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Doohickamabob

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Posts posted by Doohickamabob

  1. I grade when I sell on eBay, but I tend to grade very conservation, or even under grade slightly to avoid people trying to return stuff on me. I provide good, pictures, and will disclose as best as possible any defects I see. So if I think a book is a 9.4, I will usually list as a 9.2 or even a 9.0, if I am a little shaky on the grade.

    this is my problem with giving grades-you end up having to undergrade just to be safe. Then the books don't sell for what they could.

    If only there were some service or business that would grade them for you to help you get an appropriate sale price.

  2. Marvel was aiming at the teen audience with its late 1970s magazine Pizzazz. The July 1978 issue is an embarrassing interesting snapshot of the times. The cover feature is about the "Sgt. Pepper" movie (the poorly received musical starring the Bee Gees, Peter Frampton, Alice Cooper, Aerosmith, Steve Martin, George Burns, etc.). Articles cover such important topics as: Suzanne Sommers, Leif Garrett, Star Wars, summer camp, monsters throughout history, Meat Loaf, Shaun Cassidy, and Stan Lee in the editorial offices.

     

    Here's the cover, and a few pages I found amusing:

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  3. When CGC posts "shipped/safe," does that mean the books are in the mail as of the date posted? If so, does CGC provide tracking information?

     

    If you have multiple submissions (using different tiers) and one is marked shipped/safe, but the others are still "verified," does that ever mean that the "shipped/safe" one is in holding until the others are finished, so they can be sent together?

     

    If an order has shipped, I get a shipping notification at the end of the business day with tracking. If an order is sitting in the safe, a few reasons are; awaiting payment, awaiting another order for return shipping.

     

    Thank you. I have a "shipped/safe" item with a date, but it's been a couple weeks with no tracking etc. So I think CGC is just holding it until it can ship everything together. (I could call CGC to figure this out, of course, but figured it would be something people here would want to know.)

  4. When CGC posts "shipped/safe," does that mean the books are in the mail as of the date posted? If so, does CGC provide tracking information?

     

    If you have multiple submissions (using different tiers) and one is marked shipped/safe, but the others are still "verified," does that ever mean that the "shipped/safe" one is in holding until the others are finished, so they can be sent together?

  5. ebay user ID: rubbersoul1989

     

    canceled order and blocked

     

    "So. I already paid because I thought I was stuck with it. But someone told me it was worth asking, I thought I offered 42 after making offers. I know it was a really dumb mistake. But. It's worth a shot asking, is it too late to cancel this order? I know. Really dumb. I know it's easy to refund things on paypal. If you could understand that'd be great.. I'm also from MD! As much as that counts for.. Which is nothing. But hoping you can work with me. I will give you a few dollars for the listing fee or something if you can help me out. Sorry for inconvenience and stupidity on my part. Thanks for your hopeful understanding."

     

    At least this guy is polite and admits he's a bonehead.

  6. I still love this SW parody. I'm sorry if I am taking up space with the pages.... these were my most favorite years of collecting.

    No problem. It's still a great parody, like you said. They got Mort Drucker to do the Empire Strikes Back satire and he had a lot of fun with that (the final panel shows that they "fixed" Luke's severed hand, but they accidentally put a foot there in its place).

  7. mjolario (19)

     

    Did a Buy It Now on a $20 book at 1:03am and at 4:21pm I received this message "I had a flood in my home. I live in ca and i cant afford to buy this at this time. Can i cancel this order so sorry"

     

    The old "flood in the home" excuse. Reminds me of a friend who won an auction at a really good price, and the seller comes back with, "the comics were in my basement and there was a flood that ruined them." My friend asked, "Well, can I at least see a photo that shows the flood, or a pic of the comics that shows the damange?" and the seller wasn't very friendly or helpful after that.

  8. Wondering what the value on this poster is? I understand value is whatever someone wants to pay, but if anyone out there has an idea, that would be helpful. Thank you!

    Not sure of value, but it's super cool. Should be framed.

  9. For those who want to see Mad 196, here are some images of the Star Wars segment (some of the images near the spine are not great, but I'm not stressing the spine any more than I have to).

     

    Interesting thing about the Mad satire of "Star Wars" is they tried out a new artist, Harry North, for one of the biggest movies of that year. I was surprised they didn't get Mort Drucker to work his magic on it, but I assume Mort must have been tied up.

  10. Those look great but with the little corner tear, the Mad probably isn't going to beat the highest-graded copy. What are the interior pages like -- much discoloration?

     

    I am not very good at the differences in high-graded copies. There is an area here where you can post pictures and people will estimate what grade you'd be likely to get. It's called Hey buddy, can you spare a grade? and you'll get some very helpful feedback, though you'll want to post additional photos showing the back cover, and some of the interior.

     

    Beautiful copies nonetheless!

  11. Newton rings don't bother me that much, but the new cases are fragile as heck. Iv'e had a lot of slabs mailed to me show up cracked or fractured. Their reholdering program must be booming.

    I thought they were supposed to be stronger?

    Iv'e gotten 5 packages in the past couple weeks, 3 broken slabs. Maybe I just have bad luck. The old ones were never that bad for me.

    I'm hoping your situation is an anomaly. Or there's somebody at your local post office who sits on the packages during break.

  12. Newton rings don't bother me that much, but the new cases are fragile as heck. Iv'e had a lot of slabs mailed to me show up cracked or fractured. Their reholdering program must be booming.

    I thought they were supposed to be stronger?

