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Rick Probstein interviews Bill Mastro
This is a pretty good interview. Probstein talks with Mastro on his Instagram channel for about 40 minutes. They discuss the trimmed Wagner card and shill bidding operation at Mastro Auctions among other things.
The interview starts at about 1:45. https://www.instagram.com/tv/CT2hwihp0Vd/ |
Cliff notes?
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He also said the majority of the auctions that were shill bid at Mastro Auctions were actually of Americana or other non-sports card collectibles. He said it was mostly stuff that had very interested few buyers. He said most of the cards had plenty of action and that they didn't "need" to bid on those, but that sometimes they did anyhow because they had access to everyone's bid amounts and they got greedy. Lots of other great stories though. Worth a listen. |
Thanks for sharing!
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I didn't think Alan Ray -- the pre-Mastro owner -- was the one who cut the Wagner from the sheet. I had thought the provenance did not go back all the way to the sheet and I also thought Ray would not say where HE got the card.
But there are several members at least who know the story better. |
Thanks for sharing!
Thanks for sharing!
Interesting to hear him speak. I expect that there will be a tell all book. Found it interesting that he said he hated Lew Lipset. Patrick |
Very interesting and entertaining. He should write a book. His enthusiasm for cards is obvious.
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Didn't Mastro buy the sheet from Rob Lifson, or Rob loaned him the money to buy it himself?
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Prison really aged him.
Let that be a lesson to all you youngsters out there. |
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He actually is a good speaker and told some fascinating stories.
IT was a bit long but pretty entertaining. As for the truth of it all That is for others to decide Worth the watch |
Will Doug Allen be next?
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So basically he was "THIS" close to being innocent and certainly not a bad guy, and everyone should just enjoy what an entertaining fellow he is. Gotcha. |
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He admits to his guilt in the video and served his time. |
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I enjoyed the interview.
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Mastro and Lifson actually bought the Wagner in 1985.
He kept quoting 1996. It overall was an interesting interview |
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Did you actually have one? Or just a snide, condescending remark? |
Haven’t watched yet but why did he hate Lipset?
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Fascinating interview. Brought back a lot of memories of the people who set up at shows starting in the early 1970s. I especially enjoyed the stories about my hobby mentor Frank Nagy.
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To be clear, this is not my opinion of Mastro. Someone asked for the Cliff Notes so I provided them as delivered in the video, and without bias, for the two topics I thought people would be most interested in. I don't think there's anything wrong with him trimming that sheet cut Wagner. I just think it should have been graded for what it is, as a sheet cut card. But I have a big problem with how he ran his auctions. However, I find him to be remorseful and he's paid his debt to society. I'd give him a second chance. But I understand others who wouldn't. To each their own. |
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mastro interview
Boy, the crack about Lew Lipset was gratuitous.
Lew Lipset wasn't there from the beginning, but he was a very big deal from the mid 1970s on. The older collectors (like Nagy, Elwood Scharf, Al Price and a lot of other people nobody remembers today) felt comfortable around him. He was one of the early go-to guys. Lipset, as was mentioned in the interview, had a shot at the 25 grand Wagner. He was also in the running for the BB Magazine photo collection. He was all business; I don't remember him back slapping and yucking it up. Back issues of The Old Judge, his one-man operation, can be checked out on line. He issued price lists and catalogued obscure issues. There were a couple of books of check lists in there, too. He was probably the conscience of the collecting business. He didn't suffer fools. lumberjack |
Lew Lipset is "old school". I once bought several "Near Mint" cards from him trhough his auction on his website. At BEST, they were "Very Good". When I told him the issue with his grading, I was promptly blocked. I was later told by someone else to give him a "pass" because he was a hobby legend. If a hobby legend is that bad at grading cards, I want nothing to do with him.
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I doubt Ken Kendrick is going to send it back to be reholdered an A any time soon.
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Great to hear Bill. Those stories were fascinating. Hopefully, I can see him at the National next year.
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Probstein and Mastro, 2 of a kind. I got nothing good to say about either of them.
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A week later, I asked them for tracking info. They informed me that, "due to an ebay glitch this item was double listed and we no longer have anymore in stock." So, I won a straight auction with (apparently) no shill bidding. That's great; however, they didn't honor the high bid and wouldn't ship the card. This same item (cert # and all) appeared in a Probstein auction a short time later, where it sold for more money. |
Travis/Snowman- I'm guessing that you have never been shilled, to the best of your knowledge? Some have & it's not a great feeling.
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Mastro's stories seem like they captured the inevitable moments when a fairly pure hobby started to turned into a business/hobby. That was interesting interesting to hear... I'd read an oral history if anyone ever put a reliable one together -- a sort of "Glory of Their Times"... I think the pure hobbyist are all gone now. Does any one know if an oral history exists? I've read bits and pieces over the years.
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Interesting - are we giving these guys a free pass!
I thought there was so much negative about both of these guys and PWCC anyways - thanks for sharing, I always like to hear perspective from both sides Happy collecting! Thanks Jimmy Piccuito |
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Of course, we all know that countless consignors shill their auctions with companies like Probstein, et. al., but that doesn't mean that Rick himself (or anyone being paid $X/hr to list cards for him) is shilling his own auctions. It's just an absolutely ridiculous claim to make without evidence, and nobody has shown any evidence of that whatsoever (and sold prices do not constitute evidence of this claim, despite the thousands of internet trolls who seem to think otherwise). It doesn't even make sense. It would just be a completely stupid thing for him to even try to do. The risks so greatly outweigh the benefits that it would be completely asinine of him to even try. |
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I guess they "found" it. |
Thanks for sharing the interview. Really enjoyed listening to Mastro's stories especially the Wagner deal. Wish Probstein would have stopped interrupting and talking over him. Could have listened to another hour about the early hobby days. Mastro comes off like he truly regrets his mistakes and has paid the ultimate price both with losing 18 months of life behind bars and his reputation, and I personally think everyone deserves a 2nd chance. Maybe Mastro gets one...I don't know. You might have a different opinion if you were the one financially harmed by his greed.
As an aside, the more I think about the ebay/PWCC debacle, I think ebay is just as culpable and should/could have done so much more to stop the shilling. The PWCC account termination feels more and more like retribution to PWCC's plans to build their own auction platform. |
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The first one was mine, not the second. Chronologically: 1. I win auction 2. I pay 3. They don't ship 4. They relist Timeline make sense? |
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"Hidden reserves" is something new I learned today.
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