiet moment in an airport turns unforgettable: Keith Barry shares how a simple card change became a first clear memory for a child recovering from eye cancer and why that reminder of wonder still guides the way he builds every routine. From there, we dig into the material he trusts most, the frameworks that make it bulletproof, and the choices that turn effects into experiences people carry for years.We start with the Invisible Deck and why Jay Sankey’s X handling solves the “you just flipped it” theory. Keith walks through clean stage adaptations, then shifts to his corporate powerhouse: a three envelope test inspired by Bob Cassidy’s 4DT, rebuilt with double blind structure, historical framing, and a ping-pong rhythm that delivers 25 beats from business cards and envelopes. He explains how premise, protocol, and pacing remove false solutions and keep spectators engaged without confusion.Keith also lets us in on a surprise: despite being a self-proclaimed technophobe, he’s getting ridiculous reactions with iCons by building an influence narrative that yields two hits from one search. It’s part of a broader philosophy of growth, cold plunges, virtual studio builds, and doing the uncomfortable thing to stay sharp. That shows up in personal pieces too: carrying a deck for joy and creativity, and a harmonica routine that reveals Hey Jude as a quiet tribute to his father.We cover wallet workflows, his red envelope routine that consistently produces authentic emotion, and why comedy-first staging with Steve Bedwell’s In Over Your Head can supercharge a theatre. Then there’s Smash and Stab: Keith breaks down safety as a mindset, the role of sound design, and the mental reframe that prevents catastrophe. He even makes a case for retiring the Omni Deck, then points to overlooked alternatives that reward originality.If you want stronger mentalism, better framing, and routines that mean something, this one’s for you. Listen, share with a friend who loves magic, and leave a review with the routine you’d add to your forever set.Keith’s Desert Island Tricks: Invisible Deck Three Envelope Test Icons Deck of Cards HarmonicaJAKS WalletIn over your headSmash and StabBanishment. Bad Ego’s / Omni DeckBook. The Klutz Book of MagicItem. Photograph with family Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  40. 110

    Ben Williams

    A lot of magicians are taught to copy the script, dress the part, and never take off their shoe. Ben Williams did the opposite and that’s where the magic got good. We sit down with Ben to map the journey from shop counter to full-time pro, and how ditching ego, reading people, and letting effects breathe turned solid tricks into lasting moments.We walk through the eight workers he’d take to a desert island and the choices behind them: why Ring Flight Revolution becomes a miracle when you slow it down, how Card to Shoe transformed from “never do that” to a signature closer, and the way “Anything” makes prediction feel honest without fussy process. Ben breaks down a Coins Across that escalates cleanly and ends with a personalised photo souvenir, his pragmatic love for Digital Force Bag and how to apply it to the right audience, and a disarming Card in Condom routine built on kindness and careful framing. We revisit his evolution from OCL to Rings for linking cards, same impossible souvenir, smarter method and the un-gimmicked Photo Frame change that fuels upsells, referrals, and framed memories that live on long after the gig.Threaded through every piece is a clear philosophy: fewer phases, stronger beats, context over dogma, and spectators treated as people first. Ben names ego as the thing he’d banish, then points to tools that actually help, Fitzkee’s The Trick Brain as a creativity blueprint and humble elastic as a versatile engine for movement, vanishes, and clever mechanics. If you want a set that travels from weddings to corporate floors with equal power, and a voice that’s yours, not a borrowed script, this conversation maps the path.If this episode sparked ideas, share it with a friend, hit follow and leave a quick review!Ben Williams’ Desert Island Tricks: 1. Ring Flight Revolution 2. Card to Shoe3. Anything 4. Coins Across 5. Digital Force Bag 6. Card in Condom 7. Rings 8. Photo Phrame Banishment. EgoBook. The Trick BrainItem. ElasticFind out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  41. 109

