Seer-ial

A couple months ago I wrote…

“If I wanted to do a serial number divination here is what it would have to look like:

The spectator takes out any bill of any denomination from her wallet. With your head turned away she folds the bill up so the serial number is completely hidden away. You never touch the bill—nobody other than the spectator touches the bill—and yet you’re able to tell her what the serial number is.

That would seem impossible if it weren’t for the fact that I’ve seen my friend do that exact trick about half a dozen times. [It’s] designed for social, one-on-one performing and in those situations it’s a really strong effect.”

And here is how it’s done.

I’ll explain the simplest version first and then give some alternative ways to perform it so it’s even more fooling.

You have a spectator remove a $20 bill and fold it into eighths and crease it sharply so it stays closed. You ask her to place the bill on the table near you. The bill is covered with a mug or cup so you can’t see anything and you are able to divine the serial number, apparently without ever touching the bill.

This uses a switch I originally described in the trick, “Cup of George.” There is a bill with a known serial number already in the cup. When the cup is turned down, the bill on the table is kicked into the lap with the pinky finger. It looks like this in action…

IMG_5595.gif

What makes this so strong is—from the spectator’s perspective—the bill is never touched. They remove it from their pocket, they fold it up, it’s isolated under a cup. And yet somehow the magician can name the serial number. And it’s the spectator who removes the cup and unfolds the bill. It really kills people.

Here’s how my friend does it with any common denomination. He has a $1, $5, $10, and $20 folded in eighths in his pocket, or in different pockets. The spectator removes their bill and he locates the required matching bill. As they are folding their bill, he is cleaning out his cup with a napkin and in the process he leaves the matching folded bill inside.

He has them place the bill in front of him. He covers it with the cup, doing the switch in the process, and has them place their hands on the cup.

[Don’t overly justify the cup. The cup is there so you can’t see or touch the bill. I wouldn’t even bother stating that.]

Then he divines the serial number.

He either writes it down on a business card, or a blank page in a small notebook, or types it into the notebook app in his phone. But in actuality, he does none of those things. Each bill’s serial number is already written on an individual business card, on an individual page in the book, or in a note on his phone.

So, if he’s using business cards, he’ll just remove the one for the right denomination bill, act as if he’s writing the serial number down, and then set it down on the table. If it’s a page in the notebook he’ll just act like he’s writing the number down then rip that page out of the notebook. If he’s using his phone, he’ll have all the serial numbers in one note and erase the ones he doesn’t need.

Of course, you can just ask for one specific denomination if you want, and then you just have to memorize that one serial number if you prefer going that route.

Bonus Convincer: Each serial number that is pre-written down has the third digit from the end incorrect. It’s lower than it should be by two. So he will set the business card down at the end, go back one final time to “sense” the bill, then he turns the business card over and corrects the wrong number. Although they shouldn’t have any reason to doubt it, this should have them fairly convinced this was all written in the moment.

There you go. A serial number divination isn’t really my style, but I’ve seen this one in action and it is both very strong and very straightforward. If I was going to do one, this would be it.


Modern Ouija

Here’s something I really like.

My friend got this Ouija board a few months ago.

Screen Shot 2020-06-08 at 10.34.58 PM.png

But unlike those fake ass Ouija boards from Parker Brothers, this one really does have all the answers.

5SecondsApp_613369980.354295.gif

It’s a custom engraved wooden laptop cover made by a company called Toast. (It’s not something they just sell. It was a custom order. But here’s the vector file if you decide you want to recreate it.)

I like the idea a lot. It looks cool and it’s a conversation piece. Specifically it’s a conversation piece that can push the discussion in a weird/magic-y direction. And it can be used with different effects.

What effects?

Well, I’ve written in the past about using a Ouija board to “suggest” the letters in a progressive anagram. That way it’s not you reading their mind, but “the spirits.”

Or

You could say you’re thinking of removing the cover because some weird shit has happened since you put it on. Then use a Loop to move an impromptu planchette (maybe a fork or a paper cup) without touching it. Really any sort of PK effect would work if done on top of the board.

If you use your laptop and interact with people in libraries, coffee-shops, co-working spaces or anything like that, I think it’s a great Hook to get into a magic trick. Even if you didn’t specifically use the Ouija board in the trick itself. I watched my friend use it to transition into a trick with a woman at a cafe in this manner…

Her: I like your laptop cover.

Him: Oh, thanks.

[There was some conversation here about whether it was real wood and where he got it.]

