Until May...

Sorry for the delay in posting this. I was at the White House Correspondents' Dinner, and stuff got crazy.


This is the final post of April.

The next issue of Keepers will be sent Sunday, May 3rd.

Regular posting will resume on Monday, May 4th. Which is some Star Wars shit, if I’m not mistaken.


"Pete," The Unnamed Magician, is still sticking to his story about his trick. Skip this section if you don’t care.

Just to update you… He's now telling people he's going to retire from magic because he made so much money selling his trick to a "very well known and rich magician."

He also is telling people that this famous magician is "very disappointed" in the method but they "had to pay up" because the trick met all the conditions.

But Andy, if he's making it up, why wouldn't he say the magician was thrilled with the trick?

Because he knows suggesting that would be a bridge too far. He can't say the method was good because that narrows down the possibilities drastically. Instead he's suggesting he has some byzantine method that he was able to conceive of that somehow meets all the conditions, looks exactly like the video, works 95% of the time… but somehow it's not good. (As a creative exercise, try to imagine what possible issue someone might have with a trick that works 95% of the time and looks exactly as it does in the video.)

Now, I told you a while ago you'd never see the trick and that he'd pretend to sell it to this fake magician. And I also knew this was going to be his next ploy: "It was a real trick all along, it met all the conditions. But the reason you'll never see any famous magician actually perform this is because the method isn't great."

He set this up in his emails to me when he said, and I quote:

"I can tell you that the method is quite disappointing. People wouldn't like it or perform it."

So now you have two possibilities to believe.

A. The Jerx Theory

He came up with an average trick. Realized he could frame it as a great trick if he just showed one part of it. Got caught up in the marketing of the trick and used some questionable language to describe the conditions. Then was forced to lie about it once he got called out on it.

B. The Unnamed Magician's Story

  1. In February, he was so desperate for cash that he was selling his entire backlog of downloadable effects for $40.

  2. In March, he just so happened to create the cleanest looking version of the most classic challenge in card magic.

  3. Strangely, this effect looked nothing like any other trick he'd ever released.

  4. Coincidentally, he chose a brand new method of selling his tricks which involved an incredibly high price (for a card trick), months of pre-sales, and no actual details of when and where the trick would be released.

  5. Conveniently, he told absolutely no one the method. Not even the well-respected magicians he had shared tricks with in the past.

  6. Oddly enough, when I offered to sell the first 200 copies for him… he wanted nothing to do with that idea.

  7. Remarkably, a mysterious, wealthy magician broke with all known understanding of price negotiation and offered him an amount that was multiples of the highest public offer. Weird! And this, for a trick that had never been performed on record anywhere for anyone. Not only that, but it was a trick that had conditions no layperson would ever appreciate, but at the same time, it couldn't be performed for magicians because they could easily make it not work.

  8. For some unknown reason, he preferred to deal with the Secret Millionaire Magician, rather than make the same (or more) from me, retain the rights to sell the trick, preserve his reputation, and make me look like an idiot for questioning him.

  9. As luck would have it, some dastardly person who had verified conversations with the Unnamed Magician lied to me—fed me a fake method and claimed it was the real one. A fake method that, coincidentally, would have produced an identical result to the videos released.

  10. By chance, just when I had learned the (supposed) method and realized it was pure horseshit… that was when he was finally ready to let me buy the very real method for the very real trick! I just missed out by only waiting a month. What rotten luck!

  11. Thankfully, one of the many millionaire magicians was still interested.

  12. Amazingly, the escrow process (which typically takes 3-5 weeks) took only days this time and he now has all his money.

  13. Unfortunately, the method WHILE LIVING UP TO THE CONDITIONS 100%, isn't good (somehow), so you'll never see the trick performed. Aw, rats!

  14. And wouldn't you know it, now he's decided to retire from magic. That's certainly the action of someone who just created one of the most deceptive tricks of all time that sold for one of the highest amounts of money for a single card trick in history. And not the reaction of…oh, say, someone whose pseudonym is now burned—someone slinking off the magic scene because he knows this release will follow him forever.

So those are the options.

