Checking In

Magic for Young Lovers is now sold out. I have a few extra I held onto just in case my accounting in regards to how many I needed was off in some way. If those end up not being needed then they will be included in the Latecomer’s Package. Which is everything I ever released in one package for people who found this site after these things had been released. There are only a few of these packages available, because there are only a few of the items within the package available.

Season 4 will start in early-mid-ish February. An exact date will be announced here soon.

The Season 4 reward/bonuses won’t be discussed much here, as discussed in this post.


If I don’t come back for Season 4, it may be because the FBI is monitoring my emails and they notice a lot of suspicious activity and discussion in regards to known sex offenders. This is because every time some magician diddles a cub scout my email lights up like a pinball machine with people letting me know.

So just so we’re all aware… yes, I know that magician David Oliver was arrested for sexually assaulting three boys.

Here’s David Oliver (real name David Hussey) at his arraignment.

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I know what everyone is thinking… “Here’s another celebrity pretty-boy who feels he can take whatever he wants just because he’s a hot piece of beefcake.”

The accusations seem to come from multiple sources and according to one article:

The report says Hussey (David Oliver) was told of the allegations while in the hospital this September. A friend of Hussey’s, who was there at the time, told police he was “visibly upset” and that Hussey told her “I may have done something inappropriate.”

So while I’ll withhold my judgement until all the details are out… that doesn’t sound good.

It’s upsetting. Almost as upsetting is the fact that this is what it looks like after getting treated for skin cancer, apparently.

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Couldn’t we invent like a gauze beanie or something? Is that really the best our modern medical treatment has to offer? Slap a couple maxi-pads on his head and send him out the door?


Well, this is an awkward transition, but a few weeks back I recommended playing a little game with yourself where you imagine all the quotes in Penguin’s promotional emails are from people talking about their dicks after getting plastic surgery to make them bigger.

I missed this one originally, but a friend forwarded me the email for an effect called Gone Fishin’, which featured a bunch of quotes from satisfied recipients of penile enlargement surgery…

"Breathtaking. In the right hands it can be a miracle. I love it." -Marc Salem

"A miniature masterpiece" -M Bean

"This left my wife and daughter SPEECHLESS." -Dave Medeiros


Ah yes, there’s that typical high-quality sort of magic writing I’m known for.

Hope you’re all well. I’ll check in again soon. Enjoy the book.

Mini Update and Some 2018 Music Faves

Quick Updates…

  1. If you’ve paid in full for the book expect an email later today with details on the shipping info/fee. If you don’t get the email (make sure you check your spam and your email that’s associated with your paypal account) let me know.

  2. If you were on the monthly payments and you started later in the year, expect an email next week about paying off early (if you want to).

  3. If you didn’t buy the book and you’d like a copy, I have about 14 extras. They will be available as of this coming Monday. Check back here then if you’d like a copy.

  4. The Winter issue of the X-Comm Newsletter will come to subscribers this weekend.

  5. The books and decks will ship in a few batches, starting next week through early February.

2018 Music Faves

I’ve already posted a lot of my favorite songs from 2018 during last year, but here is a round-up of some of my favorite songs of the year that haven’t found their way to the blog previously.

My taste in music leans towards 60’s influenced indie-pop, garage-pop, punk, psychedelia, folk, power-pop, and that sort of thing. If that doesn’t appeal to you, go kick rocks.

Favorite Single of 2018 That Sounds Like a Single from 1966

Flower Garden by The Lazy Lies (Barcelona, Spain)

“Wouldn’t it be amazing if good deeds made people beautiful?”

Buoyant and sunny, a perfect piece of pop-music that—if it didn’t mention pictures getting likes—you would assume was from your parent’s generation. Unless you’re significantly older than me… then you’d think it was from your own generation. Or maybe you’re a baby and your parent’s generation is the 90s, in which case get out of here, baby! This blog is for adults. Although I gotta hand it to you, I like a baby that can read.

Somehow this only has 97 plays as of me posting it here, which is mind-boggling to me.

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Favorite Punk Song of 2018

Some Mutts (Can’t Be Muzzled) by Amyl and the Sniffers (Melbourne, Australia)

Woof woof.

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My Most Played Song of 2018

Italian Jeans by Stufft Crust (San Francisco, California)

Garage/surf/punk. Every night I have a little dance party for myself (a habit I recommend for everyone). This was my favorite song of 2018 to bop around the apartment to.

Favorite Power Pop Song of 2018

Give You What You Want by Greg Pope (Nashville, Tennessee)

I’m a sucker for this type of rhythm—constantly pushing forward. It sounds like a train rumbling down the tracks.

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My Favorite Talky Songs of 2018

By “talky” I mean these guys aren’t great singers, but they still put out some catchy songs that I enjoyed this year.

Hospital by Art Brut (Berlin, Germany)

Eddie Argos, the lead singer of Art Brut, “nearly died” of peritonitis this year. He wrote this song while recovering.