Him: The other day this woman freaked out about it. She said the Ouija board is powerful black magic, not a toy.

Her: That’s funny. I used to play with one at my grandmother’s house with my cousins.

Him: Was it powerful black magic? Did you contact any spirits?

Her: I don’t think so. If we did, they didn’t have anything interesting to say. But I swear the… whatever the thing is called… would move on its own.

Him: Hmm… yeah, I’m fascinated with anything weird/unexplainable. Speaking of… do you want to see something I’ve been reading about?

Then he was off showing her some mentalism thing and they’ve been seeing each other since.

That’s a much better response than I’ve ever gotten from my custom laptop cover. (Which consists of a tasteful nude of myself with the phrase, “Magicians Do It With Sponge Balls” engraved underneath.)

[UPDATE: My friend just saw this post and passed along some more information if you want to have one of these made for yourself. Here’s his email:

I thought of a couple things your readers may want to keep in mind if they decide to do this.

First, the total cost of this, including top and bottom covers for a 13 inch macbook, was $160. So it’s not cheap.

Second, here was the first mock-up they sent me.

Screen Shot 2020-06-09 at 8.19.06 AM.png

Obviously that looks idiotic. There are two special requests you have to make. The first is to have them print the image across the full cover. (That’s where $30 of the $160 went—as a surcharge for the larger image.)

The other special request is to have them remove the TOAST logo. (That’s the small brown box at the bottom of the image above.)]

Impromptu Universe Selection

Multiple Universe Selection was a trick I wrote up here almost five years ago.

That trick became somewhat representative of the style of magic I’ve written about, particularly in my books over the past five years. It’s a trick that plays out over multiple-locations and days. And it’s a trick where you start with a simple effect (one card changes to another), and you just keep building up layers around it until that simple effect becomes “evidence” of a much grander and crazier idea (that you can skip through the multi-verse).

Over the years I’ve heard from a number of people who have performed it—the stories and responses that the trick generates are understandably pretty bonkers—but I don’t believe I’ve received much in the way of alternative handlings for the effect until just recently.

For this post to make sense, you need to be familiar with the original effect, so if you’re not, go check it out.

Okay, this idea comes from Myles Thornton. Here it is, in his words…

I wanted to send you an email detailing my method of your effect Multiple Universe Selection, which allows you to perform the effect spontaneously. Basically my method eliminates the need for the special vanishing ink. So while you are walking to the postbox you pop into a corner shop you buy a pack of letter envelopes, stamps and a box cutter. Now when you get to the mailbox you take out the stack of envelopes and a piece of paper. Write the letter and give the envelope to your spectator and ask her to write her address on the envelope and put the stamp on. Hand her the letter and ask her to put the letter in. Now ask for the envelope back and place it, address side up, on top of the stack on envelopes. Perform a double turnover and seal the envelope and write her special number across the seal of the envelope to prove it won’t be tampered with. Now you have switched the envelopes. Post the letter with her special number face up. The rest of the effect is performed the same way.

This method I think has some advantages as it can be performed spontaneously by popping to a local shop. Also the address on the front of the envelope will be in their handwriting, all you have to do is switch the letters when you are home later, seal the envelope and write the number across the seal. Finally you also don’t have to worry what day it is as there is no time delay needed.

I think it’s a very interesting thing to consider. For me, this is such a “special occasion” sort of trick, that I’m not sure I need an impromptu-ish handling. But it’s definitely something I’m going to play around with.

Here are the different trade-offs.

Original Version

  • Only one envelope is in play, so it’s a little cleaner.

  • The participant can drop the envelope in the mailbox themselves.

  • No sleights or handling to worry about.

Impromptu Version

  • Doesn’t require a special pen or preparation.

  • Can be done any day/time of day (with the original version you wanted to do when the letter would sit in the mailbox for a bit of time).

  • The spectator can write their name/address on the envelope.

The likelihood of me ever using the impromptu handling will probably come down to how smooth I can get it. I played around with a stack of normal envelopes to see what a double turnover would feel like with them. It’s somewhat clumsy, but I might be able to sand off some of the edges with work. I would suggest instead of taking the envelope back from them, placing it on the stack, and then doing a double turnover, you should take the envelope back and place it on the stack, take the pen back and write something on the front of the envelope, then do the double turnover and seal and write something on the back. That gives you a rationale for putting the envelope address side up to start (because you want to write something on it), and it gives you a moment to align the envelopes for the double turnover, which isn’t as automatic as it is with cards.