In my version of events, his actions are flawed, but feel very human to me. You don't sell hundreds of dollars of downloads for $40 unless you're desperate. He needed money and got swept up in a way he thought would get him some. I felt for him when I thought that was the case. I asked him to let me help him get out of this predicament. I imagined collaborating with him—working on a project where I took a few of his very procedure-heavy tricks and came up with some different premises or presentations to make them more interesting to non-magicians. Put that together in an ebook, or very limited edition hard-copy, sell it to my supporters, and let him keep the proceeds.

But now I guess I was wrong. I was lied to by my source. The Unnamed Magician really did have this "Ultimate Open Prediction" effect. The method was "quite disappointing" and "people wouldn't like it or perform it." This was a trick he was willing to sell to people for $100. He didn't sell it as some trick that was just an exercise in meeting conditions—he sold it as "the strongest trick he ever created." In the end, he sold this unappealing method to someone for somewhere between 50,000 and 100,000 dollars.

That's the story he wants you to believe. He thinks that story makes him look better than mine. Okay fine. I changed my mind. I believe him now. But I also have to change my assessment of him from an earlier post where I said I didn't think he was a scam artist.

Claiming a trick is the "ultimate" version of the Open Prediction, saying it's the strongest thing you've ever created, and then asking anywhere from $100 or $100,000 for it—all the while knowing the method wasn't something anyone would use—makes you a scam artist.


I've gotten on Murphy's Magic in the past for using AI to write their ad copy. I think they used AI for their ad for Shinkansen by Max Maven as well. And by that I mean they used An Idiot.

First off, what is this abortion: "From MAX MAVEN, an innovative evolution of the timeless 'Cards Across' miracle that has been streamlined, powerful, and absolutely fooling."

Quick grammar lesson: Items in a list must all have the same grammatical form. This is called parallel structure.

Rarely does parallel structure get so monumentally jacked up that it becomes perpendicular.

  • "has been streamlined" → This is a verb phrase in the passive voice

  • "powerful" → This is a simple adjective

  • "absolutely fooling" → This is a participial phrase

It would be like if I held up a banana and said, "This banana has been peeled, sweet, and absolutely delicious."

Okay, no one here cares about that. I know.

You may care about this issue though. The ad copy clearly states "They merely think of any one. No forcing." Which is odd given that the trick relies 100% on a force. How does this slip into the ad copy? What could they possibly have been thinking? I have no clue. My goal isn't to become the magic police, but when it's this egregious, I feel it needs to be noted.

Maybe it's a punctuation problem. Perhaps it was supposed to say:

"They merely think of any one? No. Forcing!"


Were you involved in this? —MC

I got a few emails about this trick and whether I had anything to do with it. At first I had no idea what they were talking about, but then a reader reminded me of this post from 7 years ago.

So, the answer is no, I had nothing to do with it other than having a similar idea in the past.

By the way, this logic is kind of insane

Uhm… okay. I get it, coins aren't as common as they once were. But there are still about 3,000 times more coins in the U.S. than AirTags.

The death of coins isn't the argument for this trick.

The argument for the trick is that a coin vanish doesn't allow you to explore where the coin goes after it disappears—which is an interesting premise. You can leave it at that. You don't have to pretend people are going to be scratching their heads when you pull out a quarter. "What's that thing??"


Peace. See you next month, my little may flowers. 😘

Turn and Face the Strange

Premise

In the most recent issue of Keepers, I talked about the idea of using things in the environment as de facto predictions or revelations for magic tricks, instead of just writing something down or pulling something up on your phone.

The premise I use with this isn't that what I'm showing them is a prediction, but that together we're "manifesting" this thing in the real world.

Consider the difference…

Prediction: I use DFB to force Michael Jackson on you. Then I show my prediction and it's Michael Jackson.

Manifestation: I use DFB to "select a random target celebrity for us to focus on." That celebrity is Michael Jackson. I tell you about this manifestation exercise I read about and the idea that if you focus on something hard enough, reality kind of echoes it back at you in certain ways. I walk you through a quick visualization exercise. We finish our lunch, leave the restaurant, step outside, walk down the street, turn the corner, and there's a Michael Jackson impersonator performing there.

Identifying the Target

Part One

I don't use DFB for this sort of thing. I use a winnowing technique because it feels more natural to me (and allows me to do it impromptu).