Favorite Line: “They tried to make me go to rehab and I said… ‘That’s probably a very good idea.’”

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Sexy National Anthem by Cheekface (Los Angeles, California)

I have no clue how to categorize their style—the guy just pretty much talks over the music— but this band has some of my favorite lyrics of any band I came across this year.

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If you like this, check out Dry Heat, Nice Town and I Only Say I’m Sorry When I’m Wrong Now.

First Date by St. Lenox (New York, New York)

This doesn’t really qualify as “talky” but he does have an unusual singing voice. I think I connected to this song because one of the cafes I work out of regularly is a very popular spot for first dates and I love creeping on them and listening in. It’s a real learning experience in regards to interacting with new people and how terrible most people are at it.

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Favorite Psychedelic Song of 2018

The Rain is Out by Gloria (Lyon, France)

Gloria is a band I’ve mentioned a few times before on this site. They’re one of my absolute favorites. They’re a pretty “gentle” psychedelia band, but they still qualify. I really like the way the song starts, with each instrument coming in individually with the same riff. Plus the video is delightful. It looks like it was made by the people behind Manos: The Hands of Fate.

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Favorite Song I First Heard In A Commercial in 2018

Love You So by Bleu (Los Angeles, California)

This slick, glossy piano-pop song was one I first heard in a commercial for ebay. I tracked it down and found out I like the parts of the song that aren’t in the commercial even better (because it has the F-word in it, so if you’re that baby I mentioned before don’t play this song!).

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Favorite Hip-Hop/Rap Song of 2018

Ace by Noname ft. Smino and Saba (Chicago, Illinois)

I used to love rap and hip-hop. It used to be the most fun, most aggressive type of music. It was all about partying, smoking weed, fucking hoes, shooting up a city block… fun stuff! Now I listen to rap and it makes me want to blow my goddamn brains out. It’s so depressing. I listen to a song and think, Is this about… fucking voting? Or some other dull shit. Yes, I know, it’s good to be socially conscious and all that, but I’m trying to shake my little booty here. If it’s not that sort of thing then it’s a song about how depressed they are. WHAT IS GOING ON!!!!?? Are people really that miserable? Do you want to listen to people talking about how sad they are?

Anyway, Noname is a young rapper out of Chicago. I dig her style and specifically like this performance because it revs up the tempo of the song on the album which is especially impressive on her verse and Saba’s verse. And I like how she sweetly says “thank you” at the end of the song.

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Favorite Folk Song of 2018

Rang Tang Ring Toon by Mountain Man (Durham, North Carolina)

See, now here’s a subject for a song I can really get behind: dancing around the house, skinny dipping with friends, and cooking beans!

Folk music isn’t necessarily my favorite genre to listen to, but I’d love to be in a folk band; 3 or 4 people crowded around a microphone singing about the Sloop John B and Tom Dooley. That’s my dream.

These ladies have a classic Appalachian-folk sound and their harmonies are just spot-on.

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Favorite Album of 2018

Hollow Ground by Cut Worms (Brooklyn, New York)

This isn’t a ground-breaking album by any means, but I listened to a couple hundred new albums this year and this one had the highest percentage of songs that I actually kept in my itunes playlist.

This description from their Bandcamp page is pretty accurate:

“Max Clarke has a knack for conjuring up warmth in his music, like endless summer or ageless youth. The 27-year-old’s debut LP, Hollow Ground, crackles with the heat of a love-struck nostalgia, woven together with a palpable Everly Brothers’ influence and retro sound. It reaches back into decades of plainspoken, unfussy, and squarely American storytelling and pulls it forth into 2018.”

Here are a couple of my favorites from the album:

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Updates

As a magician, the most shameful thing you can say is, ‘I do Out of This World with half a deck, because it’s faster.’

Wait, check that, the most shameful thing you can say is, ‘Yes, officer, I molested the birthday boy.’ But the Out of This World thing is still pretty pathetic too.
— From the effect, A World Out of Time in Magic For Young Lovers

Just a quote from the upcoming book so you know that I haven’t just written one of the greatest magic books ever, but also an important piece of art.

So, a Book 2 update. When we* contacted the printers last week to see if the most recent shipping date we’d received from them (January 8th) was still accurate, we got this reply:

“Manufacturing is running around 3 days behind schedule. They are working overtime and weekends to get caught up so check back on Monday and lets see where we are at.”

On Monday we wrote back and heard this:

“The ship date is 1-14-19.”

So that’s the latest news I have there. I will keep you updated. Assuming that date holds up then we’re looking at an end-of-the-month-ish date for delivery from me to you.

[* This isn’t the royal we. When I say “we” on this site, it usually just means “not me.” I get a good amount of help on certain logistical aspects of running this site and producing the products. I’m not dealing directly with the printers. Hence “we.”]


Pre-illustration photo and illustration from the trick Ass to Mouth from Magic for Young Lovers

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Season 4 Q&A

Are you definitely doing another season of The Jerx?

There’s a good chance, I think.

