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Ummm...like when I woke out of the haze from the cursed 'Dragon Lady/Tiger Mom' hybrid at the show...how did this thread suddenly get here?? It's been in the post-war from the beginning.
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All the cool kids love my YouTube Channel:
Elm's Adventures in Cardboard Land ![]() https://www.youtube.com/@TheJollyElm Looking to trade? Here's my bucket: https://www.flickr.com/photos/152396...57685904801706 “I was such a dangerous hitter I even got intentional walks during batting practice.” Casey Stengel Spelling "Yastrzemski" correctly without needing to look it up since the 1980s. Overpaying yesterday is simply underpaying tomorrow. ![]() |
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Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com |
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All the cool kids love my YouTube Channel:
Elm's Adventures in Cardboard Land ![]() https://www.youtube.com/@TheJollyElm Looking to trade? Here's my bucket: https://www.flickr.com/photos/152396...57685904801706 “I was such a dangerous hitter I even got intentional walks during batting practice.” Casey Stengel Spelling "Yastrzemski" correctly without needing to look it up since the 1980s. Overpaying yesterday is simply underpaying tomorrow. ![]() |
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They say brevity is the soul of wit.
Well, if you think the opposite is true, then you’ve come to the right place!! I'm not going to lie. If you walked The National for four days straight, then had your eyes taped open and forced to watch seventeen reels of home movies from my family’s trip to Fort Ticonderoga, that would take less time than reading this...but hopefully a smile or two will emerge. Perhaps, you should read a single observation, (call back alert) digest it like a modern table, move on with your life and then come back later to read another one. Or just ignore the whole thing entirely. Collector's choice! Here are my (uber-longwinded) observations from a recent show... CharlesAtlasbaseballcards70.jpg 1. The Best Offense is a Good Pretense It seems that the secret cabal of vendors that we damn well know is working behind the scenes against us collectors, had a clandestine meeting to determine the best defence (wait, why am I suddenly spelling like a Brit?) against the constant barrage of complaints about every single dealer’s crazy, museumic (is that a word?) pricing. • The meeting notes from their conspiratorial conference must’ve stated very matter of factly: No matter what the complaint is about pricing, simply respond with, “Of course, it’s a LITTLE (yes, use the word “little,” not the more precise “abundantly exorbitant times a million”) more expensive than other comps, but...(wait for it)...IT IS VERY STRONG FOR THE GRADE!!” I can’t even count the number of times I heard that specific phrase, or a derivative thereof, during the show: “A killer example for the grade!” “There’s no 3 out there with corners as good as this one!!” “That ain’t no 5, it’s a five plus plus plus!!” “I’d sell my wife to find a better 7 than this guy!!” (In all honesty, a simple look at his huge gut told the world he’d happily sell her just for a bag of mini donuts, so that didn’t tell us much.) They all said the exact same thing, and it didn’t matter if someone was actually questioning the price on their slab, they just kept repeating this mantra over and over again. If you had to do a shot every time you heard someone say it, you would’ve wound up in the drunk tank before your first lap around the floor was half-completed. One modern table guy even intimated to me, “We all know that many tens are so much better than other ones.” We do?? Under my breath, I muttered at one of them, “Again with the ‘strong for the grade’ claim? Who are you, Arnold Schwarzengrader?!” The funny thing is, not a single crazily-priced card I was shown by these phrase-wielding sellers looked to be a supreme example for the grade - quite the opposite. Bottom line...it’s time to establish a new TPG called Charles Atlas Grading (CAG). I even came up with a slogan you’re free to use: “If your card isn’t in an Atlas slab, then it’s weak as a chump for the grade...and so are you!!!” 2. An Excuse to be Touched by a Young, Hot Angel (not really) This is so minor that everyone will say, “Get a REAL problem, buddy!!,” but I urge you to follow my lead... The front table was staffed by young women handing out wristbands (for us to affix ourselves), but I took a stand and reached out my arm and (referring to the wristband) asked, “Could you please put that thing on for me? I’ll probably make it too tight and cut off my circulation.” (I’ve done that before, so it wasn’t a lie.) A happy smile followed with, “Sure, lemme get that for you.” Dirty old man, right? No frickin’ way!! A smart young (apparently, only to myself, so continue reading) man!! Here’s why: • What’s the worst thing about a card show? (The crowd screams, “STUPID PRICES!!!!!!!!!!!!! DUH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!") • Whoops...what’s the SECOND worst thing about a card show? Of course, it’s hurriedly trying to get that frickin’ wristband on in time. After paying admission, but before you can enter, you only have one ‘free’ hand to work with and you have to turn into a juggling circus performer as you attempt to keep all the crap you’re bringing inside - bags, clothing, hard cases, reading glasses case (oof!), food and drinks, and perhaps also fumbling to get your change into your pocket - from falling to the floor while you desperately try to find the edge of the adhesive section with your fingernail and get that damned thing attached to your other arm. Wouldn’t it be helpful if they provided a few tables off to the side so showgoers could take a moment to put down their stuff and attach their wristbands?? NOOOOO, what an outrageous idea!!!!!! Instead, they make it the live action