The Great X-Communication/The Jerx/My Email Crossover Post

Oooh, a crossover post! Exciting. This is going to be like the time Archie met Predator, or Charles Barkley met Godzilla.

Except it's the blog I write meeting the newsletter I write meeting an email I wrote.

It starts with this post from a while ago where I was asked to differentiate a good unbelievable premise from a bad one. I encouraged him to ask the question, "Is this a thing?" in regards to his premises. If it's a concept that exists in the real world then you're probably on the right track.

In the past few months I've had some people email and say they don't understand what I'm saying, so I probably didn't explain it well. What follows is an excerpt from X-Communication #5 where I expand on the idea, and an email back and forth with a reader where we hash out the concept as well.

You might already be completely on board with this notion, or you might completely understand my position but disagree with it. If that's the case, you won't necessarily get much out of this post. But I'm not writing this just for you, understand? In a couple hundred years when archaeologists find my laptop and uncover these writings (how do internet work?), I want to make sure this point is clear because for me it has been one of the most useful concepts in finding premises that the type of people I perform for (reasonably intelligent adults) find interesting.


From X-Communcation #5, March 2016

Familiarity of cause:

I tried to outline this concept in an old blog post that encouraged you to ask “Is this a thing?” when considering the cause of your effects. Audiences are more engaged in effects where the supposed cause is something they were familiar with before the start of your effect. How is this bill levitating? Is it mass hypnosis? Is it a manipulation of gravitational force? Is it an invisible friend you had since you were a child who is actually real and just picked the bill up off the table? These are all unbelievable ideas, but they’re not unfamiliar ideas, so they are all potentially good premises. But if you say, “The bill is floating because I’ve hypnotized George Washington into thinking he’s a bird,” that’s not going to resonate with anyone. You don’t hypnotize inanimate objects. And you might say, “Well, magicians don’t actually say stuff like that,” but yes they do all the time. I’ve seen magician’s “hypnotize” a deck of cards so it balances on their fingers; have “leader” aces cause the other aces to join them; make “jealous” cards turn green on the back; say encouraging things to cause a card to rise from the deck. While hypnotism, leadership, jealousy, and encouragement are all concepts people are familiar with, they are not familiar with them applying to objects. So it makes for bad presentation unless you perform solely for children.

You could argue, “But this is just a metaphor. No one thinks the ace is really the leader ace. I’m just using that language to clarify the effect.” Yeah, I get that. And so does your audience. They understand that your magic is just a trifle with no relationship to the real world so you have to give it some meaning in a symbolic way because it has no inherent meaning. It’s like teaching someone to tie a tie: “The rabbit goes around the tree and then under the log....” You’re trying to give context to something that is otherwise dull and meaningless. You should really question your material if it needs the context we give to the dull and meaningless. 


Email correspondence from November 18, 2015

To: thejerx@gmail.com
From: B--

You write:

"There is a very simple question you can ask yourself to discern if your unbelievable premise is a good one or a bad one. And that question is this: "Is this a thing?""

I dig the simplicity, but the examples you gave confused me.

Time travel is a thing, but "ropes traveling through time" is not a thing. How do I know when to apply the rule?

Or what about whispering decks? Sure they're not a thing but "whispering information" IS a thing. If applying the concept of "ghost" to a floating bill makes for a good premise, why would applying "whisper" to a card divination be any different?

To: B--
From: thejerx@gmail.com

The ropes don't travel through time. The magician travels through time to alter the condition of the ropes in the future. People traveling through time to alter the current situation is a thing.

Whispering decks are not a thing. Inanimate objects don't whisper. 

You're not applying the concept of ghosts to a floating bill. You're saying a ghost is causing the bill to float. A spirit being trapped in an object and moving it is a concept that exists in popular culture.

If we lived in a world where one of our popular delusions was that objects whispered in our ears, then that would be a fine premise. But we don't, so it's a made up magic premise. 

To: thejerx@gmail.com
From: B--

But inanimate objects whisper, talk, and are anthropomorphized all the time in popular culture! Think about movies like Toy Story. Wall-E. And if we go further back, we have talking sticks in the bible, whispering pots in Anderson's myths. Etc.

People traveling through time is a trope, sure. But so are OBJECTS traveling through time. Time machines. Swords. Treasure. So the distinction isn't clear to me.

I think maybe the question isn't "is it a real thing" but rather "how can we MAKE IT a real thing".

To: B--
From: thejerx@gmail.com

If you want to say you sent the rope back through time, that's fine with me too. I just think it's less interesting than saying you went back through time.

