Vaughn,
 
Bravo! Bravo! My sentiments completely. BTW, when are you going to return  to 
eBay with your great movie stills auctions? You have been away to long. I'm  
sure that your loyal following of buyers miss those great stills that you 
offer  for auction. You have always been one of the great sellers of movie 
memorabilia  on eBay and the internet since their inception. My hat off to you 
my  
friend.
 
Lenny

 
 
In a message dated 6/10/2008 10:14:08 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

Claude,

I applaud you for writing an objective narrative  evaluating your thoughts 
regarding ebay. The ebay then..........and now. They  were realistic and void 
of 
any personal vengeance, but simply a record of your  experiences before and 
after...............Again, an objective view of "what  ebay is now" and how one 
might still benefit from it, if put into perspective.  

I personally still believe ebay has some play in it; at least for a  few more 
years. Yes, in spite of their self serving attitudes, their frivolous  and 
absurd changes.......... their participant be damned mind-set. I'll  probably 
stick with it, to degree, for a few more  years..............Vaughn


At 04:48 PM 6/9/2008 -0400,  Claude Litton wrote:

Bruce

The picture you paint has some interesting details  but it is not as dark as 
you paint it.  Life changes and you have to go  with it.  Before I get into 
eBay, let's talk posters in general.   When I began poster collecting you were 
selling at Christies and also  auctions in which you sent out flyers and we had 
to call in to buy  items.  Most of the time I was told that what I wanted was 
sold. These  were dark days and there weren't many places to get posters.  
Movie  Collectors World would arrive by overnight mail to my home and I would 
spend  an hour or more with a magnifying glass and then frantically call to 
find 
 out that what I wanted was sold.  We really had no clue as to what was  rare 
and valuable and what was fairly common.  Ebay changed all of  that.  The 
auctions allowed me to really add to my collection.  I  am fortunate in that I 
can afford to buy pretty much what I want and I saw a  lot that I wanted. As 
time passed more and more people arrived on the scene  and we found out what 
really was scarce and what was fairly common.   The cream has risen to the top. 
 
You applauded ebay and established  yourself very well.  All of us went into 
buying frenzies at the  beginning because we thought we were obtaining rare 
items.  In many  cases we did, and many times we did not.  I bought many only 
to 
find  out they are plentiful in supply.  I bought many posters on ebay and  
most are worth much more today but many will never reach what I paid for  them. 
(I am thankful for the ones that turned out well as they outnumber the  others) 
 Basically, ebay's arrival was tremendous and I will always be  thankful it 
arrived.

Packing was a problem and still is  especially because I buy plaster fragile 
plaster statues.  However, I  have overcome this problem (and with everything 
I buy including  posters).  I email the seller and discuss packing before I 
pay.  I  never pay until I obtain a reply from a seller that I have no 
experience  with. When the item is fragile and valuable I ask them to take it 
to a UPS  
store where it will be packed by professionals and I pay a little  more.  It 
is well worth it and I have been fully satisfied ever  since.  Every seller 
has listened to my suggestions for packing and I  have not had a damaged item 
(due to packing) in quite a  while.

Ebay does not enforce categories and I just recently  complained on mopo 
about Ricksmovie who is flooding the US originals 1940's  category with 70"s 
posters.  However, this does not mean I will stop  looking.  I have noticed a 
pattern to Ricks listings so I quickly pass  it by. We just have to learn to 
ignore 
these things so they don't get the  better of us.  There is no question that 
ebay does not care but it is  still a very important venue to obtain items for 
my  collection.

Now for today:  I used to spend approximately  $30-75,000 per year on ebay 
and auctions.  This has dwindled  down  to approximately $15-20,000.  This is 
not because ebay has become  bad.  It is because I have bought almost every 
poster that I ever  wanted.  As the years have come and gone I have filled the 
roster with  my wants.  Just as Michael always publishes his want list on mopo, 
I 
 have a want list also.  However, it has gotten very small and no matter  how 
bad ebay has gotten, I will be there if I find one I am seeking.   For 
example, a few weeks ago I picked up a one sheet of Rose of Washington  Square. 
 I 
have been trying to get this poster for many, many  years.  There have been no 
Chans for auction (that I do not own) for a  long time.  My sci-fi collection 
wants are approximately 5 posters and  I recently was outbid on one I was 
waiting for.  However, there will be  another one, one of these days.

