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Arthur Fonzarelli’s wearing his leather jacket and skiing across the water...so it is time to
JUMP THE SHARK!!!!!!!!!!! I present to you 2021's Collectorisms Part VI (also SemRANTics or VoSLABulary) ***ALERT!!!!!!*** Before you do anything, scroll down to #306 and read it, so you will understand what's going on here. This post is ribbed for her pleasure. Do not swim for at least 30 minutes after reading. Action figures sold separately. So it is up to you, good people of Earth, to figure out what you wanna do with all of this. Good luck... 287. Slyopic (also Glaucomedy) The utilization of ‘at signs’ to imitate eyes and form the word “L@@K” in an auction title. 288. Grudge Crater Bemoaning the notable holes (superstars who were not included) in an old set, and wishing the suspiciously missing cards woulda/coulda/shoulda been a part of it. See also: Bubblegum POWs - the players not found in certain sets from the 1950’s due to the intense legal conflicts between Topps and Bowman, among others. See also: MIArtyrdom - the glorious wonderment of imagining what the missing cards of specific HOF’ers would have looked like were they ever produced. 289. Guffawbulous Having a name (Eddie Stanky, Heinie Manush, Johnny Pesky, Tom Tresh, Pete LaCock, e.g.) that causes every single collector alive to giggle a little bit whenever they run across one of his cards. 290. Klutts/Washington Extrapolation The huge increase in value that a 1978 Topps Rookie Shortstops #707 card will surely attain if another one of the players pictured on it finds his way into the Hall of Fame. 291. He’s All Gum, No Cardboard (put-down) A collector who talks a really big game and fancies himself some sort of baseball card expert, but it’s pretty obvious he has no clue what he’s talking about. 292. The Plastic Paradox A card with a ‘Buy-It-Now’ price on eBay that is less than what it would’ve cost to have said card graded in the first place. 293. Carat-Top A card with a discernible diamond cut. See also: Rotato - a card that is a true rectangle, but the image on it is tilted due to a sheet cutting mishap. 294. Planned Grabsolescence Adding overpriced things to your eBay watch list, because you know the long three month wait for your eBay Bucks Certificate to be unlocked is right around the corner, so you’ll be able to get them at a much better overall cost. 295. Sendwich The traditional setup wherein a card in a slab or toploader is placed between two pieces of cardboard, bubble wrapped and then taped together and inserted into a mailer. See also: Flub Sendwich - when a seller doesn’t properly seal a toploader with tape, and the card is able to slide out of its moorings while in transit. See also: Schmuckstuck - when a toploader is rendered forever useless by a careless seller who seals it with impossible-to-remove packing tape, transforming it into a permanently sticky mess. See also: Stichabod Crane - a seller who commits this offense. 296. COCD (Cardboard Obsessive Compulsive Disorder) The malady plaguing people who have strict, unwavering personal standards regarding how perfectly centered a card must be to earn a place in their own personal collection. See also: Scoff Centered - the derision for any card falling short of his rigidly demanding standards. See also: Centertainer - any collector afflicted with this condition who takes particular delight in showing off his beautifully centered cards. 297. Bogusto (also Grate Expectations) The exhiliration of seeing your eBay listing has a whole slew of watchers...only to bitterly realize that they’re not potential buyers, but lookie-loos waiting to see if anyone is stupid enough to pull the trigger at your ridiculous price. 298. Blockem’s Razor The principle that in deciding whether or not to add an eBayer to your blocked bidders list, the simplest explanation is usually the right one. He’s going to be a problem for you. 299. Blindignity When the photo on a card captures the player with his eyes either fully closed or in ‘mid-blink.’ See also: Mocularity - the undoubted mirth and merriment expressed by the people at the card company as they decided to use that particular ‘eyes closed’ photo for the card instead of selecting a nicer one. See also: Blinksmanship - a photographer’s knack for catching players in this state. 300. Noobilation The happily optimistic and enthusiastic posts of someone who’s just recently joined the site and has obviously not yet been exposed to net54’s sordid, seamy underbelly. 301. Trimpropriety Deciding what the acceptable shortness of a card can be, either top to bottom or side to side, that occurred naturally when the sheets of cards were cut at the factory. 