Magic: The Gathering Drive to Work Podcast - #982: Magic 30 Talk
Episode Date: November 4, 2022At Magic 30, I did an hour-long panel sharing personal stories about 30 different pictures I'd chosen from 30 years in Magic. In this podcast, I go over why I chose those 30 pictures and stor...ies to share.
Transcript
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I'm pulling my driveway. We all know what that means. It's time for another drive to work.
Okay, so today, so at, as I'm recording this, Magic 30 has not happened yet.
But as you are listening to this, it has happened. Ah, the mystery of recording ahead.
So today I want to talk about my speech, the preparations and the making of. So what happened basically was when they were planning out the,
when they were planning the schedule for the panels and the talks,
they said to me, we'd like to give you your own hour
and you can talk about whatever you want to talk about.
Which, by the way, is a very daunting task.
Here, whatever you want.
But I said to them, okay, any clarification
and one thing they said is, well
it is the start of our 30th anniversary
and by the way, yes, I understand technically
the 30th anniversary starts next year
but this is the beginning of the
very long process of celebrating our anniversary
so I do realize that, but anyway
it's the start of our celebration of the
30th anniversary
and so they're sort of like, well,
if you could somehow hit upon the idea that Magic's 30 years old,
that would be great.
So I was trying to think of like, what could I do?
And the other thing, I'm a really big believer in the medium is the message,
meaning I was doing a presentation.
I had the ability to sort of show pictures and things.
And so I'm like, okay, you know, what can I do that would be the most fun?
And then I realized that there's a lot of picture, like, I started thinking about the
idea of showing magic history through pictures.
And that's when I realized that I'm in a lot of the magic.
There's a lot of...
That I...
On some level, I'm kind of like the Forrest Gump of magic.
And that I just keep showing up in places, you know,
that I just sort of...
I'm always kind of there.
And the thing that sort of spawned this was
there's a picture from the first world championship.
So Zach Dolan, the United States, is playing Patron Lestray of France.
And it's this really, like, pivotal, big moment.
The first ever finals of a, you know, Magic World Championship.
And in the background is me taking notes.
I'm just there.
Like, you can watch my talk for the whole story of how I got there.
But the point is, like, here's this pinnacle moment of magic history,
and I'm in the background.
I'm just there.
And so it dawned on me,
did I have 30 sort of pictures of me throughout magic's history
where I have personal stories to share?
And I liked the idea because it was very visual,
that I could show. Like when I do a podcast, for example, there's no show and there's no visuals, I'm talking.
So, you know, it leans on certain kinds of storytelling.
But the thing I enjoyed for this, for the talk was, I could be very visual.
So, and in fact, the thing that was funny is, when I pitched my idea of the pictures, they liked the idea.
But originally when somebody else was going to build the slides, they had said to me, oh, well, we can only have like 30 slides.
And I realized, I think Gavin Verhey was the one that suggested, when I pitched the idea of pictures throughout history,
Gavin said, well, it's 30 years, why not 30 pictures?
I think very influenced by my 20 years, 20 lessons talk.
Like, the number of years, that's the number thing,
but okay, it makes sense,
and I felt like a lot of my stories were going to be,
you know, one to three minutes,
so I could tell 30 stories in half an hour,
not half an hour, in an hour. And so when they sort of said that if their slides were built externally,
I could have maybe 30 slides. I'm like, well, that's just the pictures I'm talking about.
I want more than that. So I asked them, can I build it? Can I build my slideshow? And they said,
sure. So my slideshow has hundreds of slides, not just 30. So there's lots of, and one of the things that happened is once I realized
that I wanted to do pictures,
I then got access
both to my, well, I had access to my private
pictures, but I looked through all my private pictures
and then I also looked through
we have like
sort of, I don't know what to call it, but
like the pictures that Wizards has taken.
I looked through all the event
pictures and stuff.
And so I then had to narrow it down. So the exercise really was once I decided that I wanted
to do stories based around pictures, I needed to have pictures and I needed to have stories.
Ideally, things that were interconnected. The other thing that I thought about was that I wanted to celebrate what magic is.
And so part of what I was also looking for was I wanted to talk about a lot of different aspects of magic.
