How Does The art of misdirection | Apollo Robbins | TED Work?

It’s like when you’re playing hide-and-seek and someone distracts you just as your friend sneaks up behind you, misdirection is about tricking your brain so it doesn’t notice something important.

How It Works

Imagine you're eating a sandwich, and suddenly someone takes the bread out from under your nose. You look up in surprise, but you didn't see them move, that’s what Apollo Robbins does with people's attention. He uses gestures, words, or even movement to trick your brain into looking one place while something else happens right in front of you.

Why It Feels Like Magic

You think it’s magic because your brain is trying to keep up with everything at once, like when you’re playing tag and someone hides behind a tree, but you don’t notice them until they pop out. Your brain gets confused, and that’s what makes the trick feel surprising.

It's not real magic, it's just really good trickery!

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Examples

  1. A magician makes a coin disappear by drawing attention to his other hand.
  2. You’re told to look at one card, but the real trick is on another.
  3. A person’s eyes are guided away from where the secret happens.

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Categories: Science · magic· misdirection· TED Talks