Alas, woe is me ... 

I, too am unable to find plenty of movie paper auctions with ridiculously low 
starting prices on eeekbay.

The economy may be #1, as stark reality can be a beeyotch when deciding between 
food / roof over your head or a pile of lignin with delightful colors.

Some types of magazines and toys will always be collectible, as just about 
everyone has read for enjoyment and/or played with toys in their early years, 
when life was a little less time consuming and memories of youth grow fonder 
with age.

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________________________________
From: Bruce Hershenson <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Saturday, November 5, 2011 7:46 AM
Subject: [MOPO] In his latest musings in Movie Collectors World, Freddie 'Dr. 
V' Poe had the below to say about the current state of our hobby


In his latest musings in Movie Collectors World, Freddie 'Dr. V' Poe had the 
below to say about the current state of our hobby:

"Where oh where has our hobby gone? Where are all the movie posters that once 
saturated cyber-space and beyond? To be perfectly honest I am not too thrilled 
with the state of affairs within this once great hobby. I am in no way bashing 
the hobby or movie posters, but to me, they seem to have lost their luster.

At one time there were pages of ads in MCW bought up by poster dealers from 
across the country. Now you hardly see any. eBay has turned out to be mainly a 
"Buy It Now" format with over inflated prices. You very rarely see vintage 
movie posters and or lobby cards offered in an auction format on eBay.

Bruce H. (emovieposter.com) is the only one offering a steady stream of movie 
paper in the true auction format. The last poster I bought on eBay was a title 
card from the re-issue of "DRUMS OF JEOPARDY" for $35.00. And before that was a 
movie program with Universal's "THE CAT CREEPS" on the cover for $12.00. These 
are the only two pieces of movie paper that I have bought in the last three 
months or more. I find it depressing.

I also can't seem to fetch a decent price when I try to sell some of my own 
collection. No one can convince me that poster values have not dropped of in 
the last couple years. Looks like no one is buying like they used to.

What is the cause of this sudden lack of interest? Why are collectors and 
dealers afraid to let the market dictate the value of a poster? Are dealers 
purposely holding back on to their wares, waiting for this curtain of 
depression to rise?

Here is my opinion of what has happen to this once great and prestigious hobby.
1) The fall from grace. The "trust" between collectors within the hobby has 
been tainted. Certain individuals creating and selling high tech reproductions 
of valuable posters put a damper on things for sure. Nearly every collector 
became paranoid to buy high end posters and even started to doubt the 
authenticity of posters they had in their collections for years. This created a 
mass hysteria in the hobby.

2) The economy. Cut and dry. I can't ever in my fifty-six years remember being 
so worried about my finances. The other day I was looking at all my stuff. I 
realized the vast amount of money I had invested in my collection. This sent me 
into a panic attack, my heart was beating so fast I couldn't breathe. This is a 
similar reaction that investors had when the stock market crashed in 1929 or 
when Mars attacked in 1938. Luckily, Jayme brought me back to my senses, before 
I jumped out the window, by saying "what do you care? you’re never gonna sell 
any of it, you love it, you're Dr. Vollin....!" She's right. I'll love it to 
the grave.

3) Reproductions. They suck in general. Why would you want them? Why would you 
sell them? They drag the market down and cause confusion for collectors, 
especially when you are buying posters off a computer screen. I don't know how 
many times I have found repros at yard sales and flea markets. Good luck trying 
to convince the uneducated that his/her poster is a copy and not an original. 
It's better to just walk away than argue.

Once again, I am not trying to degrade a hobby I've loved all my life and have 
given up more than a pound of flesh for, but rather lamenting it's weakened 
condition. I imagine that every field of collectibles has been damaged to some 
extent, but not as bad as movie paper. For example, magazines and toys are 
still holding their own. I can easily sell a vintage toy or a back issue of 
Famous Monsters a lot easier than I could a lobby card.

The solution to the problem? Who can say. Hopefully the economy will turn 
around sometime in the near future (don't hold your breath), this will 
definitely help. The "trust" factor will always remain, now that many 
collectors have lost thousands of hard earned dollars from deceitful 
transactions. Some collectors would like to see "feeBay" go by the wayside and 
go back to the old way of trading. A few collectors have come up with a plan to 
start their own movie poster auction site but I have yet to be informed on 
their course of action.

At any rate, hopefully we will see our fine hobby resurrected to it's full 
potential. Until then we will go on searching, trying to find new ways to buy 
and sell movie posters."
-- 
Bruce Hershenson and the other 25 members of the eMoviePoster.com team
P.O. Box 874
West Plains, MO 65775
Phone: 417-256-9616 (hours: Mon-Fri 9 to 5 except from 12 to 1 when we take 
lunch)
our site
our auctions

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