Posts in miscellanea
Miscellanea Chapter 2

A follow-up from Miscellanea Chapter 1 we have some recommendations for you:

Read:

Handling Traumatic Imagery this article does an amazing job at flexing the magic/psychology of the mind to combat traumatic viewing experiences. Something, sadly, many of us are facing even more currently in America.

The Forgotten Art of Assembly if there was one article to completely summarize how I’ve personally felt during this global pandemic, it would be this one. This is labelled as a MUST READ for any Four Suits aficionado. Truly amazing.

Watch:

Baraka sit back and get a perspective on the entire world, I’m not kidding you, the entire world, in this film. Be ready for an experience with this one.

Upcoming Project Peek? The Form of Magic

Dear Reader —

At this current moment in time, at this literal exact moment you’re reading these words, I want you to imagine me saying “Thank you” to you.

Now, I’m currently heavily inspired (and somewhat in awe) by this: https://noproscenium.com/enjoy-a-quiet-moment-of-contemplation-with-the-end-of-the-day-review-c249cad5eb95

Isn’t it beautiful?

No lie, I/We have been mulling over stuff like this for a while now, but I think there’s a distinct difference between Theatre and Magic in this sense. Is it possible to evoke a feeling of Magic in a remote manner such as this?

I guess you’ll find out.

— J.R.

Happy New Year 2021

What follows here is one of my favorite videos of all time. For some reason it reminds of the time we’re currently living in. Bless you all.

2021.

— J.R.

miscellaneaJax Ridd
Only One-Line Ideas in This Post: Part I

“Folks, I’m a psychic. Now, I know what you’re thinking..”

You know the “I want to believe” poster from the X-files? I want to make one with David Copperfield flying and with the same phrase posted over it.

Some information inherently transfers at a very low bitrate.

Jackie Chan uses grunts during his fight choreo to establish beats and cues.

Stripper using a stripper deck for a card routine.

Phantom hand tests for a QB.

Four Suits … Four Loko?

Flour Suits will be the name of our bakery

Wrestling WWE magic match

What Dungeons and Dragons Taught Me About My Career

Maybe a few days ago I played through a one-shot campaign organized by ZY. It was a beautiful little campaign with a fun storyline. One of the biggest elements of D&D that surprised me with it’s complexity was creating my own character. A large element of creating a character consisted of choosing their strengths and skills. I wanted my character to be a deception artist, so I maxed out their Charisma score and correlated abilities. Here’s what surprised me. 

I expected to be a pro at anything related to persuading other characters within the storyline to give me information/etc. However, the other large component of the game structure is to roll a 20-sided die to determine whether or not your character succeeds in any particular action. I was sure that with my maxed Charisma, I would succeed in these tactics. I rolled a 1. I failed my strategy. Another instance came up, and even with my maxed out statistics, the roll of the die led me astray. Then came another instance where I had to utilize my very low Sneak stat, but the die rolled favorably for me. Even with a starting disadvantage, or a starting advantage, my result was anything but expected. I had to think quickly and devise another plan. 

I’m sure you can see where this is going. I think that these instances often occur in many more ways than we can even perceive in our daily existence.

Moments of chance play out in ways we cannot expect.

Sure, our strengths may benefit us over time, but that says very little about our day to day interactions. And it says even less about finishing our campaign of real life. If we are to get where we need to go, we need to embrace chance, and embrace the unexpected. The only thing that matters is that we continue to move forward. Let the die roll. 

— J.R.