How Copperfield Vanished the Statue of Liberty

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  • Опубликовано: 26 дек 2024

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @MindBlownMagicIllusion
    @MindBlownMagicIllusion  Год назад +33

    Free Magic: MindBlownMagic.com

    • @billgreen4003
      @billgreen4003 Месяц назад

      COOL

    • @Jumbo-k4t
      @Jumbo-k4t Месяц назад

      Absolute scum you've got no talent you can't get work because you've got a face like a bull terriers backside so you go and give away magic you disgusting parasite and I guarantee you're actually wrong

    • @Jumbo-k4t
      @Jumbo-k4t Месяц назад

      And I'd be careful if I was you I know of several magicians that have been successfully sued by David Copperfield don't fk with the master

  • @kingrobert1st
    @kingrobert1st Год назад +5870

    You missed the most important misdirection. He had a helicopter with a bright spotlight shining on the statue for a considerable length of time during which he apologized to the audience and said they were having "technical problems." Eventually the curtain came across and the stage began to revolve imperceptibly slowly. However the helicopter moved in sync with the stage. The beam of light appeared to be stationary in relation to the stage. When the curtain was lifted they saw the helicopter in the same place but with no statue. The beam of light also helped black out the background. Otherwise the audience would have seen a different skyline. Pure genius!

    • @acreguy3156
      @acreguy3156 Год назад +239

      Interesting, KingRobert. That was one slick chopper pilot who was able to sync up the light with the stage from what I assume would have been at 1,000 feet AGL.

    • @kingrobert1st
      @kingrobert1st Год назад +47

      @@acreguy3156 Slick magician too!

    • @acreguy3156
      @acreguy3156 Год назад +53

      @@kingrobert1st Agreed! When I first saw that when he did the trick, I couldn't believe he was even from this planet.

    • @countsmyth
      @countsmyth Год назад +153

      He also had floating lights in the water if i remember, to replicate the ones shining up onto the statue.

    • @kingrobert1st
      @kingrobert1st Год назад +19

      @@countsmyth Well executed plan!

  • @ebolarnator1794
    @ebolarnator1794 6 месяцев назад +1367

    RUclips needs more videos like this, straight to the point and isn't 10+ minutes long to answer a simple question. Thank you ❤

    • @brettg274
      @brettg274 6 месяцев назад +62

      FR, most videos be like, “but to understand the trick, first let me tell the life story of David Copperfield…”

    • @exiaxzero
      @exiaxzero 3 месяца назад +23

      And then an awkward, sudden cut in the middle to talk about today's sponsor, Factor/Squarespace/Ridge Wallet/Vessi/Raid: Shadow Legends. 😂🤣

    • @JackieSwisher619
      @JackieSwisher619 2 месяца назад +7

      Also thanks for not mugging for the thumbnail. I hit ‘don’t recommend channel’ whenever I see those.

    • @OfficialOpinion
      @OfficialOpinion Месяц назад +1

      Can't make money and be sustainable without it. The end.

    • @ebolarnator1794
      @ebolarnator1794 Месяц назад +3

      @@OfficialOpinion If no one watches 10+ minutes videos for a simple question, they it will make money and be sustainable. 👍

  • @khmergodhobbies
    @khmergodhobbies 8 месяцев назад +2920

    thanks for only being 2 mins and not 20.

    • @dessertlocust
      @dessertlocust 6 месяцев назад +69

      agreed, most people would drag this out for a 4 hour video

    • @Guchiechoochchandhi
      @Guchiechoochchandhi 6 месяцев назад +7

      Definite king status

    • @Juianer
      @Juianer 5 месяцев назад +7

      Most videos are 11 min

    • @pl33
      @pl33 4 месяца назад +4

      Agreed 👍

    • @KandiKlover
      @KandiKlover 4 месяца назад +5

      And still too drawn out with useless babble.

  • @frogman1941
    @frogman1941 Год назад +324

    Egon moved the statue of liberty with his NES controller. Well done Egon. Well done.

  • @ChaoticYak1
    @ChaoticYak1 11 месяцев назад +196

    Cool! As a kid, I loved watching David Copperfield. I knew it was all tricks, but the experience was what I enjoyed because I didn't know how he pulled it off. For me, it doesn't change my enjoyment to know.

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade 10 месяцев назад +6

      I was fortunate enough to see him the last time I was in Vegas. He still puts on a great show and I'd definitely recommend it to anybody who has the opportunity to see one of the all time greats. There's a reason why he was the first billionaire magician. He puts on a spectacular show. I was somewhat surprised to be able to get such good tickets the day of the show. But, then again he does shows throughout the year and has been for many years.

    • @Goodcityz
      @Goodcityz 2 месяца назад +2

      Me too, watch every t.v special with my parents. Great memories

    • @MikehMike01
      @MikehMike01 Месяц назад

      The Statue of Liberty trick is painfully obvious
      Like he can’t do anything at all to the real one, so it left literally one other option

  • @fepatton
    @fepatton 9 месяцев назад +14

    I remember that show! I always looked forward to his and Doug Henning's specials on TV. Finally got to see Copperfield in person many years ago at the San Jose Arena, and it was a great experience. Cheers!

    • @johnstorton
      @johnstorton 2 месяца назад

      I was a fan of Henning. I was amazed at his slight-of-hand skill. I didn't care much for Copperfield's grand illusion trickery.

    • @legitbeans9078
      @legitbeans9078 Месяц назад

      Gai

    • @AnthonySforza
      @AnthonySforza Месяц назад

      Oh, I know... saw him in Vegas around Christmas of 2007. Checked that "80s/90s Kid" item off the bucket list.

