Fundamentals: Zero Carry
/The final fundamental concept I want to examine this month is the newest of the three.
When I first introduced the term Zero Carry, it was a designation for one trick I wanted to have in my repertoire—a go-to impromptu effect with an engaging premise.
Since the time I first wrote about it, it has evolved into something else entirely and become a guiding principle I'm using to design my current 100 Trick Repertoire.
This is an example of me introducing a term for a concept that still wasn't fully formed. I knew there was something I was circling around in my brain that went beyond just wanting to do "impromptu" effects. But, like I was with the Magic Eye portraits of my youth, I was too focused to see the full image. I needed to let my vision blur for the image to come clear.
(We had a Magic Eye store in the mall near my house when I was young. It was just people standing around staring at pictures on the wall with their eyes glazed over asking themselves if they were seeing something or not. What did they imagine the shelf-life of that business would be when they opened it? Did they put their arm around their 6-year-old son and say, "Someday, this will all be yours." Cut-to four months later: "Going out of Business!" "Everything Must Go!" "Buy 1 Get 14 Free!")
I now realize that what I was circling around with Zero Carry originally was not an impromptu trick or repertoire. But a genuinely carry-less approach to performing.
Why?
The stuffed-pockets of the EDC crowd often leads to magic that feels stilted, inorganic, and scripted. That doesn't mean bad magic, but it's frequently magic that is more dismissable. The magic is seen in the gimmick or the prop rather than in the moment.
The minute you pull out a fake red button to do a trick with, you've eliminated the element of spontaneity which is one of the cornerstones of powerful casual magic.
It may be a strong trick, a fooling trick, and great for walk-around magic at a restaurant gig. But for casual performing in social situations it creates a weird vibe. It comes off almost as desperate. People frequently see magic tricks as an attempt for you to show how clever you are… and now you're carrying around something to do that with? It's not a great look.
That level of seeming preparation dials down the impact of what you do.
It's the difference between making an off-hand funny comment or telling a funny story, and carrying around a small box that says Genuine French Birth Control Device on it, which, when you open it, reveals a little guillotine to chop your dick off.
Oo, la, la, indeed.
Even if you think that's funny, it's canned funniness.
Carrying around stuff to show people tricks feels like canned magic. Not farm-to-table astonishment.
There are three elements to my Zero Carry Philosophy
Impromptu Magic
This is the obvious one. Magic with objects that can be entirely found in your environment.
The issue with impromptu magic though is that it's frequently a little too quick and meaningless. "I take the ring off my finger and it appears back on my finger!" It's a fine trick, but it's not going to stick with people long-term.
So what I find myself looking for these days are impromptu tricks that feel like a full experience—that have a full storyline to them. So it's not just a brief, throwaway moment, but a genuine little story for them to walk away with.
Wonder Room
The Wonder Room is my concept of having magic tricks in some sort of permanent display in your house. There are various approaches to this that I've written about on the site, but a "basic" setup would be to maybe have a shelf somewhere where you display "weird objects" you've come across due to your interest in magic, and then maybe another display of interesting decks you've stumbled upon.
You're not carrying around these objects or decks with you on the regular. Instead, they're openly displayed in your house. This leads to a very natural way of presenting magic where people can just ask you about something you have exhibited and you can show them what makes it "weird" or "interesting."
There's a very pleasant flow to this type of interaction. Rather than you seemingly having a secret stash of magic props in some other room that you bring back when you want to perform something. Instead you have an interest in something (magic and/or strange phenomena), and, like most people with an interest in something, you have it on display where you (and others) can appreciate it. People ask about things and you talk about them.
You treat these things like objects of interest. Rather than treating them like shameful objects—hiding them under the bed like Nazi memorabilia or furry porn.
Organically Housed Tricks
"Housing" your repertoire is a term I came up with which means having a place for a trick to live where you can easily perform it whenever you're inclined to.
For example, if you keep Color Monte cards in your wallet at all times, you can always perform Color Monte whenever you feel like it.
Organically Housed Tricks are tricks that live in a natural context.
Your wallet isn't a "natural" context for a card with a red diamond, a card with a blue diamond, and a card with a guy gloating because he won $14.
But really no context is normal for such a trick.
On the other hand, think of Jeff Prace's Random Card Generator. Put that in your wallet, and again you're just seen as carrying around a magic gimmick.
But I will frequently use it as a bookmark. And that's an "organic" house for the trick. People use cards of all types as a bookmark. If the subject of magic comes up I can say, "Sorry, I don't have any cards or anything on me." Then I can "notice" my bookmark. "Wait, they were giving these away at the casino the other day... it's supposed to help you identify a lucky card." And then we're off.
This may seem like a small thing—using a card as a bookmark rather than carrying it around in your wallet, but it's an added bit of authenticity that I find adds a lot to the casualness of the best social magic.
Further examples from Jeff Prace (since I'm on his site).
Penrose Pendant could live around your neck.
Mon-key could live on your keyring.
Chapstick-Addict and The Passenger Wallet could live in your pocket.
How does this differ from EDC? you might ask.
The difference is that Jeff Prace could be walking around with all these tricks on him, get hit by a bus, and the people at the morgue wouldn't be like, "This guy sure liked carrying around a bunch of magic tricks."
I'm not suggesting building your repertoire around impressing the mortuary attendant, I'm just pointing out how invisible and inconspicuous organically housed tricks can be.
Impromptu magic gives us a stable of effects that we can go into at any time in many different situations. It’s Zero Carry because you literally don’t have to carry anything with you.
The Wonder Room concept gives an outlet for tricks that don’t have to be carried around with us. And it allows our friends to guide the interaction by what objects they take interest in. It’s Zero Carry because they objects are on display, not carried on you.
Organic Housing is an approach to props and gimmicks which emphasizes their everydayness by putting them in a natural context. It’s Zero Carry because you don’t *seem* to be carrying anything with you solely for the purpose of showing someone a trick.
The goal of these three branches of Zero Carry is to create magic that seems more spontaneous, natural, unrehearsed, free-wheeling, and in-the-moment. This is what casual magic should feel like.
Zero Carry isn’t exactly about having nothing. It’s about never seeming like you needed anything.