The first question I ask myself is, “do I have the content for another year?” I do. The next question is, “Is there interest in another year?” I’ll know that when I put out the call to this year’s supporters to see if they want to sign up for another year. If there is enough interest in another year, I’ll do one.

How will the (potential) next year be different?

Well, there are three types of posts here that require a lot of time on my part: effect/presentation posts, theory posts, and research posts. These types of posts will no longer be on the site and will instead be in publications for supporters only.

Not everything that could potentially fall into one of these categories won’t be posted, but the more fully realized effects/presentations (which is something I haven’t posted on this site for a while now), the fleshed out theory, and the posts related to focus-group testing or other long-term research won’t be up here anymore.

Wait… so what types of posts does that leave? Making fun of Ellusionist? Joshua Jay photoshops?

Yeah, mostly. There will be shorter, but more frequent posts. Imagine the typical Friday posts, but spread throughout the week.

Oh, I see. So you’re going to take the good stuff away and make people pay for it and just leave the dumb stuff here?

I’ve been saying for a couple years that I’m going to be shifting my focus to the people who support the site. If you thought it was “good stuff,” you would have hopped on to support it already. Right?

Yeah, but…

Look, I get it, you’re thick as pigshit and you can’t fathom why someone is only willing to devote 100s of hours of his time for free content and not all of his time. I’m a true monster.

You’re just trying to make money.

Well, yes… to a certain extent. This is time consuming and it’s taking away from time I would be using for other work.

But money is only part of the equation in finding the balance between my time, my interests, my need to eat, the niche focus of this site, taking care of the supporters, etc.

If money was my primary focus, I would not have stopped allowing new supporters for this site.

Yeah, I don’t get that move at all.

Well, there are two reasons for it.

The first reason has to do with how I see the “business” of this site. I don’t see it as people paying me to produce a $260 book every year. I see it as a type of consulting service. Most non-professionals don’t have the time, energy, or social circle to try something out 20 or 30 times in a casual situation. But they like the that someone is, and they’ve found some value in the ideas and effects generated by the time I devote to that pursuit. I see it less as selling a product and more as providing a service. And if you’re providing a service, you can’t just take on unlimited clients. I’m at the point where I have enough people on board to keep the site going, but not so much that I can’t read everyone’s emails and at least consider ideas and suggestions they send my way.

The second reason to limit supporters is as a form of anti-piracy.

Huh? How does that work? Won’t there be even more bootleg copies of things if there are less legitimate ones to go around?

Well, maybe/maybe not. If I write a book and give one copy to my friend, and he’s a good guy and doesn’t share it, then there is no piracy and there is only one legitimate copy. At the same time, anyone who wants can go to Penguin and buy an online lecture—there are unlimited copies for sale—and yet people still steal the content.

Fewer copies means I can keep better track of what’s out there, and who is screwing me over. But ultimately is very difficult to stop people from ripping you off. I will be able to find out who did it and terminate their “membership.” But who knows what I can or can’t stop completely.

So as much I want to be anti-piracy, my way of doing so is to come at it from the opposite end. I’m going to be pro-supporter. By limiting the number of supporters, I’ve created a situation where it’s better for you to support this site rather than rip me off. First it’s better for your state-of-mind because you don’t have to look in the mirror and think, “I’m a piece of shit.” But it’s also better for supporters financially. Supporters of this site will have a physical product to enjoy. And one that was made in smaller quantities than there was a demand for. Which means there will always be a secondary market where you can at least get your money back. So it’s pretty much free to support this site.

So here’s what a potential Season 4 holds:

For Non-Supporters (and everyone else): You will still be getting a bunch of content here, but it’s going to be of the less in-depth, less substantial, more fun variety. There will probably also be more off-topic posts as well (music, life-advice, things I’m into.)

For Supporters: Once the initial Book 2 mailing is complete, you will get an email with more details about staying on to support the site and reserving your spot in the new super-secret magic society. That email will include the details about the rewards for Season 4 which will include Jerx Deck #3, a physical publication of some sort, the pdf newsletter, and access to at least one exclusive effect that I’m thinking about releasing that won’t be available anywhere else. For the most part, this is going to be discussed off this site. (Either on a new separate site or via email.)

For Non-Supporters Who Want to Be Supporters: Any Season 3 supporter who chooses not to sign up for Season 4 will have their spot made available for someone else to take. I will have a sign-up for people who’d like to be on the waiting list posted here in a couple weeks.

I know this is all stupidly complicated, but it is how it is.

I’ll be back next week with any further updates I receive from the printer. And for the few of you who like the music posts, I’ll be posting some of my top songs from 2018.

RTP: A Happiness Practice

Today, as we get ready to turn the calendar page to 2019, I want to talk about a mindset that has improved my quality of life in recent years.

We all know people, maybe you’re one of them, who tend to live in the past. Perhaps they’re having a hard time moving on from some past trauma, or they’re looking at the past from the opposite perspective and they romanticize some time period or relationship from bygone days. I think we all recognize the danger of indulging too much in this kind of mindset. At best it’s unproductive and at worst it can be paralyzing.