The purpose of that post was to discuss what types of premises I believe audiences have an easier time connecting with. And my point is that it's probably more engaging for an audience when the premise is something relatable (albeit unbelievable). 

How was this amazing thing accomplished?

  • Time travel
  • Ghosts
  • ESP
  • Coincidence
  • The deck talked to me

The first four are all rich subjects that can be mined for interesting presentational angles. The fifth is not.

If your audience relates to whispering sticks from the bible, then that's perfectly in line with my point. Tell them your deck of cards was crafted from that stick in the bible. Talky Bible Stick is my favorite bible character. My friends don't know that much about the bible unfortunately.

Anthropomorphizing things is what we do to explain to children. And it's a big part of the reason why magic often comes off as being for children and magician's come off as being condescending.

To: thejerx@gmail.com
From: B--

Assuming by "good premise" you mean interesting and compelling (is that a fair interpretation?), the problem with a whispering deck isn't that "whispering things" aren't real, it's that it's a boring ass premise. And I totally agree, that WE traveling through time is better than a rope traveling through time, and a ghost is more compelling than a whispering deck.

I dig that. So instead of:

"There is a very simple question you can ask yourself to discern if your unbelievable premise is a good one or a bad one. And that question is this: "Is this a thing?"

we get:
"Is this [the most interesting type] of thing?"

Which means what makes a good (i.e. compelling/interesting) premise good is that it is compelling/interesting (i.e. good). Which kinda doesn't say anything.

What I dig is the idea of the premises being UNBELIEVABLE. Because that's TOTALLY contrary to the way so many "popular" performers are trying to convey their magic.

To: B--
From: thejerx@gmail.com

In regards to that blog post it was just a matter of trying to answer the reader's question, "How do I differentiate a good unbelievable premise from a bad unbelievable premise." And my answer is that if that premise is a concept that already exists, then it has the potential to be a good premise because it's a concept an audience can relate to and will possibly hook them in some way that you can't even plan for.

As I've stated in some other post, my favorite reaction is when a spectator will find themselves, however briefly, believing something unbelievable. The jack got angry and changed from blue to red is not a premise that people could even consider buying into for a moment. Cards don't get angry. Yes, anger exists. And humans and other animals may turn red. But that doesn't explain how this card changed.


April Fools!

Hahahahaha

oh my god...

hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha
hahahahahahahahahahahahaha

I totally got you fuckers good. 

You guys were all like, "uh-duhr, duhr... look at this resolution before Congress to recognize magic as an art."

I made that up. It doesn't exist. "Eric Hogue" is a made up person. I took that picture from a royalty-free image source. "Wylie, Texas" doesn't exist. Copperfield is totally in on it. It was a goof that you all fell for!

So we can all forget about this now. It was an April Fools Day prank by me. And now that the day has passed we can let this go. I appreciate all the people who saw how funny it was -- an art form that is often seen as being full of desperate validation seekers, desperately seeking validation by asking for a resolution to be passed to recognize it as art -- and tweeted it and spread the word. But now we can stop doing that. Because whatever could possibly be gained by pushing this legislation through (this fake legislation that I completely made up), is wholly negated by the fact that we need to push it through in the first place.

Certainly the girl who says, "Tell me I'm pretty," doesn't really believe she is. And the person who is coerced into corroborating that statement doesn't believe it either. 

AND THAT'S WHAT MAKES THIS WHOLE THING FUNNY! It's my funny joke! Not a sad reality that reflects poorly on magic. So for all the laymen who saw this as pathetic and made comments to that effect online, what do you have to say now when you realize it was ALL A JOKE? Magicians are very confident that what they do is an art and certainly don't need congress to affirm that. I swear. 

 

The Magician's "Response to Tragedy" Library

After the attacks in Belgium last week, I began thinking about Shin Lim and the video he made after the Paris attacks last year.

What better way to pay your respects to the victims of a tragedy than to make it about yourself? 

Well, now you can do it much faster and easier with a new project I've started called, The Magician's "Response to Tragedy" Library. I've created a library of 8000 videos (and growing) that allow you to post a response to almost any tragedy that occurs within moments of it occurring. Earthquake in Dubai? We've got that. Plague of frogs in Kansas? We've got that too.

How does it work? You just subscribe to the service and anxiously await something terrible to happen. When a suicide bomber takes out a pie-eating contest (for example), I will take our response video to that tragedy, add your contact info at the beginning and end, then upload it to youtube and facebook.

All you have to do is sit back and collect the likes.

See the sample clips below for three different potential tragedies.

Eggstreme

That's an Easter pun.