  • @PRH123
    @PRH123 Год назад +380

    I recall starting to watch it on tv, but the buildup was so interminably long, it was really tedious waiting for the trick, that we just changed the channel…. We had previously wasted an hour or two waiting for Capone’s safe to be opened just to see there as nothing in it…. was a common approach on shows back then…

    • @John_Locke_108
      @John_Locke_108 6 месяцев назад +27

      😂😂. First time I truly experienced true dissapointment as a kid was Al Capones vault.

    • @scalien225
      @scalien225 6 месяцев назад +10

      @@John_Locke_108 Capone's safe!! Then the sequel, the Titanic Cabinet! What memories.

    • @mccallosone4903
      @mccallosone4903 5 месяцев назад +5

      yeah al capones vault, what a shaft that was

    • @goodbonezz1289
      @goodbonezz1289 2 месяца назад +8

      You must be referring to the Geraldo Rivera special, opening Al Capone’s safe? But that was in 1986, three years after this stunt, not previously.

    • @jimmyrade7815
      @jimmyrade7815 Месяц назад +2

      More time wasted = more ad revenue

  • @DR-mq1vn
    @DR-mq1vn 10 месяцев назад +20

    I watched this on TV in 1983! Thanks for the explanation.

  • @finkelmana
    @finkelmana 11 месяцев назад +892

    Figuring out how a magic trick is done is far more interesting than the trick itself.

    • @michaelbarton4787
      @michaelbarton4787 11 месяцев назад +15

      But it does kinda take the 'magic' out of magic tho'

    • @finkelmana
      @finkelmana 11 месяцев назад +72

      @@michaelbarton4787 not really. We know magic isn't real and it's just an illusion. So the fun is in figuring out how it was done.

    • @rodan9773
      @rodan9773 11 месяцев назад +2

      Not really to me anyway.

    • @kekke2000
      @kekke2000 11 месяцев назад +10

      A trick like this is just a nothing burger, there is no skill involved. But seeing people who are really good at sleight of hand perform is really impressive, perhaps even more so when you know how it's done.

    • @tommymackbwb5979
      @tommymackbwb5979 10 месяцев назад +7

      @@finkelmanaI agree with you. Watching magic tricks aren’t as fun because I’m more interested in how they did it vs what they did

  • @malkamusik
    @malkamusik Год назад +490

    I remember this vividly as a child. Not sure I thought much on how it was done. I then ate spaghettiO's for dinner. The following day I rode my bike 4 miles.

    • @georgeneuman488
      @georgeneuman488 10 месяцев назад +13

      I remember it vaguely (I was five)...can't recall what we had for dinner!

    • @robertlyle6277
      @robertlyle6277 10 месяцев назад +11

      Yeah - I thought it was lame as well. Meatloaf and mashed potatoes for my family. 😋

    • @bobloblaw9791
      @bobloblaw9791 9 месяцев назад +8

      I’m just not enthralled by illusionists either. We had pizza that night. Can’t remember what I did the next day, but I’m sure a bmx was involved.

    • @schqrr
      @schqrr 7 месяцев назад +4

      Haha it’s cool you remember that

    • @Mr.M4N.777
      @Mr.M4N.777 7 месяцев назад +6

      Best Comment!

  • @DOC_951
    @DOC_951 2 месяца назад +10

    Dear lord… I’m so thankful you made this video on 2 minutes, unlike other channels

  • @hunter141072
    @hunter141072 Год назад +167

    Those David Copperfield Specials were a must back in the 80´s, I remember there were 6 or 8 of them and he always performed something "impossible" at the end of the show. Back then it was insane and we had no idea how he did it, but today it´s so easy to understand how everything was done. I´m not gonna lie I kind of like the fact that now I know how he did all of those tricks, back then I really wanted to know how he could do such amazing tricks but it was impossible to get that information.

    • @gbhxu
      @gbhxu Год назад +3

      Used to prefer Doug Hennings specials.

    • @ginog5037
      @ginog5037 Год назад +3

      ​@@gbhxuThey were all good and fun to watch...

    • @kevinpittman2517
      @kevinpittman2517 Год назад +5

      i remember the great wall of shina the most. that was awesome

    • @michaelbarton4787
      @michaelbarton4787 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@kevinpittman2517 Indeed - not too tricky to work out how he did that one tho'

    • @spidey3471
      @spidey3471 7 месяцев назад +2

      And even today for some reason I still remember those specials were always sponsored by Kraft

  • @ryancoulter4797
    @ryancoulter4797 Год назад +186

    He also hired actors to play some of the audience because he wasn’t trying to fool them, he was trying to fool you the tv viewer. There was a This American Life episode about this.

    • @Venusandjupiteinunion6434
      @Venusandjupiteinunion6434 2 месяца назад

      Magic tricks are carefully calculated mind manipulation. They want you to believe they have some kind of super human ability. Do you know how long it takes to learn how to fool you? A long time. But it only takes a second to realize it's not real.

    • @vitoc8454
      @vitoc8454 Месяц назад

      Criss Angel's bizarre exploding racecar-into-cage-teleport "magic trick" is one of the most hilariously bad attempts to fool an audience watching through a screen

  • @Flyboy_73
    @Flyboy_73 Год назад +80

    I figured it was a 2nd black curtain that mimicked the night sky.

    • @martabachynsky8545
      @martabachynsky8545 11 месяцев назад +3

      That's what I thought it was as well.

    • @KotobKotob
      @KotobKotob 10 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@martabachynsky8545no. The arrangment of light make it disappear

    • @rolandliana
      @rolandliana 10 месяцев назад +1

      hade the same idea

    • @snaifhassnan6348
      @snaifhassnan6348 Месяц назад

      66

  • @glenpolen5562
    @glenpolen5562 Год назад +219

    Great video.
    I was impressed back then, and years later, I had heard that the stage moved and he had the bass turned up in the music so the audience did not realize what was going on.
    Very loud music with a heavy bass can make people confused and even psyched out a little.
    It can also throw off your balance .
    So the stage movement would feel normal to the audience, like you greatly mentioned.
    Thanks Dan.

