Teller Reveals His Secrets
The smaller, quieter half of the magician duo Penn & Teller writes about how magicians manipulate the human mind
- By Teller
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2012, Subscribe
In the last half decade, magic—normally deemed entertainment fit only for children and tourists in Las Vegas—has become shockingly respectable in the scientific world. Even I—not exactly renowned as a public speaker—have been invited to address conferences on neuroscience and perception. I asked a scientist friend (whose identity I must protect) why the sudden interest. He replied that those who fund science research find magicians “sexier than lab rats.”
I’m all for helping science. But after I share what I know, my neuroscientist friends thank me by showing me eye-tracking and MRI equipment, and promising that someday such machinery will help make me a better magician.
I have my doubts. Neuroscientists are novices at deception. Magicians have done controlled testing in human perception for thousands of years.
I remember an experiment I did at the age of 11. My test subjects were Cub Scouts. My hypothesis (that nobody would see me sneak a fishbowl under a shawl) proved false and the Scouts pelted me with hard candy. If I could have avoided those welts by visiting an MRI lab, I surely would have.
But magic’s not easy to pick apart with machines, because it’s not really about the mechanics of your senses. Magic’s about understanding—and then manipulating—how viewers digest the sensory information.
I think you’ll see what I mean if I teach you a few principles magicians employ when they want to alter your perceptions.
1. Exploit pattern recognition. I magically produce four silver dollars, one at a time, with the back of my hand toward you. Then I allow you to see the palm of my hand empty before a fifth coin appears. As Homo sapiens, you grasp the pattern, and take away the impression that I produced all five coins from a hand whose palm was empty.
2. Make the secret a lot more trouble than the trick seems worth. You will be fooled by a trick if it involves more time, money and practice than you (or any other sane onlooker) would be willing to invest. My partner, Penn, and I once produced 500 live cockroaches from a top hat on the desk of talk-show host David Letterman. To prepare this took weeks. We hired an entomologist who provided slow-moving, camera-friendly cockroaches (the kind from under your stove don’t hang around for close-ups) and taught us to pick the bugs up without screaming like preadolescent girls. Then we built a secret compartment out of foam-core (one of the few materials cockroaches can’t cling to) and worked out a devious routine for sneaking the compartment into the hat. More trouble than the trick was worth? To you, probably. But not to magicians.
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Comments (58)
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Cool!!!
Posted by Sonny on January 2,2013 | 09:23 AM
Its fascinating to know the secrets behind magic that seems real like life in such simple and lucid ways
Posted by Toni gyamar on December 2,2012 | 02:37 AM
Thank you Teller for this insight. I have just finished reading 'Mischief', by Harling and Nyrup who in a much more wordy book, cover the same premise. I am an enthusiastic amateur and member of the Magic Circle.
Posted by philip cordrey on November 16,2012 | 09:06 PM
Teller, thank you. I have always been interested in psychology and the study of thought and perception from a cognitive emotional perspective. I had not put together the science of magic with psychological therapy before.
Posted by Jeff on April 29,2012 | 10:18 AM
"Nothing but free publicity so they can constantly maintain their Name in public. The bait is this story. He keeps his and Penn's name in the public eye. That’s all this is." @Max, because when you want publicity, we all know that you go directly to the Smithsonian Magazine, the very personification of PR hype with an extremely wide readership. Very cagy of Teller to tap into the public consciousness like this.
Posted by Colin Rutheford on April 1,2012 | 11:55 AM
I can tell you with certainty, Its al B.S. He’s a showman, it’s his shtick, It’s always been their shtick,…. Pretending to tell you how it’s done. Nothing but free publicity so they can constantly maintain their Name in public. Houdini, Madonna, they are all to familiar with how to keep their name in public and Alive. THAT is the underlining trick. Keeping your persona alive. Controversy, exposure, sensationalism. That’s the real secret. The bait is this story. He keeps his and Penns name in the public eye. That’s all this Is.
Posted by Max on March 28,2012 | 10:22 AM
As I understand it, and this may have slackened in recent years, but magicians are duty-bound among their not so secret society never to reveal their secrets. The best way to never reveal your secrets, is to make everyone believe you already have.
I'm not convinced Teller has given us any of his real secrets. He's described essentially what's already out there in the public consciousness. What magicians learned long ago and have passed down for generations. These are the lessons an aspiring magician picks up along the way in the early years of honing his craft. Not that you can now go be a magician. Any musician will tell you music theory is nothing like picking up a guitar and playing till long after your fingers bleed and you build up callouses.
The descriptions in this article that appear to be of tricks Teller and Penn currently do are either ones done in a different manner from how he explained them, or they are retiring them, or those particular examples are still used because audiences favor them, but have been discerned by audience members already and he feels safe in 'revealing secrets' that are already relatively well-known outside the illusionist 'secret society.'
So one can assume a scientist has 'tricked' Teller into revealing his secrets, but that is not evident. This could simply be yet another illusion. Would Teller admit to that one way or the other? Of course not. Why? That would be telling.
Posted by ZachsMind on March 24,2012 | 10:39 PM
First of all, "magic" is about manipulating and altering people's perceptions. "Science" is about uncovering the darkness of manipulated or altered people's mind. Teller just encountered a master magician clothed as a scientist who convinced Teller into "helping" the "sciences" in exposing his tricks!
Posted by tt on March 23,2012 | 02:23 PM
Fascinating!!! Any great performer will hook onto the concious minds of the audience so as to play with their perceptions for a little while! Thanks Teller! Hope to see you in Sin city sometime!
Posted by Daniel Roberts on March 21,2012 | 09:29 AM
Teller's is one of my favorite magicians, he is so clever and so skillful, as a magician I learn all the time but this article has articulated many things i wanted to say ...and could not express myslef
Well done
Posted by magicmatan on March 14,2012 | 07:20 PM
The "magic" Teller reveals is used everyday by professional salespeople worldwide. Whether the product is diamonds or real estate, the prospect is manipulated into making the sought-after buying "decision".
Posted by Steve on March 6,2012 | 01:21 AM
magic is about domination, plain and simple. Someone who wants to completely alter the way you see and interpret reality is a dominator. In magic there is also deduction. We allow ourselves to be seduced so that we can be dominated. Evil genius.
Posted by florence rouzier on March 5,2012 | 05:50 PM
Hmmm I think this is applicable to modern politics as well- "let them think they have a choice..."
Posted by Mari on March 4,2012 | 09:49 PM
"Choice is not freedom," as every mother of a recalcitrant toddler or child knows. "Do you want your blue shoes or your red shoes" is a good way to get a predetermined outcome of shoes on the kid's feet that day, without it becoming a power struggle. It's probably one of the first tricks of misdirection a mother learns, and a child experiences.
Posted by Sarahw on March 4,2012 | 08:46 PM
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