Jinx Navigator Podcast — Episode 11: Issue #11
Issue #11 is a card-heavy issue with a few pleasant surprises — a clever cigarette gag, a matchbook divination that requires nothing more than a book of matches and one quick calculation, and a borrowed business card that survives being cut in half. Annemann’s editorial is in a reflective mood, anchored by a story about a fireman with an excellent memory for shoes.
Effects Covered
[0:56] Editorial — Theodore Annemann Annemann opens with a summer complaint about slow mail, recommends a Liberty magazine article on university telepathy experiments, and highlights a magic newsletter disguised as a hometown newspaper. The centerpiece is a story about a fireman who remembered a substitution act from 20 years earlier in perfect detail — including the performer’s shoes changing mid-routine — which Annemann uses to make the point that audiences are paying closer attention than performers tend to assume.
[3:45] A Cigarette Rolled by Proxy — Orville Meyer Tobacco and rolling paper go into the mouth, a few chewing motions later, out comes a perfectly rolled cigarette. Meyer’s version uses a rubber novelty cigarette and a well-timed switch, and produces a clean result every time — unlike earlier marketed versions that often left the cigarette looking the worse for wear. For close-up situations, Meyer suggests substituting ground coffee for the tobacco, signing off with a cheerful “after all, it’s for the sake of art.”
[5:40] The Fan Location — El Rey A card technique rather than a complete effect — a method for secretly marking a selected card the moment it’s returned to a fanned deck, using nothing but a finger’s sense of touch and a tiny crimp. The right hand stays completely clear throughout, the helper can even be invited to reposition their card, and the deck ends up shuffled by the helper with the performer’s hands nowhere near it at the crucial moment. Jay — self-described non-card-guy — tried it this morning and reports it works as written.
[7:17] A Trick with the Fan Location — Theodore Annemann Annemann’s own application of El Rey’s technique, built around a neat reversal of standard card trick logic: the helper chooses their card from a face-up spread, returns it, shuffles the deck, and the performer finds it face-down. The presentation hook — chosen face up, found face down — gives the effect a tidy internal logic that, as Annemann notes, tends to stick in people’s minds long after the show.
[8:26] A Card to Be Thought About — Theodore Annemann A helper mentally selects one of three freely chosen cards, the deck is mixed, and the performer produces — incorrectly, then incorrectly again — before ultimately finding the card in the most dramatic way possible: from his pocket. The method is structured so that the pocket production is the most likely outcome, and the apparent failures along the way make the ending land harder whenever it arrives.
[9:48] A Divination with Matches — Fred Demuth A helper secretly pockets some matches, tears out more to represent the count remaining, then holds an unknown number in their fist — and the performer names exactly how many without asking a single question. The secret is a fixed mathematical principle built into the standard 20-match booklet that always produces the same result regardless of the choices made, leaving the performer with just one quick calculation. Adapted from an older card effect, the matchbook setting gives it a pleasantly casual, impromptu feel.
[11:15] The Card Unharmed — Theodore Annemann A borrowed business card is sealed in an envelope, both ends are cut off, the card is slid back through so both ends are visibly sticking out, and then the scissors cut straight across the middle — yet the card comes out completely unharmed. Annemann has been using this as a press piece for years, preparing batches of envelopes in advance and carrying them mailed and ready. Jay has a note about the moment when the card first gets shaken out after cutting the end off — check the comments at jinxnavigator.com.
[12:59] Outro Links and a preview of Issue #12 — featuring Annemann’s thoughts, tidbits, and ideas on several different magic effects.
