MCJ Advent Calendar - Day Two - Stank On Your Hang-low

One of the more common topics that I wrote about on the MCJ blog was the idea of using magic to pick up women. This topic is an evergreen, but back in the mid-2000s, with the rise of the "pick-up artist" scene, it was particularly popular on the Cafe and in other online forums. 

In the intervening years I have determined that yes, you can definitely use magic to attract women just not in the way any of you knuckleheads have tried. I have a few routines that I've created that have, unintentionally, turned someone who wasn't particularly interested in me into someone who was. And I have one routine in particular that is more powerful than roofies in the "getting you laid" department. I may one day release that routine to like five people but I'll want to do a background check first because I genuinely wouldn't want it in some asshole's hands. The moment I figured out what it was doing I stopped performing it unless I was doing so for someone I already knew was interested in me. 

I will give you this bit of advice if you're looking to use magic to attract women. Do not try to do something impressive. Do not try to do something romantic. Do something that hints at an unknown and inexplicable connection you share with that person. Hints goddammit. Don't beat them over the head with it. Don't be like, "There's no way I could find your card... unless we were soulmates." In fact, forget it. You're going to fuck this up.

You're probably better off following the advice below. The advice there is legit, but when I painted the scenario, my tongue was in my cheek. And if you follow that advice, your tongue will be in-between a couple cheeks as well. Her butt-cheeks. Hellz yeah.

What's interesting to me about this post (and this is my first time reading these things in 12 years) is seeing the nascent stages of some of the ideas I've talked about on this site. Specifically I see the beginnings of the Distracted Artist presentation as well as ideas that have become more defined in my mind regarding people whose only interest in magic is what they can get from it (which, let's be honest, is 98% of you). 

Without further ado...

Friday, December 05, 2003

Ask the Jerk

Dear Jerk:

In your very first post on this site you indicate that magic is not a good tool for seducing women. Yet in the same post you say that magic could possibly be "sexy." As far as I'm concerned, anything that can be sexy can also be used for the seduction of women. How do you reconcile these statements, and how do you go about making magic "sexy"?

Signed,
Never Been Laid


Dear NBL,

Let me take the long route to answering your question.

I believe people get into magic for two reasons. Neither of these are, "I love magic!" If you really enjoyed magic the last thing you would do is study it, because the very act of studying it takes all the magic out of magic. Now, I don't mean this in the same way that people say, "You shouldn't dissect poetry because that takes all the beauty out of it!" Which isn't true at all, you can tear a poem apart word by word, consider the author's motivations and the poem in its historical context and after all that still find it to be beautiful. On the other hand, when you dissect the workings of a magic effect, it ceases to be very magical. So people who really love the experience of magic may study the performers of magic, or the history of magic, but I don't believe they get into the performing of magic.

Another reason people don't get into magic is to "further the art." You can decide to pursue songwriting because you think you have something to add to the body of written songs. But you can't get into performing magic for a similar reason, because you'd have no idea how you could further the art of magic until you have some understanding of how magic works.

So what are the two types of people who get into magic?

The first type of person who begins to perform magic is the type of person who wants to know the secrets. This person has an unrelenting curiosity and doesn't care about the "art of magic" or anything of the sort. He wants to know secrets so he's able to say he knows them and if he performs tricks at all, he performs them to show how clever he is.

The second type of person who begins to perform magic is the loser. He can't craft a joke. He can't hold an interesting conversation. People avoid him. He's probably unattractive and feels left out all the time. People avoid him because he's a bore. Maybe he wears suspenders, a fedora and a bowtie because people thought it was really interesting that first time he did it, but after that, it's just kind of lame. So this person is drawn to magic because it can do something for him, it can make people pay attention to him in a way they never paid attention before. Magic is inherently interesting because it's the act of doing the impossible, so people will watch some geek perform magic if only for the satisfaction of being able to say "You stupid geek. I saw how you did that."

Now, over time, the majority of that first group will give up magic because it's no longer interesting to them and they'll move on to something else. A very small percentage of them will grow a love for the performance of magic and continue performing. These people become the performers we look at and say, "Wow, that guy's great."

The second group, however, will always continue performing because magic will always be the crutch they lean on. It's very hard to learn how to be interesting and charismatic, but it's very easy to learn to do something interesting. So once this group of geeks discover magic, they stay with it for a lifetime.

