Coming in the JAMM #1

One of the rules I tried to adhere to when I was writing the X-Communication newsletter was to not review something unless I had personally performed it (or at least seen it performed by someone else in real life). There were a few times where I couldn't—and sometimes where a trick was so fundamentally flawed I didn't need to do it—but for the most part I did and it always led to better reviews which were informed not just by my opinion of the trick/method, but my experience performing it. I will try to keep that up with the reviews in the JAMM as well, if for no other reason than that actually performing the effects makes it easier to write about them. And it often allows for the evolution of a presentation that is more in line with my style .

Late last year there was a really offbeat effect put on the market with a super clever gimmick behind it. After playing with it and performing it a few times (and getting really good reactions), I came up with an alternate presentation that has been getting even better reactions. You'll find my review and handling for the effect— which is in my top 3 of the year—in the JAMM #1.

You can subscribe to The JAMM here.

2016 Magic Awards

Least Essential Deck of Custom Playing Cards

Is Jay Leno your style icon? 

Then you have to get the Denim Deck. It's all the style of denim, with the luxury... of denim!

Great for your next corporate gig at Gitano, B.U.M. Equipment, or Bugle Boy, the Denim Deck is your way to let people know you have a shitty sense of esthetics without constantly having to verbalize it.


Best Gimmick That I Can't Really Figure Out A Use For

I love the gimmick for Hologram by David Stone. A sticker materializes on a card and then changes color.

Unfortunately I haven't really been able to come up with a context for it that is particularly logical. In David's routine he has a spectator choose a card and he puts a sticker on it. This card is lost in the deck. Then he brings another card out of his pocket, makes a sticker appear on it, but it's the wrong color, then he changes it to the right color and shows the card to be the spectator's card. It sort-of makes sense. But it doesn't make a ton of sense.

This is the downside of the style of magic I prefer. Normally magic is just meaningless nonsense and everyone is okay with that. But if you train your audience to expect some kind of logic to your effects, then they become a bunch of wise-asses when things don't really make sense. "Hmmm... so why did you put a sticker on the card? Because you had a way of making it look like a sticker appears on a card?"

To be fair, the DVD that came with this effect didn't work when I got it, so maybe there is a more cohesive plot to be found on there. I'm too lazy to send it back and find out.


Best $13 I Spent

I know there's nothing more boring than this, but I have a fetish for organization and storage and boxes and things like that. In that regard I've really enjoyed this little lock-box from Amazon.

It's the perfect size for a couple decks of cards, some Sharpies, and a handful of gimmicks. Velcro'd to the inside of the top of the box are two coin-purse-esque pouches. I travel a lot so I use this as kind of a magic dopp kit. I keep a few things I'm working on and a few mainstays of my repertoire in there and I can just grab it and go, instead of just having these things rattling around in my regular bag or something like that. Then when I go out at night I can peel off one of little pouches and toss it in my pocket and have a couple gimmicks on me if an opportunity should present itself.

Plus it has a lock on it so people won't know I'm not a true wizard. I can hide all my secrets away like a pre-teen with her diary.


Dumbest Post at the Magic Cafe

Always a stiff competition, but I think this may be my favorite.

So, imagine you release a watch that produces smoke. "Look, everyone! Smoke is naturally emanating from his skin, right from under his big ugly watch!" your audience enthuses. 

And then you make a version that looks like a smart watch. The only problem is that it doesn't tell time. What do you do when your spectator asks you what time it is?

Well, here is the creator's response...

Is that a normal human response to being asked what time it is?

"I'm not going to look at my watch (the thing I keep on my wrist for the purpose of telling time). I'm going to look at my phone to tell you what time it is. It's more accurate."

"Thanks! Obviously when I casually asked for the time I needed something hyper-accurate. You see, I'm timing how long it takes for an electron to jump from one atom to another. Can you let me know when 320 attoseconds have passed?"

