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Mythical Patterns: 4 cascade, 5 fountain, and bonus: 5 wimpy

btiemann

Here I attempt the impossible: to juggle four balls in the cascade pattern, and 5 in the fountain. As a bonus, I also show the 5-ball wimpy pattern. So far as I know, I am the first person ever to do this trick, and with any luck will also be the last.

03:11

74886

0

05-01-2010

[3]

Boppo's Whiteboard:

btiemann

Here's the "Level Of Excitation" Method. To use it, you only have to know the get-in and get-out sequences for the excited-state siteswap tricks you wish to transition between. Knowing those, you can write transitions both ways.

07:33

21058

3

09-10-2010

[2]

Ball Passing Video

reverse7

IJA Numbers Champions Passing 11 through 14 Balls in 1 Count (Thundershower/Ultimates) Patterns. Includes worlds first 14 ball qualify. Juggling recorded in Chicago at Lake Shore Athletic Club and Alternatives inc. and in Athens Greece at the EJC. Music by Widespread Panic recorded live at the Chicago Theater 08/13/06(WSP)

03:55

11287

0

12-10-2007

[4]

Hybrid Tricks for Numbers Juggling: Boppo's Whiteboard

btiemann

This is a family of tricks that are part cascade or fountain, and part shower or pseudoshower, which are good tricks for learning numbers juggling. They are stepping stones between the easier tricks you can do, and target numbers trick you wish to do. Pseudoshower?! Twin to the shower, it has even high throws and odd period, instead of odd high throws and even period. The four families of hybrids are, the cascade-shower, the cascade-pseudoshower, the fountain-shower, and the fountain-pseudoshower. The inf. pseudoshower 3: 1818181 could have been added to the lower right section, on top. I like all of these tricks, but haven't seen them described this way before. I also performed 8888181 and 8888881 in Ten Years of Not Juggling, shown on the board. In that film I also performed 6: 99919191, and 5: 88171717, 6: 88881717, 7: 88888817, and also 6: 889191, and 7: 888891, which differ in having shower throws higher than the fountain throws.

09:18

9041

1

12-01-2010

[3]

Awesome concrete wall, that a six-ball juggler blocks part of

btiemann

Here's a film of a really nice concrete wall, except that some juggler is blocking the view of part of this wall. He seems to be doing the wimpy pattern and then the inside halfshower, as if to show that the patterns are different. But check out that wall! (See the killer thumbnail!)

00:12

8954

1

11-11-2009

[2]

10 Years of Not Juggling - Full Resolution

btiemann

I took a 10-year break from juggling, but am getting back into it. Here is my first collage. Music is Comets Over Flatland (15) by R. Winchester. It is written in 15-tone equal temperament, not the otherwise universal 12-tone equal temperament of western music. Filmed in late 2009. 0:04: 4: 61616 0:19: 5: ([4,4x],2)* 0:29: 7: ([6,6x],2)* 0:37: 4: 7161616 0:51: 5: 75751, 77771707771716661*, then 95551 a few times. * Trick was "spontaneous." 1:21: 5: 66661 1:31: 8: (8,8), 97, 8, (8x,8x) flashes 1:56: 5: 91 2:07: 6: 99919191 2:14: 8: 999999990 and 99999991 flashes 2:23: 9: 9 (9 catches then 11 catches) 2:40: 10: a (11 catches, Garfield Finish) 2:48: 5: 88171717 3:00: 6: 8844 3:07: 6: 868671 3:15: 6: b66661 3:23: 4: 80 (Actually, 6: 8[22]) 3:36: 6: 889191 (big brother of 6671) 3:42: 6: 78888171 3:51: 6: 8888181 4:00: 7: 88888817 4:05: 8: 97 4:11: 7: 8888881 4:20: 8: (8,8) (18 catches) 4:27: 7: 888891 - this is a really neat trick 4:32: 8: 8 (21 catches) 4:40: 10: a (17 throws, 10 drops)

04:45

7888

6

15-12-2009

[10]

Beginning Basic Elementary Juggling v. 8.0

btiemann

Just a few of the most simple, easy, rudimentary patterns for juggling ...... 8. Plus, a world's first demonstration of precision toad manipulation. Got toads?

09:59

6711

1

15-08-2010

[5]

Bruce Sarafian

bsarafian12

8,9,10,11,12 ball juggling, 6 ball shower, 9 ball triple multiplex stack

06:11

6206

2

17-11-2007

[2]

11 ball flash (slo-mo deinterlaced) world record tie

btiemann

I was the second person to do this after Bruce Sarafian, who at that time had not yet flashed 12 balls nor gotten past 11 catches with 11 balls. Plus, this shows the definitive Boppo Finish.

00:20

5841

0

09-11-2009

[2]

Siteswap Pinch-Ups - Boppo's Whiteboard

btiemann

Here's something I discovered while composing my thoughts for an upcoming siteswap-based tutorial for numbers juggling (still in progress) I call them "siteswap pinch-ups." I don't think they have been described before.

