- Alright, we're good? What's up!
Ok, we did it, we did it,
we hit a million subscribers
on this channel,that's
incredible I'm still
at a loss for words, I didn't
think we'd hit it this soon.
I expected January 2019 was the goal.
We smashed that so thank you
to everybody who subscribed
this means the world to
me, it means that you know,
things are looking up obviously so,
I just want to take a
second to acknowledge that
and thank you guys so
much, I will by the way
be doing the giveaway
within the coming weeks
I just have some other stuff planned out
such as this video here.
Second bit of news,
I am currently selling uncut
sheets of first playing cards.
An uncut sheet basically is before they go
into the cutting process, they're laid out
in sheets and a lot of
people including myself
like to use these sheets
as office decoration,
there are only 100 available,
I think already half of them
are gone but I'll leave
the link below if you guys
want to check those out.
Today is an interesting video,
this is something, an
idea that I've had of mine
that I wanted to do for
a long time and I wasn't
quite sure how to do
it, how to go about it.
But, I'm basically going
to learn how to cheat
at Hold 'em, so the whole idea here
is to be able to shuffle a deck of cards,
make it look like it's being shuffled
when actually placing
the cards that you want
at certain places in the deck,
and then dealing them out.
There are many, many magic
books that exist out there.
I've got a collection
of a ton of magic books.
Some dating back to like the 1800's.
The book we're going to
focus on today is considered
the Holy Bible of card, magic
and card cheating even today.
It was published in 1902 and it is called
The Expert At The Card
Table by S.W. Erdnase.
(upbeat ambient music)
Now this book has been in the
center of a lot of controversy
over the years, especially when
it was published because it
basically showed you how to
cheat people out of their money,
and you were also exposing
magic in a book so two no-nos,
the magic industry was
definitely not quite happy
with Mr. Erdnase which by
the way is a pseudonym.
No one knows who this guy really was.
Now these techniques are
very very sleight intensive
and take years to master to make them
look effortless and to actually apply them
in a game of Poker or playing cards.
In offering this book to
the public, the writer uses
no sophistry as an excuse
for it's existence.
The hypocritical can't of
reformed gamblers or whining,
mealymouthed pretensions
of piety are not foisted
as a justification for imparting
the knowledge it contains.
Fancy words, but it will not
make the innocent vicious
or transform the past-time
player into a professional
or make the fool wise, or
curtail the annual crop
of suckers, but whatever
the result may be,
if it sells it will
accomplish the primary motive
of the author, as he needs the money.
All about the money.
The reason he wasn't
arrested back in the day
for releasing this book
was because he sold it
as a guide how to spot a
cheater and not how to cheat
at cards which is pretty
tricky and also why he used
the pseudonym, so he wouldn't get caught.
Really interesting, I'll
leave the link below
to this book, you can check
it out, there are all sorts
of different paperbacks,
super cheap but a lot of fun,
super interesting magic
history behind this.
Another interesting thing
is that there are a range
of playing cards that
were dedicated and devoted
to this book, you had
playing cards that literally,
the back design was the book,
you also had people replicate
what they believed to be the actual cards
that Erdnase used back in
the day, which are known
as the squeezers and then a friend of mine
Daniel Madison released with
Ellusionist one of the most
creative decks I've ever seen,
this deck actually mimics
what the cards looked like in the book.
So I did want to give you a
bit of history and background
about this before we dive
into myself learning something
this difficult, I do want
to show you the process
of me learning and I do also
want to break down how to
read a magic book because
they're not easy reads,
they're very heavy and many
times, because they're so old
they use all these words
that we don't use today.
So hopefully, that'll be
a little bit more clear
for you guys so, although
this is not a tutorial
because that's not my
intention is not to teach you,
but I do want you to
watch me learn something
and then maybe that'll help you
learn something on your own.
Enough talking, let's dive in.
Again, sorry for the lengthy intro
but I do think it's
important that you guys know
a little bit about the
history of this book.
OK, so what we are going to learn
is Stock Shuffling, retaining
Stock while shuffling.
Now I've never attempted
to learn this, I know of
all the lingo and I know
technically, or I know actually
theoretically how all of it's
done and not technically.
So first of all, you have to know how to
overhand shuffle, most people know how to
shuffle this way, they're
obviously in more of
the eastern countries,
people shuffle like this
but you will need to shuffle like so.
