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TVNZ – Fatal Distraction Review

A mind reader who can’t read minds but who’s a bit more honest about it?

The Tui billboard writes itself really, doesn’t it?

Except, with Chris Cox it about sums up his act.

As you wander into his latest show, Fatal Distraction, you’re greeted by ushers wanting to get you to fill out some information and provide a list of things for Chris to do in his act.

But even if you think you know where he’s going to go with it, I can guarantee you don’t have the slightest clue about where the journey’s going to take you.

He’s asked that secrets of the show aren’t revealed – and fair enough, I’ll afford this boisterous Brit that very courtesy – suffice to say, it’s loosely an act which has a story thread running through it. One of those threads is that you’re only one “What if” away from a different life….

However, the major thrill of this show is the audience participation – Chris’ show is not one where you can sit back and not get involved; thanks to the hurling around of a soft toy, his victims (in the loosest sense of the word) are chosen and feats performed that simply have you sitting there, scratching your head and voicing out “WTF?”

It’s very easy to be cynical about an act like this – sure, you can argue the suggestions are placed in volunteers’ heads by potentially loaded questions – though, to be honest, if you’re thinking that, it’s a surefire sign that this quick talking Brit, a crown prince of distraction, has got under your skin and got your grey matter puzzling away.

Cox is enthusiastic, fast talking, funny, (albeit with a bad line in some corny puns here and there) and the provider of a great hour’s worth of entertainment. It’s cleverly masterful stuff throughout and it’s guaranteed to leave you puzzled but greatly amused.

Thanks to a generally good natured and genial host, you’re happy to sit back and be confounded; Chris is even generous to stick around afterwards to meet the crowd.

I’d wanted to go to talk to him and profess to know how he’d done it (I didn’t have the first clue if I was brutally honest but pure swagger would never see me admit that) but sometimes, the magic is simply left alone and you’re best to bathe in the glow of a mind blowingly good, brilliantly entertaining show which leaves you beaming from ear to ear as it finishes.

By Darren Bevan.

Yahoo New Zealand – Fatal Distraction Review

UK comedian Chris Cox claims to be a mind reader who can’t read minds. But based on his show at the NZ International Comedy Festival this year, I’m starting to suspect perhaps the young man really can read minds after all.

Cox is not your usual comedian, in that he doesn’t just stand on a stage and spout jokes at an audience.

No, in his own charming way (and using a ferret in a jumper), he picks out members of his audience to demonstrate his knack of knowing what’s going to come next. (But don’t be alarmed, more timid audience members – Cox doesn’t humiliate his participants and doesn’t make them do anything too taxing or embarrassing.)

Cox’s enthusiasm on stage appears to be boundless and those who see the show will leave the theatre wondering how on Earth he manages to do what he does.

I, myself, don’t know how Cox manages to be on the money so often with his audience predictions, but I do know ‘Fatal Distraction’ is funny, fascinating and a bloody good hour of entertainment.

Dominion Post NZ – Mind reader or not? Chris Cox tells all

“I always disliked people who pretended to be a psychic,” declares Englishman Chris Cox.

“What I always liked about magic is that you were dishonest – but you were quite truthful in that you were lying to people.”

It sums up Cox’s credo and partly explains his billing in the New Zealand International Comedy Festival as “the mind reader who can’t read minds”.

The funny thing is that while Cox, 28, can’t read minds, he’s so good at what he does that more often than not it appears that he really does know what we’re thinking.

Ahead of Cox’s shows next week, Wellington audiences got a 10-minute teaser during First Laughs at the Opera House on Sunday night. Cox brought three audience members on stage and asked each to choose a different coloured headband to wear, then sit on one of three chairs on stage. One woman was asked to go through a bag containing bits of paper describing pieces of clothing, while Cox said he would know the answers to a series of yes and no questions he put to the three. Cox appeared to get some of the questions wrong. But in a twist that left many in the audience gasping and whispering “how did he do that?”, Cox then went on to reveal that he knew all along what he would get wrong or right. He also knew ahead of time which coloured headbands each of the three would choose, the specific chair they would sit on and the item of clothing on the chosen scrap of paper.

Cox is well aware of the long history of “mind readers” as entertainment. “In the early days it was often a swami going ‘I know what you were thinking’.

“For me what’s interesting is pulling back the curtain a bit. You put your cards on the table and say ‘look, I’m not actually able to do this. Here are some of the techniques I use, now watch what I can do with it’. I like to start off gently and show some of the techniques behind the things as I’m doing it – and that stuff gets hidden more and more as you go down a slightly more incredible route.”