version of those subway videos from Japan you run across, where city workers shove the crowds onto the trains so the doors can finally be closed. (Yes, that’s a reach, but I’m trying to make a point.) Doing it my way, you avoid all of that, because it only takes a split second for her to put it on for you. A split second well spent - no delays and now it’s show time!! Plus, no need to seek out a garbage can to throw out that pesky little peeled-off segment, because she has it, not you. Ain’t your problem no more!! Of course, (call back alert) we could avoid all of this by just stowing everything in a large backpack to free up our hands, but where’s the fun in that? stackedchairs02.jpg 3. Chairing is Caring...No, It’s Not!!! The first table I stopped at had the usual assortment of boxes and binders and slabs (“Oh my!!!”), so I was casually standing there taking it all in (my ‘Collectorism’ for this is Table Tilt - the stationary pose of standing still at a dealer’s table with your head angled slightly downward as you examine all of the items there) when the vendor suggested that maybe it would be good if he got me a chair. Thanking him for his hospitality, I said there’s no need, and didn’t think much of it. But...merely minutes later, I was engaged in the same activity at a different table, when the guy there immediately came up to me and said, “Let me find you a chair.” Looking around, I thought, “Why is everyone from the get-go treating me like I should be in some “I’ve fallen, and can’t get up!!!!” commercial airing during the afternoon soaps??” Later on, and directed specifically at no one but me, a dealer said, “I got a couple of chairs at the ready.” (I guess he forgot to tag on, “...for a Methuselah-looking motherf*cker like you!!“) This was the most seriously high ‘dealer to chair-offer ratio’ I had ever encountered. Why was everybody trying to be an usher?? All of these overtures came unsolicited, so what was I missing?? In the end, I wasn’t sure if like a restaurant host, they were just saying, “Sit down and stay a while!!,” with the hope I’d put a few bucks in their coffers by ordering overpriced jalapeńo poppers and cocktails, or was it that I looked like my stasis pod malfunctioned last night and suddenly aged me thousands of years like Stewart in ‘Planet of the Apes’??? The jury’s still out. This depressed me so much that I needed to take a moment and sit down. But then it got even worse... 4. The Reading Glass is Half-Empty!!! Pulling out a 1972 Topps #32 Cleon Jones ‘In Action’ card to give a look-see (it’s crazy hard to find without a tilt), and bringing the beloved Met closer to my eyes, I exclaimed to no one in particular, “Crap!! Need my reading glasses!” (Which I had recently started bringing along to use for close-up inspections.) The couple working the table reacted with a good natured, hearty chuckle. Instant friends (Spoiler alert: that changes). I said, “I still can’t believe I need these things sometimes. It’s all brand new to me, and it’s such a frickin’ bummer.” (Yes, people my age talk like that.) (The WTF moment commences now...) The lady, who looked absolutely ancient to me, grinned and said, “Yeah, my time is also going to be coming soon in a couple of years, as I had a hard time even reading the expiration date on the paprika (she pronounced it “pah-prick-uh,” with no slight hesitation between, or stress placed on, syllables, and not “pah—PREE—kuh” like normal people) jar last night. Right, hon?” (as she looked to her hubby to confirm her story). My brain shrieked, “Coming soon???!!! Wait, aren’t you years, even DECADES older than me??? Shouldn’t MY gradual vision loss be following YOURS, not the other way around???!!! I can’t possibly be older than you, you crypt-keeper-resembling crone!!! I still have my youthful, boyhood glow!!!” (Oddly enough, her husband was clearly much younger than she was, so maybe they have a ‘sugar momma’ thing happening, but hell if I know.) She was then able to hammer my coffin shut for good with a final, “You should go to Bath & Body Works in this mall. I think they carry those chains that hold your glasses around your neck when you’re not using them. You know...attached like a necklace, so you won’t lose ‘em??” It’s a rare occasion when I’m rendered speechless, but holy heck did she inadvertently (God, I hope to hell it was inadvertent!!!) do a number on me that I won’t ever forget. When exactly did I become a “back in my day” saying, canasta-playing, butterscotch-carrying, sweater-smelling-of-mothballs-wearing, old biddy who plans on spending my final years down in Florida kind of person???!!! 5. Mourning Has Broken...My Heart Like placing the Thanksgiving turkey in the middle of the table so all can gaze upon its magnificence, so do Willie Mays cards always occupy the center spots of cases out here as reverential moneymakers. Sadly, those middles sure got a lot girthier after his recent passing, with a ton of cards being added with (Surprise!! Surprise!!) monumentally inflated prices. One guy had every single card in his display - all HOFers big and small - with ‘loud’ price stickers attached to them, except for the now overabundant number of Willie Mays cards clogging the middle. He purposely removed the stickers from those. Everything else still had (literally and figuratively) large prices showing, but the "the Say Hey Kid" cards were devoid of such trivial indications. I cut to the chase and very politely (swear!) said, “You clearly want people to ask about these cards, so you can gauge their interest during this sorrowful time and then invent an obnoxiously high price on the spot...to see if they will bite, right?” In a theatrical pretense, he frowned, shrugged his shoulders and spread his palms-up hands out in an exaggerated gesture of, “Who-ooo...me??” (Although this was real life, I swear there was a ‘sarcasm’ emoji floating beside him.) When I asked why he did that, a self-satisfied grin appeared as he scoffed, “You know what they say about hot