Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Preview of Magic Magazine for March 2014

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MAGIC Magazine March 2014 CoverMAGIC Magazine January 2014From The Editor

The March 2014 issue of MAGIC Magazineis now out. If you haven't already received your copy, here's a look at what's coming your way.

MAGIC Magazine is also available for the iPad. The cost is only $3.99 per issue, and it arrives within a few minutes. Best of all, you can enjoy it wherever you want.

Thanks for your continuing support…

Stan Allen








Stories in MAGIC this month: Alt

Solving the Puzzle of Ryan Oakes
By Tom Wallace
Acclaimed by his peers even as a youngster, Ryan Oakes has forged a successful career in magic, somehow keeping a low profile while being involved in highly visible projects. Corporate shows, a television series, and a magic set branded with his name keep Ryan busy, in New York City — and far beyond.


Tempered GlassTempered Glass Phenomena
By William E. Spooner
Call them Prince Rupert's Drops or the Devil's Tears. No matter the name, the curious properties of tempered glass products have intrigued and entertained scientists and magicians for centuries.


Sirens at Sea
Sirens at Sea
By Rory Johnston
A magic production show starring a female magician is still unusual, especially when the producer is also a woman. But having one woman create and produce three such shows, running concurrently on different cruise ships, and star in one herself is truly unique. Yet that is what Connie Boyd has achieved.

Sirens at Sea
The Rameses Royal Centenary
By Chris Woodward
March 1914 saw the first Royal Variety Performance for the King and Queen of England at the London Palladium. And it was a magician, Rameses the Necromancer, who was chosen to close the show.
Wizard Wars


Wizard Wars
By Alan Howard
Pair up four magicians, give them some random items, and see what magic they can create. That's the premise behind Wizard Wars, a pilot for a new television show on Syfy cable network.

Correction: As the March issue went to print, the pilot episode ofWizard Wars was scheduled to premiere on Tuesday, March 4. It has since been pulled from that time slot, with no new airdate available.


Plus Updates on…
    Vegas Tent
  • The 2014 edition of the Columbus Magi-Fest
  • Extreme Vegas, a hybrid magic/dance/circus production
  • The Winter Festival of Magic in Indianapolis
  • Derek Hughes' Insomnia
  • Remembrances of Scott Lewis, Dave Madden, and Brian McCullagh

Bonus Content for the March Issue…
  • The original test competition that led to the pilot episode of Wizard Wars
  • Jason England explaining some of the finer points of tricks from Close Culls
  • Convention Podcast: Florida State Magic Convention

Products reviewed this month:

Fifteen products are reviewed this month by Peter Duffie, Jason England, Gabe Fajuri, Jared Brandon Kopf, Francis Menotti, Arthur Trace:

Hungry? by Mathieu Bich Alt
Cruise Magic 101 by Nick Lewin
Psy-Colony by Gary Brown
Click 2 by Valdemar Gestur
Twisted Queens by SansMinds
Instant Fortune Teller by McTaggart and Hall Alt
Allegro by Miguel Puga
EP by Valdemar Gestur
SoundzAmazing by MagiGadgets
RE by Chris Webb
Heinstein's Dream by Karl Hein
Built to Last with Doug Conn
Showmanship for Magicians by Dariel Fitzkee
Alluminati by Chris Oberle
MAYHEW: What Women Want by John Lovick


And there's even more tricks and advice this month:

Harapan OngIan RowlandMike CaveneyMark KornhauserSimon CoronelScott Tokar
First Look: Close Culls
Harapan Ong
Readers of MAGIC Magazine will recognize the name Harapan Ong, as he has previously shared several moves and routines in Joshua Jay's "Talk About Tricks" column. Of his native Singapore, Harapan says, "We don't get much outside influence from other magicians, but I believe this has been a blessing in disguise. It has given me the potential to explore magic without preconceived limits or constraints." Most of Harapan's material deals with the spread cull, a sleight he has dissected and enhanced in several intriguing ways, as you will see in these four effects excerpted from his new booklet, Close Culls.

Loving Mentalism: Gorilla Mentalism
Ian Rowland
This month's "Loving Mentalism" comes with an apology. There are already so many mentalism routines featuring gorillas, and I'm sure readers will be bored by the very idea of trudging through yet another. Alas, in a shameful display of barren creativity, that's exactly what's on offer this month — one more gorilla mentalism routine to add to the pile. What's it about? Well, attention blindness is the theme, and it's about putting a picture of a 300-pound gorilla right in front of people and yet, due to a quirk of the mind, they never even notice it's there.