    R Paul Wilson

    The work is the point. That’s the pulse of this candid, wide-ranging session with R. Paul Wilson, creator, consultant, and the mind behind The Real Hustle, where we dig into what actually makes magic land: clear effects, honest timing, and an audience that edits your choices in real time. We open with a hard truth: there are no shortcuts. From Vernon’s Triumph to cups and balls, Paul shows how iteration, not novelty for novelty’s sake, transforms a trick from “doable” to “devastating.”We trace his path through cornerstone pieces, Coins Across, Cylinder and Coins grounded in Ramsey’s discipline, and the folded card as a perfect state-change convincer. Each routine becomes a lab for tightening language, shifting moments, and cutting clutter so spectators feel the miracle before they hear it. Paul’s story about reconstructing and refining a rare take on René Lavand’s Breadcrumbs reveals what deep study looks like: research, respect, and a poetic frame that makes people care.Then we zoom out. A guitar shows up, not as a prop, but as cross-training. Learning music sharpened his teaching, exposed the myth of “easy,” and mapped directly onto sleight-of-hand: structure practice, embrace the slog, and aim for competent, confident, and comfortable. We also step into memorised deck thinking, why Simon Aronson’s “Everybody’s Lazy” still feels impossible, and how Tamariz’s mindset unlocks new doors in any stack. Paul rounds it out with cups and balls as an act-in-a-pack and a lifelong workshop, from Elmsley and Williamson to Tommy Wonder.Along the way, he buries one thing: resentment. We talk about healthier ways to handle influence, invention, and disagreement in a small, connected art form, private conversations over public pile-ons, and effect-first decisions over hype. If you care about building stronger routines, cleaner methods, and a better culture, you’ll feel at home here. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves real craft, and leave a review telling us which routine or insight you’re taking back to your practice.R Paul Wilson’s Desert Island Tricks: Dai Vernon’s Triumph Coins AcrossCylinder and Coins Folded CardBreadcrumbs Musical Instrument Memorised Deck Cups and Balls Banishment. Resentment Book. The New Greater MagicItem. A very good knifeFind out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  42. 108

    Joel M

    A live show opens with robots, kids, and pure energy, then the control room realises ten full minutes aired with no sound. What happens next says everything about a presenter who helps to keep everything flowing and use his incredibly personable persona to make a disaster feel like it barely even happened. That’s our entry point into a fast, generous conversation with Northern Irish magician and Blue Peter presenter Joel M about building routines that survive chaos, delight kids and adults, and still feel fresh after thousands of views.We trace Joel’s path from early stage shows to viral short‑form clips where his brother’s reactions became a storytelling engine. He breaks down why packaging matters as much as method when you’re competing with global feeds, and how he curates classics and modern visual pieces for attention, pacing, and punch. Then we dive into his “desert island” list, eight workers across cards, mentalism, and simply put, pure joy. Expect a “special” deck paired with Mnemonica for quick, impossible hits; a Clarity Box used as a late‑show kicker rather than a card location; iCurveball for durable, app‑free phone mind reading; an add‑a‑number pad that routes memories and PINs cleanly; billets with Acidus Novus, the move that built a career; Tenyo’s Crystal Cleaver for unapologetic wonder; Liam Montier’s Timeless, framed as pseudo‑hypnosis; and Blockhead, reimagined through a candid story about psychosomatic pain and the brain’s strange wiring.Along the way, Joel shares pragmatic rules for stronger shows: design for robustness, not fragility; avoid repeating the same revelation three ways; cut hack lines that punch down; and let meaning carry the shock. His book choice, Derren Brown’s Notes from a Fellow Traveller, speaks to building theatre that lasts. His non‑magic tool, a Blue Peter badge, proves that props with story palm better in the audience’s mind.If you love real talk about creating modern magic that works on stage, on camera, and with families, this one’s a keeper. Joel’s Desert Island Tricks: Deck of Playing Cards Clarity Box iCurvball Kozar Prediction PadBillets / Acidus NovusCrystal Cleaver Timeless Blockhead Banishment. “Hold out your hand.. no, the clean one. Oh, that was the clean one”Book. Notes from a Fellow Traveller Item. Blue Peter Badge Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  43. 107