  13. A question for the Mad Magazine Collectors: In 1978, I bought several of the Mad 196 Star Wars editions (as well as the Jan 1978 Cracked SW cover) and just bagged and stored them. There is not a lot of info on higher quality copies other than the Gaines copies. Are they worth getting graded? Any thoughts would be appreciated.

    I did an eBay search on completed listings for that issue and it is not worth a lot even in the higher grades. One copy described as high grade sold in auction for $25. There was a CGC-graded 9.6 copy that was alleged to be the highest graded copy (and perhaps was, though it might be tied with other copies) and it sold for $125.

     

    My opinion is if you have an issue that stands out as being off-the-newsstand fresh, to the point where it could qualify as 9.6 or 9.8, it would be fun to grade it as an experiment -- if it's something you personally like and want to slab for the long run. If you're looking to make a profit selling all the issues, I don't know that slabbing would make a big difference if they graded 9.4 or lower. You might take a lot of photos of each in raw form, and put them on eBay as BIN's for $25 - $50 or something, because I think they would sell eventually due to the "Star Wars" connection.

     

    Not to put down the artist Jack Rickard, who was always a great artist (and did a respectable job of stepping into the cover-art role occupied by Norman Mingo), but this cover doesn't stand out as a Mad classic. I like the later issue with the "Mad musical" (with characters kind of dancing) a little better. Oddly enough, the giant Darth Vader helmet on Alfred E. Neuman makes me think of Rick Moranis doing the "Dark Helmet" character in the Mel Brooks movie "Spaceballs."

     

    Kudos on saving and storing all those "Star Wars" Mads, plus the Cracked issue. I also remember that I think the first issue of a magazine called Pizazz had a good "Star Wars" cover, and I know Crazy had some "Star Wars" issues. (And many other mags of course...) It would be cool to see a photo of your mags if you have one.

  14. OMG now her emails are getting nasty rude.. she says by the position of the doll they have been collecting these for years and it is obviously repackaged..

    B.S.

     

    but am I wrong to expect the item back??

    Nope.

     

    or pictures to show the obvious stuff she is talking about that I do not see??

    This is a very uncooperative person, so you probably won't get pictures.

     

    She says "Don't worry I will leave appropriate feedback for a seller like you"

    Feedback extortion. Call eBay.

     

    Sorry you got in the crosshairs of a scammer dillweed like this. It happens to all of us eventually. It never ceases to suck.

  15. Do you think a person emailing like 12 times about an item is kind of excessive?? Especially when 6 of them are within the first half hour the item is listed.

     

    Anyway I do need the money but don't know if I need the hassle of the person.

     

    Yes, it is excessive. $100 on a $375 item is a pathetic lowball offer. The incessant emailing is a form of pressure, even if the words themselves are not pressuring. Just the excess of it alone is pressure. Always step back from a high-pressure person.

     

    In my experience, "I need it for my daughter" is code for "I want to make a profit and here's a story to make you feel like you're doing me a favor by becoming my sucker."

     

  16. Can we rule out these satires appearing in other publications, such as Cracked, Humbug, Stan Lee's Snafu, and Hugh Hefner's Trump, for examples? You mostly stuck to Mad, right?

    Can't rule out Cracked though the likelihood is very low as I was never much of a fan. My memories are very clear on these two parodies but as I said, memory is very fragile and fallible (To digress, I have a frequent argument over the "But there were eye-witnesses to the crime" belief that this is the sine qua non of guilt - sorry for the digression).

    I agree, memory is an unreliable thing. One of the most unrealistic tropes of movies is when characters slowly regain their memories in vivid detail. The unfortunate truth is that with the right suggestion or imagination, people can "remember" things that never happened.

     

    Anyway, I'll keep looking for what you describe. Now it's a vendetta. I will take it slow though. This makes a good excuse to go back and read through Mad issues.

     

    One of the things about the older Mads is that I never had the magazines as a kid. Only later did I go back and collect them. Most of their material I only ever read via specials, or via paperbacks. There's quite a bit of great stuff in the earlier magazines that either wasn't reprinted, or that wasn't reprinted in anything I got a chance to read. The early era of the magazine, with Wally Wood and Joe Orlando art, has a different and more anarchistic flavor than the heyday when editor Al Feldstein had a more regular stable of "insufficiently_thoughtful_person" contributors.

     

    Don't get your knickers in a twist if you can't find them they may not exist (though they should).

    I often lose my knickers.

     

    P.S. Here's a graphic from 1954 where Mad is making fun of all its imitators. I read that William Gaines put each competitor on the wall and would write an "X" on it (or something -- put a dart in in?) whenever each title went bust. This piece cleverly builds a line of text around nearly all of 'em....in alphabetical order!

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  17. This artist is not from the era of my most fervent Mad-reading, so I don't know much about him. But RIP nonetheless. Here is what Mad posted on their Facebook page:

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    Classic MAD Dept.

    GERRY GERSTEN, MAD ARTIST, RIP

     

    We’re sorry to report that 2017 is picking up where 2016 left off, with the passing of yet another MAD contributor. Gerry Gersten, one of MAD’s most talented caricaturists, passed away over the weekend. With his pencil on vellum technique, Gerry produced many full-page impact pieces of art for MAD, including memorable drawings of Ronald Reagan, Dr. Ruth and Elvis Presley. Our condolences go out to Gerry’s family. We will have more on Gerry’s career in MAD #545.

     

    From MAD #285, March 1989

    Artist: Gerry Gersten

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