Excuse me David but I was not the first on this board to point out that
your post was inappropriate. And thanks for illustrating my point
brilliantly about "going ape." I have no intention of starting a public
war on this board. I've better things to do with my time than to post
endless, boring rants. FRANC

-----Original Message-----
From: MoPo List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of David
Kusumoto
Sent: Monday, March 16, 2009 8:54 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [MOPO] OT: images in MoPo posts.


FRANC (all caps like you like it):  
 
Since you're once again trying to start a public "war" between us -- my
response is this:  Given your egregious remedial skills recognizing the
differences between a private e-mail, a group e-mail and MoPo e-mail, I
doubt some can trust what you say about anything.  And no, I can't
remember the last time I've gone "ape" about anyone posting notes about
politics, "excepting myself."  A tad irritated, perhaps, but not "ape."
I think the list does a good job policing itself, esp. when we both
occasionally get out of line.  I think you should stop being angry with
me or with the world in general.  You once said, "Life is short and
Proust is LONG."  Well, I suggest you write your posts in a spirit
that's consistent with your motto -- and perhaps you'll gain more
credibility addressing subjects beyond your deserved expertise as a fine
seller of lobby cards.  DAVID
 

  _____  

Date: Mon, 16 Mar 2009 20:31:19 -0400
From: [email protected]
Subject: Re: OT: Speaking of Stephen Fishler...
To: [email protected]


Kirby's right, especially considering that this same poster goes ape
when someone on this board goes off-topic to discuss anything to do with
politics, excepting himself.  FRANC 

-----Original Message-----
From: MoPo List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jeff
Potokar
Sent: Monday, March 16, 2009 7:41 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [MOPO] OT: Speaking of Stephen Fishler...


calm down kirby... put on your Streisand soundtracks... and center
yourself. no reason to get those skirts of yours in an uproar..LOL 


On Mar 16, 2009, at 3:01 PM, McDaniel Kirby wrote:


Is this going to start a trend of people posting their images?  It might
as well 
be Facebook.

And since WHEN did these tiny urls start rendering the image.

Have I missed something here, or has AMERICAN.EDU updated something?

I know we are not supposed to post attachments.

What's going on here?

Kirby


On Mar 16, 2009, at 3:27 PM, David Kusumoto wrote:



A MoPo pal privately (and jokingly) asked me last night, "so who's the
ugly guy having dinner with Liza in the 4th picture?"  With a straight
face, I admitted it was me.  Those pictures were taken about 2 years
ago.  
 
However, in my defense, I noted that with the mastery of CGI, I can be
cleaned up -- as is sometimes necessary in the field of news and public
relations; thus, for those "just getting to know me," who've never met
me in person (despite being a MoPo member for years) -- I submit a
"reasonable facsimilie" of yours truly, an older pix taken for
professional reasons -- (but stripped of the "kidding on the square"
caption beneath it).  Hey man, anything to reduce my "ass***e score"
among my detractors.  I'm aware most will still mutter, "now that
stuck-up clown is torturing us with a picture of himself."  Trust me
when I say I do not look like the imposter below; vaguely similar, but
with a lot less hair, a lot more gray and a lot more pickled; after all,
I was born in occupied Tokyo during the Eisenhower years, so lay off.
:-(
  <http://gfx2.hotmail.com/mail/w3/ltr/emoticons/smile_sad.gif> 
 
P.S. -- I will admit, though, that I did have a hilarious bit role in
film that people keep bugging me about.  Remember that goofy Japanese
guy who tries to hit on Frances McDormand in the restaurant scene in
"Fargo?"  Yeah, that was me.  So there.

http://tinyurl.com/d6g7t3
 
<http://members.cox.net/davidkusumoto/david-in-NY-with-caption-2003.jpg>

-----Original Message----- 
Date: Mon, 16 Mar 2009 00:45:35 -0700
From: [email protected]
Subject: OT: Speaking of Stephen Fishler...
To: [email protected]

Freeman:  
 
OK, I'm busted.  Liza felt sorry for me going alone, so after 30-minutes
of begging and groveling, making a total Asian spectacle of myself --
Liza agreed to stand-in as my "wife" -- at Bruce's poster sale back in
1998.  Below are more recent pictures of Liza taken during our last
visit to New York.  The woman below is not only Liza Minnelli -- she's
also, when the need arises -- my "wife."  I have a receipt to prove it.
Keeping up appearances is expensive, man.  But I don't mess around.  -d.
 
