"Anna May Wong was totally a boinking babe!!"
Agreed, but for me, it was always Frances Drake. I saw her in "Mad Love"
(the '35 Lorre one) and fell, well, madly in love. What an unbelievably
smoking little hottie.
Greg Douglass
Richard Halegua Comic Art wrote:
Ken
what yousay here is 100% correct.
"aging out" or as a member on NSFGE said "deadification" is the most
dangerous thing there is to us old fellers now.
Clark Gable, Great Garbo, Clara Bow...... all great stars in their
time.. now.. poof!
Gable is now known to the under 35s by a single film - Gone With the
Wind. This guy was the biggest star of his time and was a box office
champ for years on end.. But he never made the Matrix, didn't have a
role in Kill Bill, never played Superman, never spoke any of Luke
Skywalker's lines and didn't fight the Terminator..
Movies, which are eternal, clearly do have a life-span to the larger
population.
I had a girlfriend a few months back that whenever I was going to put
a movie on always said "please.. none of those movies where they don't
speak (silent movies).. and she, like myself, was over 50. If she
can't watch a silent classic.. how are the kids of today going to
watch Clark Gable, or James Cagney??
Of course, I did indeed watch silents when I was a kid in NYC. On PBS
every weekend they had a silent and it is where I first saw things
like Metropolis, Siegfried and one of my favorites - Thief of Bagdad.
Anna May Wong was totally a boinking babe!!
But kids today don't have the same attention span we did.. I remember
when I was a kid that reading was fun!! Not so with kids today
Bicycling was fun.. To kids today, it's too strenuous
flipping baseball or Mars Attacks cards was fun. Today.. "don't do
that. You'll ruin your cards. They're collectible!"
we are in a different world than we were 40+ years ago when I was a kid.
The stuff kids like today has absolutely nothing in common with my
memories. But I do understand the difference and I also can appreciate
it from the other side:
when I hear rap music, or any of the garbage that has permeated music
the last 5-10 years, I remember my parents cringing at Jimi Hendrix,
the Doors or Blue Cheer
that was then.. this is now!
in the coming decade, things like video game boxes and equipment will
be big time collectibles
the first Atari computers will be looked at as seminal history to
these youngsters (actually already is)
but why is it sad to so many of my generation (and older generations)
that what WE liked is going to be forgotten??
it's simple.. it means our world is going to be forgotten and by
proxy, so are WE
the world is for the young, and sadly.. young we are no more.
Rich
At 10:24 AM 6/4/2009, Gerri Farrell wrote:
Help, I have work to do!
This is bringing me out of the shadows. Just to add to my last post.
My theory, after collecting and dealing in popular culture for 30
years now...we collect what gives us that special something from
around the time we were 8 to 16 or so. I don't see many people
collecting from their pre-verbal stage or what they remember from
their 30s.
When a wave of collectors ages out, and the material no longer has a
new audience...that's it! Howdy Doody, Hopalong Cassidy, Humphry
Bogart, are aging out. When I started in this crazy business cast
iron toys, early Hollywood, Buster Brown were the rage. I don't see
too much new blood in these and many other areas. Let's give some
respect to the young collectors and the interest that they have in
areas that are a part of their lives.
What people choose to collect and the way they collect it varies from
personality to personality. Some collectors need to have everything
on a subject and organize it like a librarian, others want to fill
the top shelf in the kitchen with lunch boxes, when the shelf is full
they are done. Some collectors are sloppy, some are neat, some are
compulsive (must collect before I pay the mortgage) and some are
casual (that's nice, but not today). Why people collect can be very
private, everyone can't afford to step up to the plate and buy what
they want. I have always been thankful that I don't sell food to
families not able to afford it. I have never felt guilty when asked
if I could sell something for $100 instead of $200 because, "Hey,
give me a break, I can't afford it". Sorry, it's only a movie poster.
Also, If you can't understand why something from the 70s is a fortune
and another from the 30s is not, remember those laws of supply and
demand. They always apply. Wanting a poster from one childhood can
make it more valuable than wanting one from someone elses childhood.
Ken Farrell
Now in deep at
Just Kids Nostalgia
-----Original Message-----
From: jbirddouglass <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Sent: Thu, 4 Jun 2009 12:51 pm
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Why I Don't Post
Ken,
First of all, thank you for not lurking. An excellent post.. Other
lurkers...if you do not participate, we will never get to know you,
and that's an sad thing. There are far too few of us in this hobby as
it is, and I like networking. with the other lunatics who share my
addiction. I know there's a fear thing with some of you after seeing
some of the flame wars on MOPO. While there may be the occasional
person who might disagree with you on something,, screw 'em; they
don't have to die in your bed, right? ( I recently had a minor
disagreement with someone privately on this list. By corresponding
and working through the little bitch fest we had, we actually got to
know one another better, and I now have another contact in the
hobby.My life is now slightly richer because of some very civil
friction.)By lurking, you rob us of your experience and expertise, so
don't be stingy!
Back to Ken...you hit on an interesting point. The stuff that becomes
highly collectible for each generation changes with the culture, but
one thing remains the same; the most prized items seem to be stuff
that was considered worthless junk in its time to everyone but the
kids who experienced them. For me, it was movie posters, Mars
Attacks! cards, and MAD magazine. For my son, it was baseball cards
and Garbage Pail Kids; he buys and sells both regularly on Ebay.
Pre-fabricated collectibles like Beanie Babies are sitting in
warehouses; you cannot manufacture magic.
I guess no one can predict what will be The Next Big Thing but as
long as people pine for those special moments in their childhoods,
there will be "vintage" collectibles..
Greg Douglass
Gerri Farrell wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am known though my collecting business, Just Kids Nostalgia. I
read > MOPO most of the time but I never put my two cents in...why? I
am not > that comfortable with having my words and thoughts posted
for all to > see. I am "shy" on facebook and rarely send
conversational email.
>
> Is there anything wrong with "lurking"? I don't judge or complain >
about members opinions. As far as using MOPO for advertising...I have
> no problem with it.
>
> I think that the MOPO input in general ranges from informative to >
interesting to a waste of time and it adds greatly to the hobby of >
collecting movie posters. >
> But as long as I am here, this is my pet peave with some collectors
> and some of the society in general. What's with the attitude of
"these > kids today"?. Back in my day...the movies were better, the
music was > better, the toys were more fun to play with, you could
get on the > subway for a nickel (15 cents in my day), everything was
made better > and lasted longer and we were all always happy.
>
> Get over it...things change, but most remain the same. There were >
always great movies, art and music, but most of it was always bad. I
> am not sure if those cool Buck Rogers rings that came in the mail
in > the 30s were better than Burger King toys were to my kids. Are
metal > toys better than plastic ones? I don't think so. To the wide
eyes of > an eight year old, most "toys" are pretty cool.
>
> We all know technology is changing everything. Do you really think
> that Howdy Doody was more important to a generation than Mario >
Brothers or World of Warcft? What kind of memories will we have about
> the early days of the internet (we are still in the middle of the >
early days). Do you remember that wonderful sound of dial up and >
$3.00 an hour to surf the net at a speed that would make us all
scream > for a 14 year old to fix it?
>
> Things changed when the railroad came through. They are still >
changing. People always suffer when there is change, look at the
Bates > Motel
>
> Let's not forget the wars and poverty that never end. It would be
nice > if they are only history to the next generation.
>
> OK, I went on and on...this is why I never post. I really want to >
delete this instead of sending it...Oh, what the heck!
>
> Ken Farrell
> Just Kids
>
>
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