Hey, dum-dum:

1. Smart watches and cellphones will generally display identical times.

2. There's already a built in reason for why you can't tell the time with a smart watch. No battery left. Don't overcomplicate it:

"The time!! You want to know what time it is?! Uhhh...uhh...hold on....uhm...[be cool, man]...uh....haha...sure, the time.... You know, I can't be turning my wrist back and forth all day. My mom has carpal tunnel. It runs in our family. I think I'll get my phone from my pocket. It's much more accurate anyway. Oh, actually I left it in the other room. Just a sec.

...

Just got to plug it in real quick. I forgot to charge it last night.

...

Oh, there we go. It's three-ish."

3. I agree it's probably unlikely that anyone will ask you the time. As you said, most people have cellphones. I do, however, think there's a very good chance someone will say. "Hey, let me see that ghetto smart watch you have there. What brand is that hunk of garbage?" This is why you don't put a smoke device in a watch that people may take any interest in whatsoever. (This should have been obvious with 2 seconds of thought.) 


Best Picture of David Blaine's Diarrhea

Coming in JAMM #1

The Word Processor of the Gods

This is based on an old idea from this site that I've fleshed out into a three-phase routine. It's essentially a multi-phase Triumph effect that includes a spectator shuffle. It's got a completely different energy than a standard Triumph effect. It's a very kinetic presentation where you and the spectator are bouncing between real life and your computer as you undo your actions in the real world, again and again, until you're undoing your own undoings. And, like all my best effects, it ends with you suggesting acts of sexual congress with your spectator.

You can subscribe to the Jerx Amateur Magic Monthly here.

With your paid subscription you will also receive a football phone. 

Scratch that, the football phone is a no-go. But with your paid subscription you will receive the first Jerx Deck of playing cards. The only way to obtain this deck is with a subscription to this site/the JAMM.

Welcome Back

Hey, it's me, magic's #1 fuccboi, Andy, returning for year 2(.5) of The Jerx. 

Today I'm going to ease back in to regular posting with a preview of what's in store for this year.

How are your New Year's resolutions going? One of mine was to be much more focused when writing this site. I wanted to be less distracted so posts wouldn't take me so long to put together. Usually when I write I'll write a sentence, take a break, think about what the next sentence will be, and in that break I'll click some other tabs and start doing something else entirely. So this year was going to be the year I knocked that shit off and really sat down and wrote with a single-mindedness. 

So I sat down. Thought: I guess I'll say 'Welcome back.' Then thought: Maybe I can find an amusing Welcome Back Kotter gif. Then I watched Welcome Back Kotter clips on youtube for 35 minutes—a show I consider unfunny and depressing.

So that's where I'm at.


This site exists because of the people who pledged their support for the Jerx 2017. If you signed up for the mailing list in the past couple of months you should have received an email this weekend with a link to subscribe for the supporter rewards to come. If you didn't sign up and you're interested, don't worry, the link will be available for everyone tomorrow.


This Christmas, reader Joseph Ruiz was inspired by some of the ideas in this blog to perform a Distracted Artist/non-presentation bottle production. Instead of saying, "Gather 'round everyone. As you know, I'm a mindfreak and I have something wonderful to show you," he just planted the folded, flattened bag he would remove the bottle from under the Christmas tree as part of a White Elephant gift exchange. When it was his turn to "randomly" pick a gift, he chose the little packet, unfolded it, pulled out a little card and then the bottle of booze.


Here is the schedule for the Jerx 2017:

Monday, Wednesday, and Friday there will be new posts here. 

Tuesday and Thursday there will be short posts previewing what will be in the coming month's Jerx magazine or highlighting some other commercial enterprise related to this site. Essentially these will be sponsored posts, except I'm the sponsor. (Although I'm open if other people want to purchase something ad-like to run on one of those days.)

So if you just want the legit posts, come on MWF. New posts will go up around 3AM New York time.

There will be the occasional Saturday non-magic posts, and I'll be taking 4 weeks off over the course of the year.