 <http://tinyurl.com/c7olph> http://tinyurl.com/c7olph
   <http://members.cox.net/davidkusumoto/yoe-ny.jpg> 




  _____  



From: [email protected]
Date: Mon, 16 Mar 2009 03:12:40 -0400
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Speaking of Stephen Fishler...
To: [email protected]; [email protected]


What was Liza Minnelli doing there?
 
In a message dated 3/15/2009 11:59:38 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,
[email protected] writes:



David  I have always meant to apologize for hassling your wife back then
at that Comic-Con in the 1970s!

 
Bruce -- it couldn't have been you in the 1970s at Comic-Con who hit on
my girlfriend-who-later-became-my-wife.  She remembers the creep being
definitely fair-haired and geeky.  And though you're obviously no George
Clooney -- my wife doesn't consider you a geek, as is evident in the two
pics she prodded me to share (see below) that were taken with you both
at your L.A. sale.  
 
Meanwhile, I have to say that while showroom auctions are prohibitively
expensive -- (which explains the high buyer and seller premiums other
auctions charge) -- there's a wistfulness I feel about those sales of
the past.  That sale of yours in L.A. in that massive building was
something, with all the lots displayed in floor-to-ceiling rows around
the room -- and what was a "first" for an "auction house" at the time --
you had lots of food stored in big coolers in the back for everyone to
help themselves.  My recollection of the news story I wrote -- was you
had several hundred lots and only about 4-5 passes.  And the happiest
guy in the room (besides the winning bidders) -- was a fellow in his
late 30s named Marty Saltzman, who agreed to be interviewed and proudly
revealed he was the consignor of more than half of the lots.  That kind
of openness among consignors and bidders -- with media present -- will
likely never happen again.  I think the only reason why normally
hide-bound people would reveal themselves in this way -- was because
they were not only happy, they were ecstatic -- and the noisy party-type
atmosphere in the showroom helped -- (a big contrast to more stoic
affairs held elsewhere).  Whatta day that was...  -d.
http://tinyurl.com/cjsft3
 
<http://members.cox.net/davidkusumoto/hershenson-sale-dec1998-los-angele
s.jpg> 
-----Original Message----- 
Date: Sun, 15 Mar 2009 22:26:22 -0500
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Speaking of Stephen Fishler...
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
CC: [email protected]


David
 
I have always meant to apologize for hassling your wife back then at
that Comic-Con in the 1970s!
 
Seriously though, I really have to admire Steve Fishler. Back at the
time of that auction, Steve and around a dozen other guys were
advertising hot and heavy that each one of them paid the "most" for top
quality posters.
 
Well, I knew when I got these two incredible posters (never before
auctioned, excellent unrestored condition, and straight from a man who
had owned them for 50 years) that THIS would be the ultimate test of who
was the real deal, and who was "all talk".
 
My auctions have always been cash only, with no trades, no 6 months zero
interest, no pretend sales, etc. I made it clear before the auction that
the high bidder on either of these two posters would have to pay in full
within 30 days of the auction date (and only in the world of
collectibles where almost all the top players for the most expensive
posters are "collectibles rich, but cash broke" could these be
considered onerous terms).
 
Well the auction came, and not only did Fishler buy BOTH of these, but
none of the other "we pay most" guys even bid!
 
And of course I would have gone to my grave without revealing who bought
these except that Steve himself revealed that he was the buyer.
 
The collectibles world is filled with lots of big talkers, and huge
sales that never really happened, but these were two sales that did.
 