I’ve been fortunate that I’ve never really fallen into that mentality. I’m able to look back fondly on the past, but not live in it. And I’m pretty much immune to the negative impact of past setbacks, pain, or trauma.

Instead, I spent a lot of time focused on the future and investing my time and effort in ways that would pay dividends down the road. Not only did this lead me to be more productive than the people I knew who were stuck in the past, but looking ahead just seemed like a more motivating way to go through life.

But, I’ve come to realize that this can be something of a trap as well. “Building towards the future,” is great, but I think it can be a lie we tell ourselves too. “Yeah… now kind of sucks. But if I put in the work now, then I can reap the rewards in the future.” The future—which may or may not come as we intend it to—is often the excuse we use for not living our life today in a way that brings happiness and excitement.

Okay.. gee, thanks, Andy… what is this? A post to tell us to “live in the present”? Wouldn’t a picture of a shitty motivational poster have accomplished the same thing?

No. I’m not telling you to live in the present. First off, I’m not even really sure what that phrase means. If you’re telling me to live in such a way that I take as much pleasure as possible from the present moment then you’re essentially telling me to lay on the couch watching tv, jacking off, and deep-throating a tube of cookie dough. That’s not the “happiest” thing I could achieve in my life, but at any point in time, it might be the most immediate thing I could do to enjoy that moment.

“Live” is about as passive a verb as you can get. So… live in the present? What does that mean? How is that actionable?

I don’t suggest you live in the present. My suggestion is this…

Romanticize the Present

I mean the word “romanticize” in two respects. First, I mean it in the way we say “romanticize the past.” That is, to look at the present with rose-colored glasses, to de-emphasize the problems and to focus on the things that make you happy. Don’t wait 20 years to look back fondly on this period of your life.

Second, I mean “romanticize” in the straight dictionary sense: invest with a romantic character.

And by “romantic” we’re talking these synonyms: adventurous, charming, chimerical, daring, dreamy, enchanting, exotic, exciting, fanciful, fantastic, fascinating, mysterious, passionate, wild.

If your focus is on the past, the rest of your life may end up passing you by without bringing you any joy.

If you’re always working towards “the future” you may end up sacrificing the present for something you find out you didn’t really want. You may find out that working 12 hour days in your 30s, 40s, and 50s, so you could retire and drive an RV when you turned 60 was a mistake.

If you choose to simply live in the present, then your life might consist of a daily pleasantness of ordering pizza, playing video games, and ripping bong hits, but your days will blend into each other. You will become so enmeshed in the present that you aren’t creating unique memories to look back on with fondness, or generating things to anticipate in the future.

Ah, but what if you choose to romanticize the present? What if you look at your life as a series of small memorable adventures for yourself and those around you? Then you’re creating positive, lasting memories while at the same time generating anticipation for near-future experiences. And in the present you’re focusing on the positive and creating moments that bring you and those around you happiness. You aren’t just “living” in the present, you’re actively putting effort into molding the present to your liking.

Yeah, that’s great, Andy. I don’t have time for that. I have a mortgage to pay.

I live this way and I make money.

Sure, but you’re a once in a generation—nay, once in a century—type of talent. I haven’t been blessed like you have been.

That’s true. But look, this isn’t a lifestyle that demands all your time and money. In fact, part of what pushed me in this direction was thinking back to being a kid in the 80s (a time when I had no money) and thinking about all the memorable exploits my friends and I had back then. Why? Well, because we were constantly pursuing adventure.

If I ask you the memorable things that happened to you in 2018 and you have to search and search for an answer and eventually you say, “My mom got cancer,” that feels to me like you’re not living your best life.

I try to have some new adventure brewing in my life every few days or so. A meetup with someone, an excursion, trying something for the first time, creating something, or whatever. Always have some little thing on the horizon. That’s not to say you shouldn’t have big plans too. But I know people who work all year planning for one 10-day vacation in September and if that is anything less than perfect, then this one exciting adventure for their year goes down the drain. And even if it is great it often feels like it still didn’t live up to the build-up.

But if you’re regularly engaging in new undertakings and trying new things, then you can be a little more daring and adventurous. If something doesn’t work out, then you only “wasted” a couple weeks of planning and you have something new coming up just around the corner.

Let’s say you go at a leisurely pace of one interesting, memorable experience a month. At the end of a year when someone says, “What were the highlights of your year?” you have 12 distinct memories of some new thing you did or place you went. These don’t have to be huge deals. Maybe they’re a day-long road-trip or a concert you went to or a five-minute short film you made. You’ll still be ahead of the game. I know this because I ask people all the time, “So, what were the highlights of 2018 for you?” And most struggle to have any answer at all. In the end, they’ll usually spit out something they could have said any year. “Thanksgiving was nice.” Or something like that.

