Mailbag #158

I just read the post "A Cross-Cut Tweak Tweak"  and I wanted to ask what your thoughts are on a particular phrase I have a problem with. 

"Look at the card you cut to" I feel is problematic. I feel this line invites scrutiny from analytical participants, maybe because it actually is a lie. 

I would avoid lying at this moment and say something 'neutral' like "lift up the top packet and look at the card and remember it". 

I feel this will minimise scrutiny because I don't have to lie, and a participant doesn't know what to expect from a procedure in a card trick anyway. If they are convinced the deck is shuffled, and I ask them to look at a card, it shouldn't matter. But if I start lying about where the card came from, people can get hung up on that and guess that I know the identity, despite the shuffle? 

Depending on the presentation I could later ask them to bury it.

 And maybe you could reframe the events later? 

"You have yourself cut these cards and looked at a card, somewhere in the middle of this deck." Which is still true and a bit ambiguous, but suggests it was any random card in the middle.

What are your thoughts? —PK

I understand where you’re coming from, and I wouldn’t say it’s a mistake to do it that way, but it’s not the path I would choose.

I have pretty strong faith in the deceptiveness of the Cross-Cut Force. In my experience, most people are just naturally inclined to believe that’s the card they cut to, and I think referring to it as that helps cement that reality in place, rather than creating suspicion.

And because of that, I don’t think your proposed wording adds much. Yes, if you have someone who naturally sees through the topology of the Cross-Cut Force (surprisingly rare) they can’t accuse you of lying. But they can wonder what the point of cutting the deck was if you were just going to have them look at the bottom card in the first place.

If you want to maybe blunt the “card you cut to” language. You could maybe say, “Memorize the card you cut to.” Which puts the focus on the fact they have something to do in that moment (memorize the card). Which hopefully takes any mental energy away from them thinking, “Ah, but is this the card I cut to?”

The beauty of the Cross-Cut Force is that you can’t get busted on it. As I mention in the post referenced above. If someone ever says, “That’s not the card I cut to,” you just say, “Huh? It’s not? Wait…okay, I’m confused then. Go ahead and just take the card you cut to. Or cut again to any card.” Yes, you’ll have to tap dance your way into a different trick, but there’s full plausible deniability here.


With the whole Ted K situation going on, I began wondering if you ever heard directly from anyone you put on the GLOMM’s banned member list?—DA

Yeah, there are two or three posts in the archive where I respond to someone who got kicked out of the GLOMM who ended up writing me directly. Honestly, I admire the gumption. “How dare you tell people I was convicted of sexual assault!” That’s a big swing to take.

The more impactful letters I’ve received are from the victims of some of these guys. (And they are all guys. No woman has broken the GLOMM’s glass ceiling, yet.)

I’ve also heard a couple of times from magicians who told me they struggle with these desires, and one of the factors that keeps them in line is thinking they’ll be splashed on my site if they ever did anything and it was found out. Good! Look, I don’t blame anyone for whatever fucked-up thought their brain has. I feel bad for them, so long as they don’t give in to a desire they know will harm someone else. So if imaging me busting your ass on this site is beneficial to you in any way, I’m happy to exert that extra bit of pressure.


Your post [The Coin Vanish Paradox] reminded me of this section in Designing Miracles (Darwin Ortiz page 26):—BG

In volume two of his Expert Coin Magic... Made Easy! DVD seres, David Roth teaches his handling of the visual retention coin vanish. (This is a method of pretending to place a coin in one hand while actually retaining it in the other.) In Roth's hands this is one of the most amazing visual illusions you'll ever see. Any observer would be willing to bet at least one gonad that the coin is really in the hand. Yet, after demonstrating this uncannily convincing sleight, David observes: "But, remember, as in all coin vanishes, no matter how well you do this move—even if you do it perfectly—once you open your left hand to show that the coin is gone, the spectators will look at the other hand. He goes on to say that even if you really did put the coin in your left hand and then vanished it by some other means, "When you open your hand, they will look at the other hand." He then explains, "This is where routining is most important. It's the routining that will keep spectators from suspecting the other hand." Routining is a term that magicians use to mean a variety of things. In this case, I believe that what David is calling routining is what I call design.