    Christopher Taylor

    What happens when the universe sends you a sign? For Christopher Taylor, it came in the form of a prisoner's profound question and a late-night phone call from David Copperfield on the very same day his wife encouraged him to pursue magic full-time.In this captivating episode, Christopher shares his remarkable journey from prison guard to classroom teacher to pioneering creator of electronic mentalism. As one of the first innovators in this field, his products like Equinox, Real Ghost, and Death Toll have revolutionised how performers approach classic effects by creating versions that look "as if they could be done for real."Christopher's approach to magic transcends mere methodology. A skilled storyteller, he explains how narrative transforms tricks into meaningful experiences, emphasising that a well-told story must stand on its own merits before magic is introduced. His philosophy that "the story is what makes the audience hungry" offers a masterclass in creating context that elevates magical moments.Perhaps most thought-provoking is Christopher's perspective on magic itself. He challenges the notion that "there's no such thing as magic," arguing instead that magic is as real as comedy or tragedy, it simply requires a particular viewpoint. The synchronicities in his own life, like David Copperfield calling at the perfect moment, reveal the magical structures that exist if we're willing to see them.Whether you're a creator, performer, or simply fascinated by the psychology behind powerful experiences, Christopher's insights into electronic mentalism, storytelling technique, and the philosophy of impossible moments will transform how you think about the art of astonishment.Christopher’s Desert Island Tricks: Equinox PK Touch / Real GhostTaylor Index Decoding SystemThe Prisoner Overkill Card Under TableTrilogy Scrying Out LoudBanishment. The idea that there is no such thing as magicBook. Storytelling: Process and PracticeItem. Keys Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  44. 106

    John Carey

    Card magic legend John Carey takes us on a fascinating journey through the eight tricks that defined his remarkable career, from the streets of London to teaching in 26 countries worldwide.   John's selections reveal the essence of powerful, practical magic. The Biddle Trick, with its multiple magical moments in a single effect. Triumph, where chaos transforms into perfect order except for the spectator's selection. Cards Across, which proves equally effective in close-up or stage settings. ACCAN (Any Card At Any Number), the plot magicians have pursued for generations. The Ambitious Card, with John's advice to limit phases and build to an impossible climax. Think-a-Card, perhaps the purest demonstration of apparent mind-reading possible with playing cards. His One Coin Routine, the visual magic that saved him in challenging performance environments. And finally, Card to Impossible Location, creating unforgettable magical moments when signed cards appear where they simply cannot be.  Throughout our conversation, John shares performance wisdom gained over decades: "Less is more." "The effect should build, never plateau." But his most powerful insight comes from legendary performer Fay Presto: "The magic must always be strong, but YOU are the effing magic." John's personality shines through each routine, reminding us that technical perfection means nothing without the human connection that transforms tricks into magic.  John's Desert Island Tricks offers a masterclass in selecting effects that stand the test of time while allowing your personality to make them uniquely yours.John’s Desert Island Tricks:Biddle TrickTriumph Cards acrossACAANAmbitious cardThink a cardOne coin routineCard to impossible locationBanishment. Chinese Sticks Book. Royal Road to Card Magic Item. Personality Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  45. 105

