This just explains how the average number Teller writes on the blackboard equals the number written on the vase of jelliebeans. It doesn't explain how this is also the number of cents the spectator adds up.
Sorry, I’m not buying all of it. Kudos to figuring out the paper part. I should have figured it out, especially after seeing it on TV and seeing it live. However, I don’t think they have an off-stage assistant counting the coins. I think they have an easier way to do it, and it’s being transmitted backstage somehow. It might have to do with the weight of the bowl before and after the coins are taken out. I believe the coins consist of half dollars, quarters, dimes, and nickels. No pennies. Interesting. Penn said on his podcast that the trick would be ruined if, after counting the change, the audience member throws it back into the bowl. And he said that this actually happened once. When I saw it live, the audience member he chose to count wasn’t from the USA and wasn’t familiar with how to count coins our coins. While she did her best, and got very close, she messed up. Then Penn had to count them himself.
Nope. Penn can just ask this -- if someone responds, fine. If nobody responds, he'd have brushed it off as "okay, I'd be ashamed too" or something similar.
@@nitedk technically you could prepare set of coins that could do the trick. Let's simplify and say there are two type of coins: 10 grams and 9 grams. You can have any amount of coins of first type and have maximum 9 coins of second type in a bowl and still be able to determine sum of the coins by their weight. Let's say bowl weights 245 grams. You can have this weight only if you have 20 coins of first type and 5 coins of second type. There's no other way you can get 245 grams. You can't put more than 9 coins of second type in a bowl because 10 coins of second type would weight 90 grams and it would be unclear whether you have 9 coins of first type or 10 coins of second type.
A person backstage could transmit the coins total using the Thumper method
Brilliant! Thank you!
Glad you liked it!
Brilliant reveal 😊😊
This just explains how the average number Teller writes on the blackboard equals the number written on the vase of jelliebeans.
It doesn't explain how this is also the number of cents the spectator adds up.
Explained everything watch again and try to understand
Please reveal Penn and teller's bucket of blood trick ❤
Next video Bucket of blood👍
Lol so this guy can't speak, but good at fooling us 😂😂😂
Wow
The main question is: how did the assistant count coins so quickly?
Sorry, I’m not buying all of it. Kudos to figuring out the paper part. I should have figured it out, especially after seeing it on TV and seeing it live.
However, I don’t think they have an off-stage assistant counting the coins. I think they have an easier way to do it, and it’s being transmitted backstage somehow. It might have to do with the weight of the bowl before and after the coins are taken out. I believe the coins consist of half dollars, quarters, dimes, and nickels. No pennies. Interesting.
Penn said on his podcast that the trick would be ruined if, after counting the change, the audience member throws it back into the bowl. And he said that this actually happened once.
When I saw it live, the audience member he chose to count wasn’t from the USA and wasn’t familiar with how to count coins our coins. While she did her best, and got very close, she messed up. Then Penn had to count them himself.
Very good tricks❤❤❤
That’s really great busting tricks
Perhaps there needs to be a show "Fool Ace" LOL
Nicely done! Penn and Teller Fool us revealed
was there a stooge ? because Penn asked who did write 100 and one of the crowd said he did
Nope. Penn can just ask this -- if someone responds, fine. If nobody responds, he'd have brushed it off as "okay, I'd be ashamed too" or something similar.
No, nobody in the crowd answered yes - they just showed one random guy to fool us. Or at least hey tried ;)
why not just use a scale under the bowl of coins?
Maybe they did. This video is just guessing.
@@Max_Jacobybut the reason could be that there are coins of different weight.
@@nitedk technically you could prepare set of coins that could do the trick. Let's simplify and say there are two type of coins: 10 grams and 9 grams. You can have any amount of coins of first type and have maximum 9 coins of second type in a bowl and still be able to determine sum of the coins by their weight. Let's say bowl weights 245 grams. You can have this weight only if you have 20 coins of first type and 5 coins of second type. There's no other way you can get 245 grams. You can't put more than 9 coins of second type in a bowl because 10 coins of second type would weight 90 grams and it would be unclear whether you have 9 coins of first type or 10 coins of second type.
@@Max_Jacoby I know, I just said it could be the reason.
Can u reveal Andy Gershenzon at Fool Us please
How could an assistant count the coins? Rennie is with the coins from the time she grabbed them from bowl.
From a still shot taken from the video feed. Although I'm not convinced... Seems hard to count when some of the coins are mostly hidden.
@@nitedk Exactly. With many of the coins partially hidden, this method is risky at best.