It wasn't like here are the top 30 moments on the Pro Tour, right?
I wanted it to be here is a widespread of different things that happened.
And so it's me talking about different things,
but it's also through the lens of what I experienced.
So, you know, I was more active in different parts of magic at different times.
So in some level, you're seeing 30 years of magic,
but it's going to be through my eyes because I'm the storyteller.
But that was the challenge.
So the challenge was I looked and I collected infinite pictures
so I went through
whenever I found pictures
of myself
I would pull them out
and then I'd try to figure out
what were the compelling stories
to tell
what were the cool things
and so I'm going to walk through
my 30 pictures
and talk about
I'm not going to get into
the stories of the pictures
that is a talk
you can go listen to my talk
I'm hoping
I'm hoping that's someplace that you can listen to.
I do not know that.
But hopefully it's somewhere where you can go listen if you weren't able to listen to it live.
Anyway, so I'm going to walk through the 30 pictures and sort of talk about why I chose those pictures.
This is more behind the scenes.
So if you want to hear the stories, and then a lot of the stories I'm telling,
not all of them,
but a lot of the stories I've told on my podcast.
So if you are a regular podcast listener
and you listen to my talk,
a fair number of the stories I've told,
not all of them,
and not all of them with the detail necessarily
or there are elements that I shared
that I didn't share on my podcast.
But anyway, a lot of the stories,
you should at least be familiar with the story,
not all of them.
Okay, so number one, picture number one was me at the first World Championships in 94.
Like I said, this was the inspiration for the whole talk.
So clearly, I had to have it.
And I decided that I wanted to go chronologically just to give the larger sense of sense.
So the talk would feel like there was progression to it.
And so by going chronologically,
it's sort of like talking about the last 30 years.
I thought that was kind of cool.
And like I said,
it's just a couple of the photos I used,
I felt were like just classic magic photos
that I happened to be in.
And so a few of the ones are like that.
So this is one of those.
And it's like I said said it's a funny story because
a lot of the world
the other interesting thing is
Worlds 94 is basically the place
where I
sort of made the decision that I wanted
more to do with Wizards and it really
was the thing that I think led
me down the path to working at Wizards so while it really was the thing that I think led me down the path to
working at Wizards.
So while it also is a big moment in history, it's also representative of kind of a big
personal moment.
Anyway, so that just felt right.
Okay, next picture was Mark Justice and I in the phone booth. So at the second Pro Tour,
the one where Hammer played
Gaven,
Mark Justice...
I decided that I...
I think at the very first Pro Tour,
the way commentary worked was
they asked me to do commentary,
but it was with two other Wizards people.
And the other people
who were doing commentary with me
just didn't know Magic that well.
And so I decided that what I really wanted is a play-by-play and a color commentator.
I thought I would do the play-by-play, and then I would get pros to do the color commentating.
And then each show, I asked a different pro.
So the first show, I asked Merc Justice.
And Merc Justice was, I guess I'm not getting into the story.
But anyway, Merc Justice and I were friends.
was, I guess I'm not getting into the story, but anyway, Mark Justice and I were friends.
But the funniest story about that was that we ended up doing nine hours of broadcasting in this phone booth
because they just, it was very, very early on in the days of
shooting magic and they just hadn't, like, no one thought through, like,
oh, where are the commentators going to be? And so the phone booth was like,
well, here's the one place that's already here
that technically you fit in
that we can use for sound purposes.
And it just was kind of so silly.
So when I was looking through the pictures,
it's not even a great picture.
Like, you can't even really tell it's me and Justice.
That's why I have to kind of tell the story
because, like, if you look at the picture in a vacuum, you don't even know what it is. It's just two people in a phone booth that you can't
quite make out who it is. But it was really reminiscent of sort of the early days of the
Pro Tour and how, you know, there's a lot of finding of our feet in the early days. So anyway,
I liked that story just because it was reminiscent of, hey, you know, maybe now we do things and they're super polished.
But there was an early day where we were figuring things out, and that seemed quite cool to me.
Okay, the next photo was the design team from 1997,
which was literally the six people who were full-time magic designers.
As I said in the talk, we're now up to 50.
So it was a point in time where
Magic was small enough and R&D was small
enough that, like, the six of us
were, you know, or
I guess Joel was the
head designer, but the other five
of us were every development team.