    James Brown

    What if everything you thought about magic was missing the point entirely? Prolific creator James Brown shatters conventional wisdom about magical performance, revealing that the true essence of magic isn't found in secrets, techniques, or special abilities, but in the powerful human connections we create.  James' journey into magic wasn't the traditional path. Without childhood exposure or magician parents, he approached the art without the constraints and rules most practitioners inherit. This fresh perspective allowed him to focus intensely on what truly matters: creating genuine moments of wonder through psychological understanding rather than technical mastery. His revolutionary approach to classics like Card Under Box and Double Cross demonstrates how reframing effects around spectator experience rather than magician prowess creates more powerful, memorable magic.  Through his desert island selections, from the incredible "Push" to his signature "Pot of Jam”, James reveals a philosophy that places human connection at the centre of magical performance. He challenges the ego-driven culture that pervades much of modern magic, where exposure fears and celebrity worship distract from magic's true purpose. In an age where AI threatens to replace content creation, James argues that magic offers something irreplaceable: genuine human interaction that creates moments of wonder no technology can duplicate. His passion for creating experiences so powerful that methods become irrelevant offers a refreshing counterpoint to the anxieties about exposure that consume many performers.  James’ Desert Island Tricks: Push Card Under Box Top Change Coinvexed Crazy Mans Handcuffs Double Cross Pot of Jam Coins Across Banishment. Magicians Ego / Exposure & Quality of magic on Social MediaBook. Reality as an Art by Aaron Alexander Item. Mind of the SpectatorFind out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  46. 104

    Marvin Berglas

    This week we welcome Marvin Berglas, President of The Magic Circle and the creative force behind Marvin's Magic, as he shares the extraordinary journey that shaped his legendary career.Marvin's story begins with a powerful lesson in resilience, when a Harrods buyer dismissively tossed his product aside calling it "that old stinker," he responded not with defeat but determination. Returning weeks later to a different department, he secured a promotion that blossomed into a 40-year relationship and millions of units sold. This pivotal moment embodies the positive mindset that would become his hallmark.Growing up as the son of magic legend David Berglas provided Marvin with a unique perspective on the art form, though he admits he wasn't initially drawn to magic as a child. It wasn't until his late teens when he unexpectedly assisted his father at a convention that the magic bug bit him. From there, he forged his own distinctive path while honouring his father's legacy , "We reached the top differently," he reflects, "I used my first name while he used his last name."Throughout our conversation, Marvin reveals the philosophy behind Marvin's Magic's enduring success, prioritising quality, innovation, and the genuine joy of performing. His product line has evolved from classic boxed sets to cutting-edge creations like iMagic, which seamlessly blends physical props with augmented reality. These innovations have inspired countless performers, with many of today's professional magicians tracing their initial spark to owning a Marvin's Magic set.The episode culminates with Marvin's reflections on his role as Magic Circle President, where he's spearheading initiatives to preserve magical heritage while embracing new technologies and supporting the next generation through the Young Magicians Club. His unwavering commitment to positivity shines through as he declares what he'd banish if given the chance, negativity itself.Join us for this captivating conversation that peels back the curtain on a magic legend and reveals how magic can transform lives when powered by the belief that nothing is impossible.Marvin’s Desert Island Tricks: Deck of Cards Book TestPseudo Psychometry Dice Appearing Helicopter Lights from Anywhere iMagicThumb Tip Banishment. NegativityBook. Mind and Magic of David Berglas Item. Mobile PhoneFind out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  47. 103

    Nikolas Mavresis

    Nikolas Mavresis, one of magic's most inventive mentalism creators, opens up about the effects that shaped his journey from magic skeptic to prolific innovator. This conversation reveals the fascinating truth behind his creative process and how he approaches method selection."You have to put yourself in the spectator's shoes and think like laymen," Nikolas explains, pinpointing why some magicians dismiss powerful methods that laypeople find utterly baffling. This philosophy of prioritising audience experience over magician preferences has guided his approach to creating memorable magic.Nikolas walks us through the eight effects that would accompany him to a desert island, starting with John Bannon's Twisted Sisters, the packet trick that showed him how eight cards could create an unforgettable miracle. From Simon Aronson's Shuffleboard with its escalating series of revelations to Joshua Jay's Inferno that feels "real" to spectators, each selection reveals another facet of Nikolas’ mentalism approach.When discussing his own creation, The Collector, Nikolas shares a fascinating insight into his method design: "When you combine two different methods together, one method cancels the other, making it impossible for people to backtrack." This strategic layering of techniques has become a signature element in his work, including recent releases like Card At Any Role and Nostalgia.The conversation takes an unexpected turn when Nikolas connects his music background to his magic creation. "It's like writing a song," he explains. "Magic needs good timing, nice flow... it's a way to express what's inside and connect with others through the things I build." This cross-disciplinary approach might explain the rhythmic, emotionally resonant quality that makes his effects so powerful.Whether you're a fan of Nikolas’ work, a mentalism enthusiast, or a creator looking for inspiration, this episode offers rare insights into the mind of someone who has mastered the art of creating magic that genuinely connects with audiences. Discover why Nikolas believes his Desert Island book selection, Practical Mental Magic by Theodore Annemann, remains essential reading for anyone serious about mentalism.Nikolas’ Desert Island Tricks: Twisted SistersShuffle BoredInferno Memorised Deck Killer Elite Pro The Collector SnapsAnniversary Waltz Banishment. Drama and Negativity Book. Practical Mental Magic Item. Musical Instrument / Music / GuitarFind out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  48. 102

