Chop Box
/After the cigar version of the Chop gimmick mentioned last week, I got a number of emails asking me what I use Chop for. So today I’m going to share my most used trick that I do with Chop. You could rejigger the handling for the cigar version. Or use the Sharpie as I describe below.
The following description comes from the first issue of the supporter newsletter, Love Letters.
Okay, this is likely going to be my main usage for this gimmick going forward. Just keeping it in my bag and having the ability to do many different types of effects that would normally require a prediction box. I was surprised this idea wasn’t on included on the download, because in my opinion it’s one of the best ways to use this gimmick.
Here’s a simple example…
Before leaving to get dinner with my friend Elisabeth, I tell her I want to try something. “I had a weird dream last night. I want to test something...”
I tell her to go grab a mug from the kitchen. She comes back, and I drop a crumpled up piece of paper into the mug. I tell her to put a book on top of the mug and go place it somewhere in her house.
At dinner I say, “Point to anyone here.”
She points to an older woman near the corner with her husband.
“If you had to guess her name, what do you think it would be?” I ask.
“Hmm.... Let’s go with Agnes Goodhead.”
“Haha, perfect,” I say.
Later when we get back to her place I say, “Oh, can you go get that mug that you set aside earlier?”
She brings it back to me.
“Last night I had a dream that we went to that restaurant and we met a woman who looked just like the woman you picked out. Except in my dream, we talked for a little bit with her.”
I pull out a Sharpie from my pocket.
“In the car before I came in here, I wrote down a detail from that dream on a piece of paper.” I mime writing something with the Sharpie. “I want to show you what that was.”
I grab the bottom of the mug and have her remove the book from on top. I show her the wadded up paper inside, tip it into my hand and give it to her.
She opens it up and on the paper it says, “Agnes Goodhead.”
Okay, so the method here is pretty clear. You drop a dummy paper that has been prepped into the mug. Then, at some point in the night, you get some information that you couldn’t have possibly known at the time you gave her the “prediction” earlier in the day. Then, at any point later when you’re alone (in the bathroom or whatever), you write it down on a duplicate piece of paper and crumple it up.
When the time comes, have your friend bring you the whole set-up—which they won’t really know what it is quite yet—have them remove the book from the top as you hold the mug from the bottom. Show them the paper inside. “Dump it” into your hand (shuttle pass for your finger-palmed dupe) and give it to them to open. Step away from them while they do this (as if you’re just being fair). Drop the pen in the mug or just steal out the duplicate however you want.
Is this the “ultimate” prediction box? Maybe not. But being able to build the “box” from items they have on hand, and the fact that you only have to carry this gimmicked Sharpie with you makes it so damn practical.
You can use it to predict anything you want. What someone will order at dinner. The score of a basketball game you go to. How many people with glasses you’ll see while you’re out that night. Whatever you want.
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Over two years later, I still use this a lot. I keep Chop in my car or computer bag and use it spontaneously when a prediction box type routine comes to mind. As I said, it’s not the “ultimate” prediction box. But it fits in with my Carefree Philosophy and I’ve never found it to be lacking in its deceptiveness.