You’ll feel like the Dos Equis Most Interesting Man in the World if you can name just 12 relatively minor things. “Oh, I took a pizza making class and now I can make this amazing homemade pie. I went snowboarding in Vermont last February. Carol and I went for a weekend in NYC and saw My Fair Lady on Broadway. I joined a softball team and we lost a game 43-0. Me and the kids went camping during the Perseid meteor shower. Pat and I took a road-trip to the last remaining Howard Johnson’s.” Etc., etc.

The goal is not to sound like someone who is engaged with life. The goal is to be that person.

As long-time readers probably recognize, I came to this mindset through magic. In The Jerx, Volume One, I wrote about the Romantic Adventure style of magic presentation. This is a style that is not just a demonstration of your skill, but instead involves something more immersive for the spectator. They participate in the presentation rather than just witness it. This style evolved from short interactive pieces to more long-form ones, where the trick would be a part of a larger experience. Not only did I find the tricks to be much more powerful in this style, I also found that they were more enjoyable for myself and the spectator. Performing in this style had enriched my life. I could look back and see 100 little experiences that I had crafted for people and each one was a distinct memory for me. This proved to be significantly more rewarding than a jumbled/vague memory of showing people card tricks over the course of a year.

And the reaction to this type of performance was overwhelmingly positive. One time I asked a friend if she wanted to see something weird and I took her on a 40-minute drive to a waterfall that has a natural gas flame that’s lit behind it. While we were there I showed her “something strange that happens in this area.” After the trick she looked at me and said, “This feels so indulgent.” I asked her what she meant and she said, “I never take time for things like this.” What she meant was she rarely ever takes time to do something just for the sake of doing it.

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For many of us, life frequently amounts to the same dull things over and over again, interspersed with some periods of big tumult (changing jobs, moving, ending a relationship, etc.). Often we only fill our lives with things that require no effort (watching tv, playing video games) or things that we have to do (mow the lawn, go to work). To set aside an hour of planning and a few hours of execution for something that is ultimately inconsequential is kind of a rarity, but I think it’s these things that can generate the most happiness.

From there, the idea of the “romantic adventure” as a lifestyle choice developed. You see, the words “romance” and “adventure” both imply a kind of impracticality. Grand romantic gestures and big adventures both suggest things that were done for no practical purposes. I figured including more of such things in my life could lead to even greater enjoyment. And that’s saying something because I figure I was probably already in the 99th percentile for happiness. But it worked. Including small, indulgent, impractical adventures regularly in my life made me happier and gave me more opportunities to appreciate the present.

If any of this resonates with you—if you feel your life could benefit from romanticizing your present—here is what I recommend. Once a month (and that’s really a beginner pace, you want to work up to at least once a week) you’ll want to come up with some sort of mini-adventure. What constitutes an adventure? I think of it as something that requires some time, energy, and a little planning but that doesn’t serve any real purpose other than the enjoyment and satisfaction of the experience. So that could be: organizing a party, going on a hike, taking a class in something that isn’t for work, hang-gliding, going on a police ride along, taking a road trip, visiting some “haunted” locations, submitting a pie in the baking contest of your state fair, seeing concerts, exploring some abandoned places, going to see some high school plays, going to a minor league baseball game, having sex in nature, learning to cook something new, visiting someone you haven’t seen in a long time. These are examples, not suggestions. Do the things you like. Bring people along or go by yourself. (If you’re going to have sex in nature, bring someone else. Shoving a pinecone up your ass doesn’t count.)

And, of course, you have an interest in magic which is tailor-made for bite-sized adventure. Crafting an experience for someone else is also an experience/adventure for you.

Eventually you want to plan these things as frequently as your schedule will allow.

You have a family and a day job? I understand. But you still watch four hours of tv a night. You can fit a little adventure into your life.

I like to find something interesting to do every few days. I’m never really stuck for an idea. I find books and websites with interesting places to visit. I reach out to people I haven’t seen in a while and plan meet-ups. I’ll just start driving and spend a night in a town I’ve never been to. Once you open yourself up to it, you’ll find ideas everywhere.

Further Reading:

Read more about the Romantic Adventure style of performance here and here.

Read The Secret to Happiness Part Two to see how I incorporate big, long-term goals in my life. I haven’t abandoned these types of goals.

Read How to Slow Time for an earlier look at a similar idea.

Happy New Years, everyone.

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Stocking Stuffers

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A Sponge-Ball Routine

This is the only sponge ball routine that I enjoy performing. It’s pretty funny. Like, real person funny, not magician funny (i.e. not funny). I have a few friends who perform it too and I considered having someone record a video of it so you’d understand the delivery, but I decided against it. I think it’s the kind of thing where if you are the sort of person who would be good at delivering this, then you’ll understand the humor from the text alone; if you’re not, then seeing a video won’t help you anyway.

For those who are funny, no explanation is necessary. For those who are not, none will suffice.