    Ben Hanlin

    Ever wondered what happens when a car vanish illusion goes wrong hours before filming? Or how swallowing needles helped a struggling magician pay his rent before television fame? Ben Hanlin pulls back the curtain on these stories and more in this incredible episode.The celebrated British magician, known for ITV's "Tricked" and Discovery's "Breaking Magic," reveals the eight effects that defined his career, from close-up card magic that stops conversations instantly to elaborate television spectacles requiring aircraft hangars and custom-built props. His selections paint a portrait of modern magic's diverse landscape, where success requires mastering both intimate performances and grand illusions.Ben's journey from Birmingham recruitment consultant to television star hinged on unexpected moments, like performing needle swallowing on the streets of Stratford-upon-Avon and later for Kim Kardashian on a yacht. He shares the high-stakes problem-solving required when overnight temperature changes threatened to ruin a £10,000 television illusion just hours before filming. These behind-the-scenes glimpses reveal the combination of creativity, technical knowledge and quick thinking that professional magic demands.What makes this conversation particularly fascinating is Ben's thoughtful analysis of why certain effects connect with audiences. Whether discussing the natural tension created by water escapes or the visual impact of producing liquid from nowhere, he demonstrates a deep understanding of audience psychology that transcends mere technical execution. His candid thoughts on outdated props ("no grown man should be walking around with a purse frame") and his recommendations for creativity tools offer valuable insights for performers across disciplines.Join us for this entertaining exploration of magic's past, present and future through the eyes of one of Britain's most versatile performers. Whether you're a devoted magic enthusiast or simply curious about the craft behind the illusions you've seen on television, Ben's stories will change how you view the art of deception.Ben’s Desert Island Tricks: Multiple Selection Needle SwallowMoving Car Vanish Manip Act Sam the Bellhop Beer ProductionPhone in Fish Water Torture EscapeBanishment. Purse Frame / Rope Around Neck / Confabulation Routines Book. Books of WonderItem. Evernote Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  49. 101