302. BINishing Touches Happily finding a very affordable Buy-It-Now price for the last card you need to finally complete your set. 303. A Player to be Hall-of-Famed Later (also Pete Rose Colored Glasses or Grandiminoso) Expecting to get more for a card in a trade or a sale than it is truly worth, because, "Everyone knows he should definitely be in the Hall of Fame!" See also: Juice-Bumps - when this tactic is used with regard to steroids-era players. See also: Ain’thood - the continual uptick in admiration and reverence a ballplayer, arguably with the qualities of an all-time great, receives the longer he is ‘wrongly’ held out of Cooperstown. 304. Sherlock Chromes A collector exposing the forgeries and/or trim-jobs of modern cards. 305. Ribbie-Glibby (slang) Any self-important know-it-all who refuses to accept the acronym “RBI” as the independent word it truly is, and therefore never deigns to pluralize it and say, “RBIs.” “He hit .254 while tallying a healthy 103 RBI.” 306. Basebull Market (also Batmitt Crazy) How economists in the future will describe the drastic upsurge in baseball card buying and selling during the pandemic. 307. Peaceful, Sleazy Feeling The theme song of card doctors. See also: Noh Canada - the national anthem of sellers who realize much too late how much more it costs to ship a card up to our northern neighbors. 308. Costume Foolery A baseball card (usually from very early in his big-league career) showing a player wearing a number different from the one with which he has forever been associated. 309. Poach Roach After hitting ‘Buy-It-Now’ and sending payment for a card, you receive a message informing you the seller has cancelled the transaction and refunded your money...and you know full well it’s because someone contacted this unscrupulous seller and offered him more money for the card. See also: Soft Meddling - an amiable message sent to a seller suggesting you would gladly pay him a bunch more for a card he just sold to someone else if he’d cancel the original sale. 310. Plate Crasher (also Aingejustice or Jordantithesis) A player who appears completely out of place on a baseball card, because he is much more renowned for playing an entirely different sport. 311. The Cardboard Menagerie A table at a show having a wonderfully wide and varied assortment of different sports, years, brands and memorabilia on it. 312. Nextortion (also Penultimatum) When a member bumps his ‘for sale’ thread with a resentful veiled threat of, "This is your final chance to get this card before I move it to eBay tomorrow!!" See also: Rantifesto - a condescending statement added to the end of an eBay listing which chastizes potential bidders for committing whatever perceived affronts the seller has rattling around in his head. 313. One-Trick Phony (also Harvey Hadhoax or Lucky Dent) A player who has forever enjoyed a highly elevated status within the collecting community due ‘only’ to a readily-identifiable, single game accomplishment or occurrence. See also: Pizazzeroski - how the lasting gusto of a player from this group’s single-game glory helped pave the way for him into Cooperstown. 314. Acronymrod A member who, for unknown reasons, eschews using simple, straight-forward abbreviations like “FS” or “PM,” to instead use his own slightly different combinations of letters. See also: Deciphoraging - wracking your brain in an attempt to figure out exactly what each of those initials could possibly stand for. (Also pertains to misspelled acronyms.) 315. Ancestuous Doing searches for players like “Aaron,” “Sisler,” “Brett,” and “Griffey” and having to weed through all of the results showing their much-less-desired relatives’ items. 316. April Drools Day (informal) The spring afternoon when you realize the official start of the baseball season is finally here at last. 317. Brag Tax The additional fees paid to a player to have him add a very brief inscription of an achievement, like “HOF 1999,” to his autograph. 318. Mets Runway (also The Batwalk) The patch of ground between the visitors’ dugout and the third base line at Shea Stadium where every National Leaguer was forced to walk to and pose for Topps photographers. 319. Louvre Affair Cards that sit forever unsold due to their seller’s penchant for ‘museum’ pricing. 320. Vendor Reveal Party A seller who gleefully proclaims, “Newly Graded!!!” in his auction description, as if he’s announcing the birth of a child. 