Bent on Deception: Get Smart: Control vs. Chaos
Mike Bent
A lot of children's entertainers are at the extreme ends of the control vs. chaos seesaw. Some are control freaks who don't allow for any spontaneity and make the kids almost afraid to laugh or respond. Others are the wacky uncle who comes for a visit, gets the kids all hyper and sugared up, and then leaves right before the inevitable meltdown. I've learned that, for me, the answer isn't just a balance between the two, because when you're working with kids, things can easily tip out of balance. The answer is much easier than that and can be broken down into six easy steps.

Classic Correspondence from Egyptian Hall Museum: Percy Naldrett to Reg Wishart
Mike Caveney
Everyone who knew Percy Naldrett said he was a character. By the time of his death in 1973 at age 88, he had become a grand old man of magic, having witnessed so much of what the British magic scene had to offer during the 20th century. Naldrett was an inveterate letter-writer and his missives were filled with news, gossip, advice, and opinions. This letter to a magician named Reginald Wishart described, among other topics, Amac's illusion called Find the Lady.

For What It's Worth: Pulitzer Prize for Kornhauser?
Mark Kornhauser
Although I have always had a preference for the Nobel Peace Prize, who could turn down a Pulitzer? Unfortunately, it costs fifty dollars just to submit an application to the nominating committee. And who knows, I might not even qualify. But simply having the name "Kornhauser" and "Pulitzer" in the title makes it more likely that there will be some status benefit for me. It's just the way Google and humans work. I'm simply applying the widely accepted self-aggrandizing ethos of the day. I have broken no laws and I manage to draw attention to myself. Thanks for listening. Like me on Facebook.

Walkabout Soup: Expensive Illumination
Simon Coronel
There was this card sandwich routine that I used to do, one of those "Jacks-as-detectives trap the chosen card between them" type of effects. I'd given it a deliberately melodramatic presentation. Part of the script went: "This is going to be a film noir piece. Imagine that we're doing this in a dark room with an overhead spotlight and a Henry Mancini track playing. We didn't have the production budget to do it for real, so use your imagination." Given that I usually performed the routine in restaurants, this was obviously a joke. But then I thought, What about actually doing it? Actually getting an overhead spotlight, killing the lights, and doing the trick to dramatic music. Particularly in the Magic Castle's Close-up Gallery, that would look awesome…

Real-World Methods: One Thing
Scott Tokar
Cocky. That is what the famous Dutch magician Peter Pit used to call me. Back when I was a Junior at the Magic Castle, maybe seventeen or eighteen years old, I didn't get along so well with Peter, maybe because he often called me "cocky" or maybe because I was just too self-assertive. But even though we didn't form a close bond of friendship — or even a mutual respect, for that matter — Peter Pit gave me, as a young man, the most important advice I have ever received: "In order to become a real success in magic, you should focus on one thing and master it. Take that one thing and make it yours." 

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

I got this from facebook and 11 minutes later I checked for my sticker. They are tricking me. Screw you facebook!

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Saturday, February 1, 2014

Magic Magazine Preview February 2014

I sent this out later than I wanted to. 

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MAGIC Magazine January 2014 CoverMAGIC Magazine January 2014From The Editor

If you have not tried out our MAGIC Plus, this is a great month to do so.

There's a tutorial video of V.I.P. Card Through Handkerchief from Steve Valentine, as well as a clip of Dick Turpin — one of Steve's mentors — performing Cards to Pocket. And for even more Mr. Valentine (in February, no less), we have posted his December 2007 interview from this magazine.

There's also a video sampler of BeBop Bamboozled, the Super Bowl XXIII Halftime Show featuring magic in 3-D, and the entire first episode of a new Irish magic series. And of course, Jason England walks you through the latest card tutorial.

It's all available on the MAGIC Plus page atwww.MAGICmagazine.com. Your copy of the February issue is your key. Enjoy!

Thanks for your continuing support…

Stan Allen

P.S. MAGIC Magazine is also available for the iPad. The cost is only $3.99 per issue, and it arrives within a few minutes. Best of all, you only buy it once, then you own it forever and can enjoy it wherever you want.