So the In-jog is something
we're going to be using.
The In-jog is a protruding card over
the little finger of the
left hand so when I'm here,
I'm either In-jogging this
card, and then shuffling off,
giving me a nice Break here when I want to
go and grab it and the
other way to do that
is to simply riff one off down here.
Obviously those are pretty big In-jogs,
you don't need them that big, but for
demonstration purposes
that's what an In-jog's
gonna look like which allows you
to cut directly at the
Break if you need to.
Out-jog is the same thing, but up here.
(cards shuffling)
So you're going up here so that you may
grab at the Break, OK?
The Break obviously is,
let's say we In-jog,
(cards shuffling)
and hold at the Break, we're
going to want to hold there.
Bit of a tricky situation, and then Throw,
throwing on top which
basically means taking the rest
of whatever's left on
your Break and throwing it
on top, obviously Shuffling
Off is just shuffling
without design and that's
really all you need to know
for this, the rest you
don't really need to know.
So, you need to know Injog, Outjog,
Break, and how to Shuffle Off.
So what we wanna know
is the Two-Card Stock.
Basically, if you're
playing Texas Hold 'em,
and you want to deal
yourself a winning hand
or deal whoever a winning
hand, this is going to
teach us how to do that
through an overhand shuffle.
Obviously, this is an old book and if you
haven't read a magic book before,
things might seem super,
super complicated.
The two desired cards are placed on top,
undercut about half the
deck, In-jog the top card,
run two less than twice
the number of players,
Out-jog and Shuffle Off,
undercut to Out-jog,
forming a break at the
In-jog, run one less
than number of players,
Throw to the Break,
run the number of players,
In-jog and Shuffle Off.
Undercut to In-jog, and
Throw on top (chuckles).
Now that sounds way too
complicated, but they do
end up breaking it down
on the next page here.
Let's do exactly what they say
and see if we can learn this.
Assuming that this is a
five-handed Poker game,
so five people, and we're
playing Texas Hold 'em.
Two kings, the desired cards
which are placed on top.
Alright, let's go do that,
I've placed both kings on top,
what do I do next? I
undercut about half the deck
and then In-jog the top
card that is, to push
one of the kings slightly
over with the little finger
into the left-hand pack
with the left hand, OK.
So grab half the deck, I'm
gonna In-jog this card,
just that single card,
it is done the instant
the undercut is made and just before
the right hand makes a
downward motion to shuffle
so, as soon as this is
done I need to do this, OK.
A little bit of muscle memory here.
Run two less than twice
the number of players, OK.
Bit of math here, that
which would be eight so,
because we are five players,
five times two is 10,
two less than twice the
number which is eight.
So I run eight and then Out-jog so,
one, two, three, four,
five, six, seven, eight.
Out-jog. Out-jog meaning,
placing this one forward
so we got the In-jog back
here, we got the Out-jog now
and Shuffle Off which
means, shuffle the balance
to the right-hand packet,
the left hand without design.
The left little finger
and the first fingers
now hold the in and out jog, correct.
Left little finger, first finger, got it.
The next operation is to
undercut to the Out-jog,
forming a Break at the In-jog,
OK that sounds complicated
but what they mean here is I'm going to
apply pressure here and I'm going to apply
pressure here and I'm
going to come together.
Nope, you lost me. Oh God.
In-jog this one. One, two, three,
four, five, six, seven, eight.
Out-jog, run the rest, now at the Break.
Boom, so at the Break now I've created
this other little Break by doing that.
Let's do that one more time, and so
the right hand finger
easily find the Out-jog
and the right thumb presses
up a little on the In-jog
and forms and holds a
space under the packet.
(cards shuffling)
Out-jog.
Run. That right there.
I'm making that Break happen.
OK, so once I have this, run one less
than the number of players, so four.
One, two, three, four and Throw the Break.
That is, pass the rest of
the cards above the Break
into one pack on the left which is done by
lessening the thumb pressure somewhat
and slightly accelerating
the downward motion.
Throw the rest on top,
got it, run the number
of players which is five, one, two, three,
four, five, In-jog
and then Shuffle Off.
(cards shuffling)
And then undercut at the
In-jog, so that's the In-jog,
undercut, and then Throw on top.
