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The Streets Set

Archer, John

Vanishing Inc.

(Based on 2 reviews)
From the man who fooled Penn & Teller in their hit show, we bring you "The Streets." The plot is simple: someone picks a city street map and thinks of ANY street they see on the page. You read his mind and tell him many details about the page he is looking at and even EXACTLY what street he is thinking of.

The quantum leap forward with "The Streets" is that, finally, John Archer has solved the biggest issue with any book test: why use a book? People don't need books to think of words, so why use them at all? But here you change the game: you ask someone to think of a STREET, and provide a book of maps to help. Now, there's a very logical REASON to carry a book of maps.

"The Streets" comes with two custom-printed map books (London and Boston) that do all the work for you. These books are subtle works of art. They look JUST like the real thing, but these maps have all sorts of built-in features that force various streets and features. The package also includes a beautiful storage box for both books, two indexes, a 50-page booklet (including two full routines by Luke Jermay) and access to a 30-minute video download of John Archer performing and explaining the routine.

This is a full routine that can be performed anywhere in the world. The presentation is perfectly justified even if you don't live in London or Boston.

"The Streets is more than a single trick; it's a practical tool for the working mentalist-which means if you use it wisely, it might actually keep you off the streets!"
- Max Maven

"This is a professionally designed piece of equipment which looks good, works well and offers time-tested methods built-into a deceptively convincing and modern package. The Streets can turn any performer into a human GPS."
- Michael Weber

"A utility tool that will allow even those left cold by traditional book tests to craft exciting demonstrations of super memory, telepathy or body language reading."
- Luke Jermay

Reviews

Christopher Carey

Official Reviewer

Mar 27, 2014

THE STREETS SET by John Archer is the latest version of an effect he released a few years ago. Since I don’t have the previous version, I’m unaware of any differences or improvements. I do know that John Archer is a wonderful performer. I would put him in the same conversation as a David Williamson or Tom Mullica. The difference is that he’s able to blend crazy humor (some of which borders on Don Rickles insults) with mentalism. I know of no other performer who does this.

One thing in the ad that bothered me right away (and John repeats this in the accompanying teaching video) is this idea that he finds it strange to “have to hand someone a book to generate a word” instead of having the participant simply think of a word. But I don’t find it strange at all. Audiences know that newspapers, magazines and BOOKS have words in them. Books, I feel, lend a certain visual appeal to a mentalism show (but still probably don’t meet Jim Steinmeyer’s production quality standards).

I have also read complaints that one is restricted to using only the gimmicked city books John provides, Boston and London. But I don’t agree with those complaints at all. After all, John could not have practically made all the city map guides for us. Put your thinking cap on and I’m sure you can justify using these books. John addresses this in the instructions. And I’ve read comments that suggest that everyone uses smartphone apps to navigate these days so why would anyone own a map in book form. That’s simply not true. Go to a bookstore or online and there are still many different publishers of maps in book form. SOMEONE is buying them.

Overall, I really like this because it offers a plot one doesn’t often see in mentalism, namely, the revelation of a LOCATION someone is merely thinking of. Just think how you can reveal that and don’t stop thinking, as Tommy Wonder would say. Using a much larger map, you could make this a very big showpiece, perhaps, even a closer. That’s worth the asking price that John Archer asking for.
(Top ▲)

Jeff Stone

Official Reviewer

Mar 17, 2014

Review of The Streets by John Archer:


Two well made map books, a 35 minute downloadable video, a 43 page booklet of instructions, 4 crib sheets, and John Archer for $120 bucks. Is it gem or is it rubble . . .

Effect


Basically, this is multiple book-test-ish effects using tourist guide maps. You can have them open to any map page and think of any street name on the page, and you can easily divine what street they're thinking of. You can have them look at any page in the index and think of the top word on that page, and you can divine it. You can have multiple people open to any page and think of any section of town on the page they're looking at. You can then (with no fishing) divine which part of town each person is in. There are a couple other effects that can be done, depending on the presentation you use and if you bring other map books into the presentation.

Method


The method is two very cleverly gimmicked books that do 95% of the work for you. The little "work" that you have to do is super simple and within the grasp of any technical skill level. The real skill needed here is the same with most mentalism; acting. One of the routines relies on a crib sheet that is supplied. However, they've made this crib sheet more user friendly than any crib sheet that has gone before. It's simple and elegant.

Ad Copy Integrity


The ad copy is accurate. However, oddly, they claim that the instruction booklet is 50 pages. It's 43, not 50. That's probably a typo, and certainly will have no impact on the final star rating. One thing, however, that I do take issue with is that the premise of this product is that regular book tests with "regular" novels are flawed because there is no justification for the book. Their argument is that if you wanted someone to think of a word, why bother using a book; just have them think of any word. They actually claim, in the book, that there is no justification of a book that will ever work.

However, I would argue that the presentational premise of "speed reading" a book on the spot and memorizing it or claiming that you've memorized it in advance is a legitimate and very good way to justify the use of a book. The presentation then becomes that you are proving that you have the whole book memorized. (Shameless plug: I just published a book, 793.8 where 15 of the 270 pages cover this very subject and give many legitimate justifications for using a book.) The reason I bring this up is because there is actually a presentation in the booklet that uses this very premise, so I found it a bit funny that they claim that there is nothing you can say to justify the use of a book. I think that line of thinking is flawed.

Product Quality


The product quality is excellent. The books (Boston and London street maps) look like the real deal. They're not "examinable." However, they are "handleable." The audience members will handle them and use them during the effect without the method being detected. The booklet and video quality are excellent. Really, the only thing that the video adds to the booklet, however, is the live performance. The instructional part is exactly the same as the booklet, and almost unnecessary. Not filming that might have made the cost a little better than it is.

The teaching is excellent, and there are many tips, pointers, ideas, etc. on how to use the props and how to blend the various effects into one routine.

Final Thoughts


This product is very usable and doable, and an excellent alternative to a book test that has a lot of room for presentational creativity. The question you have to ask yourself is if you like the effect. If you do, you'll be very happy with the method and practicality of everything. Is it worth $120? This particular product comes with both the Boston and London books. However, you can buy the set separately for $80 bucks each. So from that perspective, it almost seems reasonable. I also know that this type of prop typically does cost much more than your average effect. Mother of All Book Tests comes to mind. It's $300 - $350, and tons of pros own one. I bought one. My friend, Jim Spinnato, owns multiple copies.

I know of another pro who's bought multiple copies and he tears the pages out of the book and carries a few around with him at all times. Knowing that people spend this kind of money ($300 to $350) on a single (very well made and gimmicked) book with minimal instructions and no video instructions or performance footage, does $120 for two books with a video and 43 well written pages of instructions seem reasonable? I think so . . . unless, of course, you would never do this effect. Then why are you reading this review? This review is for people who like the effect and want to know if it really is as good as they say. It is.

Final Verdict:
4.5 Stars with a Stone Status of Gem.

(Top ▲)