June 19th
Okay, literally like 2/3rds of you have suggested “Performer as Spectator.” I promise you, I wouldn’t write a whole book devoted to that.
And if you supported for 18 months and I sent you a book that was a
”Progressive Anagram System,” you would have every right to hunt me down and beat me about the head and shoulders.
It has to do with magic—although you wouldn’t necessarily know that if you just heard it. It’s not a phrase I made up. It will take some lateral thinking to figure it out.
June 18th
Since yesterday’s post, I’ve already received some guesses, so I might as well make it a contest.
For a $100 gift-card to the magic shop of your choice, guess what the subtitle of the forthcoming book is.
It’s not:
People Are Strange
Pepperoni and Sausage
Piece-a-Shit
It’s something specifically magic related. And it’s a subject I’ve hit upon in the past, although not this exact phrase. I’ll take guesses until someone gets it right or until the cover reveal which will give it away.
June 17th
(2021) WWCV1: The Entertainer
(2023) WWCV2: Young Girls Are Coming to the Canyon
(2025) WWCV3: Escape!
(2026) WWCV4: P.A.S.
June 16th
An email I received after the most recent issue of Keepers:
“I know; I'm an old fart.
I know; you've addressed the question several times before.
But I still can't believe that anyone actually likes cellphone magic as magic, and that you think cellphone magic is worthwhile.
No, a thousand times no, cellphone magic is not magic. It just isn't. Certainly not in a world where AI exists. Please, I know you're better than this. I'm not saying your surrounding premises aren't ingenious and probably better than what the inventors of such imagined; I'm not even saying I wouldn't be fooled--even amazed for a few moments; but politely, it's lipstick on a pig. Give it up before it destroys you...”
Before it destroys me! Yikes. That's a bit histrionic.
The truth is, I generally prefer tricks that don't involve the phone. But avoiding the phone in an equally weird impulse.
It's not 2004. People don't automatically get suspicious when you pull out a cellphone. It's the most ubiquitous object in the world—your spectator is more likely to have a phone on them than a coin, a bill, a watch, a business card, paper and pencil, a book, a newspaper, or any of the other objects that used to anchor impromptu magic.
When you ask someone to add something up on their calculator, snap a photo, or look something up, they're not thinking "this must be a phone trick.” Because as long as they're under 80, this is just the way they would go about doing that activity. It would be weirder to pull out a separate calculator than use the one on your phone. DFB is more normal than bringing out a spiral notebook.
I've mentioned cutting back on phone magic tricks myself. I certainly think it can be overused in magic, especially when all the attention is concentrated on the phone itself. But I wouldn't write it off entirely. When the phone is involved naturally as part of a process, and the climax pulls the focus and energy back into the real human moment between you and another person, you can have wildly strong effects that don't register at all as "cellphone magic."
June 15th
Frequently I’ll get a message that says, essentially:
"I've always wanted to go to a magic convention, but I can't because:
I'm an anti-social weirdo.
I have a severe body odor condition. My physician describes it as 'enthusiastic perspiration with environmental impact.'
I have no money."
Well, I have great news. Points #1 and #2? Completely table stakes at a magic convention. Nobody will bat an eye.
The better news is re: #3—Brent Braun is running a "pay what you will" magic gathering in New Albany, IN from August 20–22, and the lineup includes some of my favorite close-up magic creators. If you're within reasonable driving distance, this one's worth the trip.
June 14th
Here’s a video of people in infomercials struggling to do easy things.