    • @anyoldorion
      @anyoldorion 11 месяцев назад +5

      That helps to explain why I felt unwell at rock concerts.. I have atrial fibrillation..I’m sure the bass altered my heart rate..

    • @glenpolen5562
      @glenpolen5562 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@Oystersgetclamydia
      Hello, I hope that you are doing well. Have you been to any more concerts? If so, I hope you got thru it safely and took precautions. I wonder what precautions you could take. Same with others who have other health issues. I agree that the loud bass and other loud sounds that are mixed in at a concert could affect our health and cause issues, but especially if we have any on- going issues. Im sure the loud noise could affect many people in many ways. I've been drumming my whole life and am thankful and blessed to still have excellent hearing. My eye sight is a different story, lol.
      From playing in bands, running sound and being around the loudness, I know what goes on at a concert setting from the stage set up, behind stage effects, the front special effects, speaker and amp placements, etc.
      Lot of bands who have money like to use indoor pyrotechnics.
      I worry because when watching a band while singing along to the songs and groovin to the music, we dont know when those pyrotechnics are going to blast off. We dont know if loud sirens will be played, and if any other loud bangs will go off.
      We dont see the effects coming and we are not told. The sudden shock could affect someone's health from getting scared, and maybe having a stroke or other attacks. People could pass out from the noise, and the very bright flashing lites.
      I know that some people have suffered and orhers have died. Some bands have been sued.
      We need to be pretty much in great health to enjoy a rock concert.
      Some heavy metal, grunge bands make people sign waivers.
      GOD BLESS.

    • @anyoldorion
      @anyoldorion 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@glenpolen5562
      Hi. Yep! I’m relatively well.. I’m on medication for AF now. The last concerts I attended was Beth Hart,Richard Hawley and Fontaines DC few years back.. It was the Fontaines gig that caused me to feel unwell.. Heart rate was everywhere until day after.
      I’m going to be very selective in future about the band and also venue acoustically.

    • @glenpolen5562
      @glenpolen5562 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@anyoldorion Hey, It's great to hear back from you. Im very happy to hear that you are doing well, staying healthy, and keeping the ole heart pumping.
      Amen. I just said a prayer for you when i read your reply.
      I forgot to mention in my first comment that many cities can't afford to pay the bands because of how big their show might be. Some cities just don't want to pay bands because of their budgets. Then there are the cities that just dont want certain bands to be around because of what people do before and after the shows .
      A lot of venues can't afford bands, and some dont have the room for fans.
      There are capacity limits, and many bands prefer to play the smaller clubs.
      Bands can't bring their whole show to smaller venues for safety reasons, but a larger facility mite allow minimal pyrotechnics inside, and even then, people get hurt.
      The sound can get so deafening in a smaller venue and hurt people.
      All clubs and venues must obide by noise laws, and can by sued by the city and if someone gets hurt.
      A band should also be required to have a certain stage volume.
      Some sound teams use the same settings from an arena show and at a smaller venue.
      They might adjust the highs and lows.
      Most clubs do it right, and respect is given all around.
      But, things can still happen. I would think that a persons hearing could suffer from a small venue compared to arena shows, but that is not always true.
      Plus, we are all different.
      My sensitivity could be worse than the person standing next to me.
      I remember being at many concerts, and no matter what section i was in, my ears would be ringing when i left and got home.
      I know this has happened at other events, but I remember being at a concert, and my ears were ringing bad and I got a little confused and almost lost my balance and fell over.
      I had to clear my head and sit down.
      Please be safe, and take care.
      Enjoy the music.

    • @anyoldorion
      @anyoldorion 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@glenpolen5562
      Yep! I remember those gigs very well.. I’ve seen Black Sabbath in the 70’s .. My ears are ringing to this day 😁
      I’ve a massive vinyl and cd/dvd collection that I’m going to dust off and enjoy..from my armchair. Thank you for your prayers~ I appreciate that. God bless too. 👍🏻

  • @RyuuTenno
    @RyuuTenno Месяц назад +9

    plenty of people say that, if you know how the trick worked, it loses it's magic, but for me, it's still incredible to know about. Always wondered, even though I wasn't around for that trick. I remembered hearing about it, and it's just something that's absolutely wild to think about. And I love this, cause even though I know how it's done, it's *still* absolutely incredible to see.

    • @SyntheticFuture
      @SyntheticFuture Месяц назад +1

      For me it changes the wonder. Someone still had to figure out these mechanics, had it build and execute the trick. And doing all that successfully is a wonder as well 😄

  • @ThreeToesofFury
    @ThreeToesofFury Год назад +168

    close but the actual secret was revealed a few years back in Ghostbusters 2. Copperfield had his staff spray the statue with pink slime and it merely walked a few steps away during the show. Magic!!!

    • @cdevidal
      @cdevidal Год назад +15

      Egon: My parents didn't believe in toys.
      Ray: You mean you never even had a Slinky?
      Egon: We had part of a Slinky. But I straightened it.

    • @englishtwister
      @englishtwister Месяц назад

      One thing never explained is how they got it down. Let alone getting it back up .

  • @GenX1969
    @GenX1969 Год назад +97

    He used a giant “Lazy Susan”

  • @probegt75
    @probegt75 11 месяцев назад +117

    As a kid i always looked forward to a David Copperfield special. Tv is terrible nowadays.

    • @juliap.5375
      @juliap.5375 11 месяцев назад +3

      Why? TV nowadays became more interesting.
      Of course in different countries situation can be different, as example I stopped to watch Hollywood movies near 10 years ago, incredible madness and non stop propaganda, even more than at old times :/

    • @goku445
      @goku445 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@juliap.5375 TV is dead/dying. We are in the Internet era. You can choose what you watch, not what your masters want you to watch. Be free.