Steve ValentineV.I.P. Card Through HandkerchiefMore stories in MAGIC this month:

Steve Valentine: His Magic, His Mentors,
and His Rediscovery of the Real Secrets of Magic

By Chris Philpott
Steve Valentine once described himself as "an actor and a magician, playing the part of a magician as an actor, playing a magician as an actor acting as a magician." Lay audiences know him for his many television roles, while magicians know him as a close-up performer who studies and honors the masters and mysteries of the past.


V.I.P. Card Through Handkerchief
By Steve Valentine
Here are two impromptu variations of a classic effect, adapted by Steve Valentine from the work of past masters of magic Paul Rosini and Edward Victor.



SuperbowlThe Most Watched Magic Event in History
By Rory Johnston
Twenty-five years ago, Dan Witkowski presented a halftime show that may have changed the way such Super Bowl events have been done ever since. He did it with innovation, nerve, and magic.



Paul Gleeson, Behind the Scenes
By Jamie D. Grant
Paul Gleeson, known onstage as Rua, is one of the latest magicians to have his own television series — and he is the first and only magician to do so in Ireland, presented entirely in the Irish language.

Johnny Eck
The Remarkable Johnny Eck
By Mark Walker
He was one of the most unusual secrets in magic, the truly baffling star of an illusion that is still whispered about today. Sideshow performer Johnny Eck was also a magician in his own right, a painter, and so much more -- while being so much less.

Jason England
Plus Updates on…
  • Voronin's show, The Count's Ball, plays Berlin
  • Wayne Alan revives an old theater in Virginia
  • Danny & Stacey Cole produce magic in Albuquerque
  • Donations roll in for the Brookledge Follies
  • Remembrances of Karl Norman and Rod "The Hop" Dee

Bonus Content in MAGIC Plus
  • Steve Valentine teaching the V.I.P. trick
  • Vintage footage of Dick Turpin performing Cards to Pocket
  • An excerpt from Rua's magic series on Irish television
  • Highlights of the 1989 Super Bowl halftime show
  • Jason England explaining some of the finer points of tricks fromMayhew
  • PDF of "In His Words: Steve Valentine" from December 2007
  • Convention Podcast: Abbott's Close-up Convention

More products reviewed this month:

Sixteen products are reviewed this month by Peter Duffie, Jason England, Greg Gleason, Jared Brandon Kopf, Francis Menotti, Arthur Trace:

Too Hot for the Devil by Matt Field and Tom Gagnon Masters of Illusion
Undiluted Hocus-Pocus by Martin Gardner
Numbers, Cards, and Time! By Carlos Vinuesa
The Messado Rings by Joshua Messado
Techno Pop by Jack Carpenter
Illusion Paradigm by Paul Osborne & Friends
Fractalicious with John Bannon and Liam Montier
Reflex by Patrick Kun
Secrets of My Magic by David Devant Masters of Illusion
The Secrets of Packet Tricks,
Vols. 1-3
 by L&L Publishing
Tips on Comedy for Magicians: Vol. 1 with Robert Baxt
The Red Envelope with David Sousa
Do Not Disturb! by Thomas Heine and Rainer Mees
Alien Concepts, Vols. 1 & 2 by Anthony Asimov
Snow Blind and Color Blast Cards by Bob Solari


And there's even more tricks and advice this month:

MayhewIan RowlandMike CaveneyMark KornhauserSimon CoronelFirst Look: Mayhew
John Lovick
Stephen Minch writes: "If you live in the Tacoma-Seattle area of Washington, or if you keep your fingers pressed firmly to the pulse of card magic barely overground, you know who Steve Mayhew is, and you will be excited to learn that, after more than ten years of intense and unceasing labor, a slender volume of nearly all his magic is being released. Steve Mayhew is, without question, the greatest exponent and innovator of card magic to have lived since J.N. Hofzinser. Now, I'm delighted to say, thanks to the long labors of John Lovick, we submit the following [three effects] in evidence."

Loving Mentalism: The Purple Cow
Ian Rowland
A grand illusion is on offer this month in "Loving Mentalism." It's an illusion in which a cow transforms into a horse right before a spectator's eyes! Well, maybe "grand illusion" is taking things a little too far. It's all done with a simple card containing a few questions, and the illusion only takes place in the spectator's mind rather than on a Las Vegas stage. Nonetheless, it's a simple and deceptive little mystery that shows you're a master of persuasion and mind manipulation.