ironing, don’t you??!!” Uh...I assume he was trying to trot out the standard, old time blacksmithing maxim, “Strike while the iron is hot,” but he seemed to be referring to pressing a dress shirt, so you won’t look like a schmuck at your friend’s bar mitzvah (true story). Being none too fond of this guy to begin with, I replied, “Yup, my mother says it sure makes the wrinkles in a skirt go away,” and left him with a puzzled look on his greedy face. 6. The Great Progressinator Da Vinci...Edison...The Wright Brothers. Innovators??? Ha!!!! Mere tinkerers. For my money, the title of history’s greatest groundbreaking mind goes to the dealer who made my eyes give him a standing ovation when I saw his booth. He (get ready for an overuse of adverbs) purposely had all of his ‘bargain bin’ storage containers illustrously on their sides, wonderously spilling out waves and waves of toploaders marvelously cascading across his tables. What an ingenuously engaging set-up!!! There were scores of excited teenagers...(whoops, since I’m so old now, I guess I should say “young whipper-snappers”)...surfing through the massive waves of shiny cards, building huge stacks to separate the ‘seen already’ from the ‘unseen yet,’ and smaller (closely guarded) piles of ‘keepers’ to the side. ‘Twas an absolute beehive of activity. When a kid would leave, the proprietor would then ‘re-spill’ the left-behind stacks into and around the large bins. I said, “This is sick!! What a cool set-up!!” He smiled hugely, and said, “Thank you very much!! It is, right??!! There’s barely any really old stuff, but every card you find is only a buck!!” (Wait...was this yet another person implying that I look ancient...AND was that buck comment a dig to call me cheap???) Like Alexander Fleming accidentally discovering Penicillin by stumbling across contaminated Petri dishes, he told me how he unintentionally tipped over one of his tubs while loading up his SUV for a show and had an incredible ‘aha moment’ (being an Archimedes fan, I would’ve called it a ‘eureka moment,’ but let’s not quibble), and he knew right then and there how he was going to start setting up his tables from now on!! I should’ve snapped a picture earlier, but only got this one very late in the day, so it’s lacking the impressively eye-catching, beginning-of-the-show spillover, but it clearly illustrates that he sold a crapload of cards, because those things started off being fully packed... tubsFINAL.jpg He joyously added, “I want to patent the idea!” I laughed and told him, “Call your booth ‘Spillage Village,’ or better yet, ‘Spilladelphia.’” The smile disappeared, “No way! It’s gotta reference one of OUR teams!!!!!” (Well, excuse the f*ck out of me for trying to help. I won’t even bother suggesting ‘Overflow Montana’ or ‘Buster Flowzie.’ Would those references be local enough for you, ya creep??!!) As morosely as the interaction seemed to end, he still gets my rubber bin stamp of approval for his advancement in the cardboard sciences. Reality check: I assume some “Alexander Graham Bell wasn’t the first to invent the telephone!” decryer will chime in to say, “I’ve seen plenty of dealers doing that same thing for years. It’s nothing new!!,” but I’m sticking with it. It was mah-velous. 7. Prologue: The C.H.O.M.P. (Creepy Hordes Of Munching People) Factor As a complete aside, when the lunchtime pangs of hunger kicked in, it was time to take a break and meet up with my girlfriend for some grub. I have to say it. Next to the ungainly nerds (no offense, making fun of dweebs is never cool, because the moment you have a problem with your phone or computer, who’s going to be your best friend?) digging through the modern stuff, coupled with the waves of balding middle-aged men with fat rippling through their stretched to capacity, sweat-stained shirts looking through the old stuff at card shows, is there a more repulsive group of people anywhere in the world than what is seen stuffing their faces in a mall food court?? No frickin’ way!!! BLECH!!! Anyway, after overpaying like Dean’s Cards for the privilege of eating a footlong hero (yes, it’ll always be a “hero,” not a “sub” or “hoagie” or “grinder” or “torpedo”), I decided to cruise back towards the cavernous former Forever 21 store that served as the show’s venue. On this short walk is where our tale commences... a'shatmetshat.jpg 8. Gunfight at the OaKland Corral (This entire ‘event’ took a mere handful of seconds, and would mean nothing to other humans, but the enduring and misguided passion we have for our teams makes us baseball fans an entirely different animal.) As I strode back, the mall’s drab, industrial-gray floor covering in front of me suddenly became empty...deserted, like the street outside the saloon in a movie western. Out of nowhere, a lone, silhouetted figure appeared in the distance and slowly began making his way towards me...with something green on his head. Are keys jangling in his pocket...or is that metallic clicking sound coming from a pair of spurs????? Wait, did a tumbleweed just roll past the entrance to Sephora???!!! What’s making those terrifying and echoing sounds...are there rattlesnakes in this shopping center????!!!! (Cue the infamous Clint Eastwood movie “waaah wah waaah waaaa-aaaah” sound effect.) Finally coming into focus and stopping a mere ten paces away, this buckaroo looked about the same age as me and he was proudly wearing an old Oakland A’s hat. It wasn’t some newer thing from the ‘Bash Brothers’ years. No, sir, its well-faded and weathered green and yellow told me it came from the 1973-era A’s!!! Channeling Indiana Jones, I woefully grumbled, “Why’d it have to be the 1973 A’s??” As I stood there in my faded blue, 1973-era Mets hat. His quick glance at my head told him exactly who my team was, and he nearly imperceptibly squared his shoulders to face his enemy (I’m sure I mirrored his movement to also face MY enemy). As my brain growled, “This mall ain't big enough for both of us!!” I imagined spitting a gob