    • @mikecarter8880
      @mikecarter8880 9 месяцев назад

      Well networks are dead. I find a lot of great stuff through Hulu/Netflix/Amazon and many other streaming services. You just have to dig harder to find good stuff, but you have more options than you ever had before.

    • @Traitorman..Proverbs26.11
      @Traitorman..Proverbs26.11 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@goku445
      Problem is with the choice on the internet is that there is an awful lot of confirmation bias.

    • @goku445
      @goku445 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@Traitorman..Proverbs26.11 That is still better than only showing you what some people in power want.
      The problem is education and missing critical thinking.
      You have to question yourself everyday.

  • @IvoPavlik
    @IvoPavlik Месяц назад

    Just 2-minute video. Straight to the point. He didn't even ask for subscribe or like. What a legend!

  • @ElDarren
    @ElDarren Год назад +17

    That's gold! I remember that stunt but never knew the trick. Great video dude!

  • @StLProgressive
    @StLProgressive 6 месяцев назад +8

    I remember watching this on tv. My 12 year old mind was blown, lol. It was such a cool trick.

  • @kimsterific
    @kimsterific Год назад +4

    Ty for posting ! I was 8 and rember watching.i was mesmerized 😮!

  • @drewdonald6260
    @drewdonald6260 Месяц назад +1

    No way!!! I watched this when it happened!! 39 year old mystery SOLVED - Thank you : )

  • @morlockmeat
    @morlockmeat 6 месяцев назад +5

    He also had shots from above from the helicopter. Before he made the statue disappear, he had live shots from above. After he made it disappear, the live studio showed a miniature from that perspective, with no statue, completing the illusion for the live audience at home.

  • @marcd1981
    @marcd1981 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for the video. I was big into magic from the mid 70s through the mid 80s, and David Copperfield and Doug Henning were the two biggest magicians of that time. Henning made an elephant disappear in the first season, then walked through a brick wall in the second season of his television series, Doug Henning's World of Magic. The elephant was the big one until Copperfield did his Statue of Liberty vanishing act.

  • @zabadazidit
    @zabadazidit Год назад +65

    This was shown on TV on "Magician Secrets Revealed" about 20-25 years ago. Rumor has it that the audience was in on it too.

    • @arcis5538
      @arcis5538 Год назад +17

      most likely

    • @BlunderMunchkin
      @BlunderMunchkin 10 месяцев назад +9

      If the audience were in on it they could have moved the platform faster and wouldn't have needed the bass music.

    • @CSXIV
      @CSXIV 10 месяцев назад +8

      I remember that too (and he even said some but not all of the audience were actors because it was the TV audience he was fooling, not the live audience) but I've also seen other versions of the trick that were much faster, lacked the buildup, the music and the helicopter to mess with perspective. This means the platform would have needed to move fast enough to be noticed, requiring the entire audience to be in on it. Which tells me Copperfield put in far more time and effort to make the illusion work, not just for the TV audience, but for the live audience.

    • @GamesFromSpace
      @GamesFromSpace 10 месяцев назад +7

      That's why TV magic never meant anything to me. I have no reason to think they're telling t he truth if they pinky promise no editing tricks.

    • @Gr8Methos
      @Gr8Methos 6 месяцев назад +2

      An earlier source was Bigger Secrets by William Poundstone in 1989.

  • @CamdenBloke
    @CamdenBloke Месяц назад +1

    I was obsessed with David Copperfield growing up, and watched all his television specials in grade school. I was also into magic myself. I was in every talent show.
    This only came out when I was 2 years old though, so obviously I was too young to watch it or even know about it. But I always heard people talk about David Copperfield as being the person who made the Statue of Liberty disappear. I never got to see it until years later on youtube.

  • @hemavathikumar9123
    @hemavathikumar9123 Месяц назад +4

    The "Mask Magician" has already opened a few methods on his show. But sadly the world which praised him especially 90s kids now have completely forgotten about "masked magician" . 😢

  • @juliemc8460
    @juliemc8460 3 месяца назад +2

    I love this! I always wondered how he did it. I heard it was something about the angles with the audience but this explanation is perfect!

  • @ronaldthomas7910
    @ronaldthomas7910 Год назад +25

    I remember watching it and the next day at school our science teacher explained it, but he told us it was optical illusion of lighting and when David was on some talk show he slightly hinted on the turning of the stage.

  • @ethzero
    @ethzero Месяц назад +1

    Old enough to remember watching this. Nice to have the trick concisely revewlaed all these years later.

  • @RedSiegfried
    @RedSiegfried 11 месяцев назад +4

    A lot of people don't consider "camera tricks" to be "real illusions." But it's a matter of opinion. Some of the very first illusions performed on film just used camera trickery.

    • @DavidDSimon
      @DavidDSimon 10 месяцев назад +4

      This isn't really a camera trick. No illusion was processed in the cameras. The cameras saw what the audience saw. When people talk of camera tricks - they're usually referring to something that appears different to those viewing live as opposed to those viewing on camera or some other manipulation due to how it's filmed. Here - the camera saw what the audience saw (even if they were in on it . . ). It's really no more a camera trick than any other trick filmed from the front as opposed to angles that reveal the secrets.

    • @Venusandjupiteinunion6434
      @Venusandjupiteinunion6434 2 месяца назад +1

      They're all illusions.

  • @greybeardcanadian1036
    @greybeardcanadian1036 9 месяцев назад

    I remember watching this live on tv. Ive wondered how it was done ever since. thank you!

  • @robertshawiv1513
    @robertshawiv1513 Год назад +87

    I’ve always heard that the audience was in on it.

    • @MindBlownMagicIllusion
      @MindBlownMagicIllusion  Год назад +38

      I’ve always wondered if they were. I think the effect would have worked either way, but for a live TV event, better to play it safe.

