When the Durham magician Michael Bloemeke emailed the INDY to pitch coverage of his shows, I immediately recognized his name. 

This was because I had personally experienced Bloemekeโ€™s magic when, at a birthday party he performed at two years ago, he made an X appear on my hand. One minute, my palm was bare; the next, it was intimately Sharpied with a robust X. I have no idea how it got there. 

โ€œWas thatโ€ฆOK?โ€ the birthday boy asked, pulling me aside. โ€œI mean, was it likeโ€ฆ violating to have that appear on your skin?โ€ย 

This friend, by the way, wasnโ€™t a child, nor was the next person whose birthday party I attended, at which Bloemeke also held court with a larger-than-average crowd of adults who had gathered for the occasion. Truth be told, Bloemeke was trending in my social circle. Another friend took the magicianโ€™s business card and convinced his boss to book Bloemeke for a corporate event. 

I didnโ€™t feel violated by the marking; I did, however, maybe now believe in magic. 

Bloemeke, 28, has been performing his trade for about a decade. This week, heโ€™s taking the show on the road to Europeโ€”his first time out of the countryโ€”to the Fรฉdรฉration Internationale des Sociรฉtรฉs Magiques (FISM) competition, which runs July 14-19 in Turin, Italy. The competition dates back to 1948 and comprises 97-plus magic societies. Competing in it is a big deal.ย 

โ€œIn America, you know, there might be a little smaller competition at this convention here or there, but then this is the big oneโ€”this is, like, the main event,โ€ Bloemeke says. โ€œIt very much feels like the Olympics for magic.โ€ 

Bloemeke grew up in Raleigh. In 2014, his freshman year in college, he decided he needed to become more interesting. 

โ€œHonestly, one day, I just thought that I needed a thing,โ€ Bloemeke says. โ€œI was like, โ€˜I need something that might be interesting and memorable.โ€™ I was worried that I was too boring.โ€ 

โ€œHonestly, one day, I just thought that I needed a thing. I was like, โ€˜I need something that might be interesting and memorable.โ€™ I was worried that I was too boring.โ€ 

He pulled upย YouTube and typed in โ€œhow to shuffle cards.โ€ From there, research progressed to a few easy card tricks that he’d practice for his campus church group.

โ€œIt was mostly just cards for a long time. Eventually, it moved beyond that and snowballed into, just, everything, as I got more and more interested in magic and practicing and learning new stuff,โ€ he says. โ€œAnd then you learn all the good stuff is in books, so then I start buying magic books. And then I find that I’m at the local magic club.โ€ 

Heโ€™d found his thing. Soon, Bloemeke says, he began putting together shows and attending magic conventions. He won awards from the International Brotherhood of Magicians and received a โ€œMaster of Magicโ€ degree from 4F Magic Inc., an exclusive, close-up magic convention. (Close-up magic is exactly what it sounds likeโ€”magic performed at close range, like sitting at a table with a magician.) 

He fine-tuned his act, which involves lots of self-deprecation, sleight-of-hand card tricks, and a variety of props riffing on the classics. Heโ€™ll intermittently snort a rubber band into his nose or ask an audience member to cut up a rope, only for the ropeโ€”somehow!โ€”to appear reconnected. Now heโ€™s a regular in the Triangle performance circuit, booking shows at birthday parties, bat mitzvahs, and even weddings. Not kidsโ€™ birthday parties, thoughโ€”he prefers performing for a room of adults.ย 

โ€œMagic’s not good for them,โ€ says Bloemeke, referring to children. โ€œIn order to understand the trick, you have to understand what the rules of reality are, and then [a magician] can do something that kind of breaks that [rule] and is impossible. But for kids, everything’s impossible, so it’s not really magic. Clowns honestly work better.โ€ย 

Michael Bloemeke, 28, of Durham, poses for a portrait with a deck of cards on Monday, June 30, 2025, in Durham. Bloemeke will compete in the FISM World Championship of Magic later this month. Photo by Angelica Edwards.

In March, he quit his job doing software testing in order to prepare for FISM and do magic full-time. FISM takes place every three yearsโ€”it was last held in Quebec in 2022โ€”and has two genres: close-up and stage, which then each have three subcategories. For close-up, those categories are card, parlor, and micro-magic; for stage, mental, manipulation, and general.ย 

Bloemeke is one of just four magicians traveling from North America to compete in close-up; within the category, he is performing a 10-minute parlor magic actโ€”the only American magician to compete in that category. Though he wonโ€™t say much about his act ahead of FISM, he says that, if all goes well, heโ€™ll post the act on YouTube afterward. (โ€œUnless I totally bomb,โ€ he clarifies.)

Several weeks ago, I attended a casual show that Bloemeke was performing at Bull City Ciderworks. As I slipped into my seat, the magician was explaining to the audience that heโ€™d had a beer before the show. โ€œSee?โ€ he held up an empty Corona, then placed it in a paper bag and flipped the bag over, holding it in such a way that it was obvious he was gripping the bottle from the top. Nothing fell out. Nice try, Bloemeke. โ€œNow itโ€™s gone,โ€ he said. 

But the trick wasnโ€™t over. As the evening progressed, it became clear that this routine is all part of his trademark gaffe: establish camaraderie with the audience with a trick that they can see through. Add some bluster. Next: perform a trick they donโ€™t understand. Blow their minds.

Bloemeke did just this by asking, โ€œWouldnโ€™t it be cool, though, if I could make the beer reappear full?โ€ The audience nodded. He reached into the paper bagโ€”a thin, average brown lunch bagโ€”and pulled out a full Corona, then handed it to a woman in the audience. She cracked it open and tentatively took a sip. โ€œItโ€™s a beer,โ€ she confirmed. 

After the show, I tracked him down and asked about the Sharpie hand trick, which I have probably thought about once a week for the past two years. Could he do it again? He avoided the question, instead seamlessly transitioning into a hand clasp with another local magician walking by, thus pivoting into a new conversation. This disappearing act was fair enough; still, Iย found myself checking my palm throughout the night, half-expecting to see an X.

Follow Culture Editor Sarah Edwards on Bluesky or email [email protected].

Sarah Edwards is culture editor of the INDY, covering cultural institutions and the arts in the Triangle. She joined the staff in 2019 and assumed her current role in 2020.