The Killer BrrrAPP!

Continuing yesterday's discussion about magic with cellphones, I need someone to build an app for me. 

For a couple years now when someone asks me what I do for a living, and I really don't feel like getting into specifics, I've been saying, "I'm working on an iphone app." And when they ask what the app does I say, "You can fart into your phone and it tells you what you had for breakfast." 

Can someone build this for me already or what?

I mean, I get that the technology isn't really there, but we could fake it easily enough. All you would have to do is know what your friend had for breakfast and punch it into the app at some point in the day without him knowing. Then when he has a fart brewed up you tell him to fart into the phone and the app acts like it's running some calculations:

beepbopboopbeepbeepbopboopbeepbop -- DING!

Eggs Benedict

And the app would be called something like, "My Breakfart App: Test Version 1.6." And you could personalize it with your name and stuff and tell people you built the app yourself. And maybe you could convince 1 out of 10 people that Apple had put some kind of sensor in iphones so that they can be used to detect carbon dioxide or smoke in the air. And you're just harnessing that sensor and using it to break down the gas produced in a fart to its food components.  You have some dumb friends. They would believe that.

Oh, and the app records the sound of the fart. So you have this app that's filled with all your friend's farts. And you can assign them as ringtones. So when your friend calls you, you hear his ass like pthhhflllbbbbbbbbb.

Cell Phone Magic

I know what you're thinking. The real magic would be if I could get one of these darned things to make a phone call! Hahahah, oh you rascal, you are bad

Sorry, I'm high... on life! (and copier toner)

I don't want to sound like Old Man Willoughby, but when I was writing my first site, magic with cell phones was barely a thing. It's easy for me to forget how things have changed. But we were a couple of years from the first iphone. Facebook didn't exist. Twitter didn't exist. Or netflix. In my day a mousepad was what you gave your mouse when it was menstruating. Flash mobs were called gang rapes. Black presidents were the stuff of scary science fiction. Mirrors were for rich people; we styled our hair by looking at our shadow. We didn't even think of ourselves as "single-celled" organisms, because what else was there?

Anyway, there are a few different ways people have incorporated phones into magic;

Physically altering the phone itself - There are effects where you move the logo, or twist the phone in half, or cause it to become clear. These all look pretty cool, but they're usually tied to a specific version of a specific type of phone, and by the time these gimmicks are ready to be released, that phone is on the way out. So I've never purchased one of these tricks. I can't imagine very many people do and they seem to have faded from the marketplace in the past couple of years.

App-based magic - There are so many magic apps or effects that utilize a quirk of the OS as part of the method. I'm very open to the idea of these and have spent 100s of dollars on them but haven't really fallen in love with any of them so far. I'm not one of those people who thinks people are automatically suspect of any trick done with a phone, but I just generally tend to get stronger reactions on things where technology is never brought into the equation in the spectators mind. 

You really need to find a sweet-spot when performing this kind of app magic. If your spectator is too technologically savvy they will be hip to things like voice recognition and accelerometers, or they will recognize inconsistencies in fake screens that are meant to replicate real screens on an iphone, for instance. But at the same time, if they don't have a grasp on technology at all, then everything about the phone is kind of amazing, and everything you do with it just gets lumped into "here's another thing he did with this technology that I don't understand." When you can point your phone at an airplane in the sky and get all the flight details about it, that can feel as amazing to someone as what a lot of these apps do. It would be like if I brought you into a quantum physics laboratory and I did "tricks" where I made hydrogen atoms vanish, appear, or change color, you would be like "All of this is crazy to me, so I don't even know which things I'm supposed to find particularly amazing."

But while I don't have a ton of enthusiasm about those uses of cell phones in magic, I do use mine quite frequently, but in a few different manners, one of which I want to go into detail on today.

One of my favorite ways of using my iphone is to record video of a non-magical interaction with someone that then becomes magical only when they watch it back on video. It's dual reality, but not the shitty kind between an audience and a lone spectator -- where if they compare "realities" the effect is ruined. This a dual reality between a spectator and a camera. Where the comparison of those realities is the effect.