I was just laying in bed and started laughing because I thought of something that I hadn't for about 10 years. And that was the point in time when, for about 18 months, there was this notion that cardistry/card flourishing was something of a bad boys activity, and that maybe you had to be a little dangerous to be involved with it. There were a bunch of competing groups with these corny names and they would make these videos that were meant to mysterious and badass which is ridiculous when 98% of their time is spent picking cards up off their bedroom floor.

These days I feel like people are more content just enjoying cardistry for what it is: a study of movement and dexterity that has more in common with juggling and dance than it does snorting cocaine or operating a fight club. It's certainly not the dark, enigmatic activity indulged in by brooding, dangerous practitioners that they once tried to portray. It's hard to brood when you're waiting for your mom to pick you up from the mall.

Thinking about this topic reminded me of this post from the old site....

Monday, June 06, 2005

Magik Sircull Jerx 

The whole XCM/Superhandz/Handlordz sub-culture is pretty fun and fascinating. I have no desire to do any flourishes but I enjoy watching them and appreciate the effort that goes into perfecting some of the more incredible moves.

But anyone who purposely misspells extreme as Xtreme or pluralizes things with a Z is pretty much automatically lame and a complete fucking poser. This shit was cool for about two weeks six years ago. You know who does this now? 60-year-old ad-executives hoping to target a young demographic. Don't be a tool. Drop the Zs and the Xs. In fact, drop the whole word "extreme," it's idiotic and tired. 

In general it's best to avoid using any positive adjectives about yourself. Let other people apply the adjectives. You don't say, "My card manipulation is XTREME," just like you don't say, "I'm so generous," just like you don't say, "I'm so crazy!"

“You really don’t remember me, do you?” she said. “it’s me, crazy Trudy who used to sit beside you in Mr. Pope’s senior English class. Remember me? I was the crazy one. I was the one who wrote ‘Don’t follow me – I’m lost too’ on the back of her graduation gown. It’s me, crazy Trudy.”

Suddenly I remembered her perfectly. Even at eighteen she struck me as hopeless.

”So, Trudy,” I said. “What’s going on?”

”Oh, you know me. I’m just as crazy as ever. No, I take that back – I’m probably crazier if you can believe that!”

I thought for a moment before saying, “Oh.” Because that’s really something I can’t stand – when people refer to themselves as crazy. The truly crazy are labeled so on the grounds that they see nothing wrong with their behavior. They forge ahead, lighting fires in public buildings and defecating in frying pans without the slightest notion that they are out of step with the rest of society. That, to me, is crazy. Calling yourself crazy is not crazy, only obnoxious.
— David Sedaris - Barrel Fever

Yes, and calling yourself Xtreme doesn't make you Xtreme or even extreme, it just makes appear desperate.

And it creates some strange marketing decisions.

Look at this DVD called "Xtreme Beginnerz."

What?

How can you be an xtreme beginner? 

Person 1: Damn man, I'm so Xtreme, I can't even fan a deck of cards.

Person 2: Fuck you, dude! I'm way more Xtreme a beginner than you. I can barely hold on to a deck of cards. If I have to shuffle it requires so much concentration that I shit my pants. I shit my pants to the XTREME!!!

I think that's great. They were going for something cool and ended up with something halfway between lame and completely adorable.

I can't wait for their next DVD: Xtremely Lonely Virginz Flip A Pen Around Or Some Shit Like That.

Gardyloo #8: Help Wanted Edition

I just got back from Batman vs. Superman: Dawn of Justice. It's too long, and the characters couldn't be more dull, but it's no dumber than you'd expect it to be. If you walk out of film called Batman vs. Superman and are confused why it wasn't a great film, that's on you. Anything with "vs." in the title is an excuse to eat popcorn and get away from your kids.

Twelve stars!


Help Wanted #1 - Gotham

If you live in the NYC area and you are willing to perform a simple trick for three different people one-on-one over the course of the next week or so, send me an email. I have a concept I want to test but I'd like to have people other than myself test it out. When I do anything it's like, "Oh, yeah, sure, people loved it. That's just because you're hyper charming and likable." Ok, guilty. So I'm looking for two or three other people to try something out for me.

To do the trick you'll need some items that you probably don't have access to, so you'll have to pick them up from a drop-off spot in midtown and then I'll email you further instructions.

I realize this makes it sound like you're an unwitting participant in a drug deal, but it's really just a dumb magic idea I want to test. I promise. Would I really spend a year writing a magic blog just to identify some strangers to mule heroin for me? That seems unlikely. I mean, if that was my plan all along then I'd probably ask you to buy this set of graduated butt plugs to let me know what kind of trunk-space you're dealing with, if --for example-- I wanted you to keister a couple of latex balloons filled with china white. But that's not what I'm asking of course. This blog is NOT a cover for my drug dealing operation. The people who bought my book are not expecting a hollowed out hardcover overflowing with Dragon Rock, my potent mix of heroin and crack. I mean... one's potent mix. That's like a totally absurd suggestion.