So, let's say my friend is visiting and I know that on our drive into NYC there's something I can use as a revelation.

At dinner I'll bring up the manifestation idea that I've been "reading about." Then I'll say, "The first step is to identify a fully random target."

From there I'll use some sort of 50/50 forcing technique to narrow down to the general category.

So I might do:

Person or Thing?
Celebrity or Someone you know?
Living or Dead?
Man or Woman?
Actor or Singer?

Forcing each "random" option along the way.

How?

—You can use the impromptu technique I discussed in the last issue of Keepers.

—You can use a controlled coin flip.

—You could use a magnetic coin. Have the person hide the coin in either hand. "If it's in this hand the target will be an actor. If it's in that hand the target will be a singer."

—You could use a dime/penny gimmick. Introduce a dime and penny. Say that you'll secretly choose one of the coins and isolate it in your hand, and then they get to designate one choice as the dime option and one choice as the penny option. "This way we're both involved so neither of us can control the outcome." You put your hands under the table and come out with a coin in your fist. You ask them to designate one coin to the Singer option and one coin to the Actor option. Whatever they say, you open your hand to reveal the coin that moves you to your force object.

Part Two

Once I get down to a general category, I use a technique from Phill Smith's Organic Mentalism lecture to force the specific thing. It's called The Universal and it's a way of associating different options to your fingers, and then using Quinta to force one. It's a very conversational, casual approach and works perfectly for this kind of situation.

So at this point I'll say, "Okay, so a dead, male, singer…" (Or whatever the category.)

"Let's come up with some options. Freddie Mercury… David Bowie… uhm, give me some more."

I then let them name the last three themselves.

You could just let them name all the options, hope they name the force option as one of their selections, and if they don't, offer it up yourself at the end. But I don't love that. It feels like you're trying to get that one option in. Which is especially suspicious when it ends up being the ultimate selection.

I'd rather act like I'm going to be the one making the selections and then open it up to their input as well. That feels like moving in the direction of freedom. As opposed to me shoving in an option at the end.

So I then use Quinta/The Universal to force David Bowie from these options.

I do a quick "manifestation exercise" to focus their visualization. This could be anything. I could have them think of three powerful memories from their past and imagine David Bowie is part of the memory. Or whatever.

I now set the stage for what's to come. "Okay, so if this works, we should manifest some element of David Bowie into the world in some way. Maybe hear a song from him or something like that in the next week or so."

Twenty minutes later, as we drive into the city, we see this.

"I don't believe this shit," I say, dumbfounded.

A Quinta Finger Force Finesse

Quinta is always strongest when you can tell them what you're going to do before they do it.

"You're going to think of any number. And then you're going to count on the fingertips of my left hand, starting from left to right, and going back and forth, until we end up on your number."

This sounds very definitive. But there are two natural ways to hold your hand out to them to count on your fingertips.

So you can control the orientation as you need to for Quinta.

Afterward

My experience with this premise is that the revelation gets an initial surprised reaction. A sort of, "Oh! Wow!" That initially seems to strike them as funny. But then, as they think back and consider how we got to the "manifestation target," it feels more and more impossible. We randomly selected a category. They helped choose the options. They chose the number that would select the random option.

Of course, while this is dawning on thm, I'm just stoking the situation by being a little freaked out. "That's never been there before. I lived here for 20 years and that mural was never there. I thought a song would just come on the radio or something.”

My friend was roped into the fiction enough to actually look it up online and see if she could find evidence of when the Bowie mural was made. "It's been there for years," she said.

I laughed. "Well, of course it would say that, goofball. You don't just manifest some object into existence. The whole universe shifts. We manifested a universe where that mural was painted years ago."

Later that night, after brushing her teeth, she came into my room and I was sitting on the bed looking at my phone.

"This is crazy," I said. "Wikipedia has David Bowie as having all sorts of hits he never had. Space Oddity? Star Man? Life on Mars? A few other ones too."

"Those are Bowie songs," she said.

"Huh? Those are T. Rex songs. Marc Bolan wrote those." I paused. “Oh shit… it’s rewriting your memory now too? I’m sorry. I… I don’t think I can stop it.”