Bruce


On Sun, Mar 15, 2009 at 5:29 PM, David Kusumoto
<[email protected]> wrote:



** I confess when my good-looking girlfriend (who's now my wife) and I
first walked into Comic-Con in the 1970s (which was then held in the
smallish El Cortez Hotel and later the Civic Center here in San Diego)
-- we were taken aback by the geek factor, people dressed up in costumes
and reciting every line in Star Trek, going over plot lines and
Trek-ideology, all that jazz.  I have never been a Star Trek fan or a
collector of sports cards, but I did have an interest in old comics and
movies.  Other than my aversion to Star Trek and sports cards -- I
confess I was still a little rattled that my interests were otherwise
very much aligned with others at Comic-Con -- who seemed geeky in
appearance and manner, very intellectual and socially awkward if they
had to talk about unrelated subjects like their jobs or what was in the
news.  I seemed to need reassurance because I asked my girlfriend (who
went only because of my interest, not hers) -- "do I seem that way to
you?"  And she said no.  More than 30 years later, she remains above my
standing, not what people expect; I obviously got lucky because I'm not
an attractive match for her and I'm not rich.
 
** But what was funny, I'll never forget this -- one year we went to
Comic-Con to buy more comics and folded one-sheets -- and this guy, he
looked like the square dude who plays the NBC page on "30 Rock" -- kept
following my then girlfriend around whenver I strayed into another
direction in the dealer's room, peppering her with questions -- and I
overheard this Boy Scout trying to pick her up, asking for her phone
number.  I guess he was surprised to see a girl like her at Comic-Con.
(She worked at JC Penney at the time and eventually became a department
manager at Nordstrom.)  My then girlfriend politely declined to give out
her personal information and then she swiveled and gave me a glare that
said, "get me outta of this place, NOW."  
 
** Today, Comic-Con is gigantic, with crowds of around 100,000 or more
held at the huge San Diego Convention Center on the harbor -- and though
the event still retains its geek factor -- it's far more inclusive, with
tons of stuff for children and movie-related material and events going
constantly.  When Comic-Con started, its only attendees were young
adults and grumpy old men.  The trouble today is few can afford to
attend Comic-Con.  And I understand that this year's bash is already
sold out.  In terms of its impact on traffic and people crowding our
streets -- Comic-Con is bigger than the Super Bowls our city has hosted.
Every Comic-Con, locals avoid downtown.  But now that we have a major
league baseball stadium downtown, it's a nightmare.
 
-d.

-----Original Message-----
Date: Sun, 15 Mar 2009 09:13:34 -0700
From: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Speaking of Stephen Fishler...
To: [email protected]


Guilty on all counts (btw ... I finally got the beautiful woman, but she
was born waaaay after ST left the airwaves).
 
ad

--- On Sun, 3/15/09, David Kusumoto <[email protected]> wrote:

From: David Kusumoto <[email protected]>

Subject: Re: [MOPO] Speaking of Stephen Fishler...

To: [email protected]

Date: Sunday, March 15, 2009, 2:46 AM


(truncated) 

And we used to laugh because at lunch he would tell us off and on that
any woman he might marry in the future -- MUST first know all about Star
Trek and understand it.  And oh, of course, that woman would have to be
gorgeous.  He didn't collect movie posters, but he DID collect comics
and action figures.  I bet if I drew a line connecting all of MoPo's
members -- that I would find (besides a shared interest in posters) -- a
past or present interest in comics, sports cards and sci-fi/sorcery
stuff. 

-d.
-----Original Message-----
Date: Sat, 14 Mar 2009 23:46:19 -0700
From: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Speaking of Stephen Fishler...
To: [email protected]

** I saw Fishler in person that one and only time -- and he struck me
then as a very quiet but intense young man, almost trying to hide from
any attention.  When I tried to interview him, he was visibly
uncomfortable and gave me only a few one-breath quotes.  But everyone in
the huge room was curious about him.  "Who's the kid with all the money
who looks like he just got out of high school?," was the general buzz.
Instead of letting someone else bid on his behalf, Stephen flew from NY
to L.A. to bid in person.  That was a helluva sale -- and it was
striking in that you got the feeling that Stephen himself knew he was
not going to lose those two Universal horror posters; he had no limit.
It happened at Bruce's first stand-alone showroom sale (Dec. 1998) --
after directing Christie's previous poster sales in New York.  Fishler
struck me as a very mysterious figure.  Since then, I've seen him quoted
many times and have learned that he has ALWAYS been a big name in the
comic book world.
 