Let me try to explain. Earlier this year I invited a friend over for the evening. I wanted to perform something that had the feel of the finale of a Derren Brown theater show, but do so in a one-on-one situation. I will try to explain it but there is one extra perspective you need to keep in mind. Normally you have the spectator's perception of what happened and what actually happened. In this case you're going to have the spectator's perception of what happened, what actually happened, and the camera's perspective of what happened.

So let me break down each of these three areas, then I'll tell you how I incorporated that into the full performance, and then I'll tell you what I do with these videos which is to me the really good secret. So first...

Her Perspective: We're sitting on the couch together. I have my camera out and I'm recording this interaction. I ask her to close her eyes and turn the other way. As her eyes are closed she hears me say that I'm writing a word on the card case. I'm writing the word very big and clear in all capital letters. She hears me narrating to the camera that this is the word I'm about to show her. I ask her to turn towards me and open her eyes and read to herself the word written on the cardbox. She reads the word, and as I said it's very clear in big capital letters, and it reads "LINGER." 

It's important to reiterate that from her perspective, nothing magical has happened.

The Camera's Perspective: On the video you see my friend cover her eyes and turn away. Then it goes down to the cardbox and you hear me talk about writing a word on the box, but I'm clearly moving the marker several inches above it and not writing anything. You hear me say, "Let me just darken this a little," but I'm not even writing. I'm spinning the marker around my thumb. I hold up the box to the camera and say, "This is the word I'm about to show her," but there's nothing written there. I turn the box towards her, she opens her eyes, and I aks her to read the word on the box. I ask her if it's clear and if she has the word locked in her mind. She says she does and turns away again. The box is turned back towards the camera and it's clear again that nothing is written on the box.

My Perspective: I bought the effect Offset, and set the box up so the word Linger would appear. Then I just made it show up when I turned the box towards her and made it disappear when I turned the box towards the camera. She doesn't see the effect and the camera doesn't see the effect. It's just a way of establishing two different realities. 

Putting it all together: We had been together for a few hours. Mainly just talking and hanging out, but I'd performed some tricks for her and some games/experiments, all part of "something I'm working on." The people I spend time with are used to indulging me in these sorts of things. Later in the evening I said I wanted to try one last thing. I took out my iphone and said I wanted to record this just to make sure it works. And then I recorded the interaction above. She closes her eyes, I "write a word," she looks at it. A non-incident.

When the camera is shut off I say, "What word did you see?"

She says, "Linger."

"Hmmm... interesting."

She scrunches her eyes at me accusingly, "What. What was that all about?"

"Look," I say, "Don't get mad. Would you believe me if I told you I never wrote a word on that box? That what you saw was in your mind and that you saw the word because you expected a word to be there? I know it sounds crazy. But since we met I could tell you were super-perceptive and I just kind of wanted to test that and see if I could get you to pick up on a word or concept without ever explicitly telling you to think of it."

She doesn't believe me. 

"Let's watch the video," I say.

We watch it and it clearly shows me not writing anything on the cardcase and showing her a blank box.

"What the fuck," she says. "Send me that video." After a moment she asks, "Wait, but why did I say linger?"

I then go on to show her:

  1. My email from a week before where the first letter of each sentence spells that word.

  2. My text from that morning that ends with that word.

  3. The lingerie catalog on my coffee-table with the folded over cover so it says, Linger-.

  4. The song that was playing when she came into my apartment, Linger by the Cranberries.

  5. How that nonsense phrase I asked her to record when played backwards says, "I'll see linger." (Joshua Quinn)

  6. How that random number we generated, when read upside-down reads "Linger." (Haim Goldenberg)

  7. And a few other places where that word was hidden in the environment or in one of the activities we engaged in earlier in the night.

The idea is, of course, that I've inserted this word into all these areas making it somehow psychologically attractive to her and that when I then show her the blank card case and strongly imply she'll see a word there, she will then manifest this word that's on the tip of her brain. Or something like that.

