Did you happen to catch Penn and Teller on the Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon on Friday night? The comedy magic duo taught Jimmy and the Tonight Show audience a “love ritual” card trick that viewers could also perform at home. In fact, you can do the trick now. Go get four playing cards and check this out!

Penn and Teller are promoting the third season of Penn & Teller: Fool Us on the CW Network where they continue to search for magicians that can stump them. So far this season they have showcased some GREAT magic and so far, a couple of the acts have actually fooled them. Some of the performers fooled them in the first or second seasons and have returned to successfully fool them for a second time.

The show is now hosted by Alyson Hannigan, Penn & Teller: Fool Us showcases talented magicians as they perform their acts for comedic illusionists Penn Jillette and Teller. If they can fool the duo, they win the opportunity to perform in Penn and Teller’s Las Vegas act.

Jesse Eisenberg appeared on Episode 2 of the third season and it appears that he got carded.

The magic on this third season has been fantastic however the ratings are down by double digits. For instance, last week Fool Us reached only 0.30% of the audience or about 1.21 million viewers. Last year during season 2 they averaged 0.49% of the audience or 1.81 million total viewers.

Penn is also promoting his new book, Presto!: How I Made Over 100 Pounds Disappear and Other Magical Tales. In the book, Jillette tells how he lost 100 pounds with his trademark outrageous sense of humor and biting social commentary that makes this success story anything but ordinary.

As he was approaching his sixtieth birthday. Jillette found himself opping 330 pounds and saddled with a systolic blood pressure reading over 200, he knew he was at a dangerous crossroads: if he wanted to see his small children grow up, he needed to change. And then came Crazy Ray. A former NASA scientist and an unconventional, passionate innovator, Ray Cronise saved Penn Jillette’s life with his wild “potato diet.”