Scripting in Carefree Magic
/This is my approach to scripting under the Carefree Magic philosophy.
The last thing you want is for the word "script" to occur to the people you perform for—not in casual settings. If you’re Derren Brown, it’s fine if someone leaves thinking, “That show was brilliantly scripted.” Or if you’re David Copperfield, it’s reasonable someone might think, “I wonder who writes the shitty jokes in his script.” We expect artists like that to be working from a script.
But if you're sitting on the couch showing a friend something interesting and their takeaway is, Wow… what a clever script, something has gone wrong. You're no longer coming off like a normal person sharing an interesting moment. You're coming off like a performer. And that's a weird energy to introduce into a casual interaction.
On the other hand, you don't want to have no idea what you're going to say and just wing it. Social magic should feel unscripted and natural—but you still need some internal reason for why you wanted to show them this thing. So you'll have some sense of what to say along the way.
For Carefree Magic, scripting should come down to knowing:
What you want to demonstrate.
How you feel about it.
What the backstory is behind how you came to know about it.
For example:
I want to demonstrate a technique for briefly seeing through the eyes of another person.
I'm a little skeptical, because I haven't been having much success with it.
I learned it at a magic convention. The convention was mostly standard magic tricks and stuff. But there was one guy who did a small late-night workshop on something called "borrowed vision." He taught these techniques to a handful of us. When he demonstrated it, it seemed real—but now I'm wondering if it was just a trick.
This is enough to give you talking points to hit throughout the trick without having to script everything along the way.
You can write these things out for every trick in your repertoire if you want. Or you can do what I usually do and work them out mentally a few moments before you perform.
Either way, the point is that this is an extremely low-effort process—which is what makes it the “carefree” scripting option—that still gives you the backbone of a real presentation to build on in the moment.
It’s more than just paying lip service to a subject and tacking it on at the start. "Here's an example of fate vs. free will" (with no further reference back to those subjects). Or, "Here's a move gambling cheats use."
Instead, there's enough here for real depth in the experience you're creating for them.
What is it? A move gambling cheats use that you're trying to perfect.
How you feel about it? Excited, because you have a regular poker game and if you can perfect the skill of turning cards over within the pack, then—when you're dealing—you'll be able to see what cards are coming up and whether they'll help your hand.
Where you learned it? Your great-uncle was a professional gambler and you found details of the move in a notebook he kept.
You don't have to say these things piece-by-piece for each trick you perform. But having this information in the back of your head lets you present whatever you're showing in a way that feels real—because these are the kinds of details you'd actually have if you were genuinely sharing something interesting.
Knowing these things won’t make you sound scripted. They’ll make you sound like a person who has a real relationship to the thing you’re showing them.