Desert Island Tricks

Alakazam Magic
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Mar 27, 2026 • 1h 7min

Rodney James Piper

Magic gets weaker the moment it feels like a “performance mode” you turn on and off. Rodney James Piper joins us with a profound, refreshing belief: if you’re a magician, you live it everywhere you go. That single idea ripples through everything we talk about, from pocket props and borrowed objects to stage illusions that can stop a room cold.He explains why the Stealth Assassin Wallet is a constant-ready miracle machine, how fork bending becomes a lifetime souvenir, and why the best magicians make people forget methods and just feel wonder. We also dig into practical show-craft for today’s social media era, including how to design a clean “photo moment” so the audience shares the image you want, not a messy screenshot mid-move.Then we go bigger: Fire Spiker, double levitation, and a dream idea involving a yacht appearance that might finally make it into the House of Illusion show in Salou, Spain. Rodney also flips the script on what the “real trick” is, arguing that the venue, the welcome, the pacing, and the full audience journey can be the most powerful illusion of all. We close with his banishment for the magic industry, his pick for the one essential magic book, and the one item he won’t do any of it without.Rodney’s Desert Island Tricks: 1. Stealth Assassin Wallet2. Forks 3. Borrowed Watch 4. Boat Appearance 5. Matt Edwards 6. Fire Spiker 7. Double Levitation 8. House of Illusion Banishment. The word jealousy Book. The mind and magic David Berglas Item. Family Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk
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Mar 20, 2026 • 46min

SOS: Adam Dadswell

This week Adam Dadswell returns to rebuild his list years after his first visit to the island. Some picks stay because they still hit hard in real shows, others get replaced by newer pieces that fit the way Adam performs now, with clearer premises, cleaner handling, and bigger moments for spectators.We dig into what actually makes a trick worth keeping for life: the satisfaction of a sneaky method, the freedom to go hands-off, and a premise that sparks real conversation instead of a “look how clever I am” vibe. Adam talks through switching Sneak Thief for Sentinel, his drawing duplication approach that uses a childhood imagination hook and a table display that creates instant intrigue. He also trades Big Kick for InstaCaan, a card at any number routine that escalates into a blank-deck shocker, and updates the Diabolical Principle with Loki for that unforgettable key reveal.Then we go past the trick list into the culture of magic. Adam banishes magician-wins routines that make audience members feel small, shares a wedding performance horror story and how he recovered, picks Theodore Annemann as his dream island guest, and chooses Darren Brown’s Enigma as the show he’d replay forever. We’re thrilled to meet with Adam once again! Adam's Desert Island Substitutions: 1. Sneak Thief for Sentinel 2. Big Kick for InstaCAAN3. Diabolical for LokiBanishment. Magician Winning Routines Guest. Theodore Annemann Memory. Go back to the first time he saw magic live Horror. Built up a reveal and didn’t quite go to plan Show. Enigma Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk
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Mar 13, 2026 • 24min

Stranded with a Stranger: Jim Aitken

This week we sit down with Jim Aitken, an Aberdeen magician, longtime club member, and retired paramedic, to explore eight effects that balance practicality, heart, and lasting impact. From a self-working “last two cards match” that crushes in the real world to a smiley-sticker miracle that guests remember years later, Jim’s choices remind us that method is only half the story; the rest is the way you make people feel.We trace his journey from yogurt-pot cups and balls to modern coffee-cup chops, then talk about when it’s worth investing in a premium timepiece like the Bluether Infinity Watch. Jim’s philosophy is simple: buy reactions, not just props. Rope magic makes a case for clear visual storytelling, while the invisible deck debate sparks fresh ideas for framing choices and scripting reveals. Along the way, we celebrate society life, hidden gems in books and DVDs, and the small tweaks, like personalised stickers or trial runs, that push classics into unforgettable territory.Mentalism fans will love Jim’s pick of Eclipse ESP cards and a sleeper routine that proves clean structure beats complicated method. He caps the list with Copperfield’s Flying, a nod to pure astonishment and the joy that first pulled many of us toward the art. Jim also draws a hard line on professionalism: never make child helpers the punchline. His recommended read, Simon Lovell’s Billion Dollar Bunko, opens a trove of swindles and bar bets to sharpen your handling and patter, while his must-have non-magic item, a computer for nonstop study, champions lifelong learning.If this sparks ideas for your own desert island set, share your eight tricks, one banishment, one book and one non magic item. Send it to sales@alakazam.co.uk and we can get your very own episode! Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk
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Mar 6, 2026 • 1h 8min