Technically if we are five players now,
one, two, three, four,
five.
One, two, three, four,
five, I mean, that'd be
a good hand too, but hey.
Pocket kings baby, OK!
It wasn't that difficult
I mean there is some,
the difficult part I think is,
is not necessarily
learning all the things,
you can learn all the
things and do it slowly,
I think the hard part is
getting it up to speed
and making it look normal and then also
doing the math if you're like
six people or eight people
or seven people or two
people, I'm going to try this
one more time so, we got the kings on top.
Let's try this bit a little bit faster.
(cards shuffling)
(cards slapping on table)
But can we do it faster? I guess there's
a light touch on it. Two, three, four,
five, six, seven, eight,
Out-jog, run the rest.
Catch the Break, catch the Break.
Run one less than the amount
of players so it's one, two,
three, four, Throw on top the rest.
Run the number of players,
one, two, three, four, five.
In-jog,
run the rest, grab at
the Break, Throw on top.
One, two, three, four, five.
One, two, three, four, five, OK.
Alright, I'm gonna try this
as fast as I can and then
we're gonna move on to doing
it with a different amount
of players and see what happens.
(cards shuffling)
(cards slapping on table)
That one was a little bit faster.
This is after like, about
10 times of doing it.
Speed is increasing, my
hands and muscle memory
are starting getting
used to the moves and I'm
stammering less, I'm not
staggering as much as I was.
(cards shuffling)
(cards slapping on table)
Alright, we've got that down I think.
Now, let's see if we can
do it without thinking
let's try to go with, let's go with
a seven player game, break,
seven players so it's
seven times two, 14 minus two, 12.
(cards shuffling)
Out-jog, then it should rest,
boom and boom,
got my Break there.
Two less than the number
of players that's five.
No, one less.
(cards shuffling)
Six, Throw the rest on
top, the number of players,
one, two, three, four, five, six, seven,
In-jog.
(cards shuffling)
Grab at the In-jog, Throw on
top, let's go, seven players.
One, two, three, four,
five,
six,
seven.
(cards slapping on table)
Ay-Hum! Ooh, baby!
(cards riffling)
That is cool.
I'm gonna probably perfect
it and eventually use it.
So, I'll come back in a couple weeks
after practicing this and
I'll see if I still got it.
Let's try it one more time,
let's do a four player game.
(cards shuffling)
(cards slapping on table)
Ooh, pocket sixes. OK,
still need some polishing,
but that was a lot of fun
now, after a few weeks'
practice I might be
ready to actually cheat
at the card table with this technique.
Hope you enjoyed that,
I'll leave the link below
if you guys are interested in checking out
Expert At The Card Table or these cards,
I'll try to leave as many links as I can
so you guys can check all this out.
Leave a thumbs up, thanks guys.
So hard, so difficult, I
will be practicing though,
it's not something that
I'm gonna take lightly,
it's something that I won't demonstrate
until I master it and
that's one of the things
a lot of people forget to
do nowadays is practice
before they show it on
camera and hopefully
in a year from now I can
come back to this video
and show you exactly
how fire my skills are.
I think the hardest
part, as well as magic,
as well as playing guitar,
is to do something else
at the same time and with
magic is even more interesting
is that you have to
make it look effortless,
make it look like you're doing nothing,
where you're actually doing something
extremely difficult and you have to talk,
and you have to be
presentable and sociable
and that is where magic
is really difficult,
especially Sleight of Hand card magic.
In this instance, I think
it'd be worth it to learn
how to talk to people while you can do
the mental calculations
and the sleight of hand
at the same time, kind of like singing
and playing the guitar,
most magicians just focus
on a technical aspect
but you do have to meld
those two together and that's
where the art form comes in.
Anyways guys, if you did
enjoy this video and you want
to see more of this, go ahead
and hit the like button,
leave a comment below, let
me know what you thought
of this video and subscribe
if you're new here,
hit the notification
button and all that jazz,
we'll see you on the next video.
Peace, rah! Ooh, by the
way, paste boards was a hit,
I love paste boards,
the reaction was great,
I'm filming episode two this
week, I will let you know
soon on my Instagram who
those people are going to be
'cause there are more than one, check out
my Instagram below if you
guys want a sneak peek
at that this week, alright peace, bye!
(speaking in foreign language)
(upbeat accordion music)
