Domino show

Domino show

A Domino show is created by setting up dominoes in a long line, to create a chain reaction also called the domino effect. Only the first domino should be toppled by hand. People all over the world try to set up incredible domino projects. One of the elements of excitement of a domino show comes from the risky nature. Everybody understands that every new set up domino is another new risk to lose all of the work you have just completed.

Using dominoes of different colors, the builders are able to create beautiful mosaics with them. Also, the dominoes can have different top and back colors, meaning that the dominoes have different colors before toppling, and after. Using these techniques the domino builders are able to make pictures (mosaics) appear. Other tricks include three-dimensional stackings; shapes such as spirals and letters; contraptions like stairs and mouse traps; and dozens of special toppling techniques such as "Sonimod" (the name stands for dominos spelled backwards, also called "Lightspeed setting") that are used for special effects.

The first public domino shows were those of Bob Speca, Jr. from Broomall, PA. In 1976, at the age of 18, he established the first official world record for the highest number of dominos toppled in a chain reaction, by setting up and toppling down 11,111 pieces.[1] That event, and his appearance on The Tonight Show[2] triggered a domino-toppling craze, leading to a long lasting competition among domino-builders about the world record. In 1984, Klaus Friedrich from Germany was the last person to set up a new domino-toppling world record single-handedly.[3] In that same year student film makers Sheri Herman and Bonnie Cutler from Temple University produced and directed a film entitled AND THEY ALL FALL DOWN, showcasing Bob Speca's talents. The film is part of the permanent collection of the Berlin Film Museum. http://www.deutsche-kinemathek.de/

Two years later, the Netherlands hosted a huge domino toppling exhibition that was later called Domino Day, for the first time. Since 1998, it takes place (almost) every year around November. Their current world record was set at 4,491,863 dominoes, on November 13, 2009.

The only professional domino show company in the world is Weijers Domino Productions, the creators of Domino Day. Beside domino builders they employ professional designers, developers and engineers. Their domino shows are used for product introductions, campaign launches and commercial advertisements. They also invented the so-called Builder's Challenge (BC). It is included in many shows now as an additional attraction (and risk). During the falldown of the dominoes, a builder - or several ones - has to fill in a gap in a line. A certain project (or, rarely, the whole chain) depends on that line, meaning that if the builder fails to complete the challenge in time, the project will not be triggered. BC's have become a very popular discipline among domino-builders.

Due to the popularity of Domino Day, domino-toppling has become a widespread hobby, especially in the USA, Germany, the Netherlands and Asia. There are countless local domino shows held every year, many of them in schools[4]. A anonymous Canadian who calls herself FlippyCat has reached more than 200,000 subscribers with her domino videos on YouTube.[5] Some other notable builders are Mike and Steve Perrucci, whose previous shows include three events at the Brattleboro Museum and Art Center; Max Poser from Berlin, current holder of two world records (longest domino spiral, most dominoes stacked on one vertically standing domino); and the Cologne Domino Team (CDT), an association of some of Germany's best domino builders that holds a big event every summer.

References

  1. ^ Speca, R. (2004): Championship Domino Toppling Book, Sterling Publishing.
  2. ^ Bob Speca on The Tonight Show
  3. ^ [1] List of domino-toppling world record holders
  4. ^ Video of the biggest domino show ever held in a school in Europe.
  5. ^ FlippyCat's YouTube channel

External links


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