It will take some work to get it smooth, but I think there is the foundation here for a handling that doesn’t require the special pen.

Thanks to Myles for sharing it.

By the way, Myles has a cool version of contact juggling in his At the Table lecture that uses a wine glass. It’s the sort of thing I have a feeling I’d be terrible at, but I think it looks really cool. Check it out.

Sunday Productivity, Part 2: The Ladder

Okay, so here is the system I use to maximize my Productive Personal Time (as discussed in Part 1).

For me it’s not enough just to block off that time and then have a choice of options with what to fill it with. I need a system in place.

Here’s what mine looks like.

Step One

Make a list of the activities with which you’d like to fill your Personal Productive Time (PPT).

Let’s say you have these eight items. (My own list is much longer than eight, but this is just as an example.)

  • Read (non-fiction)

  • Read (fiction)

  • Learn Photoshop

  • Yoga

  • Practice Magic

  • Practice Guitar

  • Clean and organize around the house.

  • Build Model Rockets

Step Two

Assign everything on the list a rating on a scale of 1-5 in order of importance. By “importance” I mean how much you feel this activity will be beneficial to you and your future self, either personally or professionally. For some of you, practicing magic would be a FIVE, because you either want to perform professionally or release your own magic effects or just make it something you excel. For others, practicing magic might just be a ONE. It’s something fun and you like to show people the occasional trick and you want to keep your skills up, but it’s not a big part of your life.

So let’s say the list looks like this now:

  • Read (non-fiction) - FOUR

  • Read (fiction) - THREE

  • Learn Photoshop - THREE

  • Yoga - TWO

  • Practice Magic - FIVE

  • Practice Guitar - THREE

  • Clean and organize around the house. - THREE

  • Build Model Rockets - ONE

Step Three

In your mind, break up the activities on your list into approximately 30 minute sessions. (I try not to go under 15 minutes and not more than an hour.) Most of the things on the list above could be easily done for 30 minutes and then stopped. So you could just use a 30 minute timer. But some activities you might want to break up in another way. For example, “Learn Photoshop.” You might decide to go chapter-by-chapter through a book. So instead of a session being “learn photoshop for 30 minutes,” it might be, “go through one chapters worth of exercises in the photoshop book.”

So now you have a list of activities and a way to break up those activities into 20-60 minute sessions.

Step Four

Open up an Excel or Google spreadsheet. (If you’re like, “I don’t have access to that.” Yes you do. Open a Gmail account and you have access to their spreadsheets.)

In a column on the spreadsheet list the activities that make up your Personal Productive Time.

But don’t just list them once. List them once for each level you ranked them by importance. What I mean is, if “practicing guitar” is a THREE, then you’d list “practicing guitar” three times.

So you’ll have a list that looks like this:

Screen Shot 2020-06-06 at 5.22.45 PM.png

This is your Master List.

Step Five

Copy that list over into a new tab on your spreadsheet. Fill in the cells with a black background so you can’t read what’s in the cell. Select that column and then select “Randomize Range.” (On Google Sheets you just right-click and it’s an option. I don’t know if it’s the same in Excel.)

This is your Working List of all the productive personal activities you want to devote some time to, weighted by importance and in an unknown, random order.

Step Six

Now let’s say it’s Sunday and you’ve set aside the hours of 1-5pm for some Productive Personal Time. Go to the spreadsheet. Open up the Working List. Go to the first box. Remove the black fill so you can read what it says and then go do one “session” (as identified in Step Three) of whatever the activity is. When you’re done, delete that entry and then go to the next item on the list. Reveal that task and complete it. Then just keep doing that over and over for the four hours you set aside.

I call this The Ladder because, like a ladder, there are no choices to make—no different paths to take—you just take it step by step and do whatever is next.

Maybe on Monday you only have an hour for Personal Productive Time. So you come back to your Working List and pick up where you left off.

You keep coming back, day by day, in the time you’ve set aside for this, until you’ve completed everything on the Working List.

Step Seven

Once you’ve gone through your Working List, go back to your Master List and reassess. Do you want to add or remove any of the items on your list? Do you want to change their priority rating? Do so now.

You can also add one-off, non-pressing tasks to the list. If you have to put up a shelf in your bedroom, but it doesn’t really matter when you get to it, just toss it on the list and let fate decide when it happens.

Copy your reassessed Master List over to where you keep your Working List, black out and randomize the list, and start over again.

