The Sad End to the Unnamed Magician Saga
/So here's how this played out.
A month or so ago, an announcement was put on the Magic Cafe for the Ultimate Open Prediction.
Now, there were a number of clues that what was being offered was being wildly mischaracterized at best and completely fabricated at worst.
Some people seem to think I was calling the trick fake just because I couldn't figure it out. Guys… I can't figure most shit out. Do you see me here calling other tricks fake in the 11-year history of the site?
No. There were obvious tells in the write-up that the trick wasn't legitimate, and that's why I called it out.
It was at that point I made my $20,000 offer for the rights to sell the first 200 copies of the effect. Did I want to have to pay out on that? Honestly, yes. I would have been happy to. I would have been happy to be wrong, and it wouldn't be difficult for me to find 200 people to sell this to. But I knew it was unlikely to be the case.
Later I heard from someone in the know (we'll call him Mr. X) who told me that I was right. While UM did have a trick to sell, it was not really anything like what was being suggested in the post on the Cafe.
It's at this point that UM ends up writing me, I post his email, and he gets upset with me for posting the full thing. When I asked what the problem was, he said he was upset that I let it be known that what he was selling was not a psychological force.
I replied to him, "Don't you WANT to clarify to people that it's not a psychological force? Won't that help your sales? What you have is something that is supposedly much more reliable."
It was all pretty confusing.
Recently he wrote me to tell me he wouldn't be taking my $20,000 offer. Why? Because he had an offer that was multiples of that number made to him, apparently.
Okay, sure.
Well, I informed him, that's okay. Because my offer is $5000 above whatever his highest offer is.
UM replied to me:
"They'll be offering more than whatever you will be, as they want the effect at all costs."
So I told UM that I would surpass any offer on the table. We are fully in Ridiculousland at this point. I'm now in a bidding war with an imaginary person for a non-existent trick.
And that's where things stood last night.
At the same time I was getting emails from a supporter (we'll call him The Uncircumcised Magician) who believed he had come up with a trick that met all the conditions laid out in the original Cafe post. It didn't really. Only if you seriously contort what "no dual reality" and "if you were the participant, you would experience the effect exactly as you do while watching the video" means. But it was interesting guess.
At first I just thought he had sort of cleverly crafted a bad trick that also seemed to match up somewhat with the conditions for UM's trick. But the more I thought about it, the more I thought maybe he had hit on what UM actually planned to market.
So I reached out to Mr. X again and asked if The Uncircumcised Magician's method was close. And he told me that it was more or less the same thing (he doesn’t know the exact method, but knows the general deception being used).
So I then reached out to the Unnamed Magician to rescind my offer earlier today.
It's not my place to explain what the actual trick is. But I will explain where you're being lied to…
You're not buying the trick in the video. You're buying a longer, more complicated, worse trick. If you perform it for someone, film it, and chop off the first half… then you'll have the trick in the video which you can show to a third party as the Ultimate Open Prediction. The person you actually perform for doesn't experience the "ultimate open prediction," nor does anyone watching it being performed live.
The promotional post said "no dual reality." That’s true for the trick that was performed on the girl. But the trick you experienced watching the demo video is quite different than the trick the girl experienced taking part in it. That's the definition of dual reality.
I'm going to give the Unnamed Magician the benefit of the doubt. I don't think he saw this as a scam, necessarily. Much of the material he has released in the past are things you'd be unlikely to perform for regular people. They are "magician foolers." So he's spent years seeing magicians not as his peers, but as the marks.
And I have a feeling that thinking warped him a little. And when he decided to market this trick he realized he could almost "fool" magicians into thinking they were getting one thing when actually he could only deliver something else. I don't think he saw that as a problem at first. Maybe he thought people would think it was clever. The way they think it's clever how you skirt around the conditions in a good magician-fooler.
But then I think it dawned on him that this was going to be a big letdown to people when they realized what it was. And this is probably when he came up with the "$100 pre-sale" route—which is unlike any way he's ever sold anything in the past. That approach ideally allows for a nice payday before bad word-of-mouth sinks the product.
So now you have the full(ish) story. My offer to help the Unnamed Magician rehabilitate his image after this if he ever chooses to someday is still on the table, but otherwise, I'm hopefully done talking about it.
UPDATE: Ugh… maybe I’m not done writing about this. We’ll see. The Unnamed Magician tells me Mr. X is lying to me, and that there’s no way he knows the real method. If that’s the case, then I feel comfortable sharing the method that Mr. X confirmed for me and I will do that in the near future.