Murry Sawchuck is more than a great magician and star of the Las Vegas tribe of performers. He is a television legend — at least to our well-hacked TiVo.
We enjoy watching television — it’s like our special friend. We watch infomercials, C-SPAN and the Weather Channel exclusively. If it doesn’t involve getting blown down in a torrential rain, voted down in an unanticipated filibuster or proclaimed to be the best of its kind and available for three easy payments, chances are we have not seen it.
The exception to this rule is anything related to magic.
If the content has anything to do with magic, magicians, illusion, illusionists, escapes, escape artists or Japanese gravure idol Nozomi Sasaki, our specially modified TiVo captures it for us. Yes, hacking a TiVo is an inexact science and we have wasted gigabytes of space on shows using our key words but in a non-magic way. (We have a seven hour debate from the Senate on whether Magic Markers should constitute an inhalant for the purpose of federal anti-huffing law. It was ultimately tabled and that issue remains in limbo.)
But when it catches a show, we are giddy with delight. Our eyes widen as we see the special on-screen message we hacked, “Oh Mr. Magic, I have something for you to see.”
Fortunately, we never have company and live alone in what is practically a double-wide trailer here on the outskirts of Mystic Hollow, Michigan, so there is little chance we will ever be embarrassed by the message coming on screen and being misinterpreted. It is our little secret.
(By the way, the International Standards Organization defines a “double-wide” trailer home as being one which 20 feet across and at least 90 feet long. We got the Magico Rancho at a scratch and dent FEMA auction in between hurricanes for almost nothing. It was only when we measured to install some lightly used mauve carpeting that we learned it fell short of the width requirement by 2-1/2 feet.
The good news, we had enough extra carpeting for our luxury automobile, “The Mysterny Machine.” The bad news, we did not qualify for the class action lawsuit filed on behalf of double-wide owners against the manufacturers for some defect or smell or something.
Speaking of lawsuits, we had to change the name of our ride to “The Mysterny Machine” because we were threatened by the production company of a certain cartoon dog, his beatnik owner and their ghost-chasing friends. We won’t tell you the name of the show but it rhymes with Doobie Scoo.)
But of course we digress. Of course, we digress from a story about hacking a TiVo so it may have been a welcome change of topic.
The History Channel has a great show called “Pawn Stars” and our TiVo picked up a couple of episodes. Several episodes included Las Vegas Magician Murray Sawchuk, the shop’s Magic Historian. Houdini’s Handcuffs. [Internet]. 2013. The History Channel website. Available from: http://www.history.com/shows/pawn-stars/episodes/season-2 [Accessed 12 Mar 2013].
This weekend, we were treated to a special moment of wonder when a customer / seller brought in handcuffs and leg shackles he alleged came from Harry Houdini.
The big, gregarious owner of the store, Rick Harrsion asked if there was any paperwork to tie the restraints to Houdini.
The documents presented indicated the gear was “purchased at auction Sid Radner – Houdini collection.” Mr. Sawchuck was brought in to opine whether the restraints were authentic and their value.
Mr. Sawchuck ruled the restraints were genuine based on the Radner paperwork. He suggested the handcuffs were worth $5,800 to $6,500 and the shackles $3,800 to $4,500. The seller gave them up for a mere $6,000.
So, here is our question: are the restraints still at the pawn shop? As Mr. Sawchuck lives in Las Vegas, could he have visited later to purchase them but armed with the true value and the cost to the store? Did he? And did he check the price paid for the set at the Radner auction?
Reality TV can seem so real sometimes. We thank TiVo and Mr. Sawchuck for making us think, question and wonder.
Related Posts
Inside Magic Review: David Copperfield’s History of Magic

We have been a fan of David Copperfield since his early days. We anticipated his television specials with the same…
Zoom Magic Sought by Inside Magic

We have seen some wonderful Zoom magic shows recently. We realized we only knew about them because friends (we’re not…