The Roth example demonstrates that perfect technique is not enough to create an enduring magical mystery. Similarly, misdirection is not enough, and even presentation is not enough. It's not a failure of technique, mis-direction, or presentation that leads people to look at the other hand. It's simply that it just makes sense. If the coin isn't in one hand, it's probably in the other. It's this pesky common sense that often allows laypeople to figure out what you thought was a pertect illusion. It's precisely this common sense that good design can defeat and even turn to your advantage.

Yeah, I agree with David Roth here. Even if you really put the coin in your hand and made it disappear by magic, people would still look to your other hand. As I said in that post, it’s the transfer that’s the issue. That action gives them the “answer” they need.

Where I would disagree is to say that I don’t think you can easily “routine” or “design” your way out of this issue. Sure, you can add a bunch of junk surrounding your coin vanish so that it’s no longer just a single coin vanish, but that’s not what we’re looking for.

Dustings #137

I’ve talked a lot of shit about AI, but actually it’s quite insightful.


This Week In Unnecessary Branding

I love Danny Garcia. I like what I see from his new deck of marked cards.

But what do I say if someone looks at this card and asks, "Who's Danny Garcia?"

He's the magician who designed this marked deck.

I feel like that might make them a touch suspicious about the deck.

If I just claim he's the “artist” who designed the deck, that just draws more attention to the back of the cards—which is exactly what we're trying to avoid. And anyone who actually looked at the back design would think, "What 'artist' would be clamoring to take credit for this?"

I'm not saying it's likely they'll comment on it—and sure, you could just toss the Ace of Spades to eliminate the issue. But for the life of me, I don't understand why we're doing anything that might draw extra attention to a marked deck of cards. Let alone giving people the name of the magician behind it. Oh, and it says Vanishing Inc. on the box? Great. Why not just make the back design a QR code that leads directly to the for-sale page?

Please adhere to these rules when putting out a marked deck:

  1. Market it under a different name than what's on the box.

  2. Don't put a magic manufacturer on the box.

Let's go, people. Get your shit together. Not everyone is performing solely at magic conventions or for disinterested spectators. Some of us are dealing with engaged audiences who are dying to be seduced by an impenetrable mystery! Help us out here.


I was watching the demo for Nova Rings….

And as I watched it, I thought, Wait… who is this person talking?

Moments later, I realized that was Carisa Hendrix, the woman behind Lucy Darling.

The thing is, that character is so fully realized to me that I don't really consider the person underneath. Hence why the "real" her didn't register with me immediately. I mean, I'm not an idiot. This sort of thing doesn't happen to me often. If I saw Rudy Coby offstage, I wouldn't be wondering where his other legs are. My confusion is a compliment to her. Her level of comfort in the character is totally disarming.

That being said, magic is for men. It takes a man's insight to understand complicated concepts like mouth coils or Ed Marlo's Tilt.

Sure, Carisa is a great magician, but can you imagine how good she'd be as an assistant? Think of the gesturing. Think of the SMILING.

For this reason, I can't support this Nova Ring project, or Vanishing Inc. for indulging her silly and capricious feminine whims by producing this product. We don't need to encourage this kind of thing.

If ladies insist on being magiciennes, I do hope they'll stay in their lane. Linking finger rings is really something for the gentleman conjuror. Remember, it's a Himber ring, not a Herber ring.

Women shouldn't be gallivanting around town linking finger rings. It's just not ladylike. Instead of fussing around with these Nova Rings, have you considered linking a NuvaRing? That seems like something you gals could have a lot of fun with, without stepping on daddy's toes.

The Coin Vanish Paradox

We recently attempted some focus-group testing to identify which false transfer technique was the best for vanishing a coin.

Different groups of laypeople each watched a video of a different coin vanish based on a false transfer, ranging from a simple French drop to much more complicated modern coin techniques.

Which one was the most fooling?

In a way… none of them.

Almost every respondent (we had planned to do more, but stopped at 40) when asked if they had an idea of how the coin vanished, said some variation of exactly what happened. "He never actually placed it in his other hand."

I expected that response with simple false transfers. But the same thing happened with beautiful, advanced moves like these:

Here's the paradox: if the coin hadn't vanished, spectators would be fairly convinced it was in the empty hand. But the moment it disappears, they reverse-engineer their memory: “Well, I never clearly saw it in the other hand. So it must have never been there.” The vanish itself undermines the illusion the false transfer establishes.

The problem with the false transfer is simply... the transfer of the coin itself. It doesn't allow for conviction in the spectator's mind about where the coin actually is.