However she interprets it, she ends up rather stunned and won't ever be able to hear that word again without linking it to that night.

The Follow-Up:

I don't actually use the above routine anymore. It falls too much on the line of almost believable for some people. And I'm continuing to enjoy more presenting things that are clearly unbelievable. But I have about half a dozen other camera-dual-reality routines I am doing these days and they are a ton of fun to perform. But my favorite element of them is this follow-up that I do 4 or 5 days after the performance. 

People always want a copy of the video, which I text them immediately. Then a few days later I send them another copy of the video. This time with some simple iphone editing and music added, usually with the original audio cut out. Why? Because I want to recontextualize the video. The purpose of the original video is "proof." Proof that they were fooled, or that something strange happened, or whatever. It's proof first, and then something of a souvenir second. By stripping out some elements and adding others the video is now not intended to be a document of a specific moment, but more about the memory of what was hopefully a fun and pleasant experience for that person. It becomes a memento first but still carries with it the association to whatever strange experience you shared with them.

A Thought Experiment

Let's imagine the greatest stage manipulator in the world, Cardoni, is performing a show. (I'm using stage manipulation as an easy example, but the point will hold true for close-up, mentalism, whatever.) In the audience are Charles and Lynn, two very intelligent and perceptive spectators.

Two Scenarios:

Scenario One

Cardoni stands at the foot of the stage. "Ladies and Gentleman, what you see tonight is all real. I was gifted by the universe with the power to manipulate an object's reality. Tonight you will see objects appear, change, and disappear through no other means than magic. Please open your minds to experience true wonder."

He then commences his stage manipulation routine. It is flawless. As he is making cards appear and disappear, grow and diminish, he turns to the audience and says, "Just a reminder, this is all accomplished by the power of real Magic."

Lynn turns to Charles and whispers, "Yeah, right. I think he's hiding the cards behind his hand somehow."

Scenario Two

Cardoni stands at the foot of the stage. "Ladies and Gentleman, what you see tonight is a kind of juggling. But instead of just trying to keep objects in the air, this type of juggling is meant to fool your eye. I will manipulate the objects in such a way that they will seem to appear, change, and disappear as if by magic. I hope you appreciate the illusion created by this style of juggling."

He then commences his stage manipulation routine. It is flawless. As he is making cards appear and disappear, grow and diminish, he turns to the audience and says, "Just a reminder, this is all just a clever juggling trick."

Lynn turns to Charles and whispers, "But it seems so real!"


If your goal is to create intrigue and amazement with your performance, there is a good chance the approach you've been using is completely backwards.

Li'l Andy is Back!

Those of you who were readers in the MCJ days might remember my 3-year-old son, Li'l Andy, who would take over the writing of that blog when I was too busy. Yes, much like when Billy fills in for his father on the Family Circus.

Well, Li'l Andy is somehow still three, and he's giving me the day off as a father's day gift, the little sweetheart. Enjoy his comically skewed take on magic.

Li'l Andy's Da Jurx

Waddup mommyfukkers///// oops dats not a qwestyin mark. me forgot to hit shift key. Is yu reddy for my comeggly skewd take on magic? 

Red Mint - Me think this trik is byootiful. But whut is last line of instruggshins? "Run as fast as yu can da udder way"? Becuz dont peeple just say "lemme see that"? Dats wut I wood say. Dats wut my frends wood say. Peeple who make triks no have frends?

Joshewa Jay - Get well sewn!! Joshewa is grate guy, frend of dis site, and he also rote da best introduckery magic book prety much ever. Hope his hand heel sewn. Espeshally sinse he had devestating hand injery a fyew yeers ago. But me think he will be bak shufflin aggen soon. Becuz he no take da hint. God obbyously wants you to take up a more cereebral, less dextarity-centric hobby joshewa! Feel free to ignor his wornings but expect a thresher agsident in 2016.