    • @gradywilson9213
      @gradywilson9213 Год назад +33

      I live in Las Vegas, have worked in many stage shows. The audience is ALWAYS in on it. They also sign legal papers which make them liable if they reveal secrets. Copperfield is not a very nice person, nasty dude.

    • @tropicalbeach9225
      @tropicalbeach9225 Год назад

      they are! many times just staged actors!

    • @TruthhTalkk
      @TruthhTalkk Год назад +2

      No he put it in his pocket

    • @blagus3743
      @blagus3743 Год назад +3

      @@gradywilson9213 Is it possible for someone to not know the floor is moving under them if it's moving slowly and there's multiple distractions?

  • @johnleven8907
    @johnleven8907 Месяц назад

    A minute and 90 seconds?? You're an amazing magician.

  • @CraigBoudreaux
    @CraigBoudreaux Год назад +28

    I do find it funny that you said this trick worked in 1983 but wouldn't work now... like people are more informed now than they were then. I think they are informed in a different manner than then, but it's not like good magic doesn't still amaze people.

    • @MindBlownMagicIllusion
      @MindBlownMagicIllusion  Год назад +36

      I’m not saying people are smarter now, we just have more technology. If someone tried this today, there would be drones watching from every angle and it would be exposed on social media before the special even aired.

    • @DoctorChained
      @DoctorChained Год назад

      Anyone's phone would pick up that the direction they're facing changed. @@MindBlownMagicIllusion

    • @catzkeet4860
      @catzkeet4860 Год назад +3

      Yeah and there'd be some fruitcake in the audience swearing that the aliens did it and refuting any evidence to the contrary as FBI schills "upholding the secret agreement the govt had with them"
      You know I'm right 🤣

    • @allme2547
      @allme2547 Год назад

      @@catzkeet4860 what you're saying would makes sense... if you weren't a clone that fixed the election... to help the reptile people convince us that the Earth isn't flat because you know the moon landing was faked!

    • @ykrgfk
      @ykrgfk Год назад +1

      @@catzkeet4860 Back in 1983 there'd have been some fruitcake in the audience. In 2023 the whole audience would be fruitcakes.

  • @mauriciomorales8863
    @mauriciomorales8863 6 месяцев назад

    Great video! Really liked the off road bit, that’s where the bronco shines! Good stuff

  • @donb2480
    @donb2480 Месяц назад

    I watched that show and I was amazed. Thanks for the explanation.

  • @AWARHERO
    @AWARHERO Год назад +4

    I watched this live. It was amazing!

  • @crispy982
    @crispy982 Месяц назад

    I was actually shocked when the video ended. I audibly went “Thats it?” Short and to the point, not used to that nowadays. Take my like

  • @kennethswenson6214
    @kennethswenson6214 11 месяцев назад +3

    One problem wuth the moving stage theory. Again realiziing that the statue CANNOT move. If the audience "moved" then the statue would have vanished from the part of the audience that was centerline, to the part of the audience that is left or right. The statue can't move, the illusion that the statue was "behind" one of the pillars, is just that an "illusion" caused by field of view. Secondly, always accept the easiest explanation first. All that you would have had to do was put a pitch black curtain behind the silvery one, raise both, but lower only the front silvery one at the end.

    • @rileykaiseeker4294
      @rileykaiseeker4294 2 месяца назад +3

      Yeah, but then you wouldn't see the search lights, and you can clearly see the search lights. That's why a curtain or mirror wouldn't work.

    • @somenygaard
      @somenygaard Месяц назад

      I don’t think it’s a theory, it’s how he did it.

    • @kennethswenson6214
      @kennethswenson6214 Месяц назад

      @@somenygaard Well assuming that the information came from Mr. Copperfield...yes.

  • @retrogiftsuk4812
    @retrogiftsuk4812 9 месяцев назад +1

    You're right about the method, but I'm not convinced that the audience was fooled. Far more likely the audience was paid stooges. Particularly since the curtain was set up for the camera (which the team controlled). The audience could glance around in the 60/90 seconds and see everyone else to their sides and behind them was moving.
    Stooge audiences aren't uncommon in these kinds of tricks (vanishing Orient Express also performed by Copperfield)

  • @Dubzero946
    @Dubzero946 Год назад +39

    I watched this live as a kid and my dad was like " he rotated the staff, phiff. And walked away. 😂

    • @zabadazidit
      @zabadazidit Год назад +10

      And your dad was right! 😄

    • @scottsmith7203
      @scottsmith7203 Год назад +9

      did your dad then say he's going out for some cigarettes and never came back?
      bawahahahahahahahahahahaah!!!

    • @juliap.5375
      @juliap.5375 11 месяцев назад +1

      Exactly same story, but it was my cousin 😂

    • @GeomancerHT
      @GeomancerHT 11 месяцев назад +2

      Plot twist, that's Copperfields son.

    • @Dubzero946
      @Dubzero946 11 месяцев назад

      @@scottsmith7203 no. He sd he was going to bang some whore and left. What's up brother. 😭

  • @suomenpresidentti
    @suomenpresidentti 9 месяцев назад +2

    I remember watching this live here in Finland.
    Good times.

  • @ErikErnstsings
    @ErikErnstsings 7 месяцев назад +3

    Is the rotating audience platform confirmed as the method? Asking because it was night and there were lights shining at the audience. Wouldn't lighting and the use of mirrors have been enough without needing to take the risk of having someone feel the stage rotating?

    • @allbrown401
      @allbrown401 4 месяца назад

      They're just guessing,,,,you can feel a floor move while standing on it at any speed no matter how much music or base is coming through the speakers

    • @cabrafoot
      @cabrafoot 4 месяца назад +1

      the real secret is in a book...