Weaponizing Contradiction

One of Monday's mailbag letters got me thinking of a related approach to Block Penetration effects. Even if you don't care about this type of effect (I'm not sure I do), there's a broader concept buried here worth considering

Here's the idea. You pull out the matchbox (or whatever) and say:

"Have you seen this? It won some award for best optical illusion of last year. It looks like the match is going through the box, doesn't it? From this side, from that side… you'd swear it's going straight through, right? But it's not. It can't be. There's a metal block inside."

This is kind of an interesting approach because you seem to be trying to convince them the match isn't going through the box. Which means their inclination will be to focus on trying to prove the opposite. That it IS going straight through the middle of the box.

This naturally gets them to focus on every aspect of the matchbox and match. And to reinforce in their mind the fact that the matchstick is definitely going through the middle of the box (not partway through, or somehow sneaking around the side). And it cements this visual in place without spoiling the surprise of something in the box.

Magic audiences assume everything you say is bullshit anyways and are more than ready to believe the opposite, so why not use that distrust to heighten their awareness of certain conditions?

If you don't want to say, "Notice, my hand is completely empty as I reach into my pocket."

You could say, “My hand may look empty. But there's actually a card there. I used a hypnotic suggestion earlier to wipe it from your perception. Now I can just drop it in my pocket."

This will create certainty that your hand is empty when you reached into your pocket.

If you don't want to say, "Notice, I never look at the word you wrote down."

You could say, "I've trained myself to take such a fast peek that your brain can't register it. There. Just did it. You wrote 'camping.'"

They will be certain you never looked away.

Think of it as weaponizing contradiction—using their reflex to prove you wrong as a spotlight.

It’s not something you’d use everywhere, but when you need a condition to feel undeniable, this gives you a way to lock it in.

And it's probably the only technique in magic where the less your audience likes you, the better it works. Good news for most of you.

Literomancy

Here’s a word reveal I’ve been having fun with the past couple of months. It’s based on something I originally wrote up for a previous issue of Keepers. That was tied to a specific trick. This is for anytime you need to reveal a word and want to do so in a way other than “mind reading.”

I introduce a deck of alphabet cards. (It can be any sort of alphabet deck you might have: from a magic trick, a word game, dollar store flash cards, or whatever.)

I talk about a forgotten branch of fortune telling from the Victorian era called literomancy, which used letters on cards or wooden tiles to tell people’s fortunes or connect with the dead. “It was sort of a tarot/ouija hybrid. People would sit around a table spelling out messages one letter at a time, waiting to see if anything meaningful emerged. It didn’t really stick.”

I explain I came across an old exercise people used with these cards to “establish a connection” between the sitter and the deck. I tried it a few times, and it worked weirdly well.

My friend writes down a word and sets it aside.

I give them the deck to mix any way they like, then ask them to cut it into as many piles as there are letters in their word. I have them arrange the piles in a row. And finally, I tell them for each pile they can turn over the top card or the entire pile.

At this point, of course, I’ve already peeked their word earlier in the process.

I tell them we’re looking for “overlaps” between the letters that come up and the word they’re thinking of.

I take their hand by the wrist and hover it over each pile. I go letter by letter and point out any similarities between the revealed letter and the letter at that position in the word they’re thinking of. I treat it as if they’re giving off some energy over each card.

Because I know their word, I can “sense” if they’re having a strong reaction to the letter.

Occasionally I’ll get a perfect letter match—where the letter they dealt is the same as the letter at that position in their word. (Once every 12 million performances or so, they’ll cut to their exact word. When this happens, just end the trick there.)

More frequently, though, I’ll be noting smaller similarities.

“Okay, there’s an intense energy on this letter. Was the second letter in your word also a vowel?”

“Oh… something’s happening here. I doubt your word ended with a Q, but is the real letter a similar shape? An O or a C, maybe?”

After this, I take the random letters they dealt out and say them as if they form a word.

I have them gather up the cards and hold them between their hands, focusing on their word. I put my hands around theirs. “Think of using your word in a sentence. Or a context it might be used in.”

After focusing on it, I now say the nonsense word in place of their actual word in a common phrase, building it piece by piece, somewhat confusedly.