321. Fundamantles The simple rule of thumb that the Mickey Mantle card will be the most expensive card in the vast majority of sets in which he appears. See also: Reds Herring - the odd occurrence wherein the 1963 Topps Pete Rose rookie card takes that title instead. See also: Micked-Off - how the high-numbered 1967 Topps Tom Seaver rookie card stops the value-war dead in its tracks. See also: Mr. Bloctober - due to the existence of the 1969 Topps ‘white letter’ variation, Mantle is technically still able to claim the throne over the Reggie Jackson rookie card. See also: Polemick - the ongoing debate of whether or not Mickey Mantle’s 1969 card counts as the last one of his playing career, since he retired before the regular season got under way. 322. Bubble Gumption A message sent to an eBay seller asking, “What is the absolute lowest price you will accept for this card?” See also: Smite Back Atcha (idiom) - when the seller immediately replies, "What's the absolute highest price you will pay???" 323. Fliptease The systematic removal of a graded card from its plastic holder. 324. Skewedonyms The inconsistent spellings of certain players’ names (Jimmie/Jimmy Foxx, Lew/Lou Burdette, Satchel/Satchell Paige and Dick/Richie Allen, e.g.) used by the card companies. 325. Wesparkerization (or Wesparkered) How the clumsy presence of some random player in an action shot greatly distracts or partially blocks the viewer from seeing the player whose card it actually is. See also: Co-Stargazing - excitedly looking at the all-time great hidden in plain sight amid the game action on another player’s card. 326. Banalogous The nonsensical listing price of an ungraded card at the going market rate (or more) of what a graded version of the same card sells for in the ‘same’ shape. 327. Doubtspoken (informal) When a member starts a thread asking if the card he’s looking at is authentic, but his wording either hints at or directly states that he does not think it is, in fact, genuine. See also: Grabbergasted - the reaction to finding out the card you were so happy to acquire is a fake. See also: Trympathy - the feeling of sadness felt for someone who got screwed over by someone selling a doctored card. See also: Shedical School - where card doctors are trained in the trimming arts. 328. Tax Player The IRS be damned, April 15 will always be remembered as the day Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier. 329. Keds Pox The extreme corner and edge wear, creases and overall dilapidation caused by loose cards jostling around in a shoebox for long periods of time. See also: Discardboard - the random stacks of old, round-cornered, ‘worthless’ cards in bad shape that every collector has strewn about. 330. Swappraisal (also Barterback) The short postscript added to a card to reflect the player had been traded in the off-season. See also: Misuniformed - the confusion of kids opening packs and wondering why the guy is shown on his old team. 331. Pitchcraft The belief that some Hall of Fame hurlers relied on the sorcery of doctored baseballs to pave their way into Cooperstown. 332. Amissfit Seeing an old league leaders card that includes a (to you) completely unknown/’undeserving’ player on it. See also: Whiffraff - the non-superstars appearing on strikeout leaders cards. See also: Gawk-On Player - when you can’t help but stare with bewilderment and say, “How in heck did this guy get on here?! What kind of season did he have??” See also: Presidekick - when a scrub player actually occupies the top spot on said leaders card. 333. Agonull Set A baseball card offering which includes one or more unnumbered cards, leaving a collector to angrily exclaim, “How in heck will I ever know if I have a complete set??!!” 334. Stack Wounds (also Pile Scars) The squeezed gouges in the sides of cards that resulted from being bundled together and kept tightly wrapped in rubber bands by kids. See also: Notchos (slang) - cards having this type of damage. See also: Cross Glitching - the marks caused by rubber bands being stretched both vertically and horizontally around piles of cards. See also: Elastigmata - when these types of grooves are present on a hallowed, big-money card. 335. Bumper Card (also Maraca) A graded card that is swimming so much in its holder that any movement of said holder causes an audible carom. 336. Kintimidation (Cue the portentous music...) Always having to sleep with one eye firmly open, because it’s becoming more and more apparent that your wife and kids know EXACTLY how much of a gold mine your collection has become. And now it's time for (MANY) beers!!!
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All the cool kids love my YouTube Channel:
Elm's Adventures in Cardboard Land ![]() https://www.youtube.com/@TheJollyElm Looking to trade? Here's my bucket: https://www.flickr.com/photos/152396...57685904801706 “I was such a dangerous hitter I even got intentional walks during batting practice.” Casey Stengel Spelling "Yastrzemski" correctly without needing to look it up since the 1980s. Overpaying yesterday is simply underpaying tomorrow. ![]() Last edited by JollyElm; 10-29-2024 at 06:21 PM. |
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“Are you police?”
