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In this captivating episode of WorkLife with Adam Grant, world-renowned mentalist Oz Pearlman joins Adam on stage at Authors@Wharton to demonstrate his extraordinary skills while sharing the profound lessons behind his rise to success. (02:37) Oz, who left his Wall Street career to pursue mentalism and reached the finals of America's Got Talent, reveals how his craft extends far beyond entertainment into creating memorable moments and mastering human connection. Throughout the episode, he performs mind-reading demonstrations on audience members while breaking down the psychology and strategic thinking that drives both his performances and professional success. (10:00) The conversation explores themes of risk-taking, empathy, rejection resilience, and the art of understanding what others truly want.
Adam Grant is an organizational psychologist at Wharton and the host of the WorkLife podcast. He's a New York Times bestselling author known for books like "Think Again" and "Originals," and is recognized as one of the world's leading experts on motivation, meaning, and organizational behavior.
Oz Pearlman has been called the World's Greatest Mentalist and made it to the finals on America's Got Talent. He's performed for celebrities including Steven Spielberg, Katy Perry, Tom Brady, and Barack Obama after leaving a career on Wall Street to pursue his passion for mentalism and magic.
Oz emphasizes that his success comes from making everything about the audience rather than showcasing his own abilities. (11:11) When pitching TV ideas, he doesn't focus on himself but on why viewers at home should care. This principle extends beyond entertainment - the more you can empathize and understand what's going on in someone else's mind, the stronger your advantage in life becomes. (13:24) The people who stand out most in professional and social settings are those who are genuinely interested in others, ask thoughtful questions, and make people feel seen and heard rather than defaulting to generic conversation starters.
Drawing from his experience as a 14-year-old restaurant magician, Oz learned to anticipate and address every concern people might have before approaching them. (17:38) He would analyze what potential customers were thinking - Do I have to tip? Is this kid any good? How long will this take? - and systematically eliminate these hesitations through his approach, body language, and opening phrases. This methodology applies to any situation where you need to win someone over, from job interviews to sales calls to networking events.
To overcome the emotional pain of constant rejection at restaurants, Oz developed a mental framework that separated his identity from the performance. (26:56) Instead of internalizing rejection as personal failure, he blamed external factors or reframed it as "not yet" rather than "no." (27:15) This psychological technique - making situational rather than dispositional attributions - protected his self-esteem and allowed him to persist through hundreds of rejections while continuously improving his approach.
Oz created a powerful technique to overcome procrastination by setting phone alarms 24 hours in advance asking "How do you feel about X? 1 to 10." (29:05) He forces himself to complete dreaded tasks while rating his anxiety level, then when the alarm goes off the next day, he invariably finds his stress has dropped from an 8 or 9 to a 2. This demonstrates how time changes perception and helps trick your mind into realizing that anticipatory anxiety is often worse than reality, leading to faster action on difficult tasks.
Oz's willingness to take bigger swings than others in his field comes from extensive preparation and failure planning. (07:57) Before any high-stakes performance, he maps out multiple backup plans and contingencies for when things go wrong. (09:07) Crucially, he maintains control by never telegraphing his intended destination, so audiences never know if something has failed. This approach - combining thorough preparation with strategic ambiguity - allows for both ambitious risk-taking and graceful recovery when needed.