For example…

Let’s say the person is thinking of the word HOME. And they cut to these letters.

During the first phase, as I’m holding their hands over the cards one by one:

Card 1 (P) – “Hmm… I’m not getting much here. You might also be thinking of a consonant.”

Card 2 (V) – “I don’t know. It’s either not similar at all or the connection isn’t there.”

Card 3 (T) – “There’s something here that’s similar to the letter in your word. I don’t think it’s a T, but maybe it’s structurally the same? Mostly straight lines or something?”

Card 4 (I) – “Okay, I’m getting more similarities here. This is either a letter that sounds similar—like another vowel—and it may also have a similar structure. Straight lines. Maybe an A or an E.”

As they hold the cards between their hands, I’m now repeating the “word” they cut to: PVTI. (Just say the letters as a word as best you can.) “Pivty, pivty, pivty…” I’m saying it in a searching way, as if I’m trying to find some connection that’s out there somewhere.

“Pivty. Pivty… At pivty? Hmm… At pivty… yourself? Yourself at pivty?” Pause. Thinking. Then, questioningly: “Make yourself at pivty? Maybe? I don’t get it. What is ‘Make yourself at pivty’?”

I say it in a “does that mean anything to you?” way. Then they explain, or it dawns on me that they must be thinking of “home.”

What’s interesting is that this is a word reveal where you never actually reveal the word. You’re describing a context that word might appear in and leaving it up to them to explain how what you said makes sense. So it has a different feel from a traditional word reveal.

This also sets up a future trick I do for them, again using the letter cards as a kind of divination tool (since the deck is now “calibrated” toward them). There, they mix the deck and the cards end up revealing an important word or name to them directly. (This is Letter Perfect by David Regal.)

Mailbag #170

In the post on The Breakthrough System, I wrote: “In the trailer above, Johannes makes a comparison to this effect and walking on water. That’s how into this trick he is.”

Johannes took issue with this and wrote:

One misinformation you had was mentioning that I compared TBS with walking on water. If you listen to the trailer again, you'll understand that this was not the case. The comparison was between the experience whether a spectator is watching a magician perform a trick or experience doing the impossible themselves without knowing how, I simply brought an example with "walking on water" trick to deliver the point home, as clearly it would be more powerful experience for the spectator if THEY could do it themselves not just watch.

There’s no “misinformation,” but I can see how it could be misinterpreted if you didn’t watch the trailer.

I said he made a comparison between TBS and walking on water—and that’s exactly what he does. He literally says, “Let me give you a comparison,” and then launches into walking on water as the example. He uses it as an analogy. An analogy, by definition, is a comparison.

To be clear, he never says, “This trick is as powerful as walking on water.” I wasn’t suggesting he did. But reference points aren’t neutral. They imply a degree of comparability.

For example, if you asked, “Andy, what makes your next book so good?” and I said:

“Well… let me give you a comparison. You know the Bible, yes? It has lots of seemingly impossible things in it. That’s part of what makes it so compelling. Well, my book has descriptions of seemingly impossible things too.”

I’m not claiming my book is as impactful as the Bible. But choosing that as the comparison tells you something about how I’m framing it.

Same principle here.

Or to flip it the other way, if I wrote in my review, “Johannes’ trick is convenient because it fits in your hand. Sort of like how dog shit fits in your hand,” he’d be justified in taking that as a dig, even though I never explicitly said the trick was dog shit. The comparison does the work.

But to reiterate, Johannes wasn’t claiming the effects are equally strong. If he had been, I would’ve called him delusional instead of just teasing him for being very “into” his trick (Which there is no denying once you watch the tutorial.)


I was interested in your thoughts on one alternative presentation for solid penetrations: making the trick about memory distortion/manipulation.  

For example, show a hypnotic spiral video on youtube, then tell the participant to pay close attention to what I'm about to show you and try to remember as my details as possible.  Show the penetration (match through the matchbox or whatever, then take the match out).  Snap fingers (implying that the participant is being taken out of hypnosis).  Ask the participant to describe what he/she just saw in as much detail as possible. Once the participant finishes describing, say that couldn't possibly be what you saw, and then show the block.  —DS

Yes, I like it. That’s a good approach to get them to pay detailed attention without spoiling the surprise ending.