of tobacco juice at his feet. Sadly, it was all just an act. Since I’m the only Mets fan west of the Pekos, I was alone. No one would be galloping in to help me circle the orange and blue wagons. Both he and I recognized this for what it was, an unavoidable duel between hated adversaries. It was high noon in front of the Hello Kitty store, but we both knew full well that my Mets had already lost this gunfight over a half a century ago in The World Series...4 games to 3. He didn’t need a Colt ‘Peacemaker’ in his holster to prevail. The only thing he needed was already hanging inside whatever ballpark the Athletics call home - signage boasting “1973 World Champions.” When 1973 comes up, my thoughts go to Raquel Welch, Pam Grier’s funbags (no offense, I’m obviously referring to her purses), and Ann B. Davis as Alice (yeah, sometimes my freaky tastes veer towards the matronly, but I won’t apologize for that). That’s what real men think about, but this guy wasn’t pondering delicious 70’s babes...his reverie told me he was off thinking about Darold Knowles and Bert Campaneris and Reggie, about Willie Mays losing balls in the sun, and about his boyhood hero, Joe Rudi, playing flawlessly even though the blinding rays in Oakland made it feel like those long ago games were being played on the surface of Mercury. I searched his eyes for a hint of compassion, maybe a little, “It’s all right, buddy,” to ease my pain, but he offered nothing. Not even bothering to meet my eyes, he only proffered a deliberately slow and knowing tip of his green hat to say, “Eff you and your Big Apple losers!!! 'Miracle Mets,' my ass!!!!” He was silently laughing out loud as a smirk filled his hate-filled soul. I guess there are none so loud as those who will not speak. (Whoa!! Someone call Bartlett's and get that quote in the next edition!!) As he happily walked off into the sunset (literally, the store was called “The Sunset Emporium”), I was left with the last vestiges of my masculinity destroyed by his yellow and green stagecoach rolling over me. I never stood a chance...you can’t change the past. 9. Epilogue: The H.O.W.D.Y. (Hotties on Walls Delighting You) Factor As the dust settled (see what I did there?), it was time for me to do the ‘walk of shame’ and mosey on back to the show. I was feeling as low as a horse hoof in mud (ibid.), but then a saving grace appeared. Everywhere I looked, the same, oft-repeated poster of a trio of soaking wet, racially diverse, gorgeous ‘fillies’ who were falling out of their skimpy bathing suits was visible. Don’t reckon I can tell you what in tarnation these ads were trying to sell to people, but gazing at them made my diminished testosterone levels shoot up faster than a buzzard on a carcass!!!! [ATTACH]629449[/ATTACH].jpeg 10. The Apparent Unimportance of Nothingness A young guy was doggedly trying to sell his card to a dealer, and he kept referring to the prices on his phone with choruses of, “They always sell for $125. Always! I want $125 for it.” The reply was, “I’ll give you $80, and that’s being generous.” “But it always sells for $125. Be fair! I need $125.” After a few rounds of this same conversation were repeated and in the books, the seller finally said with exasperation, “Only $80. Let’s see if you can grasp this. What does this card sell for?” “$125. See?” (as he showed him his phone.) “Okay, so if I buy it from you for $125, what price can I sell it for?” “I told you!! $125!! Every time!!” Pausing a few moments in the hope that enlightenment would enter the kid’s brain, he asked, “Do you really not see what I’m getting at???” Now mumbling to himself, the kid huffed and puffed and stormed off. Looking for support, the seller remarked, “This is my job. The boy wants me to buy his card for $125 and maybe I can re-sell it for $125, but probably less. No profit. Nothing!! He can’t grasp that simple concept...and he thinks I’M the bad guy?? When did they stop teaching basic economics in school??” I commiserated, “You can’t teach common sense.” 11. Would You Like an Order of Despise With That? As a pair of guys were happily digging their way through some bins, I could tell that one of them was brand new to the vintage game. His buddy kept explaining the differences in Topps designs to him, and would test his newfound knowledge by pulling out a 1959 common and asking, “What year is this one from?” The other guy thought for a moment and replied, “It’s the knothole layout. You said the 58’s have the empty colored backgrounds, like this one (as he pulled a 1958 card from the bin)...so it’s from ‘59, right?” (And the crowd roars!!!!!!) Exclaiming, “Very well done!” I gave him a fist bump. (Both were really good guys, so we got to talking about all sorts of things.) Being all giddy as they pored through the final toploaders in search of gold, they readied their stack of ‘keepers’ to buy. The more ‘expert’ of the two enthusiastically focused his smile on the serious, bespectacled seller and said, “Wow, all of this is incredible!!! It’s obvious you’ve been a COLLECTOR for a long time!!” With an unmistakeable contempt in his voice, and seemingly ready to rap the guy’s knuckles like a yardstick-wielding nun yelling, “Sinister!! Sinistro!!” at my left-handed sister in Catholic school (TMI), the seller dismissed him with a corrective, “No I’ve been a VENDOR a long time!” As if to separate his lordly self from the common riffraff of the regular collecting community. Note to self: Revise Chapter One, Page One of ‘The Idiot’s Guide To Selling Baseball Cards’ to include, “Always display derisive scorn towards highly-spirited customers.” 