So spectators can enjoy and be in awe of your magical-looking small object manipulation. But if, like me, you want to create effects that they can't easily write off as "skill," then it's likely there's no false transfer that will accomplish that goal.

Clarifying The Magic Cafe's Content Policies

The Magic Cafe's rules can often be a little inscrutable. The only reason this site exists is because twenty-two years ago they deleted a post I wrote that said, "Sponge Ding-Dong."

Apparently that old Al Goshman effect was simply too erotic to be mentioned on the Cafe, so it just needed to be removed.

In actuality, no one would find that innocuous comment offensive. It was just one of the Cafe's dull moderators—someone living a life feeling powerless and impotent (figuratively) (oh… who am I kidding, probably literally too)—who got off on wielding this tiny amount of power.

At the time, I'm sure they were like…

Which quickly turned into…

As I set the place ablaze for the next year or so on the blog I started in response.

That blog led to thinking about magic more, which led to performing magic more, which led to this blog, which led to eight books, which led to even more opportunities in writing and magic and working with almost every big-name magician I have any respect for.

So, I came out of things alright.

But even after 25 years, people still don’t quite know what they can or can’t mention on the Cafe.

Fortunately, they have me—Friend of The Magic Cafe, Andy at The Jerx—to help you understand the rules.

Here's a post and Dave Scribner’s (“Assistant Manager”) response explaining their policies regarding why they're deleting any references to Ted Karmilovich's conviction for sexual assault. I thought I’d help the Cafe out by amplifying their message here.

See guys? It’s just that they don't talk about “sexual activity” on the site. The problem with the Ted K. story is that it's simply tooooooooo sexy!

When I read the newspaper articles about him taking advantage of a 15-year-old as her teacher, I was like, "What is this, The Asbury Park Press or the gosh-dang Penthouse Forum!"

So please, don't mention his conviction on the site. Scribner's worried you might get people too turned on.

Now, some people might say that talking about someone's sexual assault conviction isn't exactly "discussing sexual activity"—it's discussing criminal activity. They would contend that calling statutory rape "sexual activity" minimizes what happened. It erases the victim and the crime. They’d say, "sexual activity" implies consent, and a 15-year-old can't consent. That's literally why it's illegal.

Oh, pish-posh, I say!

I'm with Scribby on this. Nothing even hinting at the existence of sex should be allowed.

In fact, can we also ban mentions of “my wife's having a child" and things like that? Do you know how that thing got in there? You might as well just say, "You know what I did nine months ago? I stuck my throbbing cock into my wife's quivering gash and filled it with pump after pump of my hot, creamy load." It's the same thing! The same exact thing!

Come to think of it, should they even allow discussion of the sponge bunnies trick? I suppose it’s okay, just so long as you say the baby bunnies were adopted.

The other great point Scribner makes is this: "Posts defaming someone else are considered flaming which is definitely against our rules."

Is that clear enough for you? Don't "defame" people by pointing out factual things that they did that are in the public record. Have some decency, won't you?

The rules are plain and simple. If Craig Petty rips off Bob King's effect, New Wave Prediction, then we must have a 50-page thread on what a piece of shit he is. Craig's in the wrong, and he deserves that.

If Craig was smart he simply would have raped Bob King because then it's mum's the word!

I think that all makes perfect sense now.

I’ll pre-emptively say, “You’re welcome,” to the staff at the Cafe for helping them out by explaining their perfectly rational rules and regulations.


Look, here are my genuine (and hopefully final) thoughts on this issue:

  1. Does the Magic Cafe really have a policy to cover up sex crimes because they "don't allow discussions of sexual activity"? I doubt it. The issue was that the story broke on my site, so that dunce, Scribner, had to fumble around and come up with some sort of rationale for why it couldn't be mentioned.

    And the best he could come up with was, essentially: "The Magic Cafe is a safe space for sex criminals."

  2. I understand not wanting that review thread to devolve into endless discussion of this topic. But censoring this story completely isn't the way to handle it

  3. There's nothing wrong if you want to purchase the new book (in my opinion). Ted's dead. You're not giving him any money. But it's also completely valid that there are people who might not want this sitting on their bookshelf regardless. And those people should have the information to make an informed decision.