    Wayne McEwan

    Step into the magical world of Wayne McEwan, New Zealand's premier children's entertainer and versatile performer who has earned both the Lifetime Achievement Award from Magic New Zealand and Children's Entertainer of the Year honours from the Variety Artist Club of New Zealand.  Wayne takes us on a captivating journey through his desert island magic selections, beginning with "Howzatt" by Michael J. Fitch, a cricket-themed paddle trick that culminates in the production of a mini cricket ball. This culturally relevant choice perfectly illustrates Wayne's thoughtful approach to connecting with his New Zealand audiences through their passion for sports.  His customised Copper-Silver-Brass coin routine reveals the depth of his performance philosophy. Rather than using standard coins, Wayne employs an authentic Chinese coin, an old New Zealand penny, and a contemporary 50-cent piece to weave a fascinating narrative about New Zealand's gold mining history, demonstrating how magic can become more meaningful when anchored in local heritage.  The conversation takes a thrilling turn when Wayne describes his children's show favourite, "Snakeless" by Mike Bent, a multilayered routine featuring creepy crawlies, an animated spider that climbs up his trousers, and a spring snake finale that creates absolute "pandemonium" among young audiences. His detailed explanation showcases the brilliant psychology behind effective children's entertainment.  What makes this episode particularly valuable is Wayne's insights into performing across different venues, from restaurants to large festivals, from intimate birthday parties to corporate events. Each selection in his list serves a specific purpose in his professional repertoire, from the beautifully crafted Babu Wallet for close-up performances to "Slice of Magic" that gets him significant media coverage when he cuts a child in half during family shows.  Wayne's passion for quality magic is evident in his reverence for Tommy Wonder's Nest of Boxes and his recommendation of "The Secret Ways of Al Baker" as his desert island book. His selection of his two performing parrots as his non-magic item offers a glimpse into the personal connection he has with his animal performers.Wayne’s Desert Island Tricks: Howzatt Copper, Silver, BrassSnakeless Slashed Babu Wallet Bill in Lemon Slice of Magic Nest of Boxes Banishment. Zombie BallBook. The Secret Ways of Al BakerItem. ParrotsFind out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

  50. 100

    Tony Antoniou

    When magic meets craftsmanship, something special happens. Tony Antoniou embodies this intersection as both a lifetime Magic Circle member and the creative force behind The Mind Hacker, crafting exquisite leather goods that expand the use of popular effects from post-it pads to ProMystic effects.His selections paint a fascinating portrait of his evolution from close-up performer to mentalist, with each choice reflecting deep consideration of what makes magic truly impactful.The journey begins with the versatile Real Die, a pocket miracle that delivers far more than simple prediction and his own creation, Circle of Destiny, which employs a unique utility move he developed for billets. Tony's candid discussion about Red Hot Mama showcases his understanding of performance psychology, while his preference for Zoltar's Opener over the legendary Invisible Deck demonstrates his willingness to evolve beyond traditional standbys.What's particularly illuminating is Tony's philosophy on taking controlled risks, inspired by his friendship with David Berglas (whose book he selected as his desert island reading). This mindset permeates his approach to both performing and creating magic, explaining how he's able to blend technical precision with genuine astonishment.Discover how a coffee machine fuels magical creativity, why awkward performances deserve banishment, and what makes a leather craftsman's approach to magic uniquely powerful. This episode offers a masterclass in magical thinking from someone who's dedicated his life to elevating the art.Tony’s Desert Island Tricks: Real Die The Circle of Destiny Red Hot Mamma / Chicago Opener Imaginary Shopping List Zoltar’s Opener Heirloom Emily’s Revenge Card Warp John Kennedy Card Box / Colin Rose Card Index Banishment. French Kiss / Egg bag Book. Mind and Magic of David Berglas Item. Coffee Machine / Finger RingFind out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Each week we invite one of the biggest guests in the world of magic to maroon themselves on a desert island. They are allowed to take with them 8 tricks, 1 book, 1 banishment and 1 non magic item that they use for magic! We discuss their 'can't live without' lists and why those items were chosen. Episodes are uploaded every Friday and are available via all Podcast service providers! To find out more about the team behind Desert Island Tricks, please visit: www.alakazam.co.uk

HOSTED BY

Alakazam Magic

Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Desert Island Tricks have?

Desert Island Tricks currently has 50 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Desert Island Tricks about?

Each week we invite one of the biggest guests in the world of magic to maroon themselves on a desert island. They are allowed to take with them 8 tricks, 1 book, 1 banishment and 1 non magic item that they use for magic! We discuss their 'can't live without' lists and why those items were...

How often does Desert Island Tricks release new episodes?

Desert Island Tricks has 50 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to Desert Island Tricks?

You can listen to Desert Island Tricks on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts Desert Island Tricks?

Desert Island Tricks is created and hosted by Alakazam Magic.
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