Apollo Robbins: The art of misdirection
Apollo Robbins: Dėmesio nukreipimo menas
Apollo Robbins will take the phone from your pocket and the ring off your finger, then hand them back to you and (maybe) show you how he did it. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
kurie mus apakina.
mobiliuosius telefonus
dešiniojo kampo apačioje?
kiek valandų?
žingsnį pasitikėjimo žaidime.
Kokios spalvos mano kaklaraištis?
įmantrių jutiklių
patys to nesuvokdami.
įvairiomis technikomis,
išnaudojate savo dėmesį,
Joe: I don't.
Joe: ne.
Joe: Money.
Joe: pinigus.
Joe: Yup.
Joe: taip
savo telefono numerį.
Joe: I do.
žetoną savo rankoje?
Joe: Taip
jūsų rankos. Sakykite taip.
AR: Good.
AR: gerai.
AR: No, it's not here. Open your hand.
AR: ne, jis ne čia. Parodykite ranką.
Tai buvo sunku.
AR: Oh, thanks.
kad žetonas pradingsta.
Tai labai neįprasta. Ar tai jūsų, pone?
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Apollo Robbins - Gentleman thiefApollo Robbins will take the phone from your pocket and the ring off your finger, then hand them back to you and (maybe) show you how he did it.
Why you should listen
Pickpocketing is a triumph of craft: a distracting touch with one hand, while the other hand gets to work, and the next thing you know ... where's my wallet? Apollo Robbins is a modern master of picking pockets, possessor of a subtle understanding of human attention, a taste for classic crime, and something he calls "grift sense" -- which, as he told the New Yorker , is “stepping outside yourself and seeing through the other person’s eyes, thinking through the other person’s mind, but it’s happening on a subconscious level.”
Robbins makes a living as an entertainer, speaker and television personality, and he also is the founder of Whizmob Inc., a collective of misdirection experts -- including reformed criminals -- that schools military and law enforcement leaders in fraud and scam tactics. Robbins has also collaborated with academics in his quest to understand how awareness and attention can be manipulated. He's co-author of a 2011 paper that explores something he noticed in his countless hours of practice: people's eyes are more easily misdirected to follow a curve than a straight line.
Apollo Robbins | Speaker | TED.com