Bent on Deception: The Mysterious Case of the Missing Matching Mitten
Mike Bent
This routine uses two ideas from Billy McComb. You invite a helper onstage, then show five different cards, each printed with a different-colored mitten. After you place the five cards aside, you ask your helper to turn around. Then you show the audience an envelope with a window cut out. The envelope contains a single card. You explain to the audience that the card is your prediction, and show a picture of a red mitten that your helper needs to match. Next, you take the prediction card out of the envelope and place it aside, face down. You spread the stack of face-down cards in front of your helper and ask her to choose a card that she thinks will match the prediction you showed earlier. She turns over her card to show a yellow mitten! You act disappointed. You say "Sorry, it's not a match" as you turn over the prediction card to reveal — a yellow mitten! Your helper did get it right! But what happened to the red mitten? As you turn around to look for it, a cutout of a red mitten is stuck on your backside!

Classic Correspondence from Egyptian Hall Museum:
R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. to Stephen Patrick

Mike Caveney
"It's Fun to be Fooled — It's More Fun to Know." To the magicians it must have felt like a tsunami. One moment everything was fine, and then suddenly you couldn't turn around without having the secret to a magic trick rubbed in your face. Over 1,200 daily newspapers ran black-and-white comics that used magic principles as a way to sell nicotine. On Sundays, the ads got even bigger and appeared in full color. The most popular magazines of the day all carried Camel ads that exposed our precious secrets to the masses. Not surprisingly, the response from the magic world was immediate and decisive.

For What It's Worth: My Fake Love
Mark Kornhauser
A long time ago, Chipper Lowell and I were in a show together in Lake Tahoe and we noticed how audiences always fall for the fake "poignant moment." Entertainers easily recognize this artificial plea for sympathy and roll their eyes at the obvious ruse. Most everyone else, however, gets out the Kleenex. We thought, If it's that easy to create poignancy, then why shouldn't we incorporate it in an equally fake way? As it turned out, blatantly insincere as we were, our "poignant" moments were often taken at face value.

Walkabout Soup: Seventeen Chairs and a Fringe Festival
Simon Coronel
Back in 2004, during my final year at university, I produced a one-man show in the Melbourne Fringe Festival. I had been learning magic for four years at that point and wanted to unleash my brilliance on the world. If you've ever been involved in a Fringe Festival, you will know that they can be harsh mistresses. The efforts involved in producing your own one-hour show are pretty intimidating, particularly for a first-timer. 

Friday, December 27, 2013

Magic on TV

Here is what is coming up on the TV in the near future.

Scambushed Scambushed
Sunday, December 29th, 7 and 7:30 p.m. E/P, Travel Channel 
Gregory Wilson, along with co-starts Brittany, Adam, and Chelsea, visit sight-seeing locations in and around Los Angeles to pickpocket, scam, con, and rob unsuspecting tourists in two 30-minute, back-to-back pilot episodes. 

Don't Trust Andrew Mayne 
Monday, January 13th, 10 p.m. E/P, A& E 
Andrew Mayne's new series, Don't Trust Andrew Mayne, premieres on January 13th. This is the first of ten episodes ordered by A&E. Read our exclusive behind-the-scenes story in your January issue. 

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

MAGIC Magazine Preview - January 2014

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MAGIC Magazine January 2014 CoverMAGIC Magazine January 2014From The Editor

The January 2013 issue, which is now out, might feel a bit like a medical journal, in part because of the article about David Oliver. It's an amazing story of a magician who spent twenty-plus years freely giving his time to help young magicians and then found himself in need of help. A few pages later, we start out a profile on Gary Peterson with the words "Your child has six months to live." And then there's our follow-up with Wayne Houchin, one year after he was brutally burned while appearing on a television show in the Dominican Republic. All three of these stories could have ended in disaster — but they don't!

Also, there's quite a bit of news this month, especially with a new TV series starring Andrew Mayne. It premiers on A&E in January, and we have the exclusive behind-the-scenes story. Plus, coverage of magic in Los Angeles, London, and Singapore. Scroll down to see what's coming your way. Happy New Year!

And thanks for your continuing support…

Stan Allen

P.S. MAGIC Magazine is also available for the iPad. The cost is only $3.99 per issue, and it arrives within a few minutes. Best of all, you only buy it once, then you own it forever and can enjoy it wherever you want.