There was no who's on this development team.
We were on every development team. There just
wasn't enough people to have different development
teams.
Now, eventually, we would get more people and we would grow.
But it's interesting to me to look back and sort of, like, all of us went on a plane to visit my dad's house.
That's where the picture was taken.
And, like, you know, there's not often that, like, I remember we were commenting on the plane.
Like, if the plane went down, Magic was in trouble.
We were all of magic R&D.
So, it just, I don't know.
That one, to me,
that picture is literally sitting in my house.
It's just kind of reminiscent
of a time gone by.
And part of the whole talk to me
was the nostalgia
of just remembering things
as they had been,
of capturing moments in time.
So that picture, I don't know,
it was a personal,
it meant a lot to me personally.
Okay, number four is
another Pro Tour story. My Pro Tour stories
are front-loaded just because my time with the
Pro Tour was early on in my time at Wizards.
This was the Riot!
So at one
of the Pro Tour Los Angeleses, we had
to kick out David Mills in the
finals for, like,
casting his cards before tapping the
mana. Literally, he got
ejected from a pro tour
for playing his spell
before tapping his mana, which is now
just part of
magic. In fact, because of that
event, we changed the rules. Not
often the rules of magic change
because a pro tour event
made us change the rules. How often does that
happen? Anyway, it was,
um, this is another example where there's
this classic, classic picture
of Dave Mills being informed that he's being
disqualified that just was, like,
if I was just picking in a vacuum,
like, magic history pictures, I
would have picked that picture. And the funny
thing is, I'm in it.
I'm in the picture. Although, you might not even know it's me. It's the back of my head.
I have to point out it's me. Maybe you recognize me. I don't know. But it's interesting of how
it's another example of just magic history was happening and I was there.
And it was a crazy...
Of all the things that ever happened at the Pro Tour, and there's been some crazy stuff,
the DQ was nutty.
It was nutty.
So anyway, I had to include that story.
Okay, number five was me dressed as a chicken, head judging, unglued.
So they didn't even have a good picture.
The only picture I could find is a fuzzy picture.
In fact, it's probably the fuzziest picture in the whole slideshow.
is a fuzzy picture.
In fact, it's probably the fuzziest picture in the whole slideshow.
Somewhere in the bowels of my basement
or in my garage,
there's probably more pictures.
I couldn't find one.
I did some looking.
I couldn't find it.
And so it's one of those things
that's kind of become a story of a legend,
like I had judged as a chicken,
that I just felt like I needed to bring that up. And it also let me sort of show, like I had judged as a chicken, that I just felt like I needed to bring that
up.
And it also let me sort of show like, you know, I showed this little sequence where
I dressed as a donkey for Unglue and I dressed as a squirrel for Unstable and I dressed as
an astronaut for Infinity.
That, you know, every sort of unset, at some point I've had to dress up in some kind of
outfit, you know, and that there's something about, I don't know, the wackiness and the essence of the unsets. And I
wanted to reference the unsets. And I felt the most visual way to represent the unset was sort
of the most iconic sort of visual moment of the unsets. Number six, the magic invitational. So
this is the magic invitational at Wizards the reason I picked
there's a lot of magic invitations
the magic invitational was something that magic
had done that was important
and I wanted to make sure to sort of talk about
hey, there are things that were part of magic that are no longer
part of magic, that part of magic's history
is there's things that happen for a while
and the invitational was basically
the
it was the,
what do you call it? The All-Star Game.
We did it originally as an event to promote in the Duelist.
It was originally the Duelist Invitational. Later became the Magic Invitational.
And I just, I mean,
I don't know. Once again, this is me telling my stories, and I just, I mean, I don't know. I, once again, this is me telling my stories.
And so it's a lot of my vantage point through, um, a lot of my vantage point through looking
at, um, at magic.
And so the invitation was near and dear to my heart.
There was a really funny story.
You know, it's a story of the time where, uh, I had my budget slashed to zero and like, okay,
how are you going to make it work? You have
no money. So anyway, I got to tell
that story, which was a fun story.
And I just found a cool picture of me
posed with all the people in front
of the wizards because we had a hold of the wizards.