This is how the magic population comes to be 1% intriguing, interesting, intelligent performers and 99% complete fucking geeks.

These geeks are users of magic. What can magic get me? Can I use it to break the ice at a party? Can I use it to help me get this job? Can I use it to get girls?

No. No you can't, Fatty McShitstains. Girls like a man who has interests and skills that complement his personality, not a man whose interests and skills are a substitution for a personality. 

So that is why I said magic wasn't a good tool for seducing women, because the guys who would want to use magic to get a girl are the same guys that girls avoid on general principle. 

The second part of your question asks how to make magic sexy. You do this in the same way you make anything sexy: Do it perfectly and do it effortlessly. If you can perform something that looks incredibly difficult (even though it may be technically easy) and do it in a way that makes it seem like you're not stressing at all, that will be sexy. Think of guitar players. If a guy can play guitar and just flow with it and be cool, he has to beat the pussy away with a stick. But a guy who has to check the fretboard between every chord change and takes half a minute getting his fingering right is usually singing to himself. 

So let's put this into a magic scenario for you, NBL.

Go to a decent hotel and rent a room.

Go down to the hotel bar with a stacked deck of cards. Order a drink with no alcohol, you might be here a while and you need to maintain your poise. Casually watch the bar tv, engage in some light banter with fellow customers, or just enjoy the music. At some point pick up the deck as if it was just sitting there and you didn't bring it yourself, and do a one-handed, intricate looking, flowing, flourish. Nothing complicated (don't do some crazy cut where there's so many packets you're forced to hold one under your chin or something, you're supposed to look cool for christ's sake). Do something you can do over and over again without messing up the stack. But don't draw any attention to yourself doing it, just do it right on top of the bar or even at your side. Don't even pay attention to it yourself, continue watching tv or whatever. This is just a casual tic of yours. Some people swirl their drink, some people tap their fingers on the table, and you do this little flourish.

Eventually someone will say something about it. Wait until that someone is female. And then steer the conversation in this direction:

"That's kind of neat," she says. (Or words to that effect)

"Hmm? Oh this? Oh, that's just a habit of mine. I don't even know I do it usually."

"It looks interesting."

"Oh, it's just something I picked up. There was a time in my life when my income relied on me spending a great deal of time around playing cards. You kind of pick up all sorts of little tricks."

(This line sounds very mysterious, like you're some international gambler. Women dig mysterious guys.)

"Really? Can you show me anything?"

(See, you get her to ask you to show her something. This will make the magic somewhat seductive because it's something she's asked you for now.)

"Well sure, let me think if I remember anything." 

(You immediately agree which shows her you're receptive and friendly, but then you act like you can't think of anything which makes her think you're not some geek who sits around practicing card tricks.)

Then you say, "Well, we can try this."

And you go into this simple trick. Have her cut the deck and take out a card while you turn your head. Tell her to look at it and hold the card close against her so you can't see it. (Don't say "Hold it against your heart." That's corny). When you turn back put the deck together and set it aside and determine what card she is holding (via the stack).

Then turn to her and say, "Don't say a word. I'm just going to look at you and nothing more and I'm going to be able to tell you what card you took."

Stare into her eyes for a good ten seconds, it will feel like a long time to stare into a stranger's eyes. It is. After ten seconds break eye contact and look away and say, "Don't say anything. This is hard, but I really want to get it for you." Again, this is something you're doing "for her," this isn't some lame trick you're dragging out for attention, this is something for her. For a second time look into her eyes, hold it for even longer this time, 20 seconds or so. Then close your eyes for a beat longer than a blink and open them, look at her, very gently tense the muscles you would use for smiling so you'll have the tiniest smirk and then say:

"This isn't easy. I noticed you the moment you walked in here and I was trying not to stare then, because I know beautiful women get that all the time. And so now looking at you, it's almost impossible to concentrate on some ridiculous card trick. So here is what I propose. Don't say a word. I'm in room 216. I'm going to leave the bar and I want you to join me upstairs in five minutes. No pressure here. This is an invitation. I don't want a relationship. I don't want to romance you. I don't want to nurture you. I just want to take you and fuck you until your molars rattle."