12. Random Funny Moment As I was checking past sales data on my phone BOOM!! the site went down. I hit refresh and hit refresh and hit refresh again, nothing. So I held my phone up high...I dunno, to ‘try to reach’ the Wi-Fi or whatever and get a signal. Don’t think everyone’s completely reliant on their phones at card shows?? At the very moment I did this, people as far as the eye could see, everywhere across the floor, were all suddenly holding their phones up in the exact same frickin’ manner, suffering the same indignity of having their Wi-Fi taken away. In the old days, people used to hold their hands up to the heavens for Jesus, now they do it to see what an SGC 5 1963 Topps Manny Mota RC should sell for. moneycountingmachine01.jpg 13. Meet Me in the Middle...of Park Place and Fort Knox While waiting to chat about a pair of Jim Palmer rookie cards, I stumbled into a fascinating negotiation unfolding in front of me. A pair of guys - seemingly a lead negotiator and a ‘bag man’ with the money - wanted to reach a deal on a variety of slabbed cards (I couldn’t see the grade numbers) spread out on the glass display. The two main prizes were a 1950 Bowman Jackie Robinson and a 1957 Topps Mickey Mantle. Among the other things were a few overly-colorful modern cards with blue Sharpie signatures on them - ‘hot’ autographed rookie or chase cards or something. Back and forth they went in a spirited and respectful manner, with the buyer time and again offering a (very large, but still too low) number, and the seller (while explaining his pricing and punching numbers into a calculator) countering with a (slightly reduced, but still much) higher number. At one point (referring to the Robinson), he said, “This is literally the cheapest you can buy this card for in this grade anywhere on the planet. I checked. You can search your phone as long as you want, there isn’t a lower one on this great big, spinning, blue beach ball.” (Quite poetic!!! Wonder if back in the day he was using his student loan money to buy cases of 1990 Score cards while studying for an English Lit degree, but that’s pointless conjecture.) Finally, the talks reached the point where the two sides were close enough (metaphorically, their beer bellies were bumping each other) that the end game was imminent. Holding out his hand to shake, the buyer said in a hopeful fashion, “Meet me in the middle??” Let me say this: When I ask a dealer to ‘meet me in the middle,’ it’s when I only want to pay 50˘ for a 1972 Topps Moe Drabowsky card he wants a buck for. I will say, “Seventy five cents?” If he comes back with, “I’ll let it go for eighty,” my reaction would be, “That’s too rich for my blood.” So, take a wild guess what the ‘meet me in the middle’ price was here?? It was a “Holy guacamole!!!” (ugh, I can’t stand avocados) inducing $17,300!!!!! YOW-ZA!!!!! With the seller accepting the deal, (earlier, it was agreed that this would be a cash transaction) a perfectly uniform stack of one hundred and seventy three newly minted (or is it “printed”?) $100 bills was slid across the table. It was like a scene out of a heist film, and I expected the seller to say, “The serial numbers are non-sequential, right?” He handed the stack to his assistant who then disappeared somewhere. Returning only seconds later, he gave a subtle nod to indicate the cash was the correct amount (did he have a currency counting machine hidden back there???), and the sale was finalized with more handshakes. Whatever the opposite of a monied collector is, that’s who your humble correspondent is, so this transaction was so above and beyond what I’m used to that it was very cool to behold. 14. California...The World’s Mental Asylum Complete randomness here, but how about a last minute giggle? Driving back home from the venue, we spotted something that would be quite odd to anyone not forced to deal with the daily lunacy of The Golden State. A guy was pedaling his bike down a heavily trafficked (shouldn’t that be spelled “trafficed”?) street with, whaddaya know, a giant German Shepherd casually standing without a care in the world on his head and shoulders. This is a waaaaaaaaaaaay zoomed in part of the only photo my girlfriend was able to snap out of the passenger side window (from a very far distance) as we turned off of the road, so at least we got something... bikeriderwithdogFINAL.jpg (Editor’s note: I did say, “WTF!!,” and whipped a uey to wait at the light, so we could get back on that road for a better picture of the dynamic duo, but the intersection was a mess and by the time we returned to pursuing our quarry, POOF!!! they had vanished just like my youth. You always regret the pictures you don’t take.) Want further lunacy? Do I even have to mention that although it was a balls-blistering two thousand and forty three degrees out, the bike rider was dressed from head to toe in thick, fully black (heat absorbing) winter gear, as if he and Lance Arf-strong (thank you, I’ll be here all week) were headed up to Squaw Valley for a weekend ski getaway???? Until next time, my fellow ![]() Darn it, I hope there are no typos in thing. Where did I put my damn reading glasses??
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All the cool kids love my YouTube Channel:
Elm's Adventures in Cardboard Land ![]() https://www.youtube.com/@TheJollyElm Looking to trade? Here's my bucket: https://www.flickr.com/photos/152396...57685904801706 “I was such a dangerous hitter I even got intentional walks during batting practice.” Casey Stengel Spelling "Yastrzemski" correctly without needing to look it up since the 1980s. Overpaying yesterday is simply underpaying tomorrow. ![]() Last edited by JollyElm; 07-25-2024 at 09:16 PM. |
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I can't say I read it all, but OMG Lance Arf-strong is unsurpassable.
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Net 54-- the discussion board where people resent discussions. ![]() My avatar is a sketch by my son who is an art school graduate. Some of his sketches and paintings are at https://www.jamesspaethartwork.com/ |
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Darren, loved your account, up to your high standards. The bike rider with his canine buddy was priceless. The only thing better would have been the pooch pedaling and the guy standing on his back. Might happen, California, you know.