Cox says it’s also an acknowledgement that today’s audiences are smart enough to know that people can’t actually read minds. “But within that you still want to enjoy it as if it’s real. I always hate the idea of someone that sat in the show seeing it as a jigsaw puzzle and trying to work it out.”

Cox’s approach has paid off. Since he began his act while at university eight years ago, he’s become a star of the comedy circuit. It’s included several Edinburgh Fringe shows – along with two Fringe awards – three West End shows and numerous television and radio spots. Kelly Osbourne and Dannii Minogue are fans and one of Cox’s biggest champions is British comedian Ricky Gervais. Cox says praise and recognition from big names has helped. “It’s flattering for anyone to like me, let alone someone whose work I admire. Live entertainment is the best thing in the world. It’s a great thing to go and do. But, particularly in the UK, money’s tight for people and it’s a lot of money to come out and see a show. Hopefully those people liking me, that other people recognise and admire, [makes] people think ‘he’s worth the risk’.”

Cox got his first taste when he was given a magic set when he was six years old. “My parents used to take me up to London to see my uncle and aunt and we’d always pop into a magic shop there and buy a magic trick. I always enjoyed performing and magic I gravitated towards.”

And yes, he says, there have been moments in his shows where he’s stumbled with an audience member. “It happens quite often, there are lots of times I’m good at covering it so no- one will really know. Rarely a week of shows goes by where I won’t pick someone to use for a trick and then look at them and change my mind and send them back.”

One of the most significant developments in Cox’s career he could only confirm in the past week: the Syfy channel in the United States has signed him up to do what at the moment is known as “the untitled Chris Cox project”.

“It will be a mind-reading show following my life as I try to mess with people’s minds,” Cox says.

“I am quite excited. [Television] is a very different beast. I know the world of theatre and performing my own shows, I know how to do the tricks and how to make stuff work. We’re trying to develop it in a way to make that come across on TV and still get the wow factor – still get people to feel involved and enjoy the performance.

“I still feel that I’m at the very early stages of my career. I haven’t hit a point where the momentum suddenly explodes. What I like now is the excitement of being able to come to Wellington for the first time and I’m still a ‘new act’ to the city. I’m a new act with a load of experience.”

By Tom Hardy for the Dominion Post, New Zealand

Kiwi’s Love Cox

Hello world,

So here I am in New Zealand and you know what, it’s bloody good fun. Especially as the reviews have been so brilliant. There are a few shows left at the Q Theatre in Auckland then I’ll have a week of shows in Wellington. You can find out about tickets here. You can read all the reviews in full here but here are a select few quotes about how great I am!

Chris

TVNZ
Bathe in the glow of a mind blowingly good, brilliantly entertaining show which leaves you beaming from ear to ear.

Theatre Review
We are left scratching our heads in wonder and amazement. How did he know that man’s phone number??? How did he know that woman wanted him to recite one very specific line from a Harry Potter book?!? Go see Cox – send him your thoughts and see what comes back. Extraordinary.

Yahoo
I, myself, don’t know how Cox manages to be on the money so often with his audience predictions, but I do know ‘Fatal Distraction’ is funny, fascinating and a bloody good hour of entertainment.

NZ Herald
I have no idea how he did it, but it was impressive stuff. And I have no idea how he did many things during his hour-long set that is a mix of love story, mind manipulation, magic show, and crazed chaos

Cox On The Box & Down Under (ish)

Well it’s all go in Cox Towers, which isn’t an actual tower, but if it were it would obviously be penis shaped. You can’t call a building that then make it a square.

I’m currently in the lovely city of Auckland gearing up for The New Zealand International Comedy Festival. I’ll be playing a week of shows at the Q Theatre in Auckland and then a week in Wellington. You can find out all the details here.

Also we have some exciting news in the world of television. By we, I mean, me. Obvs. I’ve been jetting back and forth to LA a lot recently, this isn’t just because I love Air New Zealand, or anything to do with me wanting a stupidly large carbon footprint and eternal jetlag. Oh now. It’s because I’ve been working on a TV project with the SyFy channel. Finally I can now talk about it. I’m hugely excited by what the show could be, and really hope it all comes off and you get to see it on your screens and go, oh wow, that’s good.

SyFy have announced they are developing a show with me and here are the juice details.

“Chris Cox Project – Young and charming, Chris Cox is the mind reader who can’t read minds. Cox has the mind-manipulating abilities of Derren Brown, the mischief of Ferris Bueller and the comic eccentricity of Mr. Bean all wrapped in a style uniquely his own. In everyday situations and locations – at a coffee shop, the post office, or just walking down the street – Chris amazes and confounds real people. Production company: Mission Control Media. Executive producers: Dwight Smith, Michael Agbabian, Erich Recker.”

You can read a bit more about it here.