Reel Magic Quarterly - Episode 2
(Based on 1 review)
Features:
Jason Alexander
Did you know that Jason Alexander (George from Seinfeld) won Parlour Magician of the Year at the Magic Castle? But what's even more amazing is that he deserved it! Listen to Jason as he to talks to John Lovick about how he created this award-winning act.
Kevin James talks to Tim Trono about life on a reality show and how Simon Cowell (American Idol) countributed to getting him ousted.
Columns:
Andrew Pinard - continuum
Andrew goes to New York City and speaks with Bill Kalush, Executive Director of the Conjuring Arts Research Center
Off the Shelf is proud to introduce Joel Givens' new book "Session" written by Josh Jay. Josh interviews Joel and Joel performs his Karate coin routine. This is arguably the best Ninja Coin Reel Magic has ever seen! And he explains it!
Reel Magic Quarterly is proud to welcome two new columnists
Jon Armstrong - Small Things, Big Difference
Close-Up Magician of the year at the Castle
Simon Lovell - Simon said IT!
The ever-controversial Simon Lovell sounds off on magic and the internet
Garrett Thomas with Try This At Home
Reviews:
David Regal - Tricks of the Trade
Wayne Kawamoto - Choice Cuts
Bonus Tricks:
Geoff Williams "Ready to Link"
A no-move get-ready for Linking Rubberbands
Joel Givens "Ninja Coin"
Joel's fantastic Karate Coin
"Bar Room Blues" An amazing Color-Changing Deck from Big Blind Media's "new" artist George McBride
Running Time Approximately 120min
Reviews
(Top ▲)
If it were not for Jason Alexander....I would've given this issue 4.5 stars. There is a lack of constancy re: the quality of the video.....really, I should say with the quality of the "commercials" found between the video segments. Some of the commercials are just too long and boring, but then again: that's what God gave us "FF" for, right?! That said, once again......lots a cool stuff here.
The Jason Alexander segment alone is worth twice the cost of the product! This is one DVD you need in your collection.
The Jason Alexander segment alone is worth twice the cost of the product! This is one DVD you need in your collection.