So I thought that was cool.
Next is the feature
match story. So feature matches, I
wanted, the reason I did this story was
I wanted to touch upon judging.
I thought judging was important
and I had been a judge.
And so, and I just picked a story
about sort of how being in charge
of the feature match,
just different things came my way
and there was things I had to do.
And that talks about integrating
the red zone mat, you know,
and teaching the players how to use it. And just one of the the red zone mat, you know, and teaching the
players how to use it. And just one of the weird
quirks that came out of doing that.
But I really wanted to touch upon
judging. I wanted to hit a lot of different aspects of it.
So that's one of the reasons I really wanted to do that one.
Next is the first time
I appeared in a comic. Or at least the first time
I remember. Maybe
I appeared in a comic before this, but it first time I remember. Maybe I appeared in a comic before this.
But it was Eugene Madness.
And I remember just one day, I mean, I regularly read Eugene Madness.
And one day, I show up as, like, Satan's imp or something.
It was very bizarre.
I went on to be, like, a regular character in the comic strip.
I mean, I don't just mean I showed up once or twice.
Like, I was probably, if all the characters showed up,
there was the main characters,
but I was probably the supporting character
that showed up the most in the strip.
I almost would argue I just became a regular character in the comic.
So anyway, just talking a little bit about the community
and how being the face of magic has some weird quirks to it.
And one of it is that I literally,
when I became the face figuratively, I kind of became the face literally.
And that, you know, there are people drawing me and using me to represent, you know, wizards.
And so that was, I just wanted to share that.
Next up is the match in Chiba against the Japanese high scorers that Aaron and Richard and I played in.
I don't have many stories where I won the match.
In fact, I have one.
I have one story where there was some event of consequence
and I was in the finals and it came down to me and I won it.
That is the one story I have.
So I had to show the one story because it's a fun story.
is the one story I have. So I had to share the one story because it's a fun story.
Next up, I shared
some photos from my
80,000 words.
I wanted to talk about my
article. I mean, Making Magic was
done for 20 years.
And it was the one article I did that
was all visual. It was literally all pictures.
80 pictures, so that's 80,000 words.
And I just wanted to share that.
And I wanted to sort of share a bit about my column.
Like, a lot of this is talking about things that I've enjoyed
and things that have been part of my interacting with magic,
so my column's a big part of that.
Next is Massive Magic with Richard Garfield
from Mirrored and Besieged.
Massive Magic is something that we've done many times
in many places.
I've been involved with it.
This is just my favorite ever.
Both of them was my favorite story.
And it was me and Richard.
And there was like a context to it
because, you know,
it's Frexians versus the Coalition.
Or I guess it's the Nap Coalition,
the Mirrens.
And anyway, it was just,
it's a fun story.
I have a lot of pictures to show,
so it was real fun.
And just let people see kind of
the kind of things that we do to celebrate magic
that I don't know if people were aware of.
Next up, the GDS.
I showed the pictures from the second one as my picture, although I show all three.
The great designer search has been a really important part of me.
A lot of designers, in fact, a majority of my designers
that I use with on a regular basis have come through that.
It's been a giant source for me.
And it's an interesting point of sort of how do you find designers?
You can't go to the Pro Tour.
And so that was really interesting for me.
And so I want to definitely talk about the GDS.
Next was my comic strip, Tales from the Pit.
I just want to talk a little bit.
It's something I kind of do for fun.
It's a way for me to show some lens into R&D, into magic in general.
And it's a place for me to sort of make fun of magic, you know, in a lighthearted way.
I'm not, other people are far more critical than I.
But, you know, it's me to sort of gently poke at things.
It's kind of fun.
Next up is, oh, meeting Christine Sprankle.
One of the things I really wanted for the talk
was to talk about the community.
And so I wanted to talk different aspects of the community.
I talked about people making comic strips.
So this is me talking about cosplaying.
And really, Christine was the one that put magic cosplaying on the map.
I had a picture the first time I met her
where she was dressed up as Elspeth at a world championship
and it just was, once again,
it's one of those moments kind of captured in time
that like it's me meeting Christine for the very first time
where I didn't really even know who Christine was.
