Justin Willman's performances on Netflix original, and the show has made specific efforts to limit cuts in editing when an actual magic trick is being performed. So no matter how absurd whatever Justin is attempting is, it feels real; and there's plenty of absurdity.

Some of the wildest tricks he pulls are re-ran quite a few times within the recent season and manage to never lose their magic, for lack of a better word. There's one where he'll essentially pull an object through his own body and have it come out just the same on the other side. In a later episode it's performed with a belt. He holds it behind his back, pulls both ends forward, and suddenly it's entirely in front of him. It never makes sense, yet it happened.

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That sums up most of Willman's tricks; they're obviously difficult for anyone to wrap their head around. One trick that was strange enough that most wouldn't attempt to dissect it was Willman pulling a teabag out of his eye socket. First pulling out the string and then yanking the actual teabag out from under his eye. Easily the most gross and difficult to watch out of everything in the season, so it wouldn't be surprising if most viewers were covering their own eyes as it was happening, and don't dare to watch it again in order to better understand how exactly he pulled that off.

Netflix Magic for Humans

The biggest standout of the whole season though that highlights both Justin Willman's ability and skill at creating these wild illusions and his talent as a showman who wants to entertain in more ways than one, is the ghost pepper trick. In an episode themed around fear, Willman explained his resistance to spicy food that he's had his entire life, and then decided to set up a trick that he only performs after eating an entire ghost pepper. The ghost pepper is the worlds hottest chili pepper, and Willman was not allowed to drink anything in order to recover from eating it until after completing the trick.

On paper the other aspects of that trick were merely variations on "Is this your card?", but again they went in such strange directions like a card coming out of Willman's mouth and him having to lick it so it changes to the correct card. He does three different versions of that plus having the three card numbers somehow be the combination to a locked box that a jug of milk was in, and this is all being pulled off while Willman is seemingly in intense pain from the pepper and hoping to get the trick over with as fast as possible.

That's as wild as Justin Willman gets in season 3, and that means it's the peak of the season since absurdity is exactly what Magic For Humans thrives on. There's plenty more like this in the season, and hopefully more to come in the future. Willman's tricks, illusions, whatever he wants to call them; they only get stranger as he becomes more refined.

Next: Magic For Humans: Justin's 'Trippiest' Tricks In Season 3