Sponge balls always gets a good reaction, but it falls into that category with other tricks like cups and balls, linking rings, egg bag, chop-cup, etc. What category is that, Andy? Classics of magic? No. Tricks that blow. Tricks where it’s just a sequence of meaningless impossibility. I get no joy out of performing that sort of stuff. Or watching it. If it’s your scene, great, knock yourself out. I’m just not into it.

This trick has something of a “story” to it, although it’s structured more as a three-beat joke. You get the best moments of sponge magic without the boring, repetitive stuff.

Here’s how it starts. I ask, “Have you ever heard of Memory Foam?” They usually say yes and tell me about how they have a memory foam mattress or pillow or how they slept on one at their cousin’s place. Or whatever. As they say this, I let my face scrunch up, like I’m confused. “Huh? What on earth are you talking about? A bed?” I give my head a little shake like I’m thinking, “What a lunatic.”

“No,” I say, “memory foam. Those pieces of foam that absorb your thoughts and become the shape of your favorite memory.”

I pull out two red sponge balls. “You haven’t heard of this? These are two balls of memory foam. It’s okay. You don’t need to be familiar with everything in the world, but don’t make up something about a bed or pillow or whatever, just because you’re feeling self conscious about not knowing something.”

“I’ll show you how it works.” I take one of the red balls and push it into my fist. “You just concentrate for a moment and it absorbs your favorite memory. You don’t even have to know what it is. The foam knows.” After a beat I open my hand and the sponge ball is now a cube.

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I look confused for a moment and then say, “Oh! Hahah. The time I saw that box! That was a great time. That box was awesome.”

I put the cube away in my pocket. “Here, you try,” I say, and pick up the remaining ball and give it to my friend to hold. I tell her to squeeze it and let the memory foam do its work. When she opens her hand there are now two balls. “Oh, I say. You were remembering the time I showed you those two balls of memory foam. That was like 45 seconds ago. That’s one of your favorite memories? I mean… okay… that’s great. I’m glad you’re enjoying this. It’s a little sad,” I say, as my voice trails off.

“Anyway, let’s try it with you,” I say to another friend. I pick up the two balls and give them to him to hold. After a moment I have him open his hands and, as you probably imagined, a big red sponge dong shoots up.

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“Oh…,” I say. “Uhm…. uh… well… that seems like maybe it’s a private memory. Yes? Why don’t we… uhm…. let’s just….” I take the ding-dong and put it aside or put it in my pocket and uncomfortably transition to something else.

There you have it.

You need a sponge ball to cube gimmick. Two sponge balls. And a sponge ding-dong.

I think the choreography is pretty obvious. Briefly: You bring out one sponge ball and the ball to cube gimmick. After you change the ball to the cube you put the cube away and steal the other sponge ball which you load in the second person’s hand. When all attention is on the second person, then you steal the dong. You’ll figure the rest out.

I’ve added other phases where the balls go from hand to hand or change color. They worked fine, but I like this three beat structure the best.


A Tip for Those of You With Office Jobs

Maybe this isn’t a universal tip, but it certainly held true when I worked an office job. What I learned on that job is that you should never take the week between Christmas and New Years off. So many other people take it off that it become a de facto week off even if you are coming into the office. You can take three hour lunches, watch movies on your computer, write a magic blog… whatever you want. And you’re not burning any vacation days and people actually feel a little sorry for you. You seem like a good worker. “I’ll come in and hold down the fort,” is your attitude. Meanwhile you’re taking naps and leaving at 3:30.

Again, this may have just been my particular situation, and obviously if there’s something you want to be doing on those days, it’s a bad idea. But if you just sort of automatically take those days off because everyone else does, I recommend sticking around and saving those vacation days for another time of the year.


Cardigram: A Trick from JM Beckers

You shuffle a deck of cards. You invite three friends to cut the cards as much as they want. The deck can be placed under the table so you can’t see it. The cards are cut some more and then three cards are removed, one for each spectator. The rest of the deck is placed in the card case and never looked at again. The spectators put the cards in their pockets or sit on them or whatever. All this can happen while your back is turned or you’re out of the room. You never see the cards or the deck. In fact, you can pour acid in your eyes and blind yourself before the selections are made and you could still successfully complete the effect.

The three cards are hidden. The deck is hidden. Yet you are able to name the cards or, as in the trick described by JM, you’re able to pick up on some details of the cards and your mentor is able to nail them exactly via email.

I haven’t performed the trick in the following pdf myself as it’s similar to some other stuff I do, but I think people who like this site will appreciate it. Presentationally it draws a bit on ideas I’ve offered here. But methodologically it’s the sort of thing that I never could have come up with myself. If you’re like me, it will take you a little while to wrap your head around it, but once you “get it,” it’s fairly simple. There is a section at the end of the pdf with some thoughts by me. Cardigram is based on tricks by Alex Elmsley and Denis Behr.

Here’s the pdf.

Thanks, JM.


A Mnemonic Trick for Remembering Names

I’m not naturally great with remembering names. I used to feel like my mind was actively fighting with me to ignore people’s names when I first heard them. Like they’d say, “Hi, I’m Sarah,” and I would just immediately zone out on the name.