“No ma’am, we're card collectors.” I got my first real keyboard Bought it at the emporium Typed on it 'til my fingers* bled Was the summer of '21... *Only on my left hand, because my right arm has been immobilized for a month and a half following surgery. I present to you 2021's Collectorisms Part VII (also SemRANTics or VoSLABulary) ***ALERT!!!!!!*** Before you do anything, scroll down to #400 and read it, so you will understand what's going on here. Anyone reading this post needs to be wearing a mask. For entertainment purposes only. Anyone being offended should consult a physician. All demonstrations by professional drivers were executed on closed courses - please do not attempt at home. Give your children a hug tonight, and best of luck. Hey, Wang! What's with the pictures? It's a website. Come on, will ya? Start reading... 337. Dishonus Wagner The trimmed T206 Honus Wagner with serial #00000001 (the so-called ‘Gretzky/McNall Wagner’) that was the very first card to be graded by PSA. See also: Wags Hag - anyone who uses a picture of this card as a metaphor for PSA’s ineptitude. 338. Murderer’s D'oh! Finding out you’ve been deceived and fleeced by someone selling a reprinted card or counterfeit piece of late-1920’s Yankees memorabilia. 339. Scanchovies The little scraps and specks of dust, dross, hair and whatnot that sit ‘on top’ of a card in a scan. 340. North Pull The card situated on the top of an unopened pack of cards. See also: South Pull - the card situated on the bottom of an unopened pack. See also: Gummi Pairs - the cards (and/or inserts) in a pack that the stick of gum is/was sandwiched between. 341. Sharepopper A person who organizes, runs and looks after a group submission to a Third Party Grader. 342. Glitter Critter An avid collector of modern cards. 343. Shine Swine Disreputable sellers who are listing modern cards at just plainly extortionate prices. 344. Raison d'nêtre (Fr.) Whether it’s for camaraderie, the free marketplace to peddle your cards, or just to continually start arguments with other members, the essential, defining reason that each of us is a net54 member to begin with. 345. Sleight of Brand The trickery of adding “Not PSA” to an eBay listing of a card graded by a different company, so you can reap the rewards of people including “PSA” in their searches, and get your auction viewed by a helluva lot more people. 346. Scrounge Lizard (also Molehiller) Someone who purposely keeps inventing and carping about tiny, inconsequential imperfections in a card you’re trying to sell in an obnoxious attempt to force you to lower your price significantly. 347. Kvetch-22 The principle that the people who bitterly complain the most about PSA’s horrific business practices are the same ones who gladly keep sending in more cards to be graded, because PSA slabs deliver the highest sales prices. See also: “Hegemony Crickets!” - an expression referring to the metaphorical sound of silence as the venerated PSA refuses to ever address even a single one of the countless accusations of malfeasance made against them. 348. Pentourage The insignificant autographs that appear on a multi-signed piece that surround (and let’s face it, ruin) the signature of a coveted, highly collectible player. 349. Scrawl Revered A very precious, venerated, extremely valuable and/or rarely seen player’s autograph. 350. Scribble Squabble A disagreement over whether or not an autograph is authentic. 351. The Math of Con An exorbitantly-priced card on eBay that now has an eye-catching ‘slashed price’ graphic with “12% OFF” added to it, as if that tiny bit of money ‘saved’ would in any way, shape or form make a difference. 352. Wiltwashed When a seller lists the 1969 Topps Wilt Chamberlain as his rookie card, as if the cards Fleer issued almost a decade earlier somehow do not count. 353. Strophanger (also Ginsu Gus) Anyone who uses the term “Razor Sharp!!” in an auction listing. See also: Texthibitionist - an eBayer using “FLASH SALE!” in their listing. See also: Empty Bindering - a seller using “Set Break” when they’re only auctioning off one or two cards from the set. See also: Bodybilker - an eBayer coyly trying to greatly enhance the value of the card he’s selling by stating, “Strong for the grade!!” See also: Doing the Lindy - a seller exclaiming how a card is the player’s “First Solo Card!” 354. “Sorry, Wrong Lumber.” The polite way an expert on the site definitively tells you the supposed ‘gamer’ bat you’re asking about was in no way ever owned or used by the player in question. See also: Sears Noebucks - when the bat turns out to be nothing but a ‘worthless’ store model. 355. Apexpat Predator A collector living in a foreign country who has seemingly cornered a niche of the card market due to local interest (or lack thereof) being vastly different over there. 356. Past Sales Irrelevancy The fact that you can quote the prices of past sales of a card until you’re blue in the face, but the reality is it doesn’t matter. Whatever the lowest price on eBay is for that same card in the same shape at this moment is truly what it is now ‘worth.’ See also: Highpay Snobbery - when someone tells you, “Your price of $500 is too high for this card. The last sales were only $290 and $325,” and you respond, “True, but the only one available on eBay is for $650, so either pay my price or hit the bricks, buddy.” 357. Sideswapped A horizontally oriented card that was accidentally placed in the slab the wrong way (and doesn’t correspond to how all of the other horizontal ones from the same set are encapsulated) by the grading company. 358. Departicipation Trophy That one thing you finally buy on your way out the door of a card show (or as the close of an auction draws near), just so you can begrudgingly say at least you picked up something at the event. 