Chris Webb

Chris Webb, a working magician and creator known for visual, commercial routines like FLASH, walks through his eight must-have tricks. He highlights spectator-held coin magic, movie-themed card starters, CGI-like card visuals, reliable bill changes, thread levitations, and photogenic rope work. He also explains what magic he’d bury and the non-magic item he’d keep.
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Feb 27, 2026 • 1h 26min

Vince Wilson

What makes a trick live past the applause? We say it’s story, meaning that travels with people when real life hits them in the face outside the venue. With Vince Wilson, we unpack the craft of bizarre magic as a storytelling engine that any performer can use to make their show unforgettable. Vince traces his path from paranormal investigation to skeptical, theatre-first magic and explains why narrative, metaphor, and mood beat out raw method when you want your work to stick.Together we build an “island set” that doubles as a masterclass in framing. An Okito doll becomes a Blair Witch-flavoured parable, a tea reading paints initials with ash and memory, and Odyssey transforms under the lens of folklore “glamour,” turning a visual illusion into a lesson in influence. We go deep on repurposing mainstream props like Prestige through alchemical “equivalent exchange,” proving that originality often lies in language, not hardware. The Witches of Glastonbury lands a portable fable about choice and fear, while a Grim Fairy Tales book test and Pegasus page highlight staging, justification, and the art of not overselling examinability.For scale and pace, tossed-out tarot unlocks room-wide engagement and even a nimble Q&A, powered by ethical cold reading and sharp observation. Then the closer: a lean, consent-forward PK Touches that’s devastating precisely because it’s simple. Vince shares practical guidance on consent lines, pacing, and why over-verification breaks the spell. He also makes a bold case for burying published patter so every magician must find their own voice, because sincerity can’t be borrowed, and booking agents can spot stock lines a mile away.If you want your magic to be remembered tomorrow, this conversation gives you the tools today: justify every choice, give your props provenance, and let your script reflect who you are!Vince’s Desert Island Tricks: 1. Voodoo Doll Stickman2. Tea3. Odyssey 4. The Prestige 5. Witches of Glastonbury 6. Sandman Book Test7. Tossed Out Tarot 8. PK TouchesBanishment. Published scripts Book. Daemon’s DiaryItem. Chinese Fortune Coins Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk
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Feb 20, 2026 • 1h 22min

Erik Tait

What makes a close-up set survive bars, restaurants, conventions, and The Magic Castle without breaking stride? We chase that answer with Erik Tait, who lays out eight pieces that hit fast, reset instantly, and leave images people actually remember. From a safer, sleeker ring-to-keys in Flight 101 to a signed card to pocket born from pandemic constraints, Erik shows how speed and clarity beat complexity when you’re performing in the wild. Every choice earns its space, not for novelty, but because it delivers a clean effect under pressure.We dig into the unexpected power of the reverse-cut Mental Photography deck and how to frame “experimental” props so they impress and then disappear before the heat. We rethink cups and balls as a crisp five-minute routine with decisive phases and bold loads. We turn sugar into a 3D-printed salt elephant that guests keep and talk about for years. We even give ambitious card a new spine by using an odd-backed selection, making each rise unmistakable while exploring timing and display in ways that feel fresh and visual.Erik’s coins across opens every table he works, direct, quick, and in their hands, proving the set before a wordy intro can get in the way. Then a handsome wooden update to the classic colour-vision box, Mental Block with a die, fools magicians and invites itself to be performed from a living room mantel. Along the way, Erik banishes rope magic for looking like puzzles, champions The Secrets of So Sato for elegant card thinking, and reveals the humble nail file that quietly shapes his decks and once confounded a precision scale.Erik’s Desert Island Tricks: 1. Flite 101 2. Card to Pocket 3. Mental Photography 4. Cups and Balls 5. Sugar Rabbit 6. Blue Backed Card, Ambitious Card 7. Coins Across 8. Mental Block Banishment. Rope Magic Book. Secrets of So Sato Item. Nail FileFind out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk
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Feb 13, 2026 • 21min