Maverik - Get reddy to be disapointed!!! Rus Andrews is cuming owt wid a new trik. If yu tink it will look anyting like it duz in da youtoob vid, yu dummer than I thot. Yu shood famillyerize yorself with changeling fiasko. Rus no like fooling spectaters. Rus like fooling magishins. He been lying to magishins sinse I was a tikkle in my daddys underpants. No way dis demo looks like da reel effect. Rus will say it looks like what da spectater remembers. But troof is he not the tipe of performer spectaters remember at all. 

Bye!!!!

 

An Open Letter to Steve Brooks

Dear Steve,

What up, Boo?

I understand yesterday's post created a bit of a stir in the Magic Cafe's private forum for staff members. I think now would be a good time to define the nature of our relationship before we get off to a bad start like we did all those years ago. I don't think your reaction to this site should be "how do we shut it down?" or, "what can we sue him for?" like it has been in the past. Instead I think you should try to enjoy this site. Find the humor in it. Recognize that your site is the "establishment" in the online magic world, and there is always going to be someone poking fun at the establishment. But if Obama decided to try and take down MAD magazine, you'd think that was moronic, right? I know you're thinking, "But Andy, you're not MAD magazine. You're the voice of a generation, a tastemaker, and a trendsetter." And hmmm... yes, I guess that's all true. But that doesn't change the fact that getting worked up about someone making jokes about you is ultimately not flattering for you.

Under different circumstances, I bet we would be friends. That's a joke, of course. But I truly don't have ill will towards you. There were things you did in the past that I found pretty sketchy, and I delighted in busting you on them, but you never raised my blood pressure in the slightest. That may bum out some of the people who liked my old site to know that I was never really worked up about anything, but tough tits. I was writing a comedy site, not a magic justice site. I recognize some of the stuff I wrote got people, including yourself, to re-examine some of the things they were saying and doing, but that's not why I was doing it. I just like dicking around and making jokes, or coming up with dumb ideas, or coming up with interesting ideas.

So maybe I make too many fat jokes, or suggest you probably don't smell all that pleasant, or that you make poor sartorial choices, or that you're hair is a mess, or that you're likely an unsatisfying lover. These are all just jokes. It's fun to paint you as a bumbling doofus, but really: I don't care what anybody weighs, you don't necessarily smell, it doesn't matter to me what you wear or how your hair looks, and I'm sure you fuck like a machine. You have to understand, I come from a group of friends where, whenever we reach a milestone birthday like 30 or 40, we all get together and roast each other in front of a hundred people. And the shit I say about you would be the tamest of the remarks someone might say on one of those nights. So I just come from a universe where people don't get worked up by these sorts of things. 

And if I say something that you just find too offensive, just write me and ask me to take it down. I will. I'm not looking to hurt people's feelings. I don't have feelings of my own, but I have too many mirror neurons. You could put me onstage in front of 500 people with nothing prepared, and I would happily try and keep them entertained for as long as you asked without even a bead of sweat. But if I have to watch a youtube video of one-person fumbling through a speech in front of an audience of 10 I will practically crawl up into my own asshole to get away. So I will continue to take you to task if I feel you're doing something shady, but if I say something that upsets you on a personal level just let me know. I don't really think that's an issue for you, I'm just making the offer. I think you have pretty thick skin. Like really thick. (Ahhhh!!! I can't help myself. To be fair, while it's true you could shed a few pounds, compared to most middle-aged magicians you're practically Dolph Lundgren.)

I'm not asking for a truce. You will still often be my muse, and the butt of my jokes. I'm just recommending you roll with it and put things in perspective. I'm not suggesting you do this for my benefit. Do it for yours. What's the alternative? You could try and find ways to shut this site down, and you could delete any references to it that pop up on your site, and ban anyone who mentions it. You could make it very antagonistic and give me a reason to really go after you and start targeting your advertisers. That would be fine by me, I have nothing to lose, you'd just be giving me more things to write about. But I don't need the ammunition, I already have more ideas than I know what to do with for this site. And you would just be preventing me from doing something we both appreciate: making fun of the dummies on your site.

