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29th October 2017, 02:04 PM | #41 |
A Little Ugly on the Side
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Hello Thread. Nice to see you again. It's been a long time, over nine years to be exact - the same amount of time I've spent trying to figure out the Bullet Catch.
A couple of weeks ago I watched an episode of P&T Fool Us. At the end of the show they performed a really cool trick, this one. I was amazed and astounded. They seemed to be doing the impossible. I wanted to know how the trick was done but I didn't want to look it up online. I wanted to see if I could figure it out myself. The prospects on my part for finding the solution weren't great. I thought that to be successful at all would take a lot of time and many repeated viewings of the video, over and over and over again. To my surprise and delight, after watching it only twice more, in less than ten minutes I had it nailed down. What an utterly simple, and therefore beautiful, trick. And what simple artistry from Penn. It gives little away to point out the wonderful, almost imperceivable, continual misdirection of Penn's left foot. A shift of an inch here, a kick-out there, nice! The self-pride I felt after figuring out the "Can You Lift This Box" trick emboldened me to take another stab at the Bullet Catch. I was one of those people who was able to, early on, detect the sleight-of-hand with the initial bullet switch during the opening phases of the trick. Because of this, I declared victory and told others that I had figured it all out. In hindsight, nothing could be further from the truth. The sleight-of-hand bullet switch is an important part of the trick, yes, but it is in no way the entirety of the trick. For instance, how do those bullets end up on opposite sides of the stage? And how do Penn and Teller get those bullets in their mouths? Also, how are they able to seemingly break glass panes without killing each other? Those things I was never able to get. Here's my latest attempt to answer these questions. My confidence level for the correctness of these answers is not as high as the initial sleight-of-hand, but I feel I'm getting closer and would welcome your feedback. First, how do the bullets end up on opposite sides of the stage? I think it has everything to do with the stands supporting the panes of glass. On the videos I've seen, the initial location of the stands is always so that one of the respective stands' three legs is extended underneath and beyond either the stage backdrop or a movable panel. Is it possible that when P&T grab the stands they drop the bullets through a hole in the stands at the point where they grab them? Presumably then, the bullets drop through the center of the stands and trickle down the continuing tube which extends though the hollow leg and beyond the backdrop or panel. At that instant, the bullets are collected by confederates and moved to opposite sides of the stage. Next, with the exception of a heretofore undetected sleight-of-hand move to the mouth, the only opportunity I see for a transfer of a bullet to a mouth is when the mouth is momentarily covered by the protective bullet-proof vest; not by the eye goggles and not by the helmet. If this is the case, then after the bullets are collected from the glass pane stands, they are rushed to opposite sides of the stage and attached to the insides of the vests in such a way as to facilitate an easy transfer to the mouth. It is during this movement from one side of the stage to the other that "rifling" of the bullet may occur (i.e., adding barrel marks and gunpowder odors to the slug). Lastly, the breakage of the panes of glass. For me, this is still problematic. If I were a magician, I would never, ever put myself in harms way. That includes never positioning myself in the path of an object, any object, including wax, fired from a gun. Perhaps I'm naïve. Perhaps I know diddly squat about the true nature of wax fired from a gun. I will admit, I do not know about such things. Penn has often said their style of magic is never more dangerous than sitting at home and playing a game of cards in your living room. But, if when they fire those guns some sort of matter passes through the barrels and shatters glass, I daresay that is more dangerous than playing cards. Looking at the videos frame by frame, it really looks like something is being shot at high velocity through the panes of glass. It really does! Please help me out here. Please tell me that nothing is leaving the barrels of the guns when fired. Or at the very least, convince me that if wax is being fired, it is 100% safe. |
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31st October 2017, 02:44 AM | #42 |
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The glass isn't directly between then, so they aren't firing directly at each other. The laser pointers are a misdirection to make you think that they are aiming at each other, but in reality they are aiming at the glass and past one another meaning the wax pellet hits the glass and anything that remains intact passes behind them.
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31st October 2017, 05:43 AM | #43 |
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I haven't seen the trick, and I can't access videos where I am right now, so this probably isn't relevant.
