A very short piece of magic, which Professor Richard Wiseman is nice enough to explain at the end. If you're weird enough, you may even want to try and fool your friends with it:
Photos from Magic & Martini in Toronto
Last night was our second of two sold out Magic & Martini shows at SpiritHouse in Downtown Toronto. Thanks to everyone who made it. The next several shows are now sold out but we've opened up a block of tickets for events going until the end of September, so if you haven't seen the show yet, you should grab tickets soon before they're gone. Readers can use the code olive for a discount on the price of tickets when booking online.
Here are some photos from the event by Tyler Williams:
Photos from Magic & Martini in Toronto
Last night we had another sold out Magic & Martini at SpiritHouse in Downtown Toronto. Thank you to everyone who attended the show. We had a wonderful time. The next several shows are already sold out, but we have opened up a new block of dates running to the end of September, so if you have not seen the show yet, get your tickets quickly. Readers can use the code olive for discounts on the price of tickets when purchasing online.
Here are a few photos from the show from Tyler Sol Williams.
A Secret Magic Party
Last night at NightOwl in downtown Toronto, a group of magicians hosted a super secret invitation only magic show... which they then blabbed about because magicians are far worse at keeping secrets than you might think.
A newly minted magic company, aptly named Toronto Magic Company, helmed by Jonah Babbins and Ben Train (who has made many appearances on this blog) wants to carve out a space for young and aspiring performers to share their magic with a broader live audience. It's much in the same vein that Magic Tonight was for nearly three years and Friday Night Magic was before that.
I was asked if I would get really dressed up and do just one trick along with a group of eight magicians for a standing room only crowd. Here are some photos from the party provided by Eli Green. For discerning viewers: Yes, that is supposed to be Justin Bieber. For slightly more discerning viewers: Yes, that is a roasted chicken... Magicians are weird.
Sigmund Freud performs magic
From Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal by Zack Weinersmith
Help Feeling More Awake
A very important lesson that magic taught me is that the best tricks are rarely based on a single secret, but rather on multiple overlapping and interwoven smaller secrets. That's why most people have a lot of trouble figuring out how magic is done.
If you are looking for the secret, you are not only at a disadvantage logically, you're also thinking at the wrong scale. If you're looking for a single secret, you are looking for big secret (whatever big means in terms of information) while smaller secrets are sneaking in past your notice. Generally we want big problems to have big solutions, but often a number of smaller solutions is more effective in the aggregate.
Here in a video from ASAP Science (coincidentally based in Toronto) they offer advice for feeling less tired. Notice that all of the solutions offered are small. This also has the advantage that any one of them is easier to implement.
And having done my fair share of keeping strange hours to perform magic shows (and before that go to school and teach karate) I've felt this kind of fatigue and many of these solutions have been effective.