The first week of every month will be when the Jerx digital magazine will come out and that will go to all subscribers. It's full name is the Jerx Amateur Magic Monthly. I'm calling it that for two reasons. The first is because that is the perspective I'm writing from and any insights I have will be directed primarily to people performing in non-professional situations. The second reason is so that when it shows up in your email you can say, "Aw, shit! That's my JAMM!"

What will the difference be between the blog material and the magazine material?

In the magazine:

  • New product reviews and presentational ideas
  • Some of the (relatively) more workable effects I've come up with (similar to the stuff that made the book)
  • Theory and tips of a more actionable and practical nature

On this site:

  • Comedy and commentary on things happening in the world of magic
  • Discussion of broader theoretical concepts
  • Tricks that are less "usable" but still may be interesting to read aboutsimilar to the "Field Reports" I used to do on this site

For example, in the coming weeks I'll be posting a trick where you eat a throw-pillow. This is something I've done once in my life and probably won't do again and it doesn't have any real application in any other trick. You won't be like, "Say... I think that technique he uses to eat a throw-pillow is really going to translate well into my Shadow Coins routine."


I spent a lot of time (and far too much money) in 2016 traveling around, meeting people and testing out new ideas for this site and the JAMM. I'm looking forward to sharing some of the ideas with you over the course of 2017. 

On Wednesday I'll be giving away some 2016 awards. Who had the dumbest post on the Magic Cafe? What was the least essential deck of custom playing cards released? Find out the answers to these and more on Wednesday.

On Friday I want to discuss a new way of considering magic and performance that I've been thinking about a lot over the past few months. It's an extension of the audience-centric concept and attempts to answer the question of why specifically I think magic is a valuable tool to engage people with, especially if you're not drawn to the traditional "Magician" role (as I am not). It's the type of thinking that will really connect with a few of you and make the rest of you say, "This guy's really got his head up his own ass." 

It's good to be back. And up your nose with a rubber hose. Up all of our noses with rubber hoses.

 

 

The Rebel Drones of Factory Ward 8 (Luna Sector)

The New Year is almost upon us. The next year of The Jerx is less than two weeks away.

What are your resolutions? Mine are to eat more fudge and smoke more Old Golds. I like to start the year off with some quick wins. 

If you have more traditional resolutions, here is a mental framework that may help you achieve them.

Ultimately, every resolution comes down to self-discipline. The most ingenious plans to lose weight or stop smoking or do whatever will still require you to exert self control. There's really no way around it. 

Here is the way I frame self-discipline to make it a more attractive choice, rather than just the "good" or "proper" choice. It starts off by thinking of the concepts of free will and determinism. Are we literally making choices as we go through life? Or is everything we think, feel, and do the result of a chain of events that came before? Is our free will just an illusion? 

I find these questions neither interesting nor helpful. But they do form the foundation of how I imagine the universe operates that is useful for me. 

I imagine that both things are true. I imagine that everything is predetermined and that, via effort, we can exercise our free will. 

I imagine life like sledding down an endless hill. If you don't exert yourself you will just continue along the path that's been laid out before you. But you don't have to do that. You can shift your weight to alter your direction. Or you can put your feet out to flip the whole fucking thing over and start walking back up the hill. 

Now, this technique presupposes that you believe having free will is the preferred situation. For me, at least, that's the more romantic notion than that we are just acting out roles that have already been predetermined. So I frame self-discipline as an expression of free will. That makes it the more attractive choice for me. 

So, for example, I may think what I want to do for the next couple of hours. My natural inclination might be to watch Netflix and eat a tray of brownies. But I know I should go out and get some exercise. Instead of trying to force myself to go exercise by rationalizing it as the "better" choice or the more productive choice or the right choice, I just imagine laying around and watching Netflix as the pre-determined path. It's what I would do if I was just floating through life and not utilizing my free will. It's what I would do on automatic pilot. So now making myself exercise (or socialize, or work on a project, or complete any other task requiring self-discipline) is not an act of austerity, but an act of defiance. It's an F-you to the gods, or fate, or the universe, or quantum mechanics, or whatever you want to see as the entity behind the determinism. Try it yourself. When you feel like playing Super Mario Run for another hour even though there are a dozen other more fulfilling pursuits you could be doing, just say, "Aha! That's just what they want me to do. Sorry. You'll have to find yourself some other puppet." Then go work on your novel or whatever.