So consider that. Have a good weekend. 

True love always,

Andy

PS - Can I join the Cafe Staff? I would like to have the job of responding to people who complain about the ads they get in their PMs. Do they write the newspaper too to complain about ads? "Dear USA Today, I write you today with great consternation about what I originally thought was a news story about Kraft Macaroni and Cheese...." I think what happens is they see they have a PM and they think, "A friend! I have a friend!" And then it's just from you and they get all bummed out. 

PPS - I would like to buy every banner ad on your site for July. How much would this be? I am serious.

Magic Cafe: The Movie - Casting is Complete!

Great news! The casting is complete for the Magic Cafe film. You'll remember when last we spoke about this a couple of weeks ago I was trying to cast the actors who would play the Cafe staff of 2003. Well, we put out offers to 31 actors and got our first choice with ALL of them. Hollywood is going gaga over this film and everyone wants to be a part of it, even though many of the actors had to agree to less pay than they would normally receive and to engage in unsimulated sex on screen. It just wasn't an issue with them. They know to tell the story we're going to have to go for an NC-17. How else would we be able to portray the bacchanalian orgies of grammar hosts and the sick sexual rituals that the Cafe was founded on?

Thanks to everyone who participated in the EVP contest. And congratulations to Jordan Gold who won the contest and also had six of his suggestions make it to the final cast list.

Below you can scroll through the cast that will bring this truly "magical" story to life.


 

Presentation: The Perverted Pre-Adolescent Word Reveal

My hobby is coming up with ways to reveal a thought of word. I used to have a long subway commute and whenever my phone would die and I didn't have a book on me, I would fill my time by trying to come up with one interesting way to reveal a word before I got to my stop. 

I know what you're thinking:

Andy, I have a few different ways I like to reveal a thought of word. One is, I write it on a clipboard. But occasionally, for an older audience, I'll bust out a chalkboard. But when I'm performing at a bar, I write that shit straight-up on a whiteboard, my man! [hold for high-five]

Believe it or not, I'm not just talking about what surface you write the thought of word on. Or if you say it out loud. Or if you reveal it letter by letter. I'm talking more about the context in which the word is revealed. 

"I'm a mindreader." Is the usual context. And that's fine and all, but not really my style. So I end up revealing words by interpreting people speaking in tongues, dog whispering, phrenology, or whatever. Most of these things aren't appropriate for walk-around. But I don't do walk around. I do sit still.

This presentation that follows is one I used last night that went over very well.

It's very long. But I was with someone who liked to talk and tell stories herself, so it made sense in that context. I'm not expecting you to adopt my style of presentation, and even if you do, I'm not writing out these ideas thinking you'll use them verbatim. There is a 30-second version of this presentation too, but that's up to you to figure out. No matter what your style there are ideas to be plucked here.

This is based very loosely on a real kid I used to know and a real obsession he had.

The Passion of Donny Ackerman

"Did you have a weird kid in your school when you were like 10 or 11? Like not just a poor kid, although that can factor into it, but like a true weirdo? Do you remember their name? Ok, hold onto that in your mind for a little bit while I tell you a story."

"When I was about 11, this kid moved to my neighborhood named Donny Ackerman. He was a booger eater of the first degree. Old clothes, bad haircut, and just a weird dude all around. But he was entirely unselfconscious about it. He was loud and obnoxious and hyper. I don't believe he was dumb, but he was definitely a bad student."

"But Donny's true passion was for boobies. Only a couple of girls in our class had anything worth mentioning at that time, but Donny was captivated by those who did. And he would make no secret of undressing any woman in the vicinity with his eyes. If a teacher came in with a shirt that was even slightly low-cut he would hop all over the room, practically drooling."

"One hot summer morning I was walking around the neighborhood kicking a rock around. Which is the type of thing you did in that day. And there was Donny at the foot of his driveway bouncing a basketball. I asked him if he wanted to go into the woods near our development and look at the rabbit (someone had killed a rabbit and hung it from a tree and we watched it rot throughout that summer.) He told me he'd been grounded for peeping in windows and couldn't leave his property. 'I want to stick around here today anyways,' he said, 'I'm working on something big."