I remember reading an old encyclopedia of stage magic decades ago. I vaguely recall a similar illusion in which the glass was shattered by a high-speed striking mechanism built into the frame holding the glass. Obviously, that's less practical in our modern day of video recording and slow motion viewing. |
31st October 2017, 07:22 AM | #44 |
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When I was a kid, I used to have a copy of that encyclopedia. I might still have it stuffed in a box somewhere. I remember the mechanism you're talking about. If memory serves, it was a spring-loaded arm that swung up, broke the glass, and either swung back down by retracing its steps or continuing around to complete a full circle.
Until a few days ago I had not ruled out such a mechanism, although I thought it unlikely. After examining the video more closely, the velocity and trajectory of the jet of matter past the glass convinced me there was no such mechanism. |
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31st October 2017, 07:50 AM | #45 |
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I really appreciate your post, PhantomWolf. What you describe makes the most sense. Your description comes with disappointment, though. It seems there is some danger involved that demands extra-special care, mitigation, and extreme trust on the part of the magicians. Discharging a firearm while pointed in the general direction of another human being, even though the gun is only firing wax and even though it is pointed somewhat away from the targeted person, opens up too many things to go wrong. It feels to me more dangerous than playing cards in your living room.
So - the glass. What kind of glass is it? Is it like "candy glass" or something akin? Or is it just a very thin type of regular glass? It can't be a pane of everyday, common, pedestrian glass. |
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The Three Word Story Pledge of Allegiance- "I Hereby swear upon Engelbert's grave that I will gallop, not stride run, not walk posting three words on Shemp's honor, honoring: bananas, dwarfs, clarinets, [the 7th naughty forum word], haggis, Batman, nuns, wombats until such time as I'm sober. Or dead." "Some people have a way with words, other people...Um...Oh...Uh, not have way." -Steve Martin |
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31st October 2017, 02:50 PM | #46 |
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I believe I've found the correct explanation, I think the bullets really were fired from a gun, the markings made by this participant were too irregular to have been forged. If I'm understanding this correctly though, I'm not allowed to post a link. Makes no sense to me.
The glass can be regular single pane glass, it's plenty fragile. |
31st October 2017, 02:53 PM | #47 |
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The Three Word Story Pledge of Allegiance- "I Hereby swear upon Engelbert's grave that I will gallop, not stride run, not walk posting three words on Shemp's honor, honoring: bananas, dwarfs, clarinets, [the 7th naughty forum word], haggis, Batman, nuns, wombats until such time as I'm sober. Or dead." "Some people have a way with words, other people...Um...Oh...Uh, not have way." -Steve Martin |
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31st October 2017, 03:25 PM | #48 |
Nasty Woman
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Part of Penn and Teller stock and trade is convincing people they have some special method. That is part of their schtick, not a real thing and sorry (well not really) Scrut but you are either fooled by the marketed mystique or you are lying.
That is not to say they aren't some of the most talented, if not the best sleight of hand magicians ever known. Wiki has at least one method noted about the trick that could be done and doesn't require any hand-off. People can look it up if they choose to but given board tradition I won't post a link. Bottom line, there are a number of ways to do the trick. Not knowing specifically which method Penn and Teller use is not the same as imagining they have a unique method for the trick that no one else knows about. |
4th November 2017, 02:26 AM | #49 |
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There is nothing currently in place to stop any member revealing how a trick is/was done. That went when we moved after being ********** by Randi.
http://www.internationalskeptics.com...80&postcount=2 |
4th November 2017, 07:45 AM | #50 |
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4th November 2017, 07:49 PM | #51 |
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Marcus, please think again. It has taken years of thought and some helpful hints from others here, but I am fairly confident I now know how they do it. I think there are a good handful of others here who also know how they do it.
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The Three Word Story Pledge of Allegiance- "I Hereby swear upon Engelbert's grave that I will gallop, not stride run, not walk posting three words on Shemp's honor, honoring: bananas, dwarfs, clarinets, [the 7th naughty forum word], haggis, Batman, nuns, wombats until such time as I'm sober. Or dead." "Some people have a way with words, other people...Um...Oh...Uh, not have way." -Steve Martin |
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5th November 2017, 10:04 AM | #52 |
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Your method is plausible, but is not the only the only possible sequence. You did say "pretty sure" and "fairly confident" though, these qualifiers make your statements acceptable in my mind, because I don't believe you know for sure the method.