It's just meeting her and that, you know,
that really was a through line of something becoming a big part of magic
that there's a whole community now
and like I said, part of the talk
was to talk about all the different communities.
And so I really wanted to talk about cosplaying.
And I had a great sequence of pictures
showing me posing with all these cosplayers,
which I thought was kind of fun.
So that was really cool.
Next.
Oh, I talk about doing, walking the planes.
This is another example of somebody
external doing something, working with us. This is another example of somebody external doing
something, working with us. And it just
was really, it was a lot
of fun. My story is talking about
the first time I worked with, I'd seen
something that Nate and Sean had did, the two that
did Walking the Planes.
And I said, hey, I want to be involved.
I'd like to do something.
And they came up with this crazy idea
where like, we're playing magic and then I win. And so he says, can I pick the next game? I'm like to do something. And they came up with this crazy idea where we're playing Magic and then I win.
And so he says, can I pick the next game?
I'm like, sure.
So he picks basketball.
And we're off on a basketball court.
And there's this whole story.
That was a fun story to tell.
And it was just fun.
It was something that I got to interact with.
And like I said, there's a lot of things
I've got to do with Magic.
And just the spy versus spy kind of relationship
that Nate had a character called the Wizard.
The Wizard and I were like rivals
and we always fought in the videos.
And that was a lot of fun.
Next, I talk about meeting celebrities.
And so part of being magic
is I have a lot of opportunity
to meet different celebrities.
This particular one's about meeting Felicia Day.
And it's a fun story where I figured out
that she was literally in the building
because I follow her on Twitter.
And so just like that, that story was a fun story where my chance to meet her was just me figuring out was literally in the building because I follow her on Twitter. And so just like that, that story was a fun story
where like my chance to meet her
was just me figuring out she was in the building.
And that was pretty cool.
Next year.
Oh, next was I did a thing called 20 years and 20 minutes
at one of the world championships
to celebrate the 20th anniversary.
And it just, I kind of want to talk about how we always celebrate anniversaries and
how they always come up with weird things for me to do and I'm always game to do them.
So that was the one where I had 20, I had one year, one minute per year to talk about
20 years of magic.
And that was mega hard.
I don't know, I'm not sure if watching you quite realized how hard it was, but it was
really hard.
I'm not sure if watching you quite realize how hard it was, but it was really hard. Next was me talking about the Eldrazi panel at PAX, where I presented with Will Whedon,
who I wanted to stress, I really liked Will Whedon, I had a lot of fun with Will Whedon.
A lot of the story is just how we had practiced and practiced and practiced,
and then the last minute he goes, let's try something else, which I just wasn't...
It's a funny story because I wasn't expecting that.
But I didn't... I hope people don't take away
that I had any ill will toward Wil Wheaton, because I don't.
Actually, I had a lot of fun being with Wil
Wheaton and doing that show.
And that was a lot of fun.
Next was talking about meeting Brian Goldner.
He's the...
He sadly died. The CEO
of Hasbro. And there's a fun story there
of meeting him and him thinking I ran everything, which
was kind of funny. And I want to talk a little bit about Hasbro. Hasbro's our parent company. And I wanted to make a nod to Hasbro. And there's a fun story there of meeting him and him thinking I ran everything, which was kind of funny. And I want to talk
a little bit about Hasbro. Hasbro's our parent company
and I wanted to make a nod to Hasbro. I thought that was
a fun way to make a nod to Hasbro.
Next was presenting Kaladesh.
So, talking about the big event we did
for Kaladesh and they put me in the sports
code and it was just another
once again, like, we put on a lot of events
and I want to represent some kind of the events
that we did. And this is a good example of a big event that we did.
So I thought that was cool.
Next, meeting Dana Fisher.
So I wanted to talk about the community.
I wanted to talk about how magic is changing.
And nothing felt more like magic is changing
than meeting a six-year-old
whose dream it is to second day a Grand Prix.
And so that was...
I thought that was pretty cool.
And, and Dana's super cute.
Next was the wedding.
I participated in a wedding.
I wanted to talk about how magic touches people's lives.
And it was kind of neat that I got to be in a wedding
and read the light song of night and day, the poem.
Plus, also, we were covered in,
this other thing was a visual thing. we were covered in this other thing was
a visual thing. We were covered in The New Yorker
and Al Hirschfeld drew me, right?
