Mailbag #168
/The whole Unnamed Magician fiasco feels like someone trying to take advantage of non-performers. When you actually perform for people regularly, you know that there’s no way to imperceptibly “influence” them reliably. But that’s a belief a lot of non-performers hold as being possible.—AS
Yeah, I think there's a lot of truth to this.
Someone in my email was trying to tell me I didn't understand the possibilities of how the mind can be manipulated, and he pointed to the studies on subliminal messages from the 1950s where they flashed "Eat Popcorn" on the screen so quickly it couldn't be consciously registered, and it increased popcorn sales by 58%. "You probably have no clue how much human actions can be influenced,” he wrote.
I had to bring him back down to earth by pointing out that 58% wouldn't actually be a great number to build a magic trick around.
And, more importantly, it never happened.
The guy who claimed to have conducted the study admitted he just made it up. And other studies of subliminal advertising have shown little to no effect.
I hate to break it to you, but "influence" in magic is a presentation. It's not a method.
Yes, true influence exists.. But it works at scale, over time, and through repeated exposure. And even then it's probabilistic. Real-world influence has no mechanism for producing a specific, invisible, repeatable outcome, which is exactly what you'd need for it to function as a method in a magic trick.
Jeff Prace writes:
I saw your recent post that called out the Random Card Generator and my other products—thank you for sharing them!
I have a presentation that helps make carrying the prop seem less orchestrated. When asked to perform in a casual environment, I say something like:
"This is actually great timing, because I was organizing my wallet today and found this card another magician gave to me. I think he made them. It's so someone can pick a card even when there's no deck of cards. I got it a year ago and totally forgot about it."
The RCG I take from my wallet is weathered, as if it really had been carried and forgotten about. The picture doesn't quite capture its disrepair. Because it's a small/flat disposable thing, people can relate to this. It being bent and torn doesn't impact the method, and I found audiences are less hesitant to tear it.
Yeah, this is a good approach.
Any time you can make a prop feel less deliberate, you'll have a stronger casual moment of magic.
The real win here is that it reframes the object from "a prop for a trick" into "a thing that happens to exist." If it feels like you just stumbled across it—maybe you're killing time waiting for your food to come in a restaurant, digging through your wallet, slightly confused about what it even is ("What the hell… oh right, that new age store was handing these out")—then the moment lands as an integrated part of real life. And that will always play stronger than the alternative: pulling something out with the implicit message, "Here's a special item I brought from home to show you a trick."
Please tell me that your recent ruminations on speed are leading to telling us to keep one hand in the pocket of our tailored smoking jacket and with insouciant suavity turning over the cards while saying "it can't get any slower..."—CS
No, but this does bring up a good point.
I've been harping on the fact that you need to slow down and be beyond fair in the way you handle things and clarify conditions when you perform.
But this should all be something your audience senses, not something you tell them, and certainly not something you build a presentation around.
It's one thing to say, "I just want to be really fair here…." That's fine. But the moment you're like, "I want to perform the most fair trick in the world. Everything we do is going to be completely fair," then you've turned something that's very powerful when implicit into something people just don't believe when stated explicitly.
You want to give people the feeling of fairness and openness, but the moment you start saying that, it's like saying, "I'm Honest Jim. The honest used car salesman." It only makes people question you more. Fairness has to be demonstrated, not declared. The second you declare it, you've lost it.