Cycle through, reassess, cycle through, reassess, until the day you die. That’s it.

For me it’s just the right combination of structure and randomness.

If you feel you need to, you can weigh things beyond just a scale of 1-5. The upper limit can be whatever you want.

Some might find this too regimented. But keep in mind that it’s regimented by you, based on the things you want to do and the way in which you prioritized them. So who cares if it’s regimented?

If you can just instinctively manage your personal time in a way that keeps you productive in the areas you want to be, then obviously you don’t need such a system. I’m not that way naturally. If I had four hours to devote to productive activities with no system in place, I would spend a lot of time just dawdling and delaying and trying to decide what to do next and how long to do it for and that sort of thing.

This system allows me to just bang out one thing after the other without giving it any thought and I automatically am focusing on the things I want to with the right amount of time and energy.

So there you have—in two posts—the basis of one of the productivity systems I use. First, I separate my personal time into productive time and unstructured. Second, I use The Ladder to systemize my productive personal time.

Climb the Ladder… to Success!

giphy.gif



The Juxe: How To Find New Music

For this being a magic blog, the Saturday music posts have received a weirdly solid response. I started them with, like, three readers in mind. But each post gets a similar amount of feedback to the magic posts, so I’m glad that more people are enjoying them than I expected. Of course, I’m sure many more are not into them at all. But that’s okay. My taste is a bit all over the map and doesn’t tend towards artists or even genres that are wildly popular. And that’s why I put the posts on a designated day. If it’s not your scene, you can easily avoid them.

One question I get a lot is how to find new music—how to hear about new bands, especially less mainstream ones.

I’m in a bit of an unusual position in that regard. I hosted a radio show in college and from there went on to do freelance writing and promotional work with a number of different indie record labels and music publications. So I don’t need to actively seek out a lot of new stuff. Much of it comes to me directly from artists/labels I’ve worked with in the past.

But I do have some recommendations on how to track down music that will appeal to you.

The easiest (although not most effective) way is thru Apple Music. If you have an Apple music account, they give you a new playlist every week that’s based on the other artists you listen to. It’s 25 songs long. (Go to “For You” and then “New Music Mix.”) I usually end up adding 2-5 songs to my permanent playlist each week from the new music playlist.

The more productive ways are to start with one band you like and branch out from there.

There are a number of websites that will find similar artists for you. Some are pretty good, some aren’t. The one I think works best is Musicroamer.com. You enter in a band name, they give you a bunch of similar artists. And from those artists you can move further outward and so on.

Screen Shot 2020-06-05 at 2.25.52 PM.png

If you find yourself getting into really obscure stuff, then below are the best ways I’ve found to find similar artists once you’ve identified one you really like.

See Who They’ve Toured With - Smaller bands generally tour with groups that complement their style.

Find Other People Who Like Them and Who Are Writing About Music - Take your favorite album from last year and then do this google search: “[Album Name]” “[Artist Name]” “Best of” 2019. This will lead you to other music reviewers/music bloggers who also thought that was one of the best albums of the year. Take a look at what else is on their list and you’ll often find other areas where your tastes align.

See What Label They’re On - Smaller labels frequently have bands with a similar esthetic. For example, one of my favorite bands I’ve mentioned here in the past is Gloria. After stumbling on them I found their label, Howlin’ Banana Records, out of St-Denis, France and found a bunch of other cool bands out of France in the “garage rock, indie pop and psych” genre.

Of course, once you’ve identified new music you need to make time in your day to listen to it in order to process it and see if it’s something you want to add to your permanent collection. I have a system for that too, but it’s way too convoluted. I’d recommend just making a new playlist and dumping your new music into it. Listen to it on shuffle when you can. Once a song has 3-5 plays, then you can decide whether to delete or migrate it into your long-term playlist.

New music is good for you. It keeps you young.

peanuts4.jpg

The Greatest Magic Advice in the History of the Art

Yes!

Fuck yes!!!!!

Finally somebody is saying it. Finally someone has the balls to say it.

That first fan looked like disgusting hot dog-shit.

The second one was a stunning display of refined beauty, like the wings of an angel gently unfurling under the shimmering radiance of a full moon.

Any questions?

Look… he’s right. He’s so god-damned right. Some of you are just too afraid to admit it.

Let me reiterate it for those of you too dense to open your ears when faced with THE TRUTH.

What 👏people 👏want 👏from 👏magic👏 is 👏to👏watch 👏you 👏spread 👏every 👏single👏card 👏equally👏.