I'm not saying you need to be 100% productive and you can't coast sometimes. I coast a lot. But if you find yourself not doing the things you want, and only following an easy, unfulfilling path, it might help to think of things this way.

No exercise of self-discipline is too small for me to not see it as a triumph of self-determination over fate.

In My Mind: I'm the hero of a dystopian teen novel. The sentries of Factory Ward 8 are wondering, "What's to be done with this 'Andy' character? Multiple times a day he leaves the post he's assigned to—with the other drones, manually turning the giant turbine that generates the power for Luna Sector—and goes off his pre-determined path. Perhaps he needs to be reprogrammed." As they discuss this I have, once again, left my station and I'm attempting to wake up the other glassy-eyed captives to join me in my rebellion. I've rerouted the current to blow the doors off the factory prison! Wake up, you fools! An explosion is heard and the sentries turn just in time to see me flick them off as I, and the others I've managed to rouse, make our escape. "Choke on shit, motherfuckers!" I scream as we go.

In Reality: I've motivated myself to remove the empty Burger King bag from the backseat of my car rather than leave it there to be dealt with later (my natural impulse).

You might think only an idiot would find any motivation in imaging self-discipline in this way—as an expression of free will. And that's fair, maybe I'm an idiot. But if you're an idiot too, maybe it will work for you. And if it does work you'll find yourself actually enjoying practicing self-discipline. If you're like me, you'll feel more tuned into life when you are steering the ship rather than letting it be tossed about on the waves of your basest instincts. It feels good to imagine you're exercising your free will. And it feels good in a way that taking sensible, mature actions usually doesn't. Perhaps it even gives you a dopamine hit similar to fucking or eating a doughnut (or fucking a doughnut).

And after a little while, it doesn't matter if you actively think this way or not, because eventually you just become this person. You will have effectively trained yourself to appreciate the exertion of self-discipline in the moment. You won't just be engaging in discipline for some future reward.

At least that's been my experience.

Happy New Year, everyone. See you in 2017.

Your Eyes Are Like Starlight Now

The snow is falling.

The fire crackles.

Bing Crosby croons from the radio about his dreams of a white Christmas.

The smoke from my Old Gold cigarette swirls in eddies around my easy chair.

Yes, it's Christmastime. And I'm indulging in all my holiday traditions. Having a snowball fight with the neighborhood kids. Baking cookies. And thanking god it's them, instead of me, like Bono urged me to in that Christmas song for... people with AIDS? Or starving people? Starving people with AIDS? Whatever it was... I'm thanking god it's them and not me. 


A couple questions have come in about Season 2 that I thought I would answer here for everyone.

1. Is the monthly magazine going to be content from the site?

No. The Jerx magazine will be all new material. I may have been unclear when I originally pitched the idea. Initially, when I proposed Season 2, the idea was I would do 20 new posts a month on this site and there was going to be, essentially, no reward for subscribing (other than the continued existence of this site). Then I changed that plan because I want the people supporting the site to get more/have a better experience than you other scrubs. So then I decided to do a dozen or so full posts each month on the site and then take my favorite ideas for that month that would have been on the blog, and instead put them into the digital magazine. So that will be 6-8 things each month. The breakdown will probably half reviews a la X-Communication, and the other half will be my favorite tricks/ideas/essays or whatever that I've worked on that month.

2. Will there be an option for a printed magazine?

As it stands now, no. A printed magazine done in such low quantities isn't really economically feasible. If the readership grows considerably over the course of the year, I might consider it next year. So there will be a next year? A Jerx, Season 3? No, not necessarily. I'm taking this site year by year. 

If you're someone who really prefers a physical product, then I will make one humongous pdf available at the end of the year for subscribers so you can have it bound and printed physically. You can probably get that done for like $30 or so.