  4. I've heard from a few people who are featured in the endorsements for the book who are regretting that they're now associated with it. I wouldn't worry too much about that. Somehow this story was lost for decades. I think people understand your endorsement only goes so far as the material in the book and not everything the man did.

  5. I'm not even trying to paint Ted as some evil person. Yes, he could have been some conniving predator. Or he could have been a sad, lonely, pathetic 33-year-old who acted on his worst impulses in this situation and ever afterward was a perfect upstanding citizen. I have no clue.

    And I don't care. That's not why I talk about these stories.

My point isn't, "We must shun these people! We must drum them out of society! They're irredeemable!" This is not some crusade of mine. It's just transparency.

Everyone has a different level of acceptance and forgiveness for these types of situations, but you can only use your own moral judgment when you have the information to judge. So I make the information available.

Magic has an issue (if nothing else, at least a perceived issue) with creeps, pedophiles, perverts, etc. Exposing these stories is what a healthy community does. Covering them up, sweeping them under the rug, waving them off is what a complicit community does.

How To React To the Spectator As Magician

The most difficult thing about performing a Spectator-as-Magician/Mentalist plot is giving a believably impressed, amazed, or surprised response.

It's one thing if my premise is, "I knew you'd be able to do this." But if the premise involves me being taken aback by what I'm seeing, it can be hard to play that off realistically.

"Oh my god! This is crazy! How is this happening??"

That kind of reaction can take what should be a cool moment for the spectator and turn it into a joke. It's easy for it to come across as totally fake.

So what do you say in this situation?

My current answer is this: I don't say anything.

Instead, I pose.

Usually, I'll put my hands together like I'm praying and touch them to my slightly open lips or my chin while I stare at whatever it is they're doing. This is a fairly standard look of being enraptured by something.

Other times I'll do some kind of semi-unusual action. I'll gently pinch and pull the top of my ear away from my head. Or I'll put my hand in a loose fist and scratch my forehead with the back of my thumbnail. Or I'll pick at my lips absentmindedly. During any of these, my mouth will be slightly open and I'll be staring at the cards—or whatever it might be.

These aren't gestures that you would necessarily associate with awe or amazement, but they're the sort of thing you might do if your mind was completely captured by what you were seeing. You wouldn't stand there with a wry smile and a cocked eyebrow. You'd just be distractedly doing whatever as your mind processed what it was seeing.

When the effect has concluded, I'll shake my head a little, smile slightly, maybe shrug.

When I do speak, it's not some profound declaration like: "And now you see the power of the human mind is limitless when we open ourselves up to the possibility of achieving the impossible!"

No. I just say something like, "That's wild." "I'm lost." "That's nuts."

My first full sentence will often be an attempt to dismiss what they did.

"Were you able to see the cards' reflections in the TV or something?"

I'm trying to nudge their mind into the idea that just maybe they really did something impossible. I'm not expecting them to walk away feeling like they're psychic or whatever. I just want it to feel real enough that they'll question it.

The key is remembering that underplaying beats overplaying every time. If you're not a great actor, don't try to act in this moment. Let silence and bewilderment do the heavy lifting. Then, if it makes sense, let a little skepticism creep in. Put them on the defensive—put them in a position where they're trying to convince you that something impossible really did happen.

Mailbag #157

I'm not sure if you're aware, but the Ted Karmilovich conviction info on your blog was referred to on The Magic Cafe thread about the book. It's how I've become aware of it (and your blog).

Several posters on The Magic Cafe thread spoke very negatively about the matter including that they wouldn't buy the book. Then those posts (and all other posts referring to the conviction and your blog) were deleted.

I had no idea about the conviction and I'm staggered he has it, as well as how it's been seemingly suppressed or otherwise glossed over by those in the community who knew. So thank you for mentioning it. Any sort of light on this is extremely important. I wouldn't be happy purchasing the book then finding out about his conviction, so I'm grateful I have that knowledge which has ultimately come from your blog post.—RM

I got a lot of feedback on this from last Friday’s post.

Yes, the story is real. Yes, it’s the same Ted Karmilovich.

You can see the story in the paper itself here, and an article after his conviction here (although you’ll need a paid subscription to do so).

Some people say, “I don’t care.” I’m not suggesting you have to care. I was just relaying information that had recently come my way.

I certainly wasn’t trying to spoil the release of the new hardcover collection of his material.