That’s it, baby. Everything else is superfluous.

The Surprise Fizzle

Today I’m going to share something you hardly ever see captured on camera.

Last year around this time I did a seven part series about concepts I use to generate the strongest possible magic.

In the first of those posts I introduced the idea of “Contrecoup Astonishment.” That is, the residual astonishment that is there after the spectator has had a moment to absorb the initial surprise.

I also talked about a spectator’s response to a trick going through three phases.

Surprise: Immediately after the climax of the trick.

Astonishment: If they’re still fooled after they’ve had a moment to process the initial surprise.

Mystery: If the astonishment doesn’t dissipate over time because there are no solutions to be found. Mystery isn’t an immediate feeling, it builds in the long-term when the spectator can uncover no satisfying answer for what they saw.

Think of an averagely executed french drop. There may be a moment of surprise when you open your hand to show there is no coin, but within seconds the audience will often focus on the dirty hand that holds the coin and realize that’s where it must be. The surprise doesn’t turn into astonishment.

Now think of the recently released Metal Phone trick. A card penetrates through a phone which turns out to be a solid block of metal. That will generate surprise. Without any immediate “easy answers” that surprise may morph into astonishment. But in the long-term, it can’t become a true mystery because when the spectator googles the only possible thing they could google after seeing that trick—metal phone magic—it leads them directly to where they can buy the trick. Mystery eliminated. I’m not suggesting they would buy the trick to find out the secret, but knowing they could buy the trick to figure out the secret is enough to destroy the mystery.

(And as I said in the last newsletter: “Yes, with certain effects you can get your audience to be so charmed that they won’t want to spoil the magic [buy googling it]. But, ‘I can shove a credit card through my metal phone,’ is not the sort of premise that is going to charm anyone.” That’s strictly puzzle magic. And what you don’t want is a puzzle magic trick that can be uncovered with the most obvious google search.)

But let’s go back to the initial response to an effect. The path from Surprise to Astonishment. Today I want to show you a video of the most pure example of a trick failing to make that leap. You will see the Surprise hit hard, and then you will see it fizzle out in the moments right after the trick. You rarely see this captured on film, because most people recording a performance of magic would cut it after the initial strong reaction.

This comes from Justin Flom’s Magic Mixtape, which I’ve mentioned in the past.

Here we see him vanish a coin for his daughter. Look at the Surprise on her face.

5SecondsApp_612925744.561307.gif

If this was a demo for a magic product, that is where they would cut the clip. And magicians would be fooled. “Hey, this gets great reactions. I need to get it.”

It’s not just an issue with demo videos. A lot of magicians—even when performing a trick themselves—block out anything after the initial moment of surprise. If a trick gets a gasp, they’ll ignore the spectator’s reaction seconds later. It’s a form of self-preservation because often the spectator’s demeanor towards an effect is significantly diminished within moments.

But to create really strong magic, it’s those moments after the Surprise that you need to pay attention to.

Often, the way it plays out is like this:

5SecondsApp_612925829.613639.gif

Now, with any luck, Justin spanked her very hard and she learned a lesson about respecting Daddy and his magic tricks.

But for the rest of us—a lot of the time—we don’t have the luxury to be able to spank our spectators to get them in line. And with an adult, the way surprise fizzles is usually much more subtle. They probably won’t just reach over and expose your trick like some naughty little girl. They’re more likely to just give you an initial “Wow,” and then relatively quickly they’ll switch their focus to something else. That’s why it’s important to not tune out and be satisfied with the “wow.” Instead, watch to see if the reaction lingers.

A couple years back I was dating this girl. She liked to see tricks, but even more-so she liked to watch me perform for others and watch their reactions. She worked in theater/performing so she had a good eye for that sort of thing and I would ask for her input from time to time. She once said something like, “I can tell which tricks are are the strongest by how people are reacting 30 seconds after the trick.” Meaning, that first moment of surprise doesn’t tell you too much. It’s only when you get a sense that the surprise has taken root that you get a real feel for how the trick will impact them.

With the exception of quick, off-hand visual moments of magic, the rule I use now is this: If I don’t get the sense that they’re still processing the trick a minute after I show it to them, then it either didn’t fool them or didn’t interest them (or both), and it needs to be worked on or discarded.

Check out the posts from last year—June 24th to July 8th—if you want to delve deeper into exactly how I suggest you construct a trick and presentation in a way to make that moment of surprise last long enough to transform into Astonishment and, eventually, Mystery.