Der in Israel geborene Magier Uri Geller posiert am Sonntag, 6. Januar 2008, in Koeln bei einem Fototermin zu seiner Fernsehshow "The next Uri Geller" fuer die Fotografen mit einem verbogenen Loeffel. In acht Live-Shows wird er ab Dienstag, 8. Januar 2008 beim Privatsender ProSieben einen Nachfolger fuer sich als Loeffelverbieger suchen. (AP Photo/Hermann J. Knippertz) --- The in Irael born magic artist Uri Geller poses for photographers during a photo call to his TV show "The next Uri Geller" in a TV studio in Cologne, Germany, on Sunday, Jan. 6, 2008. The live show "The next Uri Geller" will start on Tuesday, Jan. 8, 2008, in the German private TV ProSieben. (AP Photo/Hermann J. Knippertz)

A man famous for allegedly bending spoons with his mind is now explaining what the fork is up with the iPhone 6.

Uri Geller, who rose to fame in the 1970s by claiming he could bend spoons just by staring at them, now says he's figured out why the iPhone 6 is so prone to bendability.

“There are two possible explanations,” Geller told MarketWatch. “Either the phone is so seriously thin and flimsy that it is bendable with mere physical force, which I cannot believe given the extensive tests Apple would have done. Or -- and this is far more plausible -- somehow the energy and excitement of the 10 million people who purchased iPhones has awakened their mind powers and caused the phones to bend.”

Geller is now hoping to bend the ear of Apple executives and convince them to hire him as a public spokesman and prevent customers with bent iPhones from getting bent out of shape.

“I urge Apple to hire me to explain to the world that this is not the company’s fault at all,” he told MarketWatch.

However, Geller may not be the best Apple spokesman since he admits he is loyal to his Blackberry -- a phone that he claims he can also bend with his mind.

Apple execs apparently believe the so-called "Bend-gazi" controversy has been bent out of proportion since only nine people have reported the problem.

There may be a problem hiring Geller to explain his massive mind power theory problem to the world.

Ever since the 1970s, magicians like James Randi have shown that Geller's signature act of bending spoons psychically can easily be replicated, according to the Skeptics Dictionary.