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13th November 2017, 11:17 PM | #53 |
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I think the cameras fire the wax bullets.
I didn't think this until near the end (8:07) when the view pans back and you can see both cameras pointing at each magician, and the cameras seem unusually close to the guys. Like very close. The cameras are on big solid stands and the "guns" could have been carefully aimed either by the camera operator or remotely. They were fired when the guns fired. The laser sites may have doubled as a remote control to trigger the camera guns. I only saw the video once, but I remember seeing a hole form in the lower corner of one of the glass panes. If the camera fired it then the angle would be much safer than had each magician fired at it. You also don't run the risk of Penn or Teller missing the glass. That was my final thought when the video ended anyways...hmm look at those cameras - so close??? ETA: How did they fire at the exact same time? Perhaps all the guns are activated remotely, or maybe Penns trigger triggers them all. |
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14th November 2017, 10:30 AM | #54 |
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The Three Word Story Pledge of Allegiance- "I Hereby swear upon Engelbert's grave that I will gallop, not stride run, not walk posting three words on Shemp's honor, honoring: bananas, dwarfs, clarinets, [the 7th naughty forum word], haggis, Batman, nuns, wombats until such time as I'm sober. Or dead." "Some people have a way with words, other people...Um...Oh...Uh, not have way." -Steve Martin |
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14th November 2017, 05:48 PM | #55 |
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Some people think the glass is broken by squibs rather than wax bullets. However, there seems to be some question as to whether squibs could be configured to produce a round hole rather than just shatter the glass.
In this scenario, there are two ways to produce the spent shells: 1) Pass the bullets backstage where they are fired into a water tank 2) Insert the shells into the glass stands, where a bullet press type device adds the markings and gunpowder smell The argument goes that any real firing would be problematic insurance wise, and even wax bullets would produce events detectable by the cameras and audience. |
14th November 2017, 07:28 PM | #56 |
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Not only that, squibs are not invisible. If squibs were used, you would be able to see them on the glass. Yet, when you look at the glass at anytime during the videos, there are no squibs. So, squibs are highly unlikely.
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If wax bullets are no more dangerous than, say, firing paintballs, and if the guns with wax bullets aren't pointed at audience members, stagehands or magicians, then how problematic is insurance? Not very, in my estimation.
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The Three Word Story Pledge of Allegiance- "I Hereby swear upon Engelbert's grave that I will gallop, not stride run, not walk posting three words on Shemp's honor, honoring: bananas, dwarfs, clarinets, [the 7th naughty forum word], haggis, Batman, nuns, wombats until such time as I'm sober. Or dead." "Some people have a way with words, other people...Um...Oh...Uh, not have way." -Steve Martin |
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14th November 2017, 08:03 PM | #57 |
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Something else - I've been thinking some more about the original bullets, the ones that are marked-up on the slug with the initials of audience members. The audience members are allowed to closely examine the bullets, and invariably they identify them as "real bullets". Well, I think the slug is real and I think the casing is real but I would bet the casings are filled with something other than gun powder. Something much less explosive and much less dangerous, like sand or ground-up eye of newt. If they are not filled with gun powder, then, again, there would be little reason to fire them into a water tank backstage.
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The Three Word Story Pledge of Allegiance- "I Hereby swear upon Engelbert's grave that I will gallop, not stride run, not walk posting three words on Shemp's honor, honoring: bananas, dwarfs, clarinets, [the 7th naughty forum word], haggis, Batman, nuns, wombats until such time as I'm sober. Or dead." "Some people have a way with words, other people...Um...Oh...Uh, not have way." -Steve Martin |
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14th November 2017, 08:15 PM | #58 |
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Wax bullets can be placed on a gunpowder load sufficient to disintegrate them upon firing. To break glass though, they must remain relatively intact, which means they may follow an unpredictable path after passing through the glass, impacting curtains or other objects.