My point is that we have all  been collecting a long time and our collections 
are pretty full.  I  have over 300 posters framed in my home and in my office 
with virtually no  wall space left for posters.  (My wife only allows me to 
hang them in  our finished lower level and not in the main part of the house).  
My  office is saturated and that is where I hang the three sheets).  I  
search ebay 15 minutes each morning and 15 minutes each night.  I do  this even 
when away, as I did this weekend when I was in Missouri.   (Had I more time I 
would have called on you Bruce, but I was only there 2  days.)

I have a huge collection of plaster big head statues of  mainly movie stars.  
My collection which is over 300 was accumulated  over the last 11 years on 
ebay.  However, I rarely buy one these days  and it is not because I do not 
want 
to do so.  There are very few out  there that I do not own.  So-------finding 
rare ones takes much more  time and I spend less money.

I also do not want to buy any  poster over $2,000  unless I want to display 
it. It makes no sense to  throw it in a drawer.  Therefore, unless I love it 
and am willing to  take a poster down (which I also love) then there is no 
sense 
in buying  more.  

Summing up, there is no question that I detest  ebay's attitude, their inane 
changes, just for the sake of change, and their  constant attempt to milk more 
money out of sellers.  However, I have no  intentions of "Packing it in and 
quit buying on ebay cold turkey" to use  your language.  That would be cutting 
off my nose to spite my  face.

Hope this answers your question Bruce and hope you quit  your time extended 
auctions also.  Allow sniping and you shall  prosper.

Claude 

In a message dated 6/9/2008  8:32:59 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]  writes:

I USED



to be a really regular buyer on eBay (for a while, my  buying level was so 
high I needed a full-time employee to take care of  paying, unpacking, leaving 
feedback, etc). Not just movie paper, but also  vintage glass frames, paperback 
books, 1939 World's fair items, #1  magazines, and a few other areas I 
somehow wandered into.



I had a lot of really good searches saved, and I also would go through  a few 
select entire categories, and also check all the offerings of the  sellers I 
bought from the most.



One day, I noticed that eBay had added a lot of unnecessary  categories, that 
really messed up my category searching, and worse yet,  many sellers were 
posting items wherever they wanted, and no one was  policing this at all, and 
complaints to eBay went unanswered.



Later, I noticed that most of my searches had gotten screwed up (some  kind 
of changes eBay had made), and I was just unwilling to re-do them all  (since 
eBay might ruin them again at any time).



I also noticed more and more sellers being deceptive in their titles,  
meaning I would have to click on the listing to see what it REALLY  was. 
Sometimes 
titles like "Casablanca, rare style original movie poster"  might turn out to 
be a 1990s video poster!



Finally I noticed that many of my "favorite" sellers were listing less  and 
less, and when they did list anything good, they would usually have a  high 
starting price, unwilling to gamble their good posters on an eBay  that was 
clearly delivering less and less in the way of good buyers.



Worst of all, I was finding that a growing percentage of my purchases  took 
longer and longer to arrive (sometimes I would have to complain to  get it 
sent) and  a growing percentage of my purchases were not very  well wrapped, 
and a 
growing percentage of my purchases were ovrer-graded  and the seller had 
somehow "missed" extremely obvious defects.



ONE DAY, I JUST PACKED IT IN AND QUIT BUYING ON EBAY COLD  TURKEY.  Do I miss 
finding lots of cool stuff? Absolutely! But do  I miss the hour a day I used 
to spend searching all over eBay, finding  something that seemed to be 
promising but that turned out to be nothing,  or do I miss the crushed 
packages, or 
the over-graded items? Not at  all!



HOW ABOUT YOU? How do  your eBay buying habits NOW compare to a few years 
ago, both in terms  of time spent on the site, and total money spent?



Bruce


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