Get up to go. Don't take the deck.

"And the card is the 8 of diamonds." 

Leave.

Go back to your room and wash your face, my friend, because that girl's going to need a place to sit!

MCJ Advent Calendar - Day One - Genesis

Below is the very first post ever on The Magic Circle Jerk. It seems quaint now, but at the time it was this post that got me a permanent ban from the Cafe. Keep in mind that in 2003 there weren't a bunch of other people doing this sort of thing -- so it was particularly concerning to Brooks and his staff that my site existed. Am I saying I invented the genre of crude, funny, intelligent, honest, magic commentary in the online arena? I won't say that. I will leave that entirely accurate statement for others to say. 

Background: Because these posts are now pretty damn old, and because you don't have the rest of my former site to reference, I'll try to mention any background you need to understand the posts. In this entry I mention Steve's rubber coin. I'm referring to a trick he made and pimped on his site called "Silver Shifter." This was a rubber coin that you were supposed to use in a coin bend. A possibly good idea, maybe? I don't know. Honestly it sounds like the solution a 6-year old would come up with for a coin bend. But we'll never know because apparently the gimmick wasn't any good -- it didn't look real and the paint would chip off it. And the advertising that went along with it was incredibly shady, like far beyond typical magic ad shadiness. We may get into that in a future post. Regardless what we ended up with was a bunch of posts on the Cafe by Steve and his friends about how this would be the next must-have coin gimmick, they sent out a bunch of cruddy rubber coins that everyone was unhappy with, they made their money and disappointed a lot of people, then 5 years later even Steve had to admit it was a giant turd. Strange how he wasn't so forthcoming about the quality of the product when he was actually taking your money for it. 

So here's where it all began...

Wednesday, November 05, 2003

Why This Exists

So here's the drill:

Over on the Magic Cafe some kid had posed the question "What is the best magic trick to perform for a girl you love." He went on to explain that there was a girl he liked and he wanted to perform a magic trick that would make her fall in love with him.

First off, the question is idiotic. Many magicians have this sense that what they're doing is inherently sexy. It isn't. No more so than...say, whittling. Now I'm not saying magic can't be sexy, just as I'm not saying that whittling can't be sexy. I'm sure they both can be. The problem is, so many young people are drawn to magic because it helps them deal with people, it's like a substitute personality. If you're not naturally charming or witty, you can instead be the guy with the deck of cards that has a stickman on the back who finds your card. That trick is kind of charming... so now you're kind of charming. But no, that's not how it works. Guys think, "Well hey, I may not have a hot bod. But I do have a hot rod! Looky my plastic stick with the fake jewels that change colors!" And girls see through this shit. At least any girl that I would want to date would.

But instead of lecturing this kid as I am lecturing you, I just gave a simple two-word response to the trick that he should do to impress this girl:

Sponge Ding-Dong

Now, that's obviously a joke, and no, it's not super-funny or anything, but it's mildly amusing. Baffling Bra would have been a good suggestion too. The thing is, the Magic Cafe deleted that post and sent me a message that it was too risque.

Are you fucking kidding me?

I can't imagine what kind of puritanical message-board would be so ridiculous as to delete that post, yet their sense of ethics doesn't extend to not shilling shitty rubber coins. 

Anyway, I started this blog so I could piss on places like the Magic Cafe and the douchebags who run the site and post on it ("What's your favorite Elmsley Count trick?"). And I wanted to give that kid a few other ideas for tricks to do to impress a girl.

  • The Magic Growing Rod of India in My Jeans (people love magic that happens in the spectator's hands)
  • Penis thru Anything
  • The Bottom Palm (right? right? wink)
  • The Magic Appearing Baby From A Girl's Vagina (there's a long set-up for this)

An Introduction to the 2015 Advent Calendar

Starting later today and going through the 24th, you will be seeing daily posts in the 2015 Advent Calendar series. These posts will be a look back at my old blog The Magic Circle Jerk. 

MCJ was somewhat different than this site. It was more about critiquing things and less about talking about my own material and performance philosophy (although there was some of that too). And because of that there was a lot more animosity directed my way. People got pretty bothered by me. And since they just thought I was a foul-mouthed shit-starter, they would come after me, which led to some pretty great interactions with angry magicians. 