"A couple days later I saw him out in front of his house again. He had this big grin on his face and he asked me to come in. I agreed even though I had never been in his place before, nor had anyone I knew. When I got inside there was a musty smell and I noticed a few things in his house that my family had sold in a garage sale earlier that summer and that made me feel strange and sad for him."

"He told me he had a trick to show me and gave me a quarter to hold in my fist. He sat there just breathing for a moment and then I felt a tickle on the back of my hand. A moment later he inhaled sharply and said, 'Open your hand.' When I did the coin was gone. It was amazing. And I knew enough about magic to know this wasn't like any normal magic trick. I begged him to tell me how he did it, and that's when things got weird."

"What Donny told me was that the coin hadn't disappeared. He told me he had just paused time, and while it was paused he had opened my hand, removed the coin, and put it in his pocket. Then he started time back up again. It was an absolutely insane explanation, but there was something about his demeanor that made it seem believable. He asked me if I'd felt a tickle or an itch on my hand right when it disappeared and I admitted that I did. He told me that's like the leftover vibration of being touched when time is stopped. Imagine that. Someone could stop time, manipulate your body in some way, start time back up and the only hint you have is a slight tickle."

"The fucked up thing is that I believed him. I bought into it 100% and I asked him to teach me. The way he described it was like a meditation technique and I didn't fully grasp it. He would slow his breathing in this specific way and kind of push himself into a moment. It was hard to put into words. He hadn't perfected the skill yet, but he could do it every now and again and stay in that moment for a few minutes before he'd get pulled out. I tried to follow his instructions, and while there were times it felt like time was slowing, I could never get it to stop for me like he claimed it did for him."

"After a while I had to go home, but before I left he told me of his plan. He said he was going to master this skill and when he did he was going to use it to see all the boobies he could. He would stop time and look down women's shirts, poke their boobs with his finger, lay his head on them. He was shaking with excitement. And that kind of broke the spell for me, because now it just seemed like I was back with that weird kid again."

"The next and last time I saw him was a couple weeks later. He looked wilder than ever. I was walking past his house and he ran over to me saying, "I figured it out! I figured it out!" And then he did this hopping run back to his house. I'm not sure if he intended me to follow him. But I didn't, and I'm glad I didn't."

"Two days later his mom reported him missing. At first some people said he ran away, but none of his stuff was gone. There was a rumor that went around the kids in the neighborhood that whoever had killed that rabbit that hung in the woods had killed Donny, and eventually we'd find him hanging there too. But I was one of the 100s of volunteers who combed those woods, and we didn't find anything." 

"What I soon began to believe was that Donny really had somehow figured it out. And that he hadn't just stepped into a moment temporarily but that he was now living in this other world, and skipping from moment to moment, living out his fantasies."

"You might think that's just the rationalization or faulty memory of an 11-year-old who was maybe just fooled by a coin trick, and then had a friend go missing and chose to believe something fantastic rather than whatever the dark reality was. And I would likely agree with you except for two things."

"The first is this. If you read The Encyclopedia of Extraordinary Social Behavior by Hilary Evans, you will find an entry about an incident that took place one year in the late 80s, during the waning summer months in a suburban area of upstate New York. It started with a handful of young girls, but spread to women all over the area up to the age of 45. It was a tingling/tickling sensation in their breasts. Much like the one I had felt in my hand when he had taken the coin from me. Eventually it was labelled an incident of mass hysteria, but it is completely unique in that branch of psychology because, and I'm quoting the book here, it 'only seemed to affect women with ample and/or shapely breasts.'"

"Now, I suppose that could just be some wild coincidence. But I said there was two reasons I know this isn't just some misremembered moment from my youth. And the second reason is this..."

[I place my hand on her shoulder.]

"I can do it now too."

