 Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome the bizarre magic of Brian Blushwood. All right guys, here's the thing, what you're about to see as far as I know, I'm the only performer in the United States doing a public show. However, it's going to be something difficult for everyone to get a clear view of. So we need to elect two judges to come on stage. Normally I ask for the two loudest, most outrageous people in the room. Personally, I'd much rather just require Scott and Brian to get up here on stage. Are they here? So here's the thing, people ask where I get the ideas for the idiotic stuff at the front. Huh? That's fixed. People ask where I get my ideas, and about five years ago did some research at the University of Texas in Austin, which has a huge library of very old magic books. Found something written in the 1800s by the magician Jean-Yu Jin Romair Houdon, a legend in magic. Had a bunch of old magic craft that I'd heard of, but one trick that I'd never encountered. It was something that blew my mind. It was a trick that he thought was charming until he performed it for an audience, and it freaked him out so much that a woman fainted at the show. He bolted from the gig, declaring he would never again be caught at such tricks. This is the guy who legitimized magic as a theater art. He's so important that Houdon named himself after him. And this is the trick. He only tried once. Do me a favor, Scott. Grab that mic out of that stand. I want you to hold the mic in your right hand. Where's your pair of glasses? No. Hey, Brant, will you come around and grab your mic? Sorry, I won't move. We dropped that little flashlight right there. Do me a favor, I need you to hold the mic in your right hand. Hold it at your left hand, palm up. We'd like you to talk into the mic there. And I need you to describe in as much detail as you possibly can what object is inside that little silver box. It's a pepper pot, so I'm kidding. I would call that the part of the watch where you have to attach the the main part of the watch where the face is and you attach it to a metal wrist band part of the watch. There's that little metal thing you can push in and pop out and extend the size of it. The shape is cylindrical. It's made of metal. We'll call it a nail for sure. He's going with all that. Your job, Brant, screw it up here. Your job is to keep this flashlight pointed at the nail at all times. I can at least catch a glimmer of what's going on. Feel free to get up close, just don't block. There we go. Your job, Scott, is to be the eyes for the folks in back who can't quite see by describing in detail, play by play, every single thing I do, starting right now. He's putting it, he's licking it. Yes, thank you, Scott. It's going to keep going. He's holding it in the air, it's in the air. He's about to stick it in his eye probably. He's touching his eye, he's wopping it in. Oh my gosh, people, he's putting it in his eye. He's literally putting it inside of it. Oh gosh, in his eye lid, and he's put, oh, holy shit. Oh, he's pushing it down, he's mission with it. He's smashing it down his nose. Maybe it's going down, I don't know, we can't see it from here. Oh my gosh, holy shite. He's pushing it out. He's acting like it's coming out the other side of his eye. It looks like it might actually do it. Holy crap, it's coming out of his eye. Is it? Oh my gosh, it came out of his eye. In fact, in the interest of fairness, we'll trade jobs here. Here, go, you keep that pointed at the nail. Brian, you describe everything. He's licking the nail. Taste buds. I'm just glad you stopped calling it a rod. Here we go. He is pulling his eyelid out and he dropped the nail into his lower eyelid. It is now, there is a nail-shaped protrusion in his lower eyelid. And he's showing it off. Oh my god, it looks like he's a really good illustrator. Illustrator, where that nail is going. Looks like it's going right through the bridge of his nose. Oh, it looks like it stopped. It's a personal of exactly what they saw. Wait for it, wait for it. It's a hit. At Children's Birthday Park.