02:36

5213

2

01-01-2010

[2]

btiemann

Here's sort of the "Human Computer" way to deduce siteswap transition sequences between excited-state tricks. You map out the states, and look directly for ways to get from a state in one of the tricks to a state in the other.

14:09

5046

0

09-10-2010

[1]

btiemann

Here's the way computers use the state-space to generate transition sequences ... and why that way doesn't work for people! Plus, there's a human-based way if you know of or can come up with a trick that has states in common with the two tricks you wish to transition between. /nPlease note that even if tricks have different levels of excitation, but nevertheless share states with one another, you can just go from the middle of one trick to the middle of the other (or wherever the tricks share the common state), without any "extra" throws.

12:38

4956

0

09-10-2010

[2]

11 ball flash - world record tie

btiemann

This is the full file (not deinterlaced) of my world-record tie 11 flash.

00:10

4941

0

09-11-2009

[1]

10 balls 11 catches asynch fountain

btiemann

11 throws, clean finish with 10 balls in the asynch fountain. 1995.

00:05

4880

0

09-11-2009

[1]

Overview of Excited State Siteswap Transition (Mini-Series)

btiemann

Here's a non-trailer trailer for an upcoming mini-series of Boppo's Whiteboard ... namely, several different methods to calculate or deduce transition sequences between excited-state siteswap tricks. If you know the get-in and get-outs, that's enough to make transitions. If you know of or can find a trick that has states in common with the tricks you wish to transition between, that is enough to make transition sequences. If you know the states themselves and can find throws to convert between them, that too is enough. Also, if you can give the total arrival schedule, if you will, of the entire sequence you wish to have transitions within, that too enables you to deduce possible transition sequences. They all work for synch, too, but the last is maybe the best method for me.

02:55

4692

0

09-10-2010

[0]

5: 771 and 861 siteswaps

btiemann

Here's the 5-ball siteswaps 771 and its pseudohalfshower 861, connected in a single run. Filmed 1996.

00:10

4688

0

09-11-2009

[2]

6: 7899918171: The 6-ball-shower-chicken-out siteswap

btiemann

I find this trick funny, because it is almost like the 6 ball shower entry and exit, 789a...b1...a1918171 but it chickens out at the 9s and flees back to the fountain.

00:10

4584

0

12-11-2009

[2]

Three Ways to Think About Mills Mess

btiemann

Here are three ways I have thought about Mills Mess. This isn't intended as a tutorial, but feel free to use it as such if you wish.

04:03

4558

0

08-12-2009

[5]

Advice on Not Juggling - Video Response

btiemann

Suppose, for the sake of argument, that I received a video of someone's act and was asked to give advice and suggestions on it. This is my response

09:17

4486

1

05-01-2010

[5]

5: 97531 siteswap once each way

btiemann

97531 siteswap done with beanbags once each way. Filmed in 1996 (in case you think it's lame by today's standards).

00:08

4371

1

09-11-2009

[3]

Best Method: Throw Sequence (Brute Force) Transitions

btiemann

If you want to only watch one, watch this one. /nHere's a method to generate siteswap transitions based on where all the balls actually land; making them all work out amounts to creating a sequence. This is my favorite method, and it produces rather easily, all the possible transitions within the context of the throws that you've decided to mess with, either out of necessity (when throws collide) or by choice (when they don't). /nIf you're trying to come up with a way to write an algorithm for producing transitions, I would suggest that this way is the best way. It's deterministic, for one, and it's comprehensive, for another. /nThis is part 1... stay tuned for the thrilling conclusion!!

14:35

4311

2

09-10-2010

[3]

6: 999441 siteswap

btiemann

The six-ball siteswap 999441. Note that there are 3, 2, and 1 throws of each different height, which have heights of 3^2, 2^2, and 1^1. The sum of the throws are then 3^3 + 2^3 + 1^1, which is the square of the third triangular number (1+2+3)^2. How about that? This works in general, by the way.

00:08

4300

0

10-11-2009

[0]

Best Way

btiemann

The stunning conclusion to the Throw Sequence method, for asynch tricks. In this case I derive some transitions from 714 back into 741. This one also shows how to do a 0, and why I like numbers and not letters to denote siteswap throws.

12:30

4061

0

10-10-2010

[2]

6: 9595881771 siteswap

btiemann

This is the six-ball siteswap 9595881771. Enjoy! And if you don't enjoy it, there is, once again, the awesome concrete wall behind me, and shown on the thumbnail.

00:09

4059

0

12-11-2009

[3]

The Perils of Ambiguity: Boppo Qualifies 11 with 24c!!

btiemann

On the heels of Alex Barron's upcoming filmed 11-ball qualify, does Boppo get lucky once again on camera with an unbelievable 24 catches with 11 - and 15 catches with 13? /nOr, is he just trying to make a point about the shortfalls of ambiguous notations?

01:59

4051

1

02-09-2010

[2]

 
 
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