Dustings #145
/Just a note—as per my typical 18-month schedule—there will be no Jerx posting next month. Instead I will be barricading myself in a cabin somewhere and working on the next book for Jerx supporters.
Because of my prolific output, people frequently ask questions about my book-writing process (probably because magicians are often left waiting for years for magic books that were promised.)
Technically, the material is all complete. I won't actually be trying to come up with any new tricks during June. That's what the past 17 months were for.
For every chapter I have:
Notes on the trick or technique—the method, the handling, and all the technical details.
Notes from testing the trick
Notes from actually performing it (the best or most unusual reactions, my favorite performing scenarios, etc.)
During book-writing month, I'll go to a cafe in the morning and spend 2-3 hours outlining the chapter. I'll take a couple-hour break. Then I'll work the rest of the day—about 8-10 hours—from home (or wherever I'm staying) and write the first draft of the chapter.
I'm a slow, distracted writer, so it takes me about an hour per book page. So a 240-page book will take me 240 hours to write. (I did the math for you.)
That's the writing process. 17 months of daily creating, testing, and note-taking at a relaxed but consistent pace. Then 1 month of focused writing with all other obligations off the table (a luxury not everyone can afford, I know).
During that month, it's 10-13 hour days: 2-3 hours outlining the current chapter and 8-10 hours writing it.
Simple (but it's not easy).
Regarding Monday's Mailbag post, I think spoon bending would feel a lot more real if—at least once during the performance—while deeply concentrating your energy on the spoon, you accidentally let out a small fart.
"Sorry. It requires such intense focus. Sometimes things just... slip out. I’m really embarrassed"
Wow! He's really putting everything into this.
Sometimes magicians are so fucking stupid…
Gee, what a perfectly sane and normal way to show your hands empty.
Imagine it wasn’t a magic trick. Imagine you were at a party and the host said, “Hey, someone stole my expensive pen. Okay everyone, show me your hands. I want to make sure they’re empty and you’re not hiding my pen.” And then one person did this.
You think everyone would be like, “Oh, okay. You’re clean”?
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. All magic tricks are “extraordinary claims.” Your proof needs to be better than the proof you would use in a normal situation.
In this case you need to show your hands empty more fairly than you would normally.
But I can’t, because I’m hiding the pen in my hands.
No shit, dummy. That’s why this trick is not worth learning or showing people. It’s not a magic trick. Everyone knows what’s going on. It’s a broken trick. It makes you look ridiculous and it’s bad for magic.
That being said, consider this movement to be the new Jerx gang sign.
New Contest: Anyone who sends a video of themselves doing that gang sign in an interesting or unusual situation will be entered in the contest. What type of situation? On stage with David Copperfield. During your wedding ceremony. Whatever.
The prize: I will refund or comp your membership payment for a full season at the high support tier.