    • @DUNC8888
      @DUNC8888 Месяц назад

      The lights shining into the audience's eyes make it impossible to see the statue when it is blacked out, this is the simplest and most practical explanation.

  • @metasequoiaglyptostroboide5582
    @metasequoiaglyptostroboide5582 Месяц назад

    I really like your model of the scene with the paper rolls 😅
    Great explanation - on the point.

  • @aaronnoyb
    @aaronnoyb 11 месяцев назад +234

    Unfortunately, Copperfield couldn't make his name disappear, from the Epstein Island list.

    • @Firithfenion
      @Firithfenion 11 месяцев назад +14

      Hahaha best comment!

    • @Blackops7773
      @Blackops7773 7 месяцев назад

      Tbh it seems like everyone famous has been to Epsteins island

    • @brianjj6667
      @brianjj6667 7 месяцев назад +27

      Did he do more than cop a feel

    • @gavintse177
      @gavintse177 5 месяцев назад +1

      First time ever googlr about Epstein Island .

    • @KAFKUBA
      @KAFKUBA 5 месяцев назад

      Lol

  • @WildDigiDiary
    @WildDigiDiary 2 месяца назад +1

    the two pillars are see through and the spot lights from a far are moving frequently to show the transparency of the illusion . Can you explain how is that possible ??

  • @adb888
    @adb888 Год назад +9

    Watched it live and actually wasn't impressed BECAUSE of the forced camera views - I remember they had a helicopter and boats I think, but when the "trick" started, we were forced to watch everything from the same perspective as those on the stage. I mean, you already knew he didn't move the statue, but forcing the TV audience to view it from the stage too, was a bit of a giveaway.

  • @rudyschwab7709
    @rudyschwab7709 10 месяцев назад +2

    I saw a live show. I remember a lot of very bright flashes of light throughout the performance. There was a very bright flash every time something disappeared or reappeared. I thought that was kind of cheap, but I will say that if Copperfield and the other performers didn't have their movements just perfect, then the flashes wouldn't have helped pull it off.

  • @RyanJardina
    @RyanJardina 11 месяцев назад +7

    I understand his explanation but how did he make the Lego statue disappear during his explanation.

  • @robthecow5029
    @robthecow5029 Месяц назад

    Wonderful video straight to the point no nonsense A++

  • @legion162
    @legion162 Год назад +11

    I remember watching this as a 13 year old, and wondering did he move the stage

  • @davidjames579
    @davidjames579 Месяц назад +1

    It's the classic answer to how Magic Tricks are done: Rule out what's impossible, and think of the most rational explanation. It's impossible to move the Statue Of Liberty like that. But it's not impossible to move the audience, since they weigh less.

    • @thatguy2521
      @thatguy2521 27 дней назад

      Very smart way to think about it. I think what makes magic tricks really work, is it looks so unreal, they make you think about impossible things

  • @TheTruthKiwi
    @TheTruthKiwi Год назад +9

    That must've been a hell of an expensive custom made stage

    • @Bruhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh.
      @Bruhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh. 11 месяцев назад +1

      Considering that they were right next to the Statue of Liberty, I’m pretty sure it was on a boat. It’s pretty easy and cheap to move a boat

    • @TheTruthKiwi
      @TheTruthKiwi 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@Bruhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh. The stage was on Liberty Island apparently.

    • @Bruhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh.
      @Bruhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh. 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@TheTruthKiwi oh, ok then, if that’s the case the whole thing was just on a bunch of wheels, or on a single rotating disk. I think with some strong materials it still might not be *super* expensive

    • @TheTruthKiwi
      @TheTruthKiwi 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@Bruhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh. And to make it safe and apparently hidden from the audience/viewers? I don't know, I'm just assuming that a large, complex mechanism would be quite pricey. I may be wrong.

    • @gf2e
      @gf2e 6 месяцев назад

      @@TheTruthKiwiI think it could be surprisingly simple. It’s very different from anything you normally build. It only has to move a little bit. You can build a track or surface for it. Only has to move twice.
      I’m imagining a few dozen wheels at each end of the stage, running along curved tracks. Maybe even just train tracks. A couple motors geared down, with chains kinda like bike chains connecting the wheels together.
      A mechanism like that would only be maybe a foot or two tall. Easy to cover it up.

  • @RandomDudeFromSomewhere
    @RandomDudeFromSomewhere 9 месяцев назад

    I always wondered how he did that. Thanks for posting this.

  • @arghjayem
    @arghjayem Месяц назад +17

    00:40 That’s not LEGO. That’s some knock off version of LEGO! 🤷

  • @joblo2671
    @joblo2671 Месяц назад

    When you find out the 'trick' is so well-thought out and genius in its simplicity you can't even be mad :

  • @freemagicfun
    @freemagicfun Год назад +60

    Most people I knew shrugged it off as a TV trick. I remember talking about this at school after it aired - and no one I knew was impressed. The main two theories were that the audience was in on it, or he just used mirrors. I always thought Henning was far more entertaining than Copperfield. 😎

    • @NagaSeraphim369
      @NagaSeraphim369 Год назад +6

      Or since it's showing as night time, a black screen

    • @Ken-fh4jc
      @Ken-fh4jc Год назад +11

      Haha people always say “mirrors” as the default explanation for these stunts. “Oh yeah he probably used mirrors.”

    • @fododude
      @fododude Год назад +3

      Doug Henning was more entertaining but for the wrong reasons.😆

    • @sonicdiablo8968
      @sonicdiablo8968 Год назад +7

      @@Ken-fh4jc They never explain how the mirrors are used though lol

    • @Mark.Taylor.
      @Mark.Taylor. 11 месяцев назад +1

      No one thought he really made it vanish

  • @NichaelCramer
    @NichaelCramer 5 месяцев назад

    Others have pointed out the role that the moving helicopter played in the illusion, but it’s also important to notice the bright lights (both along the pillars and around the base of the statue) which were effectively shining in the audience’s eyes making it very difficult for them to notice the background skyline had also changed.