** My wife and I have always found it intriguing that so many movie
poster collectors are hyper-intellectual guys who used to collect sports
cards or comic books, who love sci-fi and Star Trek -- who have a
high-geek factor that people (esp. women) can instantly spot in a crowd.
For example, the character "Dwight" in NBC's "The Office" -- played by
the hilarious Rainn Wilson -- is the sort of guy you'd expect to collect
comics and posters, a guy who treats the Lord of the Rings or Star
Trek-type universes like a religion.  And so he does.  
 

** There used to be this quiet, portly guy in his 30s who was a graphic
designer in our office in San Diego.  And we used to laugh because at
lunch he would tell us that any woman he might marry in the future --
MUST first know all about Star Trek and understand it..  And oh, of
course, that woman would have to be gorgeous.  He didn't collect movie
posters, but he DID collect comics and action figures.  I bet if I drew
a line connecting all of MoPo's members -- that I would find (besides a
shared interest in posters) -- a past or present interest in comics,
sports cards and sci-fi/sorcery stuff.  Speaking for myself, I was real
INTO comic books during the first 5-6 years of Comic-Con before moving
on to books and movies big-time. 



-d.

-----Original Message-----
Date: Sat, 14 Mar 2009 16:36:24 -0700
To: [email protected]; [email protected]
From: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Speaking of Stephen Fishler...

David

first time I met Steve he was 12 years old looking for Fantastic Four #1
and had the cash with him and much more.

a year later he was a dealer too.

Always a good friend, I know he won't be bothered by mentioning that his
father was a liquor distributor and that should tell you everything. His
mother is a sweet lady and Steve is a very smart businessman

Rich

At 04:28 PM 3/14/2009, David Kusumoto wrote:

On the AP wires today, see below.  
 
[BTW, Fishler was/is a big buyer of movie posters and is loaded with
$$$.  I saw him at Bruce's huge auction held in L.A.'s cavernous Pacific
Design Center that I covered 10 years ago for Movie Collector's World.
At the time he was only 31 -- and he walked away with the biggest prizes
of the day -- two unbacked one-sheets for "Dracula" ($74,750) and "The
Invisible Man" ($55,200).] -d.

----------------------
Rare Superman comic sells for $317,200
Mar 14, 5:44 PM (ET)
By DAVID B. CARUSO

    NEW YORK (AP) - A rare copy of the first comic book featuring
Superman has sold for $317,200 in an Internet auction. The previous
owner had bought it for less than a buck.
    It's one of the highest prices ever paid for a comic book, a likely
testament to the volume's rarity and its excellent condition, said
Stephen Fishler, co-owner of the auction site ComicConnect.com and its
sister dealership, Metropolis Collectibles.
    The winning bid for the 1938 edition of Action Comics No. 1, which
features Superman lifting a car on its cover, was submitted Friday
evening by John Dolmayan, drummer for the rock band System of a Down,
according to managers at ComicConnect.com.
    Dolmayan, who is also a dealer of rare comic books, said he acquired
the Superman comic on behalf of a client he declined to identify.
    "This is one of the premier books you could collect," he said in a
telephone interview. "It's considered the Holy Grail of comic books. I
talked to my client, and we made the move."
    Dolmayan said the client has "a small collection, but everything he
has is incredible."
    Only about 100 copies of Action Comics No. 1 are known to exist and
they seldom come up for sale.
    "Maybe in a booming economy, it would have done a hundred grand
more, but in this economy, I think the price is great," Fishler said.
    The man who had previously owned the book purchased it in a
secondhand store in the early 1950s when he was nine years old.
    He paid 35 cents.
---
Associated Press writer Adam Goldman in New York contributed to this
report.


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