There are various types of bullet traps. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bullet_trap I rather like the idea of a device in the bullet stands which performs the required functions, impressing the markings and the smell, it would be more elegant. And of course an assistant backstage could use such a device rather than firing it from a gun. A squib wouldn't have to be placed on the glass where it is visible, it could be in the frame. Is there a way to produce a hole in the glass with this method rather than just shattering it? I don't know, but I'm not prepared to rule it out. I'm also not prepared to rule out the possibility that the trick was performed the way your theory suggests, I just don't think we can be sure it was performed that way. |
14th November 2017, 10:49 PM | #59 |
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You'll get no argument from me. A small glob of disintegrated wax, no matter where it lands, will remain quite undetectable to the audience, though. Remember, the audience is not invited to examine the stage area at the end of the trick. And, if microscopic bits of wax are deposited on pieces of intact glass remaining on the stand, their presence would be quite overwhelmed by the dramatic, jagged hole in the glass, the very area and thing the magicians ask them to quickly examine. Penn never says, "Do you see any small droplets of wax on the glass?" No, he says, "Would you prove to yourself that bullet hole goes all the way through that piece of glass?"
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Additionally, if memory serves, during live, unrecorded performances, once they don their protective gear, all remaining curtains and backdrops are lifted into the fly space above the stage. They perform the end of the trick on a virtually empty stage devoid of bullet traps. The back wall of the stage is all you see. It's like a reverse "Stop Making Sense" movie. That movie by the Talking Heads begins with David Byrne on a completely empty stage; only the back wall is visible. As the movie progresses, set pieces, props and special effects are added slowly, one at a time. With Penn and Teller, the show begins with everything in place and ends with an empty stage. Beautiful. I will grant you that droplets of wax probably end up on the stage floor. Still, they are undetectable to the audience. Even if they are detected, they would be quite indistinguishable from a sweat ball that finally fell from the nose of Dr. Joyce Brothers.
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*****The Sign of the Four, ch. 6 (1890) *****Sherlock Holmes in The Sign of the Four (Doubleday p. 111) |
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The Three Word Story Pledge of Allegiance- "I Hereby swear upon Engelbert's grave that I will gallop, not stride run, not walk posting three words on Shemp's honor, honoring: bananas, dwarfs, clarinets, [the 7th naughty forum word], haggis, Batman, nuns, wombats until such time as I'm sober. Or dead." "Some people have a way with words, other people...Um...Oh...Uh, not have way." -Steve Martin |
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1st February 2018, 04:13 PM | #60 |
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I believe you are correct after seeing it again. It seems dangerous either way.
This is a video shot from a Google Glass by one of the audience volunteers for this illusion. Penn and Teller let him record it. Listen when Penn grabs the stand, you can hear the bullet drop down the tube. He tries to mask it by tapping the glass, which is part of the routine every time, but it didn't quite work. That's how I hear it. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GTrOBwCUIRk |
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1st February 2018, 07:42 PM | #61 |
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I wonder if they bother putting marks on the tip of the fake bullets. After the participants sign the tips of the real bullets, they keep their fingers over the tips of the bullets. But they do have to move the bullets around very close to people.
They only offer three colors. So they could have three fake bullets in their pockets that have some random markings for each color. When they do the switch, they can pull the fake bullet with the correct color. They keep their fingers over the tip, but if it slips a bit and someone gets a close look they would at least see the correct color and not be able to see enough to see the exact marks. If they did that, they could hold up the bullet in full view of the audience where the people in front could see the color on the tip but not clear enough to make out the exact marks. They could even give a quick flash of the tip as they put it into the chamber so that the participant could see that the bullet has their first color on it. |
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3rd February 2018, 01:24 PM | #62 |
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Thanks for posting that video.
