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Jinx Navigator

Jinx Navigator

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The Jinx is packed with brilliant ideas for mystery performers—but finding what still works (and how to use it today) takes time. The Jinx Navigator Podcast does that work for you. Each episode explores a classic issue or source from magic and mentalism, uncovering standout effects, theory, and creative thinking—and then reimagining them for modern performers and audiences. This isn’t about preserving history for nostalgia’s sake; it’s about extracting usable ideas and turning them into practical, contemporary presentations. If you care about strong material, thoughtful performance, and making classic magic feel alive again, this podcast is for you.© 2026 Jinx Navigator Arte Entretenimiento y Artes Escénicas
Episodios
  • Episode 006: Issue #6, The Astral Shirt and More
    Mar 11 2026

    In this episode, Jay browses Issue #6 of The Jinx (1934–1941), the legendary newsletter for magicians and mentalists. This issue is heavy on Theodore Annemann, with contributions from Russell T. Wise and a peek at the editorial page.

    Effects Covered

    [0:00] Intro Jay introduces the show and the episode's focus: Issue #6 of The Jinx.

    [0:45] Impromptu Frame Ups — Theodore Annemann Annemann explores using "instant stooges" — audience members who don't know they're confederates until the moment they're needed. Includes a card-calling effect, a watch-setting routine, and slate work. Jay notes the term "frame up" seems to have died out by the mid-1900s.

    [2:48] The Astral Shirt — Theodore Annemann A classic gag elevated into a solid piece of close-up theater. With hands tied and never leaving sight for long, the performer removes his shirt while still wearing his jacket, tie, and vest — all examinable. Annemann's framing: solid through solid.

    [4:25] The Card That Isn't — Russell T. Wise A two-card transposition using a force, a double lift, and a short card. Jay recommends making the two cards visually distinct for clarity — and makes a convincing case for why.

    [6:00] Two Mind Reading Publicity Effects — Theodore Annemann The first mention of what we'd now call a center tear in The Jinx — though it isn't named as such. Includes a newspaper-chunk variation and a living-and-dead presentation using burned slips.

    [7:55] Editorial Annemann name-drops Dai Vernon, Count Orloff, Russell Swan, Tommy Martin, and others. He floats the idea of publishing twice a month (spoiler: he goes weekly instead, starting at Issue #61), and closes with a short essay arguing that effect is supreme over method.

    [8:17] Outro Links and a preview of Issue #7 — featuring Orville Wayne Meyer's "A Practical Card Code."

    Links

    • Read every article in every issue: jinxnavigator.com
    • Full details on all effects: Issue #6 at jinxnavigator.com

    Next episode: Issue #7 — featuring Orville Wayne Meyer's "A Practical Card Code."

    Más Menos
    9 m
  • Episode 005, Issue #3: The Lie Detective and More
    Mar 3 2026

    In this issue Jay talks about Annemann’s “Red and Blue Back Color Change,” a two-card back-swap, discusses L. E. Duncanson’s “With Sight Unseen,” a hands-tied, blindfolded identification routine requiring a homemade gimmick that Jay doubts can accomplish all claimed feats. He covers two solutions to a prior issue’s “lie calling” challenge: Charles Nyquist’s stacked-deck approach dependent on a clean dovetail shuffle and Stuart Robson’s “The Lie Detective” with constraints on when the lie occurs. Annemann’s “A Question and the Answer” uses slips, a switch, and a gimmick for answering written questions, and Nat Scherzer suggests using used envelopes as a novel forcing/prediction prop. Annemann’s editorial includes performance notes, industry news, and a quote on secrets reducing income-earning value.

    • 00:00 Welcome and Mission
    • 00:37 Issue 5 Overview
    • 00:58 Red and Blue Change
    • 03:00 With Sight Unseen
    • 05:03 Solution Something Work On
    • 06:33 The Lie Detective
    • 07:17 Question and Answer
    • 08:40 Neat Publicity Trick
    • 10:09 Annemann Editorial
    • 11:07 Wrap Up and Next
    Más Menos
    11 m
  • Episode 004: The Jinx #4 — The Master of the Message, and More
    Feb 23 2026

    In this issue we review Annemann’s “The Master of the Message,” an impromptu thought-reading effect. We summarize Martin Sunshine’s “Cigarette Perception,” where a blindfolded performer identifies cigarette brands, and suggests the method could be repurposed beyond smoking. Jay discusses Orville Wayne Meyer’s “Card Box Sympathy,” which uses a P&L Metal Card Box, but says the written handling seems inconsistent and asks listeners with the prop to test it. Jay explains Calvin Cole’s “One of Those Things,” a calculator-age-and-change revelation based on a simple math principle, with Annemann’s note that personal details like age increase interest and could be paired with numerology. He covers Vincent Dalban’s “Something to Work On,” a plot with no method where the performer detects when a helper lies while calling out dealt cards. Finally, he summarizes Stuart Robson’s “The Twentieth Century Newspaper Test,” using page-number corners and classified ads to reveal an ad’s contents. Jay invites listeners to view the full issue for free at JinxNavigator.com, share feedback, and teases Issue #5 and its “With Sight Unseen” effect.

    • 00:00 Episode 004 Kickoff: What The Jinx Navigator Podcast Is About
    • 00:36 Issue #4 Table of Contents + Annemann’s Editorial Highlights
    • 02:18 Effect #1: The Master of the Message (Impromptu Thought Reading)
    • 04:26 Effect #2: Cigarette Perception (A Smell Test Without Smelling)
    • 06:09 Effect #3: Card Box Sympathy — Pricey Prop, Questionable Method
    • 08:44 Effect #4: One of Those Things (Age + Pocket Change Calculator Reveal)
    • 10:19 Something to Work On: A Great Plot… With No Method (Yet)
    • 11:31 Final Effect: Twentieth Century Newspaper Test (Classifieds Mindreading)
    • 13:10 Wrap-Up, Where to Read Issue #4, and Tease for Issue #5
    Más Menos
    13 m
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