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Statistically, 98% would be saying “red / hammer” in such a scenario and has nothing to do with a favorite color or device for a man. The number is the deceptive 2%.
19 Ιουν 2021 · Did you say “red hammer”? Congratulations! You’re part of the 98% of people who said the same answer. If you answered something other than a red hammer, you belong to the 2% of the creative, out-of-the-box thinkers. That’s the Red Hammer mentalist trick. It looks easy, right?
A WHOPPING 98 times out of 100 performances! The key here is to get them to answer your questions as quickly as possible and don’t let them ponder on different answers. When you are asking the math questions, get them into the habit of responding as quickly as they can. This will improve your results and you can get this spot on 100% of the time!
19 Αυγ 2005 · This is a variation of an old trick. There is an explanation, albeit not the mystery it makes itself out to be. SOME, not 98%, people will both think of red and hammer when asked for a color or tool. For the people that answer both correctly, the test seems amazing.
They may have done a survey asking 1000 people to think of just a color, or just a tool, and then gathered that the two top responses are red and hammer. Sure, but that's the whole magic of it. If 98% of people who are asked to name a tool pick a hammer, and similarly for color and red, that's an interesting fact.
For a given category (e.g. "tools") we have some representative example (e.g. "the hammer"). It's possible that, when prompted to think of a tool, most people think of a hammer. Similarly, they think of red when asked for a color. That said, I suspect the 98% figure is fabricated.
Red hammer is probably just the most common response (red is the topical color and hammer the topical tool), and the video is just a joke to make you feel inadequate if you're creative enough to imagine something else (not that blue hammer is a very creative answer, mind you).