"Hey, Banachek! When we drop the bullets down the metal tubes, won't the audience hear the very loud and revealing clankety-clank sounds of the bullets as they continually bang up against the sides of the tubes? What do we do about that, huh?" "Guys, there's nothing to worry about. The insides of the tubes are not like a Pachinko machine. There are no protrusions sticking out from the sides for the bullets to bang into. The insides are perfectly smooth. For the bullets to bang up against the sides hard enough to create an audible clanking noise would require a fairly hefty sideways force not parallel to the force of gravity, a force that simply is not present within the tubes." "OK, fine. That makes sense. We get that. But eventually the bullets make their way to the base of the stands where they must come in contact with the bottom of the exit chutes. Won't that make a noise?" "Not really. Well, not the kind of clanking noise you're talking about, anyway. Look carefully at the design of my glass stand. The tube curves from the verticle drop to the exit leg. Have you ever seen one of those water slides that drop a person almost vertically before flattening them out with a long curve? When the person finally hits the curve, they don't "bang" into it and they don't bounce back up into the air. They slide along the curve until they are deposited safely into the deceleration splash pool. Granted, as my bullet scoots along the exit leg, it may produce a slight metal-to-metal scraping sound, but I assure you the audience will not notice this. Keep in mind what Galileo taught us about the time it takes for falling bodies to drop sixteen feet. One second, right? As you can see, the length of my tube is far less than sixteen feet. It's only about four feet tall with no more than a foot and a half of leg length added at the end. The time it will take the bullet to travel the entire length of the tube will be only a small fraction of a second. Schwooom! That bullet has exited the tube before anyone can say, 'I hope no one reveals this twenty five years from now!' The whole process happens within the blink of an eye. "To allay any lingering fears you may still have, remember I taught you how to misdirect your insertion of the bullets in the tubes by tapping on the glass. That tapping noise will also serve to mask any unforeseen clanking or scraping noises during the quarter-second it takes the bullets to travel through the tubes." "Steve, you're a genius! Here's a check for a scrillion dollars." mgidm86, in all honesty, I don't hear what you are hearing. I hear Penn tapping on his glass. I also hear Teller tapping on his glass, off-camera. The video does reveal something very interesting, though; something I had not noticed before. After the bullets have been fired, Penn's pane of glass is examined up-close. Clearly, there is a jagged bullet hole in the glass. But there are all kinds of splotches all over the rest of the glass, too. What are those? Would anyone care to speculate? |
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The Three Word Story Pledge of Allegiance- "I Hereby swear upon Engelbert's grave that I will gallop, not stride run, not walk posting three words on Shemp's honor, honoring: bananas, dwarfs, clarinets, [the 7th naughty forum word], haggis, Batman, nuns, wombats until such time as I'm sober. Or dead." "Some people have a way with words, other people...Um...Oh...Uh, not have way." -Steve Martin |
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26th April 2018, 01:51 PM | #63 |
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One paragraph would have been sufficient rather than your condescending wall of text.
You are assuming almost everything in this post. Maybe they did not design the tubes well enough. Maybe they made noise that night. And hey, Galileo, perhaps it isn't designed quite the way you say and the bullet can rattle in the tube, therefore taking longer to fall. Or perhaps you are correct about everything. ..|.. |
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26th April 2018, 08:36 PM | #64 |
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The Three Word Story Pledge of Allegiance- "I Hereby swear upon Engelbert's grave that I will gallop, not stride run, not walk posting three words on Shemp's honor, honoring: bananas, dwarfs, clarinets, [the 7th naughty forum word], haggis, Batman, nuns, wombats until such time as I'm sober. Or dead." "Some people have a way with words, other people...Um...Oh...Uh, not have way." -Steve Martin |
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29th April 2018, 11:57 AM | #65 |
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Could you make the glass in such a way that the middle part has an (unnoticeable) different resonant frequency than the rest, and then use some type of ultrasound gun to shatter the middle part?
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29th April 2018, 03:43 PM | #66 |
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If you watch it frame-by-frame you can see that at 6:01, you can't see the glass. Then a couple frames after 6:01, something pops up where the glass was on Penn's side (or the glass becomes visible for some reason). Teller fires at just that moment, but Penn fires a couple frames later. In the three versions I've see on Youtube, Teller always fires first. Also, fire comes out of Teller's gun, but not Penn's. Yet something on the center of Penn's pane of glass obviously blows away from Penn.
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