How Many People Here Tonight Are Telekinetic? Raise My Hand

Steven Wright? Kurt Vonnegut? Emo Philips? Rich Siegel? Anonymous?

Dear Quote Investigator: A speaker will typically ask audience members to raise their hands to signal an affirmative answer to a question. A humorist constructed a funny remark based on a transformation of this scenario:

If you believe in psychokinetic powers, please raise my hand.

This line has been attributed to Steven Wright, Kurt Vonnegut, and Emo Philips. Would you please explore its provenance?

Quote Investigator: The earliest match known to QI appeared in an article about surrealist comedian Emo Philips published in the “Birmingham Post-Herald” of Alabama in November 1985. Journalist Pamela Morse visited with Philips at The Comedy Club in Homewood, Alabama, and she recounted some of his jokes. Boldface added to excerpts by QI:[ref] 1985 November 15, Birmingham Post-Herald, Section: Kudzu Magazine, Emo Philips is, well, different by Pamela Morse (Kudzu Reporter), Quote Page 10, Column 1, Birmingham, Alabama. (Newspapers_com) [/ref]

“At a party people often ask each other, ‘Where were you when Kennedy was shot?’ … I don’t have an alibi.”

Emo’s comedy has been called intellectual. He’d rather just call it funny. “How many people here have telekinetic powers? … Raise my hand!”

Below are additional selected citations in chronological order.

In January 1990 “The Palm Beach Post” published a profile of Emo Philips. The journalist Peter Smith attended a performance of the comedian and also had dinner with him:[ref] 1990 January 6, The Palm Beach Post, My dinner with Emo (continuation title: Philips keeps ’em laughing with surrealism, paradoxes) by Peter Smith (Palm Beach Post Staff Writer), Start Page 1D, Quote Page 7D, Column 1, West Palm Beach, Florida. (Newspapers_com)[/ref]

Philips’ stage persona is a remarkable mixture of childlike innocence and almost otherworldly sophistication; the man who closes his act by thanking the audience for being his friend also enjoys oddly subtle wordplay and quizzically paradoxical jokes. (“How many people here tonight are telekinetic? Raise my hand.”)

In September 1990 a version of the joke was appended to a message posted to a Usenet newsgroup for Macintosh computer programmers called comp.sys.mac.programmer. The line was part of the signature file of Rich Siegel; hence, it appeared in several of his messages. No attribution was provided:[ref] Usenet Discussion Message, Date: September 27, 1990, Newsgroup: comp.sys.mac.programmer, From: @endor.uucp (Rich Siegel), Subject: Re: THINK Pascal history (was Format C Code in THINK C 4.0). (Google Groups Search; Accessed October 8, 2018) link [/ref]

If you have telekinetic powers, raise my hand.

Another Usenet participant noticed the joke and replied with humor:[ref] Usenet Discussion Message, Date: September 27, 1990, Newsgroup: comp.sys.mac.programmer, From: @midway.uchicago.edu (News Administrator), Subject: Re: Think Pascal Wishes…? (Google Groups Search; Accessed November 9, 2018) link [/ref]

> If you have telekinetic powers, raise my hand.
I just did. I also have hypnotic powers, so you didn’t notice.

In June 1993 another instance of the quip appeared in the Usenet newsgroup rec.radio.amateur.misc, and Philips received credit:[ref] Usenet Discussion Message, Date: June 16, 1993, Newsgroup: rec.radio.amateur.misc, From: @canrem.com (Jeff Shirton), Subject: UN: The ITU phonetic alpha. (Google Groups Search; Accessed November 9, 2018) link [/ref]

“Everyone with telekinetic powers, raise my hand.”
-Emo Phillips

In 1994 journalist Phil Vettel reviewed a game called Psi-Kick in the “Chicago Tribune”, and he shared the joke without an ascription:[ref] 1994 November 25, Chicago Tribune, Section 7: Friday, All a board (Continuation title: Games) by Phil Vettel (Tribune Staff Writer), Start Page 3, Quote Page 14, Column 2, Chicago, Illinois. (Newspapers_com)[/ref]

All those who believe in psychokinesis, raise my hand. Thought so. But you might change your mind after playing around with this game, which includes instructions and paraphernalia to experiment with your own psychic abilities.

In May 1998 “The Dispatch” of Moline, Illinois printed a filler item that implausibly credited comedian Steven Wright with the line:[ref] 1998 May 15, The Dispatch, (Filler item), Quote Page 1, Column 1, Moline, Illinois. (Newspapers_com)[/ref]

CHUCKLE
“All those who believe in psychokinesis, raise my hand.” — Steven Wright

In July 1998 a columnist in a North Carolina newspaper printed several lines credited to Steven Wright, but QI believes that neither of the two below was crafted by Wright:[ref] 1998 July 14, The Charlotte Observer, Column: Outfront: Short and Stupid Stories from the Annals of Brain-Dead Crime by Doug Robarchek (Staff Writer), Quote Page 3E, Charlotte, North Carolina. (Access World News)[/ref]

Shirt and sweet: More Steven Wright T-shirt slogans:
* Join the Army. Meet interesting people. Kill them.
* All those who believe in telekinesis, raise my hand.

Kurt Vonnegut died in April 2007, and a piece reviewing his life appeared in May 2007 in a Waterloo, Iowa newspaper. A sidebar of quotations ascribed to him included an instance of the jest:[ref] 2007 May 2, The Courier, Section: Cedar Falls Insider: Your Community Newspaper, Readers remember Vonnegut for his unique style by Briana McGeough and Ellen Wrede (Feature Editor and Staff Writer), Sidebar: Verses of Vonnegut, Quote Page 22, Column 4, Waterloo, Iowa. (Newspapers_com)[/ref]

“Those who believe in telekinetics, raise my hand.”

The quotation collector Robert Byrne included the line in his 2012 compilation “The 2,548 Wittiest Things Anybody Ever Said”:[ref] 2012, The 2,548 Wittiest Things Anybody Ever Said, Compiled by Robert Byrne, Quote Number 2089, Touchstone: A Division of Simon & Schuster, New York. (Verified on paper)[/ref]

How many people here believe in telekinetic powers? Raise my hand.
—Emo Philips

In conclusion, Emo Philips is the leading candidate for creator of this joke based on the 1985 citation. It is conceivable that Steven Wright who received credit by 1998 actually crafted the quip. It does fit his style of humor, but the long delay makes the Wright ascription unlikely. In addition, Wright is a quotation magnet, i.e., many jokes have been incorrectly reassigned to him. Neither Philips nor Wright is known for stealing lines. The ascription to Kurt Vonnegut has no substantive support.

Image Notes: Multicolored illustration of raised hands from Kaz at Pixabay.

(Great thanks to colleague William Mullins whose inquiry led QI to formulate this question and perform this exploration. Mullins noted that the quip had been attributed to Kurt Vonnegut, Emo Philips, and Steven Wright. He also located the key citations in November 1985 and January 1990 together with other valuable citations. Thanks also to Massimo who tweeted a picture of a sign displaying the joke. Further thanks to discussants Max Maven and Jamy Ian Swiss.)

Update History: On August 21, 2022 the November 18, 1985 citation was added. The article was partially rewritten.

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