I tried a number of the standard memory techniques that you read, e.g.,:

Make a rhyme, associating the name with your impression of the person. Or link the person’s name to a song lyric, e.g., Dave needs a shave.

Those sorts of things would sometimes work for me, but not always. My brain wouldn’t always make the reverse connection, “Ah, here’s this guy… what’s his name? It has something to do with his beard. Harry? Vandyke? What the hell was his name…? ‘Tim needs a trim’? No. that wan’t it.”

Also, I didn’t like that I was taking that moment right when I was meeting them, the moment I should be attuned to their face and what they’re saying, and instead I’m trying to come up with some stupid rhyme or association.

So here’s what I do now. It has the advantage of requiring no cleverness on my part and it’s memorable in a way that they tell you these sorts of mnemonics should be.

When I meet someone and they tell me their name, I immediately imagine them 69’ing someone I know with the same name. It can be someone I know personally or someone famous or a fictional character. So if Sarah introduces herself to me, then I just imagine her engaged in simultaneous oral with singer Sarah McLachlan, as that’s someone I can picture in my mind. If I want to be extra sure, I’ll add another detail to the background that I associate with the person I know. So, for Sarah McLachlan it might be some abused/homeless dogs who are also 69’ing. That image won’t leave your mind.

Of course this only works so long as you know of someone else with the same, but if you don’t, then you can say, “I’ve never heard that name before. Where does it come from?” Or whatever, and undoubtedly you can find some sort of mnemonic hook in that conversation.

Try it when you’re out for New Years. It works for me. Plus there’s something enjoyable about seeming like a nice attentive person and remembering people’s names when really I’m imagining them choking on the genitals of Ian Ziering.


An Anniversary Waltz Tweaking

I’m going to briefly describe some changes my friend Andrew has made to a traditional Anniversary Waltz handling that I believe elicits even stronger reactions from this already strong trick. I’m not going to get into the details of the handling, you should be able to work it into whatever version of AW that you do.

The first change is a bit of a misdirect in the presentation. Let’s say he’s performing for a newly married couple. He has one card chosen from a red deck and another from a blue deck (forced, of course) without anyone looking at them. He holds one of the cards face down in each hand. He then says something like, “Even though you could have chosen any card in the deck, you happened to be drawn to these two cards specifically. And just like you, John and Julie, these cards are… a perfect match.” He smiles broadly as he reveals the cards with some gusto. They don’t match at all, not even close. Only now does he realize this. “Oh… huh.” This gets a nice laugh.

The cards are placed face up on one of the decks which is secretly turned over to switch in the double facer. The “two” cards are signed.

The second change is to use a double-backer in the lead up to the final display. There are many routines where this is done so you can show the “front and back” of both cards, separated from the deck. But instead of using a normal double-backer, in this case you use a red/blue double-backer. It’s a small change, but it really does emphasize these are two separate and distinct cards. You are clearly seeing two different faces and two different backs which, I believe, amps up the impossibility when the cards become one single object.

You can, of course, bring the patter back around, e.g., “The important thing is not that these cards match. What matters is how well they come together… [etc., etc.]”

You’ll read my version of Anniversary Waltz, which veers off from the traditional one, in Magic for Young Lovers. If I was going to do a more traditional version it would be this one. It’s always nice when you can misdirect the audience (“Oh, I know what’s going to happen. The cards will match. I wonder how he rigged it so they’d match?”) and then follow it up with something significantly more impossible. This is a concept I’ve talked about in the past called “The Trajectory of Expectations.


Merry Christmas everyone! As I mentioned on Friday, this is the end of Season 3. I’ll be checking in here occasionally until regular posting resumes (most likely) with Season 4 in a month or so. Look for a post in a week about the direction of Season 4 (first discussed in this post). Until then, enjoy the holidays, eat, drink, be merry, and do some magic for people.

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Gardyloo #86

Friends, this has been the last full week of posts for Season 3. Another 150 articles this year, the equivalent of 1400 pages of content; plus 100 pages of X-Communication (final issue for Season 3 in January); and, oh yeah, an actual 300-something page book as well coming next month.

I couldn’t have done it without the great Jerx writing staff.

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A lot of great guys and girls putting this site together. And I have to say, only six employees jumped off the roof to their death this year. That’s something to be proud of. And, to be honest, those six weren’t really pulling their weight. They needed to go one way or the other. If they can’t keep churning out the content, then, quite frankly, they don’t deserve their nickel.

(Speaking of “not pulling their weight,” where’s the goddamn photoshop of Joshua Jay doing his Balance effect but with one of the items swapped out for a dildo, that was supposed to be on my desk this morning, Wu Chunming?)

At any rate…, there will be a final post for this season next week and that will be a wrap for Season 3. Thanks to those of you who supported this year.

There will be some occasional posts in the weeks to come, but it will probably mainly consist of updates for people receiving the book and information on the potential Season 4. If you’re one of the people getting the book or if you want to claim one of the extra copies (if there are any), then check back here every few days.