I wonder if it is only a matter of time before those dealers, who use wives or girlfriends as an enticement to visit their booths, go all in and have pole dancers performing on-site. I can envisage a scenario whereby the girls finish their shift and are looking for a gratuity. They are not looking for dirty Washingtons or abused Lincolns they want your high grade cards. Pity poor Fred, who came to the show with the intent of having his super nice '57 Brooks Robby graded, a Xmas present from his wife and now somewhat aroused, slipping his prized card into the generous cleavage about 2" from his nose. I can image the discussion when he got home: Ethel - " Well, I hope you dropped off Brooksie for grading." Fred, - "Yes, my little sugar plum at PSA". "Should be ready in about a month." Ethel - " That's good". "I'm worried about that little nick in the upper left corner." "You know, I wiped out about all my savings to get you that card and i sure hope it gets a high grade. Fred - Arghhhh (quietly) |
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Here's hoping the next time I'm sitting on the floor eating like an animal, because the venue had no lunch seating, I'll be able to gaze at bodacious dealer-adjacent 'entertainers' as I scarf down my overpriced gruel!! ![]()
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All the cool kids love my YouTube Channel:
Elm's Adventures in Cardboard Land ![]() https://www.youtube.com/@TheJollyElm Looking to trade? Here's my bucket: https://www.flickr.com/photos/152396...57685904801706 “I was such a dangerous hitter I even got intentional walks during batting practice.” Casey Stengel Spelling "Yastrzemski" correctly without needing to look it up since the 1980s. Overpaying yesterday is simply underpaying tomorrow. ![]() |
#9
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With a magnificently huge American Flag calling everyone up the stairs, I knew I was in for a great time!! Here are my (very long and hopefully semi-fun-filled) observations from a recent show... 1. Elementary School Business Class Seeing the exuberant crowd at the entrance told me this was going to be a busy show, with a lot of enthusiasm in the air. I don’t bother with the silly ‘health of the hobby’ talk (it’s like talking about the weather), but it is worth noting that there were a lot of kids with their dads lined up waiting to get in, with many of them toting their small suitcase ‘safes’ on wheels, ready to wheel and deal. Born negotiators...baby sharks, I guess. (I have since learned that juvenile sharks are called “pups.”) hatcompfrontbackwards.jpg 2. Your Hat’s on Backwards for You...Which Means it’s Now on Correctly Keith Richards said, “You don’t find a style. A style finds you,” and we all know that the exact same ‘style’ had found all of the modern card ‘bros.’ They live by the (un)stylish credo of “Get a flat brimmed hat a size or two too large and always wear it backwards!” But this time around, I don’t believe I saw even a single dealer ‘bro’ with his hat on backwards. Not a one! I guess Kenzo Takada (whoever the heck he was) knew what he was talking about when he opined, “Fashion is like eating, you shouldn’t stick to the same menu.” 3. Speaking of Hat Size, it’s a New Criterion for HOF Voters If you enjoy enthusiastic (and random) baseball card chatter, there’s simply no better place to be than among the bargain bin diggers, and this show lived up to the promise. Making his way through masses of 1970s/80s cards, a guy in a Reds hat was piling up a stack of cheap Johnny Bench cards as he and his buddy talked about the best catchers of all time. The mentions of Campanella, Berra and Carter were heavy, and out of nowhere, one said, “Gabby Hartnett!!,” which was an odd turn. But to the Reds fan, no one other than Bench mattered: “He was the ultimate player on both offense and defense. A million Gold Gloves, Rookie of the Year, World Series MVP, a pair of regular season MVPs. The greatest of all-time!!” His buddy replied, “Sure, people always talk about how great he was. I get it, but I just can’t get past his huge head.” As his friend gave him a surprised “WTF are you talking about??!!” stare, he explained, “My mom started buying me cards in 1983. Donruss. There were like three different cards of him...and all showed his freaky, gigantic head. It scared me...I had nightmares about it. I was just a kid!!” (Wow, talk about an odd turn.) Pulling a card (1974 Topps All-Star Catchers) from his friend’s pile, he exclaimed, “Look at the size of that head!! The photographer couldn’t fit it in the viewfinder. Look at this one with Yastrzemski (he pronounced it “Yuh-SKREM-ski”)!! It looks like he could fit Yaz’s head in his mouth like a lion!!! I will never get past the size of his head. It’s just not natural. It’s all too much.” Holy crap, this guy has some issues!!! “Dr. Phil?? Calling Dr. Phil!!!!!!” But is he wrong? I researched the cards he mentioned and there may be validity to at least some of his crazy noggin phobia... Bench1983DonrussGroup.jpg sopranosconstructionsite02.jpg 4. Randomly Odd Bathroom Moment Me and another guy happened to reach the bathroom door at the same time, just as a maintenance man rolling his large mop and bucket of cleaning solution exited after a janitorial job supposedly well done. Heading towards the two urinals (no, idiots, we weren’t holding hands), both of us stopped on a dime. The floor wasn’t newly cleaned, it was the standard tidal basin of disgusting pools of yellow everywhere with discarded bits of toilet paper thrown into the mix. The only way to possibly reach the toilets was to do that guy version of hopscotch where each jump targeted a ‘safe’ dry spot on the floor. My fellow pissee looked at me and exclaimed, “Wasn’t he (the janitor) just in here mopping five seconds ago???!!! What did he actually do????!!!” Ick!!!! If this was The Sopranos, I guess this would be called a card-show no-show job. 5. Table Wife or Table Strife? Approaching a lady at a table, I was wondering if I should talk to her or wait for her husband/dealer to return, and asked, “Can I make you an offer on these (cards)? Believe me, I’m not breaking the bank here, so you won’t make enough money to take a Caribbean vacation or anything, but it’s something.” With definite shades of Golden Girl, Blanche Devereaux, she replied dead seriously, “Why...would you care to accompany me to the Caribbean? Is that part of your little offer, doll?” Listen, you always hear about coyotes, rattlesnakes