  • @平-o2n
    @平-o2n Год назад +24

    The good old days without drones, social media, ubiquitous cameras, internet...

  • @texasgrillchef8581
    @texasgrillchef8581 9 месяцев назад +1

    I was there, and I noticed. And I noticed the angle was different, because when you there you could see the sky, stars clouds etc… and I could tell we moved.

    • @WolfA4
      @WolfA4 9 месяцев назад

      Part of me imagines the "imperceptibly rotating" stage violently shuddering and vibrating enough that drinks were sloshing around with people being thrown to the side like the Enterprise being attacked by Klingons then cutting to the amazed crowd as the Statue "disappeared." As the little old lady is being interviewed on camera following the show there's someone just off camera having a neck brace placed on them to treat their whiplash.

  • @meme4one
    @meme4one 11 месяцев назад +10

    One of Epsteins buddies, he can't make that connection disappear.

  • @Abaddon231
    @Abaddon231 Месяц назад

    I watched this when I was just a kid and it blew my mind.. Because it was on live TV..

  • @73macrino
    @73macrino Год назад +7

    That is pretty darn clever!!

  • @pwallace5359
    @pwallace5359 3 месяца назад

    1983 Wow, I remember watching that show and being amazed. I was 11 years old.

  • @RobertBallMagician
    @RobertBallMagician Год назад +4

    Very cool idea he did 😊👏👏😊😊👏

  • @allme16280
    @allme16280 9 месяцев назад +1

    So i watched this special and i distinctly remember that Copperfield had positioned models around the statue with a camera taking a pic every few seconds and the pictures showed the statue in one snap and then gone in the next. I'm just curious, was that part of the illusion done with this same moving stage?

  • @birdmanstudios7
    @birdmanstudios7 Год назад +3

    who else was impressed when he made the lego statue disappear??

  • @tylerk3616
    @tylerk3616 Год назад +1

    1:08 how did he do that???

  • @Twobarpsi
    @Twobarpsi 2 месяца назад

    Excellent video!!

  • @Rocky-or4rz
    @Rocky-or4rz Год назад +6

    I remember watching this when I was a kid, even then I knew he didn't really make it disappear, I just figured because of the weird camera view how to do some kind of mirror, and everybody in the audience was in on it

    • @bipolarminddroppings
      @bipolarminddroppings Год назад +1

      If you need the entire audience to be in on a trick, no magician would do it. It's okay to stooge a few people who are directly involved with the trick, but not the entire audience.

    • @Rocky-or4rz
      @Rocky-or4rz Год назад

      @@bipolarminddroppings at this point in my life, I never say someone wouldn't do anything, under the right conditions anyone will whatever it takes for fame or money

    • @chumdinger_official
      @chumdinger_official 11 месяцев назад +2

      This sort of “magic” just never struck me as interesting.. it’s too big of a trick to be believable.. Personally, Ive always been more impressed with slight of hand card tricks than over produced gimmicks.

    • @uhtred7860
      @uhtred7860 11 месяцев назад

      @@bipolarminddroppings Don't forget this was televised around the world, in the grand scheme of things, the audience where just props themselves.

  • @NextNate03
    @NextNate03 10 месяцев назад +1

    That doesn't explain how tricked all of the other senses when moving the platform.
    People can still sense when they are moving with 0 noise.
    For the most part.
    Earth is moving constantly and nobody notices it except for visual differences.

  • @davidgarner7948
    @davidgarner7948 Год назад +5

    I remember watching this as a 4 yr old and thinking it was mirrors. So 4yr old me was wrong but I thought any magic tricks was done with mirrors.... and probably smoke.

  • @yangerjamir0906
    @yangerjamir0906 2 месяца назад

    Gotta appreciate and respect the creativity and ingenuity of these illusionists.

  • @zacksrandomprojects9698
    @zacksrandomprojects9698 Год назад +4

    Im 47 now in 2023. I remember watching that on TV when I was a kid and it blew my mind. 😂

  • @PitchWheel
    @PitchWheel Год назад +13

    Wouldn't it be easier to just put a mirror between the pillars and rotate that, instead of all the entire audience?

    • @CaptainVideo1960
      @CaptainVideo1960 Год назад +1

      You’re closer to the correct solution than the explanation in this video

    • @Zan_Jayna
      @Zan_Jayna 11 месяцев назад +1

      And who would be able to manufacture a 150 foot long mirror? Westinghouse?

  • @scott4092
    @scott4092 10 месяцев назад

    I remember that! I was like 12 at the time. Holy smokes after 40 years it's amazing to finally know.

  • @duallove6909
    @duallove6909 Год назад +5

    Thank you!.Will you please show how we walked through The Wall Of China?. And the one he was cut in half?

    • @zabadazidit
      @zabadazidit Год назад +5

      The walk through the Wall of China was an under-and-over gimmick. The one where he was sawn in two involved a second man under the "legs" half of the table. Both of these revelations can be found on RUclips.

    • @LuckyCharms777
      @LuckyCharms777 Год назад +6

      @@zabadazidit
      Can you explain how the magician who visited my daycare when I was like 5yo made M&M’s appear out of nowhere? 😂
      The best audience a magician can have is little kids because they think it’s real. At least we did back then, little kids nowadays aren’t so naïve.

    • @zabadazidit
      @zabadazidit Год назад +4

      @@LuckyCharms777 Sure thing. The magician had a bag of M&Ms concealed behind his hand and used it the way other magicians would make cards "appear" out of nowhere. It's a sleight of hand trick that is easy to duplicate.