It’s sort of amazing this wasn’t common knowledge. It was a front-page news story with a long (5-year) prison sentence. And it wasn’t like this happened in the 1940s. It was the early 90s at the dawn of the internet age.

It’s definitely something that was known in certain circles. In the August 1995 issue of Genii Magazine, Danny Orleans ends his review of the Mother Of All Book Tests with this:

Some of you will say the high price “is criminal” and Mr. Karmilovich should “ do time” for gouging the magic buyer. Perhaps that would give him time to think up another great mental effect.

As I said, make of the information what you will.

You don’t have to care at all.

Or you may feel it was just a one time (seven month) mistake on his part.

Or you may say, “I can separate the art from the artist.”

Or you may decide you don’t want to spend $250 on a massive tome of material of a convicted sexual predator whose good stuff has been available for a long time.

All of this is fine with me.

But, if you come at me saying I’m “ruining his legacy,” get ready for me to dunk on your dumb ass relentlessly.

You can’t “ruin someone’s legacy” by noting something they did. That is their legacy.

As for the Magic Café deleting references to this, I don’t know what’s going on there. Maybe some of the decision makers there like Steve Brooks, Tom Cutts, and David Scribner don’t want to establish a precedent of magicians being exposed for taking advantage of vulnerable children. Maybe—for whatever reason 🤷‍♂️—they prefer sex crimes get swept under the rug. I’m not sure why that would be though 🤔. Hmmm. Well… I guess they’ve put us in a position where we just have to draw our own conclusions.


Do you have a “Best of” list or a Trick of the Year for 2025? —KL

I don’t really do “best of” lists. When it comes to identifying my favorites releases, I do that in real time as the year passes in the monthly newsletter. It’s not a collection of reviews of everything, it’s just my favorite things that I started performing that month. So to create a list of my favorite things I discovered that year, you can just take the items I write up in the newsletter. That captures everything.

But, to give you some answer, I’ll mention two of the most useful effects that were released this year. These are probably the things I performed the most because it was very easy to find opportunities to include them at the spur of the moment. They’re not locked in to a certain premise or presentation. And they’re both dead easy.

Modern Oracle by Chris Rawlins and John Cottle

A set of Magic 8 Ball style cards that give yes/no answers. You can use the cards to reveal thoughts or cards or any known entity, really.

Or just have the deck accurately answer any yes/no question someone asks it.

There are more approaches to this than you’d initially expect.

People are familiar with the concept of a Magic 8 Ball, and the idea that this deck of cards might exist seems totally feasible. It can be presented as a fun novelty item. Or a something you thought was a fun novelty item, but turned out to be something stranger.

Easy, examinable, familiar, flexible.

SAM by Christian Grace

I generally don't like tricks with direct presentations. For example: "Think of a word… Look, that's what I wrote down!" I find that sort of thing unpalatable.

But I do love tricks with very direct methods, because they give me freedom to dress them up however I want.

That's what I like about SAM. You simply ask someone to pick up on the word you're thinking of, then immediately reveal they got it right by showing they're very close to what you searched for on your phone moments ago. (This can also be framed as your prediction being correct.)

With a modicum of creativity, you can build this into all sorts of premises.

I've found the slightly-off nature of the reveal goes a long way toward eliminating the "obvious" solution.

Second only to Echo Sync on the Jerx App, this was my most used phone trick this year.

More information can be found here.

Dustings #136

A Note to All GLOMM Lodges

I was thinking about this old Creep Updates post, and the email that was screenshotted where they were discussing if they were going to help cover the cost of the Christmas party.

Surprise, surprise, they decided not to.

Well, despite the fact that there are no dues in the GLOMM, and it’s not an organization I run, I am happily going to pay your holiday party costs this year, up to $25 per person.

Just send me photos and/or video of the gathering, and let me know the cost and I’ll paypal you the money in return.

Also, it’s a holiday party, so dress up, for the love of God. If you want to be a slob who doesn’t get their holiday party paid for, join the SAM.


Will this chapter of his life be covered in the upcoming book on Ted Karmilovich?

From the Asbury Park Press, August 28th, 1992

The part where he slept with his 15-year-old student after reading her journal and convincing her he could help with the issues she was dealing with?

I believe that’s known as The Somebody’s Daughter of All Book Tests.


This Christmas, remember the true reason for the season with your very own Jerx Cat ornaments. Printable files can be found here.