"I'll show you. I mean, I'll try. I don't really have it down. The first time it happened to me I had a 103 degree fever and I was kind of swimming around in my head and at one point I realized my dog was frozen in time and so was everything else around me. Once I had done it by accident I kind of understood what I was going for, and I've been able to do it a few times since on purpose. We'll see if it works. I think there's a good chance it will work. Maybe this is all in my head, but I tend to have better luck when I'm around someone... well... let's just say that you cut a silhouette that Donny would have admired."

"Here, write down the name of the weird kid you were thinking of earlier. Fold it up and hold it tight in your hand and hold that hand in front of you like this. Okay, now look in my eyes. Can you see my hands in your peripheral vision? They're going to be near your hand, but I want you make sure they don't move at all or touch you. Okay, sit up straight, keep your eyes on mine. Try to be aware of any sensations. Ok... I'll be right back."

[ I stare in her eyes, settle my breathing, and then do what I can only describe as a slow motion blink and exhale. At that moment she feels a tickling sensation down her hand. Her eyes open wide and she says, "What the fuuuuccccccckkkkkkkkkkk."]

"Did you feel it?" I ask, laughing. "What did it feel like. A moment? A couple of seconds? I don't really remember what it's like to be on the other end."

"Okay, here's what happened. I paused time, got up, stretched my legs, went to the kitchen, made a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, came back here, took your hand, opened it, took out the paper, read the name, folded the paper back up, and folded your hand back around it. And that's pretty much all I did"

"I realize it's unbelievable, but you've held that name tight in your hand, and now I know what it is. You're going to try and make sense of this and wonder if maybe you mentioned this name in the past, or think maybe I called your sister and asked her the weird kid's name in your neighborhood or something, that's not the case. Look at me. I stopped time, I opened your hand, I read that paper. And I can prove it. You wrote this girl's name with a loop in the bottom of the last letter and you didn't close the middle letter completely. Her name is Joy."

["Oh...my...gaaaawwwwwwwwwdddddd," she says, throwing back her head back and pounding her feet on the floor. She opens up the paper and looks at the name. When she looks back at me I am holding a paper plate with a PB&J sandwich on it. I pick up the sandwich to take a bite, but before I do I lean in close to her and whisper...]

"I have to be honest. I took a peek. Your breasts are phenomenal."

Method:

  • A loop
  • A peek
  • A sandwich hidden under a newspaper on the end table at my end of the couch.

Notes:

1. So far I've only performed this twice. The difference the first time was that the card with the person's name on it ended up folded inside-out when she opened her hand and "Your breasts are phenomenal," was written on the opposite side. This all served as more evidence of "things I had done while I stopped time." But I think it was too much. The more beats you have, the more evidence you give, the more it feels like a "routine" or that you're trying to prove something. But it definitely can be done that way (although the handling is more complicated.) For me the three "proofs" in this version are perfect. They feel something magical. They have evidence of something having happened (you know the name when you theoretically couldn't). And the sandwich is like an absurd punchline. That's perfect for me.

2. In actual performance it was less of a monologue than it appears here, but it was long enough already and I didn't want to make it more so by incorporating her interjections.

3. Yes, I really do perform these tricks in these ways. Some of the response I received from Presentation Week seemed to imply that maybe they thought I was just spouting a theory on how one maybe could perform, and how that might go. But that's not the case. I legit perform like this. It's not for everyone. And I'm fortunate to have friends who are interested and willing to play and engage in this type of thing. But more people are up for it than you think. I've spun this type of nonsense for investment bankers and street thugs as well. It plays. Some people just need to be eased into it more.

4. And yes, I really did say that last line. The great thing about amateur/informal magic is you should be able to push the envelope a little, since you know who you're performing for and how they are likely to react. If you come off as a creep in real life, then no, you can't use lines like that. But if you're a normal, fun guy, and you're performing for a fun, flirty chick (in this instance) then you'll have no problem. In this particular case she responded to that line by putting her hand on mine and coyly saying, "You didn't need to stop time to see evidence of that."