Stranded with a Stranger: Mark Piazza

Eight tricks, one book, one banishment and a lifetime of lessons packed into a single, fast-moving session with performer and author Mark Piazza. We trace his arc from 25 years of kids’ shows to a sharp mentalism repertoire, pulling apart the choices that still earn repeat bookings and real reactions. From the tactile honesty of Hundy 500 to the elastic power of propless tools like Quinta, Mark shows how method serves meaning when the script and structure are tuned for impact.We dig into the psychology behind equivoque that feels like prophecy, anchored by Max Maven’s unforgettable line about remembering something that hasn’t happened yet. Then we swing visual with a cap through a clear bottle, complete with a cork for extra conviction and talk about why organic, brand-familiar props beat shiny apparatus in the wild. Personalisation runs deep in Mark’s set: DMC Alpha markings enable a clean, hands-off four-of-a-kind, and a name-spelling revelation turns a quick card effect into a souvenir moment people photograph and share.Classic structure gets a modern skin with a Starbucks chop cup and themed baseball loads, proving that context can refresh method without sacrificing clarity. We close on confabulation, glass boxes, balloons, secret adds and why layered choices plus time misdirection make it so hard to unwind. Mark also shares the book that keeps his creativity sharp, Tractare by R. Shane, and the one technique he’d banish for good. If you care about framing, personalisation, and practical workers that travel light and hit hard, this lineup will sharpen your set and your thinking.Send in your list of 8 tricks, 1 banishment, 1 book and 1 non magic item you use for magic to sales@alakazam.co.uk and have your list featured on an episode of Stranded with a Stranger! Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk
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Feb 6, 2026 • 1h 42min

Craig Petty

If you’ve ever been told to perfect five tricks and repeat them forever, prepare to toss that rule out. Craig Petty joins us to make a fearless case for evolving your set, testing ideas in the wild, and embracing marketing as part of the craft. He opens up about the morning mantra that fuels his output, how to handle criticism without shrinking, and why passion beats cynicism every time.We move from mindset to mechanics with a desert-island kit that actually works: a Rubik’s Cube routine anchored by a tattoo prediction built for photo moments, the heavyweight surprise of an eight ball production, and Jon Allen’s Destination Box for clean, spectator-handled impossibilities. Craig digs into workhorse tools, rope and rubber bands, that scale from kids’ shows to banquets, with modular phases that survive interruptions and noisy rooms. Then he spotlights the Extractor E2 as a rare “method equals miracle” device, delivering signed-card power with zero heat.Card nerds will love the marked Mnemonica segment where a memorised deck turns pick‑a‑card into name‑a‑card, unlocks jazzing, and frames Darwin Ortiz’s “Test Your Luck” as a perfect opener. And for stage lovers, Split Press earns its keep as a 360‑friendly, roll‑in illusion that lets you control angles and pace a full show. Craig’s forced choice on his own work lands on Chop, and he explains exactly why that utility tool still defines his career.The heart of the hour is a banishment with teeth: cut toxicity and self‑doubt so more magicians create, publish, and perform with courage. We close with a nod to career-making reading, John Bannon’s Impossibilia and a deceptively simple non‑magic item, the humble paperclip, fuelling Jay Sankey’s Paperclipped. Hit play for hard-won insights, practical repertoire, and a reminder to back yourself.Craig’s Desert Island Tricks: Rubiks Cube - Tattoo Reveal Trick Shot Prediction Destination Box Fibre OpticsStrange Exchange E2Marked Deck in MnemonicaSplit Press Craig Petty Release. Chop Banishment. Self Doubt Book. ImpossibiliaItem. PaperclipFind out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk
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Jan 30, 2026 • 1h 12min