When I started this site, I decided to include some more actual material and performance advice. That tampered down the dissent that MCJ engendered because people didn't want to argue with someone who was clearly 10 times smarter than them. And when people don't start shit with me, I tend not to start shit with them.

"I'm a kind person, I'm kind to everyone, but if you are unkind to me, then kindness is not what you'll remember me for"  -Al Capone

You'll definitely find the MCJ posts much more aggressive. This is because people were constantly threatening to sue me or beat me up or try to find some way to shut my site down (including reporting it as having something to do with child porn -- this was an actual suggestion by one of the fuckups on staff at The Magic Cafe). My own personal ethics involve being nice to everyone. But if you come up to me and punch me in the stomach, then I have no problem breaking your arm. That makes us even because you dragged me into this shit. It wasn't my idea.

Much of my disdain on MCJ was directed towards Steve Brooks and the Magic Cafe. You have to understand that at that time the Magic Cafe was somewhat germane to the conversation of magic on the internet. There were only a few other magic message boards, pretty much no magic blogs, and no social media. So when people wanted to discuss magic, that was where they would go. Now no one gives a shit about it, as is evidenced by the fact that Steve is essentially begging me to go after his site these days in order to give it some relevance.

There will still be some regular posting here outside of the advent calendar, but it's going to be fairly light. Not only do I have the holidays and work to deal with, but I have decided to move out of NYC for the next year or so. I'm going to put most of my stuff in storage then find a place with less distractions where I can work on the book for the first half of 2016 and then do some traveling. Not sure where I'll ultimately end up. Probably crashing on your couch at some point. We'll see.

So You Want To Do A Phony Magic Video For the Homeless

Here's a video of Murray Sawchuck called Homeless Veteran Gets Thanksgiving Surprise - MAGIC PRANK! Although that should probably be "Homeless" "Veteran" "Gets" "Thanksgiving" "Surprise" - "MAGIC" "PRANK!" Because I don't think any of those words are meant to be taken at face value.

Watch this...

There are a bunch of videos of magicians performing for the homeless on youtube. It's a way of giving a bland, uninspired performance some resonance. "He changed a $1 to a $100." Okay, so what? "And then he gave it to a homeless person." Alright, well that's something, at least. But the truth of the situation is, we just like to see people giving homeless people 100 bucks. The magic trick is secondary.

Here's how lazy magicians are. Henning Nelms says, "It's one thing to be able to make a ham sandwich appear out of the blue, but it's much more meaningful if someone says 'I'm hungry' and then you make the ham sandwich appear." (Or words to that effect.) So what do we do? Do we become masters of improvisation in order to deftly fulfill the wishes of those around us? Do we learn to anticipate people's unexpected desires so we can magically satisfy them? No. Magicians read that Henning Nelms quote and say, "Well, I guess I'll go do something for homeless people. They always want ham sandwiches."

Think of it like this. A woman spills a glass of water all down the front of her dress. You reach into the air and magically pluck out a small towel for her to dry off with. There's definitely something magical about that. But if you stand at the end of a waterslide and produce towels out of a seemingly empty box, that's not magic, that's just you performing a service industry task in a needlessly complicated way. Clearly you have some way to produce towels and so you went to a place that you knew towels would be needed. Big deal.

So the whole performing magic for the homeless thing is a little lame to me. It's about as unimaginative as you can get creatively. And just as a charitable exercise it's pretty corny. "Yoo-hoo! Look at me! I'm giving to the homeless! Better upload this to youtube!" 

Perhaps the only thing more hollow than that type of gesture is to fake that type of gesture like Murray does in the video above. 

Here are some things for Murray (and anyone else) to keep in mind when he wants to fake his next magic video for the homeless.

1. Homeless people don't walk around with empty shopping carts ready to be filled with groceries. That's what people use actual shopping carts for. Google "homeless shopping carts." That's what they look like. They're filled with shit. Sometimes literally.

2. Homeless people don't naturally know the blocking for your magic trick. There should be some sort of miscommunication or misunderstanding. I know you worked out the trick so that he would hand you the blanket and then turn around, step back so the blanket is between himself and the cart, wait for you to do your trick, then go remove the blanket -- but that's a little too polished. You choreographed the homeless guy like you would a stage assistant. 

