A magic show built from the ground up for the camera, not a livestream of a stage show pointed at a webcam. Interactive, personal, and paced for a screen. For remote teams, hybrid offsites, virtual holiday parties, and client-appreciation events where everyone is in a different room.

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Most "virtual magic shows" are a stage show pointed at a webcam. The performer can't see the audience, the audience can't interact, and the whole thing feels like watching television. The magic might be good. The experience isn't.
Scott's virtual format was built for the camera from the ground up. Attendees shuffle their own cards. They reach into their own wallets. They draw on their own paper. They're not watching a show happen to someone else; it's happening on their screen, with their stuff, with their words showing up where they shouldn't be possible.
The format works for remote teams, client-appreciation events, hybrid offsites, and virtual holiday parties. Audiences from ten people to five hundred. Runtime 25 to 60 minutes. For organizations that gather their teams in person, Scott's in-person corporate work and live keynote events apply the same approach to a room you can fill.
A 25-minute virtual feature at a remote team all-hands, Monday morning meeting, or offsite kickoff. Interactive, fast-paced, and calibrated to fit the agenda.
A 45-minute feature for remote companies running a virtual holiday party. Can include a custom intro for the company and specific interactive moments tied to your theme.
A 30–45 minute show for a remote client-appreciation event. Particularly effective when paired with a shipped gift box delivered to attendees' homes in advance (Scott uses what's in the box as props during the show).
Every engagement begins with a conversation. You tell Scott about the audience: the size, the platform, what they'll be doing right before the show, what kind of company in-jokes will land. A retiring executive whose tenure deserves a callback. A sales kickoff number to celebrate. Reference material the team will find funny. Whatever the moment calls for gets written into the routines.
That work happens before the show goes live, not on camera.
What the client needs to provide. A meeting link on Zoom, Teams, Google Meet, Webex, or whatever platform you already use. A point of contact for the day. If you'd like to ship gift boxes to attendees in advance, Scott can coordinate with your events team on what goes inside. Scott handles his own broadcast-quality camera, lighting, microphone, and connection from his studio.
Audience range. Ten to five hundred attendees. The interactive elements scale with the group size: smaller audiences get more direct one-on-one moments; larger ones get a tighter, more featured format with selected volunteers.
Every virtual engagement is custom-quoted. Runtime, audience size, platform, and any shipped gift-box component all shape the proposal. Virtual engagements involve no travel cost, which typically makes them meaningfully less expensive than the in-person equivalent.
Personal reply within twenty-four hours of inquiry, followed by a proposal. Holds are released in the order received.
Scoped individually. Final figures depend on runtime, audience size, platform, and any shipped gift-box component.
Scott also performs for adult private parties and milestone birthdays and children's birthdays. Different formats, same standard.
No, and that's the point. The virtual format was built for the camera from the ground up. Attendees use their own cards, their own wallets, their own paper. The magic happens on their screen with their stuff, not on a distant stage.
Scott can run on Zoom, Microsoft Teams, Google Meet, Webex, or whatever platform your company already uses. No special software for attendees to install.
Five hundred attendees. The format scales down as well; Scott has done virtual shows for groups as small as ten. The interactive elements calibrate to audience size.
Yes. A pre-shipped gift box (deck of cards, a small prop, something themed) turns the virtual show into a hybrid experience. Scott can coordinate with your events team on what goes in the box and will build routines around what attendees have in front of them.
Most of Scott's work has moved back to in-person since 2023, but virtual shows are still available on request for remote-first teams, global companies, and hybrid events where some attendees can't travel.