SOS: Peter Nardi

A sliced finger, a kiwi, and a lesson in checking your props, our cold open sets the pace for a no-fluff, real-world rethink of the “eight tricks for life” challenge. Two years on, Peter Nardi returns to keep what still stuns, swap what no longer fits, and explain exactly why.  We dig into the pieces that survive time and venues: the elegance of Horizontal Card Rise, the open-ended power of Extractor, and iChange, the interchange Peter refined over two decades to make cleaner and easier without losing impact. Then we make bold substitutions. Predator Wallet steps aside for Sharpie Through Card, anchored by Rob Bromley’s ingenious method and the everyday logic of a Sharpie. Fourth Dimensional Telepathy yields to Andy Nyman’s Sophie Trick, where story and structure turn an old Monte idea into meaningful mentalism. Imagine stays because mental photography still crushes lay audiences when paced with confidence, while the Mirage Coin Set earns its keep with Craig Petty’s International Reverse Matrix, fully justified by Peter’s “return tickets” kicker.  The heart of this conversation is a challenge to “magician’s guilt.” Not every prop needs a five-minute alibi. Strong, simple methods often hit hardest when performed for real people, not theoretical critics. We talk audience psychology, why lay-folk don’t track what magicians do, and how to resist theory spirals that never reach a stage. Along the way, Peter swaps his book to Bob Cassidy for evergreen mentalism structure, names Tom Mullica as his dream island companion, relives the pride of 4MG on Britain’s Got Talent, and bottles a couple of horror stories, including that too-sharp knife, so they can drift away.  Looking for inspiration for your own set? This episode blends practical technique, audience-first framing, and candid stories from gigs, TV, and shop floors. If you’re reshaping your material for today’s rooms, you’ll leave with clearer criteria and a few routines worth revisiting. Enjoy the ride, then share your eight, your banishment, and your why. If you like this kind of deep dive into working magic, follow, share with a friend, and leave a review to help more magicians find us.Peter’s Desert Island Substitutions: Predator Wallet for Sharpie Through CardFourth Dimensional Telepathy for The Sophie TrickThe Magic Menu for Artful Mentalism of Bob CassidyBanishment. Magicians GuiltGuest. Tom MullicaMemory. 4MG on Britains Got TalentHorror. Knife Through Kiwi, Through FingerShow. Siegfried and RoyFind out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk
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Jan 23, 2026 • 1h 18min

Tom Bolton

A locked gate marked 19½, a tiny office, and a stubborn 19‑year‑old knocking on every bar and hotel in Durham, this is how The Magic Corner began. We sit down with Tom Bolton to unpack how a 10–12 seat room became a destination venue, why careful lighting and sound cues matter as much as sleights, and how seasonal shows keep locals returning with new guests in tow.Tom walks us through the show’s architecture: a bar‑hatch first half, a bookshelf reveal to a ring‑seated second half, and production choices that turn tricks into theatre. Hear how he frames a multiple selection using “principles of magic,” layers Double Cross so spectators can’t backtrack, and uses Inject and Toxic to deliver deeply personal, phone‑based impossibilities. We dig into Loops and PK Touch performed surrounded, Optix for a jaw‑dropping phone vanish, and a chop cup that pays off a promised “elephant” at the perfect moment.Then comes the signature piece: Goblet of Fire. A name is written, the ember rises in amber light as music swells, and the room fills with that hush only real wonder creates. Tom explains how QLab, DMX, and an Audio Ape remote let him run every cue himself, transforming small‑room magic into a cinematic experience. We also explore reviews and tourism wins, TripAdvisor recognition, Fringe lessons from Edinburgh and Adelaide, and a candid banishment of ego‑driven hype.If you love intimate magic, theatrical polish, and creative routing that turns constraints into strengths, this one’s for you. Subscribe, share with a magician friend, and leave a quick review to help others find the show. And if you make it to Durham, grab tickets to The Magic Corner and tell Tom we sent you.Tom Bolton’s Desert Island Tricks: Multiple Selection Double Cross Inject 2.0TOXIC +LOOPSOptix ProChop Cup Goblet of Fire Banishment. Ego in Magic Book. The Particle System Item. QLab Find out more about the creators of this Podcast at www.alakazam.co.uk

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