David Oliver
Stories in MAGIC this month:
It's Wonderful — Life
By Mike Bent
In his magic career, David Oliver was known for mentoring and unfailingly helping others. When he was diagnosed with a fatal lung disease stemming from his many years of performing with birds, the magic community returned the favors, helping David beat the odds with a double lung transplant.


Andrew MayneDon't Trust Andrew Mayne
By Rory Johnston
When magician and trick inventor Andrew Mayne takes to the streets, peculiar things happen — sometimes just puzzling, sometimes teaching a victim a lesson, and all captured on a new A&E television series.





Harry MontiHarry Monti: Conjuring, Cups, and Castle
By Randy Kalin and Alan Howard
Last November, Harry Monti set a record unlikely to be beaten: performing at the Magic Castle every year for the past half-century. And that's just one of the many accomplishments of this magician, escape artist, and creator of enduring magic props.




History ConferenceSnapshots of History
By Stan Allen
Every two years, the Los Angeles Conference on Magic History is held by invitation only. The 2013 edition featured another enviable display of classic magic and scholarly presentations.






Gary PetersonGary Peterson, Making His Case
By Rory Johnston
After leaving a career in magic to become one of the world's leading builders of shipping cases, Gary Peterson returned to his performance roots by creating his own theater within his manufacturing plant and warehouse.




Plus Updates on…
    Play Dead
  • Play Dead in California
  • The new Cardini display at the Magic Castle
  • The International Magic Convention in London
  • An interview with Wayne Houchin, one year after his burning incident
  • Lawrence and Priscilla Khong's Vision show
  • Performance news on Justin Willman, Mac King, and Criss Angel
  • Remembrances of Parker Swan and Roland Hill



Cardini
Bonus Content in MAGIC Plus
  • Video teaser of Don't Trust Andrew Mayne on A&E
  • Additional photos of the Cardini display, the International Magic Convention, and Vision.
  • Jason England's videos on "In One: David Solomon"
  • Convention Podcast: Abbott's Close-up Convention




Products reviewed this month:

Fifteen products are reviewed this month by Gabe Fajuri, Peter Duffie, Jared Brandon Kopf, Francis Menotti, Arthur Trace:
Marketplace
Japan Ingenious: A Compendium
     by Steve Cohen and Richard Kaufman
Tick Tock by Sean Goodman
Intercessor 2.0 by Gaëtan Bloom
Sneak Peek by Spidey
Circuit by Zach Heath
The Carey Collection
     Vols. 1 & 2
 by John Carey
The Magic Apple Live! by Brent Arthur James Geris
Greater Magic by John Northern Hilliard
L&D by Lennart Green and Dani DaOrtiz Marketplace
Invisible Magic by Dr. Simon J. Carmel
Clarity Box by David Regal
Seventeen Secrets from the Hat & Rabbit Club
     Vols. 1 & 2
 by IBM Ring 17
The Eden Project by G. Clarke
Rosepad by Martin Lewis
The Lookout Wallet by Paul Carnazzo


Tricks and advice this month:
David SolomonIan RowlandMike BentRichard HatchMike CaveneySimon Coronel
In One
David Solomon
Over the past five years, David Solomon has published 55 monthly installments of his e-zine, the Card Magic Bulletin, and his name has been a prominent one in the realm of card magic for much longer than that. The four effects in MAGIC Magazine this month follow typify David's brand of card magic: classic effects that are direct and easy to follow, but each one reworked with well-considered and subtle touches that will not only take in anyone "in the know," but will deeply fool those who are not.

Loving Mentalism: Vision in Gold
Ian Rowland
A familiar plot with a very unfamiliar ending is on offer this month. You scribble a prediction in pencil on the back of your business card. Three selected objects are arranged in a row. Their order is rearranged according to the audience's free choices. That's right, the audience freely chooses how to rearrange the objects. Clearly, the point of this exercise is that your written prediction will correctly name the chosen order. It's the sort of thing that could be achieved using a nail writer or similar device to "cheat" the prediction before the big reveal. This is what suspicious minds might suspect, and you encourage their suspicions. When you turn over your prediction, it becomes clear that you only pretended to write something at the start. In fact, the prediction message is preprinted on the back of the card, and embossed in gold ink. The prediction is 100 percent correct, and it's ungaffed, so you can give it away.