Annnyyyywhooooooo... so if you're in the NYC area and want to try a simple coin trick and report back your results, let me know.

[EDIT: Thanks to those who've emailed. I have a couple people lined up now. If one of them falls through I'll let you know.]


Dear Shawn,

You've, got to work on the humble part of the humble-brag. Otherwise it comes off as just bragging, and the only person who would brag about a standing ovation is someone who doesn't really think they're deserving of it. Next time, try one of these:

"Sorry if the show runs late, I forgot to account for the standing ovations when I was timing it out. #idiot."

"When my wife complimented me on my three standing O's. I said, 'No, honey, you were laying down and there were half a dozen of them.' Just realized she was talking about the reception to my show. #ImADummy #cunnilingus."

"I'm such a louse. Why didn't I lift up those wheelchair bound spectators during my standing ovations so they could take part in the pleasure of praising me? #inclusion #myapologies."


Help Wanted #2 - Harkey

Do you regularly perform any effects from David Harkey's book, Simply Harkey? If so, get in touch with me if you're willing to record yourself performing, or if you have something significant to add to any of the effects. It's for a series of posts I want to do in the future.


You may think I have an issue with mentalists, but I've seen plenty of great mentalism shows and love the art. Stage hypnotists, on the other hand, all suck turds. At least all the ones I've ever seen. It would be one thing if there was an ounce of validity to the whole enterprise and that required the process to be hacky and boring. But it's 100% phony and they still can't make it interesting? That's sad.

Speaking of sad, it's got be really sad when you fancy yourself a master of persuasion and suggestion and you (allegedly) can't convince a prostitute to let you film the two of you fucking. Let's be honest, the whole reason you got into hypnosis is because you thought -- for once -- you would be able to get people to do what you told them to. You thought it would be chick after chick just being like, 'Yes, master, you can film us fucking. Anything you wish, master." And instead you learn the only thing your "skill" is good for is getting community college students to pretend to play invisible orchestral instruments. And you're like, "This is the power I dreamt of wielding?" And so you're meeting up with 'tutes to do the things that goddamn wife of yours won't and you're not even persuasive enough to get one to be filmed willingly so you have to do it without her consent like a creep. That's depressing. Although not too much more depressing than the average hypnosis show.


Help Wanted #3 - Cosmetropolis (London Swings)

I'm thinking about spending the second half of 2016 in London. Does Jerx: London have any thoughts on what area I should plan on staying in and how much I should plan on spending for long-term accommodations? I'm fairly low-maintenance, I just require something that's not a shit-hole. Also, can I just move there for 6 months? Or do I need to have a job or something. I mean, I do have a job (making Dragon Rock), but do I need one that specifically brings me to London? If so, get in touch if you'd like to hire me. Usually I work in the creative fields, but I'll do chimney sweeping, or nannying, or whatever it is you've got out there. Just make me an offer.

To Make the Vanish More Striking

This is a small thing. But, like the Elmsley Count issue in this post, it bothers me when I see it and I think it's an easy fix.

I find a lot of people perform David Williamson's Striking Vanish so it looks like this.

Tap once. Tap twice. And it vanishes on the third.

That's fine and all, but I think it's a mistake to do the two little practice taps before the actual vanish. I'm guessing the reason people do it is because it helps them get in the rhythm they feel they need for a kinetic vanish such as this. But the problem with it is, no matter how skilled you are, you have to do something different on the third tap or the coin would remain where it is, as it did in the first two. And the fact you have to move your hands differently than you did in the preceding taps draws attention to the fact that you're breaking the pattern you've established (the pattern you've unnecessarily established). 

I almost can't even intentionally do it as bad as many people do. Watch this dude try and do it. And he thinks he's good enough to teach it.

One tap. Two taps. FISHYMOVE! vanish.

To me it looks more like what you're actually doing than what you're pretending to be doing (which is almost never a good thing in magic).

I do think it's a good idea to establish the idea that the coin is going to vanish when you tap it, but instead of doing two practice taps on the coin and then a different looking tap to vanish it, I tap somewhere else. "The coin will vanish when I tap it," I might say, tapping the air in front of me. Then I do the striking vanish. Because I haven't established a pattern/rhythm of tapping the coin, there's no pattern or rhythm to be broken.

If the GIFs aren't clear, here's the raw video with one version following the other.