3. Homeless people are usually dealing with some sort of psychological or substance abuse problem. I'm not making a judgment about that, I'm just pointing out the cause and effect relationship. Now, because of that, interactions with them don't often go super smoothly. The dialogue in this video bore no relationship to any interaction I've had with a homeless person. He should have flipped his shit when you took the blanket. "Hey man, I need that to fuck my old lady under!" At the very least I would expect to hear him offer to suck your dick or sell you a VCR. He should have been calling you the n-word or masturbating while singing the Kars-4-Kids jingle. Instead it was very clear that you said to him, "Just ask me for a dollar and say that you're canning and that you were in the marines and stuff like that." Because that is exactly what my man said. Without even a fucking coordinating conjunction to be seen.

"I was wondering if you could have a spare dollar today I'm canning I was a marine corp veteran."

That's the actual quote. Get this guy an improv class. He's not an actor so much as he is a macaw. 

And the soaring orchestral music while the guy shovels cheese doodles into his mouth is a little much. Speaking of that, why were you like, "This is for thanksgiving," and then you gave the guy a metric ton of cheese balls? That seemed a little odd. Historians now say the pilgrims and indians didn't even have cheese balls at the first thanksgiving. Just cool ranch Bugles.

Don't worry, Murray. It could have been worse. Your video could have been as transparently fake as this one. Oh wait, that's you too. (Love your patter here. "Do this, then this, this, this, then this." Why would you need magic to pick up the ladies when you have a silver tongue like that?)

Thanksgiving

Thanks to those who read this site and to those who spread the word about it to people who might be into it. Thanks to those of you who have pitched in to support the site in some way, especially those of you who pre-ordered the book. Thanks to the friends who have helped with the site and the friends I've made through the site. I would like to say you've changed the way I perceive magicians, but honestly when I look at you I do that really racist thing where I'm like, "He's one of the good ones." Make sure to take a moment to appreciate the positive things in your life. To do anything less would be like tossing a salad in your lap when you have plenty of empty counter space.

Have a great Thanksgiving for those of you in the U.S., and, well, a good Thursday for everyone else. See you in a couple days.


November Commercial

[Once a month I'll be annoying you with a commercial message for this site.]

First I would like to talk about not this site, but sites and projects that are similar to it. Tomorrow is Thanksgiving here in the U.S., and I can't wait. (I make a mean cranberry sauce.) If there is a site out there that you're thankful for, or a band, or a youtube channel, or a podcast, or a performer of any sort, I'm recommending you reach out to them to see how you can best support them. I'm genuinely not talking about my site (although that would be nice), I'm talking about anybody who is producing content that you're thankful for. We're in a very transitional time for things like this. 10 years from now, this will just be seen as the accepted thing. Everyone will have a few specialty sites or podcasts that they donate $10 a month to and it will just be part of their entertainment budget. But now we're at a point in time where people under 30 all get this concept but may not have any disposable income, and people over 40 tend to look at things like blogs or youtube channels as hobbies or kid's stuff, so why should they be paying for it? 

I will tell you what I do. I put an item in my budget (I don't really have a budget, I just do this mentally) for $30 a month. Then I decide what my 3 favorite sites/performers/podcasts are and donate $10 a month to them. Of course, I support other content providers as well by buying the things they release or whatever, but this is what I do for the three entities that provide me the most joy on a regular basis. I don't just do it for them, I do it for my own peace of mind. Peace of mind in the sense that if the site I'm supporting does eventually shut down, I don't have to wonder if my contribution could have made a difference. (And when we're talking about very small enterprises (not something like NPR), a few donations a month one way or the other could very well be the deciding factor.)


Speaking of donations. Those of you who ordered the book during the initial donation period in October, and those of you who support the site with a monthly donation via the "Support the Site" link above, should have received the first installment of my reviews/ideas/bullshit newsletter, X-Communication, in your email on Tuesday. If you haven't, make sure you check the email address that is associated with your paypal account (as that is the one I'd use unless you told me to use another), then check your spam maybe, then check yourself (before you wreck yourself), then contact me and we'll sort it out. 

It's just been a few hours, but the reviews of my reviews are already coming in. 

My review of these reviews of my reviews is 4 Stars. Great reviews reviews!