Bent on Deception: A Fly on the Wall
Mike Bent
The SAM Annual convention was being held in Boston in 1981, and Ray Goulet was the head honcho. A few weeks before the show, John Calvert, the convention's star attraction, came to town. He and his wife, Tammy, stayed at Ray's home, and the Magic Art Studio became their base of operations. Was I impressed? No. I had never even heard of John Calvert.

Creative Play: Building Blocks
Tracy Atteberry & David Parr
The creative process is a personal reflection of our individual quirks, habits, and preferences. What works for one person might not work for someone else. Similarly, what works well for tackling a particular creative challenge might not be well suited to working on a different one, which is probably why Stewart James developed and collected a great variety of creative tools. In the "Creative Play" series, we too have provided a variety of approaches, so you can experiment with them and use the ones you find most appealing.

Real-World Methods: Booking Referral Websites
Richard Hatch
Let's say you don't yet have a website or that your website is not yet bringing you the number and quality of leads that you'd like. This article will examine alternative booking referral websites that may prove helpful until your own website starts to bring in the leads.

Classic Correspondence from Egyptian Hall Museum: Chefalo to LeRoy
Mike Caveney
After a two-year hiatus, we now begin 24 new installments of this column with a short, handwritten note from the Italian illusionist Chefalo. Raffaele Chefalo immigrated from Italy to America in 1900. As a young man, he worked in a Boston barbershop that was conveniently located near the well-established magic shop of W.D. LeRoy. It was during this time that young Raffaele's interest in magic blossomed. It's impossible to imagine that Raffaele didn't, at the very least, become a customer of LeRoy's and quite possibly a student at his school of magic.

For What It's Worth: OMG! Maturity!
Mark Kornhauser
As it turns out, life is not fair. Childhood influences are disproportionately powerful. Kids lucky enough to be influenced by theater arts will develop an appreciation of acting, music, technology, and the meaning of the art form. Those kids have a much better start in the world of magic than that clever, hard working junior high school kid who has never seen anything other than YouTube clips, and his Uncle Morrie doing Sponge Balls.

Walkabout Soup: Performance Enhancing Drugs
Simon Coronel
Of all the things I've ever done for a magic act, furtively taking drugs in an airplane bathroom is definitely one of the most — let's say, memorable. The drugs themselves were perfectly legal, though the reason I was taking them was more of a gray area.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Oh its that time of year

I have been doing a bunch of volunteering of my magic services but that has led to me not being able to afford much luxury for myself. Christmas is around the corner and my birthday is also. Here are some things that would make my season brighter.


Thursday, November 14, 2013

Maybe someone needs an idea for my Birthday or Christmas

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An Unbelievable Promotion
on Pure Smoke

Never-before-seen savings on this incredible system...

Holiday Special Promotion - Price Reduction to $99
Priced at $147 each, Pure Smoke has sold countless thousands of units to magicians all around the globe, from David Copperfield to Calen Morelli, becoming the most raved about smoke machine in the world.

To kick off our holiday season this year, we’re starting by making it easier for you to own this incredible device. Until the 31st of December, we’re offering Pure Smoke atjust $99 per unit. THAT'S OVER 30% OFF!
 
BUT THAT'S NOT ALL... When you purchase Pure Smoke we’re also giving you the Pure Smoke Masterclass Training DVD with Greg Wilson to download absolutely FREE!
This DVD contains 10 Complete Routines with Pure Smoke from the visionary mind of Greg Wilson - PLUS an additional 14 mini-tricks called ‘Enhancements’.
All together this package would usually cost OVER $200, but until December 31st, you get the complete Pure Smoke system - plus an EXTRA box of 10 refills (that’s over 800 uses) PLUS the Masterclass Training DVD - all for just $99.

Every single unit that leaves our warehouse is hand-tested by us and guaranteed to produce billowing clouds of smoke right out of the box.
In fact, we’re so confident that you’re going to love the New modular Pure Smoke that if for any reason in the next 4 months you are not completely satisfied with your unit, we will replace it - at no cost to you.
 
That’s our 'Full On' 120 Day Replacement Guarantee. This special price will only last until December 31st, 2013 or while stocks last - so click on any of the links in this email to add the PureSmoke System to your cart NOW. 
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