I would add a beat where after they describe what they saw, I'd say, "So you're sure you saw it going through the middle of the box? It wasn't just sliding behind the box, like this?" And I'd clearly slide the match behind the box in an unconvincing illusion of penetrating the box.

They would insist that no, it was going through the middle. This is good because it gets them to cement that image in their mind.

You’d want to make sure your attitude matches the story you’re telling. You would want to be almost smiling to yourself at this point as if thinking, "Damn, that actually worked, I can't believe it."

Thanks for sharing. This got me thinking of a similar approach that I'll share with you later this week.


What do you think about using smart glasses in mentalism performances? Do you think they would raise suspicion? —BC

Well… I mean… of course. Wearing smart glasses raises suspicion in literally any context. (The suspicion is usually, “Oh, what is this pervert trying to take pictures of?”)

I did a trick last summer at the beach where the person I was performing for thought of an ESP symbol, I drew something in the sand under a beach towel, and when she revealed her symbol, it matched what I had drawn. It was a whole thing about the “crystals” of the sand and vibrational energy and blah, blah, blah.

When performing, I was wearing these glasses…

After the effect had sunk in for a moment, the girl said, "How did you do that? Wait… are those smart glasses?"

As if:

A) Them being smart glasses would explain anything.

B) There's a big market for smart glasses inspired by the design of Rocket Pops.

If you're performing for people who know you, and you're suddenly wearing glasses or wearing different glasses than usual, that's going to be a dead giveaway, of course.

But that's more of an issue for the amateur performer. Professionals have different concerns. If one person in the group recognizes you're wearing smart glasses, everyone will know it once you leave the group.

Even if they don't know how that helps you, they will assume it's part of the method.

So you'd definitely want custom frames that don't match anything on the smart glass market. But even then, the more ubiquitous these glasses become, eventually people may just assume any glasses you wear are potentially suspicious.

After that day at the beach, I make sure to take off even normal sunglasses when performing.

Dustings #144

This has been the busiest week in the history of me working on the site: writing posts, the next newsletter, the next book, another magician's book, one non-magic advertising project, one non-magic film project, and finally getting my taxes done.

I go into a fugue state when I have that much work and just sort of barrel through it and don't realize how shot I am until things settle down. So now I'm really feeling it.

At the moment I'm in a car on the way to New Haven, Connecticut to see The Last Dinner Party tonight. Looking forward to a good show and not looking at a computer for a few hours.

[Update: It was a great show. Interesting crowd. 1/3rd sorority girls, 1/3rd sweetly-nerdy girls in baroque/gothic dresses and corsets, and 1/3rd old music-heads. (I’m not going to reveal which category I fall into.)]


An email from RS asks: How did it feel to get "called out" by the Unnamed Magician on Lloyd and Craig's podcast? 😆

As I said, it's been a crazy week, so I didn't get a chance to watch the full thing. What I did see was bizarre. Lloyd says the Unnamed Magician—

Actually, hold on, I'm just going to go ahead and call him "Pete" from now on, okay? I can't with the corny "Unnamed Magician" stuff anymore. I don't mind a pseudonym, but I don't love indulging someone who put exactly zero seconds of thought into the name they wanted people to refer to them as.

So Lloyd is either confused or Pete lied to him. Apparently Pete said that he told me to go ahead and put the money for the trick in escrow and he would prove it was real. In other words, he's saying he agreed to the deal and then I backed down.

Nothing like that ever happened. I have all the emails. I told Pete I wouldn't reveal them because they don't necessarily make him look great. But if he'd like me to, I will.

So I'm not sure what's going on. Maybe he thought he could lie to Lloyd to have him advocate for him? I don't know.

The truth is:

I offered 20k.

Didn't hear anything from him for two weeks.

First time I did hear from him, I was told he had multiple better offers (🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣)

I offered 5k more than any other offer.

Next time I heard from him: "They've made it quite clear to me that they want this effect at all costs, and that they'll be offering more than anyone else to obtain it."

I again offered to go 5k higher than their highest offer AND I'd share it with the other party for free AND Pete retained the rights to sell it himself. It's a win-win-win-win-win for everyone. He told me he'd get back to me.