How often do I get a chance for, like,
a classic caricature to draw a caricature
of me? And I had to show that, so.
Next up was doing
the video with Peter and Richard for the 25th anniversary.
Once again, touching upon different anniversaries,
sort of touching upon, Peter and
Richard were the two that started it all,
so it was a great honor to sort of do a video with them,
and I wanted to touch upon that.
Next up is me being a cutout in Japan.
I just wanted to talk about the weird and quirky things,
that one of the things about doing what I do
is I sometimes get requests that are better odd,
and being a cutout in Japan for the 25th anniversary
was one of those things.
Next up, pie in the face for charity.
We do a lot of charity work.
Magic does.
Wizards as a whole.
And I definitely wanted to talk about that.
And I literally had a video of a pie being thrown in my face for charity.
So I'm like, what better?
It's the only video I've shown in the whole time.
But I just felt like, you know, it was a very short video,
and I just felt like, hey, how often do you get, and it had me get to talk a little bit about,
a little bit about charity, and how, you know, how, what we, how we interact with charity,
that's an important part of Magic's history, so. Next is Make-A-Wish, so I talked about doing a
Make-A-Wish, this is something I've done a lot
I just talked about probably the most high profile I did I did one with Jimmy and Josh and so I want
to talk about sort of the act of doing that and just talk about making a wish as a whole
it's something that I've done I don't know how many I've done but it is something that
is part of my job and I'm glad that I'm able to do it and hey I'm always honored that like you
ask a kid that they can do anything. They have one wish.
Anything they want in the world.
And their answer is they want to come meet me and come to Wizards or do something magic related.
That is, you know, quite the honor.
So, you know, I just wanted to share that.
Next, we're talking about the video for Thornvale Drain.
I do a lot of videos.
I just wanted to sort of talk about how
I go places and people come up with stuff
and we shoot them. This was like, we were making cookies
in a kitchen down in Los Angeles.
And so, I just want to talk about like part
of what I do is
like there's a certain amount of marketing,
right? There's a certain amount of like, hey,
part of what I do is telling people about what's up
and coming. And this was an opportunity to do
that and we got to show off the year
and we got to have cookies. And so anyway,
it was definitely a time
that I wanted to talk about.
Next was me
on Good Luck High Five with Megan
Maria. Once
again, I wanted to talk about the many different
aspects of the community
around magic. And
I have a big bond with Megan Maria.
Like, I just did the Infinity pre-release with them.
And I want to touch upon the fact that I've had the opportunity to be on...
I mean, I show a little thing of pictures of me on...
with the professor and on game nights and on Loading Ready Run
and on just a bunch of different shows.
Like, one of the things of being one of the
faces of magic is I want to be out there and I want people
I'm happy that I can participate on other shows with other people and do things
and I wanted to represent that and I wanted to represent that
magic isn't just, the magic community is not just wizards. There's a
giant whole community out there.
And there's all these people
spending a lot of time and energy
making content and really enriching the community.
And I wanted to touch upon all that.
That was important to me.
Next was me wearing the fencing mask.
I want to talk a little bit about R&D
and I wanted to share a story
about behind the scenes of R&D,
talk about code names, and just wanted to share a story about behind the scenes of R&D, talk about code names
and just sort of like
little traditions and stuff.
Like one of the things,
I mean,
I touched upon it
a little bit with the comics.
I think the comics
and this one
were me talking about,
hey,
fun of the part
of being in R&D
and some of the joy
of that experience.
The part of
30 Years of Magic
to me is
all my time spent
with the people making magic.
And there's more than just the designers,
but that's who I spend
the majority of my time with.
And so I just thought
that Fencing Mask was a fun story,
and so I shared that.
And finally,
my last picture
was me this year
at San Diego Comic-Con.
The funny thing about it is
I've been at San Diego Comic-Con
for 14 years, I think, now.
This is our 14th panel, I think.
And I just had no pictures of panels.
It was really weird.
Like, this year, I actually finally got a picture of me doing a panel.
But it's kind of nutty that, like, how many years I do panels, there's, like, no pictures of panels.
Like, I just, I think the problem was I'm always doing it, so I'm not taking pictures.