Regarding last week’s post that dealt with me accidentally spending or giving away expensive gimmicked coins, a couple of people wrote in with the same, genius solution: Carry my gimmicked coins in the back of my Timeless watch.

What a great idea.

By the way, that Timeless thread on the Cafe is interesting to me. I think it’s pretty indicative of a divide in the way we present magic, a divide that has only grown larger in recent years.

You have people who are like, “The effect doesn’t make sense. The prop doesn’t look real. We shouldn’t value method at the expense of effect.” Let’s call this the “modern” school of magic thought.

Then you have a more traditional viewpoint, which is, essentially, “As long as you’re doing something impossible, then you’re doing magic, and who really cares if it makes sense or is obviously a prop or whatever.”

Here’s a post by Alex DLF from that thread, “But when people show you that this trick works very nicely, and baffles the audience, I think that, even if you don't like it, you have to agree people don't have the same consideration than magicians. I never heard "Oh, that watch looks strange" or "Wow, it's an empty watch !". They are just amazed by the fact they find a ring/coin inside.”

Uh-huh. First, “people don’t have the same consideration than magicians.” This is true. But it’s true in the exact opposite way he suggests. Real people are much more cognizant of weird or unusual magic props. If you bring out a wallet that doesn’t look like a normal wallet, or a pen that doesn’t look like a normal pen, or a watch that doesn’t look like a normal watch, people notice. And they notice more than magicians do because we’ve grown accustomed to unusual looking objects.

“I never heard "Oh, that watch looks strange" or "Wow, it's an empty watch !" Yeah, no shit. Why would they comment on something so obvious? This is a very typical sort of head-in-the-sand approach to magic. “Unless someone comes right out and says something to me, then it’s totally not an issue.”

There is sort of a disdain for the audience that permeates the posts of the traditionalists on that thread. If you believe the audience deserves an experience that goes beyond being fooled by an obvious magic prop, then you’re told you’re “overthinking” it. To be fair, the biggest defenders of this trick are the people who are trying to sell it, so I don’t actually think they care so little about these things.

As I asked in an earlier post, would you do this trick if it didn’t have a clever method? I can’t imagine the answer being yes. Another question I would ask would be, if you would do a trick with a watch with a storage space on the back, is there any prop you wouldn’t use in a trick?


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I love a good, shoddily edited magic tutorial. I particularly like it when it’s clear they filmed something and didn’t even ever bother watching it back.

This video for Anything by Ben Williams is that sort of thing, but it’s also something of a mystery. What was it that happened to Ben at 10 seconds into the video below? Dick caught in a mousetrap? We may never know. Whatever it was it apparently didn’t warrant editing out of the final version of the download.


I broke a tooth playing lacrosse years ago. It wasn’t like a sanctioned lacrosse game with helmets and mouth guards, we were fucking around in a parking lot. The tooth I chipped wasn’t really visible and I never got it fixed. Last week, because of my mostly sugar diet, I had to have it pulled. And I had the dentist give it to me.

Last night I performed Get Them Digits, the routine from Monday, for some friends in NYC. After they all pressed their phones against my head and pressed send, I had this moment where I kind of shook my head a bit and moved my lower jaw from side-to-side. Then I spit out a tooth. “That can’t be good,” I said. It added a nice element to the routine.


Bish the Magish who once asked the age-old question if I was a “magic terrorist or a sick little boy” has a new promo video on his youtube page. Well, “new” might not be the best word. I guess I mean new as in “recently posted” because something tells me these video clips might be a little older. Maybe even a year or two old.

Now, I’m not going to make fun of Glenn Bishop here. It was never a fair fight, but at least 15 years ago when we were going at it we were both nobodies. Now that I’ve been named “the voice of 21st century magic,” by Fake Magic Monthly, it would certainly seem like a case of “punching down” to go at it with him now. I guess I’m growing up. Perhaps I’m a sick little man now.

The truth is, the people I used to be vicious towards were the people who started shit with me. Glenn hasn’t talked any trash in a while, and—as I’ve said on this site about Steve Brooks—I feel a strange affection for the man. In fact, if someone wanted to make me a set of Steve Brooks and Glenn Bishop cute plush dolls, that would be great.

In addition, Glenn has had some health issues recently and I don’t want to send any negative energy his way. Instead, I want to help our old friend Glenn.

You see, there is one problem with that video.

The length? The fact that it’s a 7+ minute promo video?

No. Sure, they say promo videos should be about 3 minutes. But that’s for a promo video that doesn’t have Glenn Bishop, baby! When you got Bish, all those rules go out the window.

My problem is with the music. That 80s keyboard and guitar sound is weak as fuck. It certainly doesn’t highlight Glenn’s dynamic performing style.

I’ve done him the favor of re-editing the first 90 seconds and adding a new soundtrack. A word of warning though, if you’re watching from work… turn the volume way up. You want to make sure everyone knows you’re watching something cool and to come over and enjoy it with you.