Scarne's cut When the contiguous section is taken from the middle of the deck this is called "Scarne's cut," named after the American magician
John Scarne who developed it during World War II to help protect servicemen against cheating by unscrupulous dealers. This style of cut is against the rules or considered poor etiquette in some settings.
Multiple cuts Multiple consecutive standard cuts are equivalent to a single cut the size of the sum of the cut sizes
modulo the size of the deck. For example, in a 10 card deck, if a 7 card cut is made, followed by a 4 card cut, these two consecutive cuts are equivalent to a single cut the size of ((7 + 4) mod 10) = 1. • The deck begins in the order, bottom to top, of (1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,T). • Placing the top seven cards on the deck's bottom puts the deck in the order (4,5,6,7,8,9,T,1,2,3). • The second cut of four cards puts the deck in the order (T,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9). This is the equivalent of a one card cut.
False cut A
false cut is a
sleight of hand used in
magic or for cheating at
card games. It appears to be a real cut, but leaves the
deck in the same order as when it began, or another order known to the cutter.
Joke The command to "cut the cards", followed by someone literally chopping the deck in half with an axe, is a gag that has been used many times in popular media, going back to at least the vaudeville days. Examples include
Harpo Marx in
Horse Feathers,
Curly Howard in
Ants in the Pantry, and
Bugs Bunny in
Bugs Bunny Rides Again. ==References==