Later, I was given more information that confirmed for me the trick was not what was being advertised, so I told him I was taking my offer off the table. He told me he would go with one of his other offers.

At what point exactly was I supposed to be shoving money into escrow for this thing?

I gave him a month to take me up on the offer. He never accepted it. He never indicated he planned to accept. He only told me he had better offers.

Either way, Pete should be very happy after selling this very real trick to one of the very real secret-hoarding millionaires who wanted to buy it just to keep the secret for himself.

I guess we're supposed to believe he's got maybe 50-100k of new money in his pocket, and yet he's still sending me dozens of emails whining about this shit? That's a weird approach to life.


Sorry if that subject is boring. It's boring to me too. But it's also the easiest content in the world to write.

Oh, and just to be clear—as there seems to be some confusion—intellectual property/trade secret escrow (which is what this would be) is not a free service people provide out of the goodness of their hearts. There are escrow fees, legal fees, and verification fees generally paid by the buyer. In past deals I've been involved with, these are at minimum a few thousand dollars. So the "you had nothing to lose" argument isn't quite accurate—especially for a trick I had evidence wasn't legit.


I was at a party the other day and talking to my friend about some tricks I was thinking of buying.

I told my friend I wanted to get Digital Penetration by David Penn.

This woman turned to me and said, “I got that.”

“Oh, you’re a magician,” I asked?

“No,” she said. “I was his girlfriend in secondary school.”

Salvage Yard: Block Penetrations

Re: A Thought Experiment - The Impersonator

Loved to read your thoughts in this post. What a great analogy […]

I would really like to hear your thoughts on
Solid Condom or any block penetration effect. Because then also you show something that’s not exciting in the moment, but it kinda was looking back on it. But then it’s already over.—CW

I've mentioned this before, and I've had other people write me about it as well. For the impossibility of the effect, and how clean it is, block penetration style effects don't always get the strongest reactions.

This structure of a trick—it's a magical penetration, but you don't know the penetration is magical until sometime after the penetration has occurred—is one that I've always had better reactions to from magicians than regular people. It's not that non-magicians dislike it, it's just that the reactions aren't quite as strong. (I'm referring here to tricks like Brass Block Penetration or Industrial Revelation. I've never used the Solid Condom effect.)

My theory is this: the magician knows where the trick is going. So they know to get a good look at the conditions as the item is being penetrated.

The lay person doesn't know where the trick is going. In fact that's often part of the premise. They think the thing is just going through a normal matchbox, or an empty card case. And then… Surprise! There was something in there all along.

And they will register surprise at seeing the object. But I think a lot of that is just actual surprise at seeing this unusual thing. It's not necessarily a surprise that comes from fully grasping the impossibility.

After the block is revealed, you're asking them to do a lot of remembering. "Remember you saw the full outside of the box while it was being penetrated." "Remember nothing was sticking out where it shouldn't have been." "Remember nothing was snuck into the box after the penetration." They didn't know to be looking for these things.

Here are some approaches that don't require you to rely on their memory to know they saw something impossible when doing a block penetration effect.

Have them record it on their phone.

Then they can at least go back and see that they didn't miss anything when they watched it the first time.

Have whatever box is being penetrated wrapped or sealed in an envelope.

This prevents the idea that something was partially removed during the penetration or snuck in afterward. I used to do the matchbox penetration with it wrapped up like a little gift.

Tell them what's going to happen while the object is being penetrated.

"I know this doesn't look like much, but imagine it wasn't matches in there. What if it was a block of wood, or ice, or.… imagine something completely impenetrable, like a brass block. Then what you're seeing would be truly impossible."

Now they know to register the impossibility of there being something solid inside the box. They know to have their guard up that nothing is coming out or going in unnoticed.

And using this language still allows it to be something of a surprise when the brass block—which you framed as sort of a thought experiment—is truly inside the matchbox.

What you're doing here is solving the core problem in real time: you're telling them what to notice and why it matters, as it's happening. You're not asking them to reconstruct the conditions after the fact. They were there. They heard you describe the impossible version of events. And then the impossible version turned out to be the real one. That's a very different experience than just showing them something weird and relying on their memory to do the math.