A scene from Tony Lee’s show at UNB Fredericton, in 2009, from his Facebook page.

A video shows a group of students slumped in their chairs on a stage as if in a deep sleep. The video cuts to hypnotist Tony Lee prompting them, both women and men, to imagine simulating oral sex to a man. The students abide as they gesture, half unconscious, and move in ways miming actions one would expect to see in a pornographic film. The audience roars with laughter and cheers. “Lean forward! Use your hands! Grab that cock” Tony Lee shouts and the students on stage obey.

This scene is only a small part of the 20-minute Youtube video of Tony Lee’s show at Fanshawe College in London, Ont. in 2012, and there are others like it. Lee travels across the country with his hypnotist routine performing at various universities’ orientation week events. He’s performed close to 7000 shows at universities, including Dalhousie, Saint Mary’s, Mount A and Acadia..
Lee is a self-described “XXX-rated hypnotist,” but also offers a less racy “PG-rated” show to orientation week leaders. But many want the full XXX, he says.

Even with the controversial nature of his show, Lee says he would estimate about three or four students out of 1000 might not enjoy the show, usually due to religious or moral beliefs. The show, he says, is completely optional and no one if forced to attend. “At the end of the day the kids are grown up, if they really don’t like what they see, they’re young adults, they’ll leave the building.” He says he’s careful at universities never to demean women and to prevent nudity. “There’s a certain line that you can’t cross,” he says.

“Damien the XXX hypnotist,” AKA Damian Dougherty, also tours Canadian universities with a similar act. Lee says he mentored Damien and the two have an agreement in which Lee allows Damien to use some of his unique and original acts, “sort of like lending a comedian a joke,” Lee says.

The acts people who are hypnotized perform, Damien says, “could be anything from pretending they’re Britney Spears or Justin Bieber to falling in love with their chair.”

Lee employs a similar trick, suggesting that the students imagine themselves as their favourite pet, and their chair as a member of the same animal species and a love interest. “They think they’re a dog humping another dog,” he says “but visually to the audience it’s a person screwing a chair, you know what I mean.”

“The kids love it,” Dougherty says, referring to his own performance at orientation weeks. “I am still the highest attended event. You can speak to all the programmers on campus, my show is very fun, very safe, very clean.”

But not everyone agrees. The Dalhousie Student Union discontinued the use of a hypnotist a few years ago.

Danny Shanahan has been involved in orientation week at the university from his
The XXX hypnotist set a bad tone for the type of orientation week that they want to offer at Dalhousie, says Danny Shanahan, as chair of the orientation week committee. “I can tell you from a personal standpoint that there were definitely things that I was uncomfortable with as a first year student, but also I think many students probably were,” Shanahan says referring to his experience watching Tony Lee perform in 2009.

“I think there were some very homophobic undertones and we didn’t appreciate as a student union and it was something that we were not interested in promoting in any way,” he continues.

Many universities still hire an XXX-hypnotist for orientation week. In September Damien performed at Saint Mary’s University, Acadia, Mount St. Vincent and UPEI, and Tony Lee celebrated his 20th year performing at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario.

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6 Comments

  1. I get the feeling that this article is intended to manufacture outrage. If that’s the case I feel the need to call you out on it. I was with The Coast 100% on the rape chant issue. I could understand the concern about the St. Mary’s “sex games”. But getting outraged over the XXX hypnotist is crossing into witch hunt territory.

    Talking about sex is not a bad thing. Making people uncomfortable isn’t necessarily a bad thing. The problem with the rape chant was that it promoted a culture of rape and denigration of women, and the problem with both the chant and the sex games is that they only gave participants the lose-lose choice between feeling uncomfortable and risking being seen as an outcast and a loser.

    Contrast that to the hypnotist. Attendees know ahead of time that it’s XXX; it’s easy enough to opt out of attendending without any social consequences. Once there, only consenting volunteers actually take part in the edgy acts. Assuming Mr. Lee doesn’t use his position to attack women, gays, men, or any other group (which, based on this story, he does not appear to do) then all that is going on here is some consenting young adults witnessing and taking part in a fun, edgy activity.

  2. These things are a blast been to them before. Everyone knows 100% what they are getting into and believe it or not college students are consenting adults. Its just fun and a blast, chill out some.

  3. The people whom this might offend know walking in that they’re in store for an X-rated hypnotist and have every option to decide to do something else if that type of subject matter (everyone knows what X-rated means) offends them or is something that they’re uncomfortable with.

    I feel like so much of this comes from oversensitive people and people with the mindset of “if I don’t like it and it offends me, nobody can enjoy it”. If this is your breaking point that’s going to scar you and make you hate your experience, you’re in for a bumpy ride in university. Or, you should be if they’re still trying to encourage exploration, free thought and pushing the boundaries.

    Plus, so much of this is so that they can establish, immediately, to the students that “this isn’t high school anymore and you are adults now.” That major swing from something that they might experience in high school (we had hypnotists) to suddenly X-rated entertainment can really do a ton to establish that you aren’t in high school anymore, you’re here with adults and sometimes you are going to encounter adult subject matter here. There are other ways to get that message across, but you’re dealing with 18-year-olds fresh out of school and the big thing they understand is “sex was a taboo subject in high school”, so to hit them over the head with it immediately does a ton to reinforce that what was once off limits no longer is (to an extent).

    If you need to be sheltered from that, university isn’t the place for you.

  4. Good thing The Coast wasn’t around when 9 1/2 weeks was playing. Ew, sex. Dirty! Agreed, the rape chant/sex games initiation thing is bad, with this I get the feeling there is an ‘opt out’ avenue.

  5. How very sad when demeaning ourselves in the name of so-called fun is considered valid entertainment. That poor girl in the photo has consented to participate, but odds are when she is more mature she will cringe with embarrassment at the choice her younger self made, with online photographic evidence of her poor judgement. I am no prude but I am cringing for her. Is alcohol being served at these events? Inebriated consent is NOT consent.

  6. This is a fun show, and grown up students attend it. We can not do anything in this world anymore without someone trying to stop us from having fun. This show is hilarious and deserve an article in the paper yes but surely not one like that.

    “We don’t need no thought control. You’re just another brick in the wall ” Pink Floyd

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