    • @rowelle
      @rowelle Год назад

      This is EXACTLY how he did the Great Wall illusion: ruclips.net/video/wYFdT8UfmXg/видео.htmlsi=SMGw60aXhCivSaqs

    • @rowelle
      @rowelle Год назад

      @@LuckyCharms777I’ve been showing my 5-year-old nephew some of my magic tricks with every day objects and he’s always shocked. I bought him a magic kit but not sure if I should give it to him yet. Not sure when I will tell him that magic is just mind tricks and it’s all just an illusion.

  • @rainbowskunkdash756
    @rainbowskunkdash756 5 месяцев назад +1

    What he said about being the audience being distracted during the turns is absolutely true. Just go on Rise of the Resistance. When you are being captured by the First Order ship, you are on an actual turntable like device to get you from one location to another without you knowing.

  • @user-cb3qr9dt2k
    @user-cb3qr9dt2k Месяц назад

    Wow, I'm old, I remember watching this on TV.

  • @heads_together_crypto2422
    @heads_together_crypto2422 Год назад +4

    Did it at night. Had helicopters. Could they have had 2 separate helicopters drop an opaque curtain in front of the statues?

  • @jimk3487
    @jimk3487 Год назад +1

    He will not be able to do it broad day light. It's easy to do it in pitch black. The trick is managing lighting and dark camouflage.

  • @DeadBeatRealism
    @DeadBeatRealism 3 месяца назад +5

    Why wouldn’t it work in 2023?

  • @eliskablazkova2141
    @eliskablazkova2141 3 месяца назад

    Moc hezký den přeji vám jste super lidi kteří nám ukazují tu nádheru díky patří vám gratulujeme mnohokrát krásné bohužel nerozumím cizí jazyky ale koukám co vidím na internetu

  • @tobaccoman1542
    @tobaccoman1542 Год назад +8

    So how’s he going to make the moon disappear??

    • @scottsmith7203
      @scottsmith7203 Год назад

      Since the moon is made of cheese, David Doucherfield will just eat it all.
      buuuuuuuuurp.

    • @williamgottlieb8723
      @williamgottlieb8723 Год назад +1

      Anyone can make the moon disappear. They Just have to pull their pants back up.

  • @JosephKarsch-ym6cl
    @JosephKarsch-ym6cl 11 месяцев назад +1

    Now that I haven't seen before. (Not just the explanation, but also the use of the word "vanish" as a transitive verb. 😀)

  • @420
    @420 Год назад +20

    This would still work in 2023. People are still simpletons.

    • @BillyViBritannia
      @BillyViBritannia 7 месяцев назад +1

      People have cameras in their pockets today. This would be live on social from every angle around the stage revealing the trick.

    • @420
      @420 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@BillyViBritannia a lot of performers have audiences turn in their devices to this day, so there's that.

    • @Steveman27
      @Steveman27 2 месяца назад

      @@420 Since you generalized everyone, are you saying that you yourself are a simpleton as well?

  • @MoviesAreDope420
    @MoviesAreDope420 Месяц назад

    This was awesome!

  • @A_Realist
    @A_Realist Год назад +3

    You sure that was back in 83? I thought it was sometime in the 90’s

  • @KingOfGamesss
    @KingOfGamesss 6 месяцев назад +2

    1983?....I thought he did this around 1997

  • @robertmcknightmusic
    @robertmcknightmusic Год назад +10

    This guy is a real magician and he masterfully exploits the art of misdirection. If you notice, he goes out of his way to say multiple times that there's no way the statue of liberty could actually vanish and then he provides an elaborate explanation why. DON'T BE FOOLED, PEOPLE! That's just what they want you to think, but I'm more convinced now than ever that the statue really did disappear in 1983. Pretty cool!

  • @rcnelson
    @rcnelson 2 месяца назад

    Fun video. There are other magic tricks I'd love to see explained--the "sawing" in half of a woman in a transparent case and its separation into two parts--Leno said he watched in rehearsal and still couldn't see how it was done.

  • @TKTrooper
    @TKTrooper Год назад +7

    The audience on the stage were part of the trick. There was no need to fool that audience. Copperfield mostly always used a staged audience when it came to his big tv tricks. The poor over acting from the audience proves that alone. Its similar to the acting astonished and amazed you see from the audiences on those shopping channels when they are shown a home appliance that doesnt really perform as advertised once you get one yourself. Same thing. Also the fact the audience was not enclosed from any other angle other than right in front of them, you'd have to be an idiot to realise you aren't being moved even with supposed loud music.

  • @SoloPerICommenti
    @SoloPerICommenti Месяц назад +1

    I was a kid and looked pretty obvious to me at the time as well, to be honest...

  • @janeoconnell3163
    @janeoconnell3163 Год назад +6

    Question for the person in the video…what, specifically, makes you say that this trick would not work in 2023? I’d like to know your reasoning on that.

    • @MindBlownMagicIllusion
      @MindBlownMagicIllusion  Год назад +5

      Because of technology that exists now but didn’t then. Drones, for example. If Copperfield filmed that trick today, people would fly drones over and see the illusion. It would be on TikTok before the special was even over.

  • @bipolarminddroppings
    @bipolarminddroppings Год назад +2

    You could probably do the trick today by having a high def video screen displaying what you think is the Statue of Liberty, and then just switches to a video with the Statue edited out. The ones they use at Lucasfilm and Disney to film infront of "real" backgrounds are pretty convincing if you're far enough away.

    • @bollockjohnson6156
      @bollockjohnson6156 11 месяцев назад

      No, fool. How would that even work? Fiol.

    • @jeffh3984
      @jeffh3984 2 месяца назад

      yes, but that would't be much of a magic trick :P

  • @mimzou
    @mimzou Год назад +3

    1993 maybe ?

    • @mimzou
      @mimzou Год назад +1

      Ok I double checked it was 1983. Shit how time flies 😅