So unless someone else takes pictures. And probably somebody, somebody's taking pictures of it, but I couldn't find them.
And so that's another interesting little behind-the-scenes story of making this talk is I was at the mercy of the pictures I could get.
I had a bunch of ideas for cool stories I could tell if I could find the picture that went along with it.
And there were a bunch of stories that I just couldn't find the picture.
the picture that went along with it.
And there were a bunch of stories that I just couldn't find the picture.
That is...
Anyway, I wanted something
from this year just to sort of finish up.
So I ended up deciding that I wanted to talk
a little bit about... And it wasn't just about saying
Comic-Con, but about panels.
I mean, one of the things in my job is
I sit and talk to people and share
information about magic. And that's a fun part of what I do and part of magic.
So I wanted to share that.
Anyway, the interesting thing about me doing this right now,
I'm recording this podcast before the talk happened
because I'm trying to generate content so that this could go up shortly after I do the talk.
That's why I'm trying to record it ahead of time.
Because I record weeks ahead of time. My goal is for this to go up shortly after I do the talk. That's why I'm trying to record it ahead of time, because I record weeks
ahead of time. My goal is for this
to go up shortly after I do the speech.
But, the scary thing
for me is I haven't done the speech yet.
In fact, I'm not even done. I'm still
putting the final touches on the speech.
I'm still adding slides and stuff.
I'm still, you know... For those who
don't know, I have a slide
obsession.
For example, when I did the Great Designer Search,
not Great Designer Search,
sorry, Games Developer Conference, GDC,
my 20 years, 20 lessons talk,
I worked on that for months. I mean, I've worked on my talk for Magic 30 for probably a month,
but I worked on my talk for the GDC like six months.
I worked a long time on that talk.
It was a big, big, big deal. I wanted to get it right. And the longer I work on my talk for the GDC like six months. I worked a long time on that talk. It was a big, big, big deal.
I wanted to get it right.
And the longer I work on something, the more slides I put in it.
I just like having lots and lots of slides.
I love having visuals.
Also, I don't do a lot of graphics.
So some of my slides are just the way I do graphics.
Sort of old school.
But anyway, our talk at GDC had almost, it was just shy of a thousand slides.
So this one, right now it has over 200.
I'm not sure where it'll end up.
So one of the things that happened when I did all my research is I found all these pictures.
So for a lot of stories where I had the iconic representative picture,
I had a lot of other pictures from those events.
So where it made sense and where I had the pictures, I showed off more pictures.
Like a great example
is me playing Richard
in the Massive Magic.
We had infinite pictures
of that event.
So I was able to show
more pictures from that.
So that's part of the fun.
But anyway,
I hope my talk went well.
I guess if my talk
went horribly wrong,
I don't post this podcast.
So by the mere fact
that you're hearing this podcast, I think that means the talk probably went well. If it went horribly wrong, I don't post this podcast. So, by the mere fact that you're hearing this podcast, I think
that means the talk probably went well.
If it went horribly awry, I probably wouldn't
have been posting this podcast. So, since you're hearing
it, that means, oh, it went great.
So, I had a lot of fun
putting it together.
Like I said, I don't know
all the specifics.
Until I get to the venue, I don't know
all the specifics. So, I'm hoping anything goes off without a hitch. And I'm hoping you all enjoyed it, Until I get to the venue, I don't know all the specifics. So I'm hoping anything goes off without a hitch.
And I'm hoping you all enjoyed it, which I'm hoping, since you're hearing this, you did.
But it was a lot of fun to put together. It was a lot of fun to go back. On some level, the act
of making this was me going through the 30 years of magic. And so there was a lot
of joy, like, just going back and seeing all the pictures and picking
my memories and remembering all the memories, you know,
that it was my own retrospective on 30 Years
of Magic. So the act of making it was
something that was actually quite joyful for me and very fun.
And anyway,
I'm so glad
you guys got to hear about it. But I
am now at work. So we
all know what that means. This is the end of
my drive to work. To the end of Talking Magic,
it's time for me to be making magic.
So I hope you guys enjoyed my talk
and my talk
about my talk. But anyway, guys,
it's time for me to go. So I'll see you next time.
Bye-bye.