November's Call to Action! - The holiday shopping season is coming up and the most painless way to support the site is to use the affiliate links to Amazon in the sidebar (there is now a link to Amazon UK as well). It's easy, you just click through that link to get to Amazon and order whatever you want just like you normally would. I'm surprised how seldom this is used by people. I mean, relative to something like buying the book which is a pretty big investment. You would think for every one person who bought the book, 20 would have used one of those links, but really it's almost the inverse. Only a few people have used those links. I bet it's because people want to have a more direct role in supporting the site, it's probably less fun to do it anonymously. I get that. You want the coffee guy to see you drop a dollar in the tip jar. But this doesn't even cost you anything, so perhaps people just forget. 

Let's come up with a simple mnemonic for when you're doing your shopping on Black Friday and Cyber Monday and every other day of the year. Here's what you should think:

"I need to go to Amazon. Amazon. A maison. That means house in french. It's nice to have a house. When I lived in my college dorm I missed living in a house because one time I wanted to make a fried egg sandwich in the middle of the night and couldn't because I didn't have a kitchen. Is kitchen a german word? Let me look that up. Yup, it is. Or at least it's Latin and "Proto-Germanic," whatever that means. Germanic. Grrr... man...ick! That's what a talking dog would say after he licked some dude's a-hole. I bet if a dog wished to become human and it came true he would walk around for the first few days moving his arms in time with his legs, just because he's so used to having done that as a dog for so long. But eventually he'd figure it out. Figure it out. Figure 8 Out. One of my favorite songs on the album Figure 8 by Elliott Smith is Easy Way Out. What a heartbreaking song, but the harmonies are so pretty. I should buy that on vinyl. I know! I'll go to Amazon. Goddammit!!! My stupid mnemonic brought me right back to Amazon. Ok... how about this. Amazon. Amaz-ing. Magic is amazing. The Jerx is the best magic site online. I should go click through that link on his site before I go to Amazon." Bingo.


This is the cranberry sauce recipe I use.

You take a cup of orange juice and cup of sugar and heat that up in a saucepan over medium heat until the sugar dissolves. Then you dump in a bag of fresh cranberries (12 ounces). Then you just stir them around until the cranberries start popping like popcorn. Well, I mean, they make a popping noise. So you continue to stir and mash them with a fork for 15, 20, 30 minutes, whatever, until the cranberries are at the consistency you want. Then you're done. It will be pretty liquidy, but as it cools it will congeal. Add a little cinnamon and some orange zest if you like. Shablam!! You've got yourself some cranberry sauce. Tart but sweet and good hot or cold. (Like poontang, am I right guys? Hi-five!)

(Be on the look-out in the coming year for my new food blog where I compare everything to "poontang." It's called, "Shablam!!" (my patented catchphrase).)

Four Scoops of Vanilla

No one has been more critical of Criss Angel than I have been. His schtick is corny as hell. He looks like the Crypt Keeper after a shopping spree at Hot Topic. And the dark and brooding bullshit is equally tired. Whenever I see someone trying to come off as a real sinister badass, I always picture them on the toilet trying to push out a real difficult shit.

I've long been an advocate for people just presenting magic and being normal, approachable humans as well. A lot of magicians fight against that because they want to be perceived as having a real power. And if they had a real power, then they'd surely be some mysterious kook, right? I guess. But that's not my style.

So it's been heartening to see a movement in the past few years to a more natural style in magic performances. But have we gone a little too far in the other direction? I mean, let's take a look at some of the bigger names in magic on tv and the internet...

They seem to all have something in common. Hmmm... what could it be. I mean there's no doubt these guys represent the rich cultural tapestry you see in modern magic. It's really great to see such diversity. For instance, do you want a magician who is a young, pleasant, unthreatening, white, male with dark hair that is two and a half inches long? Or do you want to go crazy and get a magician who is a young, pleasant, unthreatening, white, male with dark hair that is three and three-quarters of an inch long? The choice is yours. 

I don't have any issues with these guys as individuals; I enjoy a lot of their work. It's just when you look at them as a group that this current crop of magicians and their magic can seem a little... monochromatic. In fact I sometimes have trouble keeping them straight in my mind. 

Which is why I thought it would be a true test to see if I could discern which one you were thinking of throughout the course of an interactive magic trick!