and bigfoots (I seriously doubt that grammatically speaking it would be “bigfeet”) in California, but man, the most dangerous animal out here is definitely the card show cougar!!! She was so straightfaced that I couldn’t tell if she was being serious...and I was painted into a corner, so I remained calm and didn’t take the bait. An eternity passed as the clock ticked away (in reality, only a second probably passed)...when she suddenly guffawed so loudly it made me jump. “My hubby wouldn’t give me up that easily!!! No way...but maybe if you bought a bunch of the expensive stuff he might!!!!!!!!” As thunderous belly laughs roared out of her jowly face, shaking the walls and frightening the guys looking through the boxes of cards. Of course she was kidding!! Of course. Stupid boy, I should’ve known. I mean, who uses an expression like “care to accompany me”??? (Strange side note: Whereas I pronounce it “car-a-BEE-in” — with the third syllable stressed, her reply was “cuh-RIB-bee-un,” an entirely different pronunciation. That alone should’ve told me we weren’t speaking the same language.) Here’s a pair of AI-generated pics of this good time lady and me living our best lives at the beach... elmsandguffawergirlfinal.jpg My possible future as her boy toy was derailed. Oh, what could have been. ![]() 6. The NFC Championship Game This is an NFC town. Didn’t see any (now Las Vegas) Raiders hats or jerseys, but as usual there was a sh*t-ton of Niners hats to be seen, so I kept casually walking up to people to cheerfully ask, “Hey, who are you rooting for tomorrow, Washington or The Eagles??” Yowza!! Who knew there was an infinite number of ways to convey, “I don’t give a goddamn flying f*ck about that!!!!” in polite society? A few examples: • “Who the heck cares??!!!!” • “There are no other teams, only the Niners!!!” • “Are you out of your mind??? Why would I care???” • (A guy’s young son with confusion) “The 49ers aren’t playing. The season’s over.” • “That’s a dumb question. I hope they both lose!!!!” • “Next season can’t come soon enough.” • “Man, how bad did the Cowboys get??” (Just a tad bit off-topic.) I had a whole thing written about the AFC Championship game, but since my Bills once again went down, I deleted it. It was all about how everyone on planet Earth wants the Chiefs to lose. Alas. 7. Sign, Sign, Everywhere a Sign Man, this guy speaks my frickin’ language... payingstrongAFsign02.jpg I kept wanting to go up to him and ask if he would literally tell me what “AF” stood for, to see how much enthusiasm he’d add to those two words (the strength of one’s cursing ability is very important to us native New Yorkers). However, he was busy the entire time (clearly doing something right), with his chairs forever being occupied, so I didn’t want to urge him to curse loudly in front of potential clients. Not a really good business model. But as a young, case-wielding guy left his booth, I asked how he did with his negotiations. “Was the guy willing to pay as far enough into “AS EFF” territory as you wanted?” “No, it was low ball. NOWHERE NEAR a good amount. He didn’t care about the comps I showed!!!” (I guess he thinks the sign should read “NNAF”???) I let it slide that I can guarantee the comps he used were cherry-picked to only show his cards in the most (new word?) expensivest of lights, while ignoring all of the data that said otherwise. 1966craig543PSA8PSA9.jpg 8. The High Price of Craigs Said it before, but it bears repeating. Dealers gotta do some surveillance if they want to make sales in a competitive environment. I saw a PSA 8 1966 Topps #543 Roger Craig prominently displayed on a table at a very silly price and glanced at it for a few moments, because I love high numbers and due to his time in Brooklyn and being an original 1962 Met, I have a particular fondness for Craig. After moving on to a neighboring table, I saw sitting before me in plain sight the very same (newly graded) card in a PSA 9...for less than half the frickin’ price of the first one in an 8!! Its sticker still had an ‘unreasonable’ number on it, of course, but in chatting up the dealer it became apparent he treated people fairly and enjoyed the back and forth of the bargaining process. In the end, I was happy to take Rog home after securing a nice deal. (Side note: the only PSA 9 found listed on eBay is a $500 BIN. Yowza!! Not exactly what I paid for mine.) handstiedPSAcard.jpg 9. Trapped in a Plastic Prison of His Own Making Many collectors bemoan when a seller says, “Well, I have X amount in this card, so...” while telling you how much he wants for it. Quite a common occurrence, and I witnessed a slight deviation of it... A guy had tons of PSA slabs for sale, nicely ordered in a multitude of two sided boxes. All had cert numbers starting with a 9 (and undoubtedly numbered sequentially), so he himself had obviously sent them off to be graded very recently. The cost of grading his inventory is unfathomable to me...mind-numbingly so. Checking my phone for reasonable comps, I asked about the excessive prices on a couple of mid-grade cards, and he told me in no uncertain terms that his prices were FIRM. “It cost me so much to get them graded, and those (the cards I asked about) came back lower than expected, so it screwed up my cost basis. My hands are tied. I just can’t sell them for less...sorry.” At least he was polite. 10. Yelp Me if You Can I asked another dealer how his day was going, and he replied, “Can you let me know? How am I doing? Are my prices reasonable?” Since he was looking for a review, I surveyed his set-up and made a sweeping hand motion to point out how many people were digging through his stuff, and said, “Dude (sometimes the word “Dude” just slips out of my mouth for some reason), if you have price tags on all of your cards and people are STILL assembling piles to possibly buy, you’re doing fine. Otherwise, they’d run for the hills. Well, since this is a mall, I guess by “hills” I mean running to Victoria’s Secret to stare at pics of scantily clad models, but I digress. In the baseball card world, people staying at your table like this is a four star review!!” daveparker1987fleerpricesticker.jpg (Yes, this is obviously a fake pic meant to emphasize a point.) 11. Parker Bros. I don’t ever recall seeing a single Dave Parker card eminently displayed on a dealer’s table before. He’s usually found and overlooked in the bargain bins, probably because his cards go from 1974 through the 80’s...not exactly a ‘valuable era.’ But as a new Cooperstownian(?), that changed dramatically. His stuff occupied some prime real estate positions in a bunch of cases - mostly his rookie card and the occasional 1978 Topps with a sticker on the holder loudly screaming out, “MVP!!!!” You know how you’ll pass a modern guy’s table replete with the shiny stuff, but he’ll also have one or two random old cards mixed in with them? This time, the fraternal order of dealers were all playing the same game, because the majority of these older cardboard ‘guest stars’ were junk-era Dave Parker cards at huge mark-ups!! Wouldn’t anything more than ten cents apiece be too expensive? Too bad you couldn’t pay for them with Monopoly money. 12. De-Cancel Cultured I ran across something that really cracked me the eff up. And as I laughed, someone said, “What???” So I turned and showed him this... ellendegenerescard02.jpg The dealer told me he used to show that card to people to give them a good laugh. “I find the best customers are the ones who like to laugh.” I offered, “As long as they’re not laughing at your prices, right?” (Hey-ooooh!!!) He continued, “But the last few years with cancel culture? It’s obviously funny, because it looks like her...but to the wrong person? They’ll have their internet warriors attack me for no reason. I’m retired and don’t have the energy for that junk, but I don’t care anymore!!” “Oh, are you a Phil Collins fan??” (His empty gaze told me my reference flew over his head.) A couple of other guys asked what we were talking about, so I showed them the card, too, and they frickin’ loved it!!! One said he wanted to buy it just to have, but he didn’t want to deprive the dealer of using it as a showpiece to entertain people. (Side note: I have a sneaking suspicion he’s going to buy the same card, grab a Sharpie and copy what this guy did and pretend it was his own ‘brilliant’ idea.) ![]() He said, “I don’t like her dumb dancing, so I’ll have my 25 Facebook friends accompany me in canceling her down!!! Ha ha ha!!!!!” (Wait, did he really just use the word “accompany”???) Since he was so happily cracking himself up, I didn’t have the heart to explain that his terminology was waaaay off. 13. Gathering the Magic in Pokémon Town There was an entirely separate and seemingly closed to ‘outsiders’ corner area of the show that I somehow stumbled into. It was dedicated to Pokémon and other modern stuff. As I stepped into this beehive of activity, it was like a scene from ‘The Amazing Race’ where the contestants have to quickly complete a tough task while running around a crazily crowded, loud and energetic foreign food market. I was overhearing all sorts of different Asian dialects in the air, as everyone was yapping away in (I assume) Japanese, Chinese and definitely Korean (my girlfriend’s mom is from there). My assumption is a language app like Rosetta Stone must’ve been running a special on eastern tongues, because there was an abundance of people of all races/skin colors fluently negotiating in, I don’t know, Cantonese(?) or something, in a highly spirited fashion with their Asian counterparts. Their accents seemed perfect. Since I know nothing about the modern stuff, I was a stranger in a strange land, and the whole thing was wild to behold...and not a Topps card to be seen by this wandering gaijin. Speaking of accents...in hindsight, it's really too bad I wasn’t able to secure that Caribbean vacation with the table lady, because if there was ever a word that was meant to be mellifluously over-pronounced by a joyously happy, dreadlocked Jamaican man, like this gentleman, it would be “Poké-MON”... rastafarian02.jpg (You can hear him gleefully saying it to you in your head right now, can’tcha?) Until next time my fellow yago kadeu sujipga!! ![]()
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All the cool kids love my YouTube Channel:
Elm's Adventures in Cardboard Land ![]() https://www.youtube.com/@TheJollyElm Looking to trade? Here's my bucket: https://www.flickr.com/photos/152396...57685904801706 “I was such a dangerous hitter I even got intentional walks during batting practice.” Casey Stengel Spelling "Yastrzemski" correctly without needing to look it up since the 1980s. Overpaying yesterday is simply underpaying tomorrow. ![]() Last edited by JollyElm; 02-05-2025 at 08:59 PM. |
#10
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This is friggin' hilarious , you made me laugh more than once, something hard to do these days, thanks for sharing !
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Collecting: Anything Larry Doyle (my great, great Uncle), Pre-War/Post-War Giants & Post-War Braves. My Wantlist Selling: Cards and memorabilia I'm weaning from my collection to fund other collecting interests. https://www.ebay.com/str/recollectionantiques/ |
#11
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![]() Quote:
I thank you! Just figured it must've been someone from my family. ![]() (That's my way of saying that although the site has really gone down a wildly argumentative road, I'm still trying my damndest to provide a bit of entertainment.) ![]() ![]() ![]()
__________________
All the cool kids love my YouTube Channel:
Elm's Adventures in Cardboard Land ![]() https://www.youtube.com/@TheJollyElm Looking to trade? Here's my bucket: https://www.flickr.com/photos/152396...57685904801706 “I was such a dangerous hitter I even got intentional walks during batting practice.” Casey Stengel Spelling "Yastrzemski" correctly without needing to look it up since the 1980s. Overpaying yesterday is simply underpaying tomorrow. ![]() |
#12
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![]() Quote:
If so, I've got a bone to pick with you!
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Trying to wrap up my master mays set, with just a few left: 1968 American Oil left side 1971 Bazooka numbered complete panel |
#13
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![]() Quote:
I'm glad you guys (I assume) enjoy it!! ![]()
__________________
All the cool kids love my YouTube Channel:
Elm's Adventures in Cardboard Land ![]() https://www.youtube.com/@TheJollyElm Looking to trade? Here's my bucket: https://www.flickr.com/photos/152396...57685904801706 “I was such a dangerous hitter I even got intentional walks during batting practice.” Casey Stengel Spelling "Yastrzemski" correctly without needing to look it up since the 1980s. Overpaying yesterday is simply underpaying tomorrow. ![]() |
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