3. Will the Jerx deck be sold separately?

No. The only way to get it will be with a paid year subscription. Or be a personal friend of mine and have me give you one. 

Those who haven't signed up yet for Season 2 and the bonuses, you can do so at the end of this post.


Much to my surprise, The Jerx, Volume One is holding its own on the Magic Cafe thread for book of the year. Not that I don't think it qualifies. It's absolutely the book of the year. Hell, it's the book of the... what's an order of magnitude greater than a millennium? Whatever that is. I'm just surprised because it's such a limited edition and is going up against books that likely had 10 or 20 times the number of copies printed. 

So thanks to those who voted and represented for this site.


Friend of the site, and GLOMM Elite, Ondrej Psenicka, sent me one of the coolest and most ingenious decks I've ever seen.

It's called the Butterfly Deck.

You know how people always talk about the ugliness of magic methods? Well, the secret built into the Butterfly Deck is so sweet that I'm tempted just to show people how it works. What it allows you to do is know where any card in the deck is at any moment, and it allows you to know what cards are missing from the deck. 

So, for example, you have someone shuffle the cards as much as they want in any manner they want. They remove a card and hide it without even looking at it. They again shuffle as much they want. You take the deck and concentrate on it for a few seconds (you don't need to spread it or turn it over), and you know what card is missing. It's as pure as that type of effect can get.

I've only had it a few days but it's pretty easy to pick up the basics of the system. I've been using it as the ultimate unbelievable exhibition of memory and shuffle tracking. I give them the deck to shuffle. Then I spread it on the table face up and "memorize" it. I hand it back to the person and have them shuffle it a few times while I discuss shuffle tracking. I have them shuffle under the table while my hands grab hold onto their upper arms. I look off in the distance and say, "Hmmm...ok...ok...interesting," and nod as if I'm analyzing their shuffle without seeing it. I then have them shuffle a few more times on the table. Then I stop them and have them name any card.

The five of clubs.

"The five of clubs? Okay... that started as the eighth card down and after your first shuffle it went down to the 42nd card."

As I say this I pick up the deck and hold it about vertically around eye level, showing them the right long-edge of the deck, with the left long-edge toward me (the positioning will be clear when you have the deck in your hands), I point near the top of the deck then slide my finger down the deck to illustrate the path of the card during the first shuffle. As I do this one movement, I get all the information I need. I then tell them a little more about the path of their card and end with something like, "And your last shuffle brought it 22 cards down, right about here." And I cut to the card they named. (Yes, the implication I'm making is that I memorized the deck and then shuffle tracked every single card simultaneously.)

This is kind of a basic idea, but it's very fun to perform. 

I think there are a few days left for you to contribute to his Indiegogo campaign and nab yourself some decks. I would definitely recommend it. 


If you live in a snowy climate, let me remind you of the trick White Nocturne. It's a really weird little moment that has an interesting kind of resonance on a snowy night.


I had an email asking about Christmas shipping times. If you order a book or GLOMM membership kit, they will generally ship out via priority mail the next day. So if you make an order by Tuesday the 20th, it will ship Wednesday and, theoretically, should be with you by Saturday. Although that might be pushing it, but I will do what I can on my end to make sure it gets to you on time. After that it's up to the mailman. (This is, of course, for domestic US shipping. Outside the US you're probably screwed unless you want to pay a fortune for overnight shipping.)

Also, if you're ordering a gift for someone else, please make a note of that so I can include a message in the order for them to get in touch so I can put them on the email list for any bonus items that may be included with their order.

Regarding the GLOMM membership kit, while there are plenty of regular Elite kits available, the Secret Hyper-Elite Platinum kit (which includes the red shirt) is close to sold out in a number of sizes. XL is sold out. There is one left in L and XXL. A few in XXXL. A decent amount available in small and medium. The red shirts won't be reprinted.


Li'l Jerxy has lost his mind and is opening up way too much over on the Jerx App.


I'm in for $10/month to support season 2, subscribe to The Jerx Monthly, and receive the Jerx Deck

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