359. Wadvice A thread stating you have a large amount of money to spend on a card, and you want members to specifically tell you what you should buy. 360. Blabbergasted When someone makes a point of stating in a bustling thread, “I’m really surprised no one has mentioned (add name here) yet”...instead of (here’s an idea) just writing about that player yourself! 361. Hologramps Any vintage collector who glances at a show table brimming with modern cards and immediately passes it by. 362. Rank-Spanking Beating out a rival from the registry in an auction for a tough, high-grade card you both need. 363. Psachotherapy (also Modus Poperandi) The fruitless undertaking of trying to understand the methodology involved in the TPG giving your card the grade it received. 364. Source Sense The acumen developed over time and used by experienced collectors of photographs to tell you what you have (or have not) got based on the markings, writings and stamps on back. 365. Woo-Hoo Hounds A card showing the random mix of teammates and coaches during the drunken locker room aftermath of a world series victory. See also: Wrong Johns - when the half-dressed, champagne-soaked group of celebrants on the card are all scrubs, and not the team’s superstars. See also: Randumfounded - having no clue who any of the players taking part in the chaotic revelry are. See also: Shindignitary - when a superstar or Hall of Famer is readily visible on the card. 366. Stickstacking Rifling through your piles of empty toploaders, trying to find a single clean one that’s free of tape residue and not stuck to other ones. 367. Fanguage (also Batois) The dialect or ‘secret language’ (including terms, expressions, references to past players or glories, local towns and landmarks, etc.) of a fan base that is regularly used while talking about their beloved (or sometimes despised) team. See also: Fansplaining - interpreting or teaching this lingo to an outsider. 368. Discompopulation The fact that certain sets don’t have complete and meaningful population data due to PSA’s adjusted itemizing practices over time. Some notable examples being the 1962 regular and ‘green tint’ cards weren’t always counted as separate entities, and specific tobacco card backs weren’t always listed separately. 369. Double Schlepardy When someone is being an argumentative d-bag in two different threads at the same time. 370. Regresstimate When additional information (such as an unseen wrinkle or slight paper loss) comes to light about the card in a ‘guess the grade’ thread, and you have to reassess and lower your numerical prediction. 371. Edge Clippers Kids who cut down larger cards back in the day to make them match the ‘new,’ standardized size of Topps cards. See also: Reteamption (or Overclubbed) - an old card found to have a traded player’s ‘new at the time’ team written on it by a kid many, many years ago. 372. Pastronaut (also Hindsightseer) Anyone getting involved in the meaningless and frustrating theoretical argument of whether or not the all-time great players from earlier in the 1900’s would be able to thrive in the modern era. See also: Spew Colors - the ploy, yet again, of a self-important member who pompously thinks he wins the argument by pointing out how the great players of pre-1947 baseball never had to face any ballplayers of color, as if he’s saying something every single human being doesn’t already know. See also: Faroffsighted - having such a love for the old time players, while knowing nearly nothing about what’s going on in the current game. 373. Plotonic Reading a thread that, based on the title, is surely going to be another ranting disparagement of a seller or an auction house...only to find that no, in a plot twist no one saw coming, it’s one that actually affectionately praises them!! 374. Swashbackler An avid enthusiast and collector of tobacco card backs. 375. Swingcognito (also Action Disfigure) A Bobble Head or Starting Lineup that, if it didn’t have the player’s name displayed right on the front of it, you wouldn’t have a freaking clue who it was supposed to be. See also: Plackadaisical - the feeling that, after seeing how awful looking the bronze plaques of some Hall of Famers are, the artists didn’t put any effort whatsoever into creating the supposed likenesses. 376. Shred Man’s Hand Cards that have obviously been trimmed (and doctored) to end up graded as PSA 8’s, when in reality they are nothing more than PSA 1’s. 377. Guffaw Poll (also Whoa! of Hands) Seeing the numbers of a poll you participated in, and not understanding how in heck the people here could’ve possibly voted the way they did. 378. Err Quotes A snarky member who quotes only a tiny portion of someone’s post, so they can take exception to it while ignoring the overall intent of said post. 379. Hocus Croakus The supernaturally magical rise in demand of a player’s cards the moment he passes away. 380. Vexed to Last When you still can’t afford to buy either of the final two cards needed to complete a set. See also: Penultimuthah F*cker!!! - the scream coming out of anyone whose last two cards needed to finish the 1967 Topps set are the high numbered Rod Carew and Tom Seaver rookie cards. See also: “Can't Set There From Here” - the way a southerner tells you you’ll never be able to complete a certain baseball card set. 381. Uppermohst The position that a piece of Topps gum from a pack of baseball cards occupies on the hardness scale. See also: Eschewing Glum - the feeling of disappointment the day Topps decided to stop including sticks of gum in trading card packs. 382. Greed Cavity (also Lacktivity) That curiously empty space in front of a table at a very crowded, busy show that tells the observer the seller’s asking prices are just too exhorbitantly high for anyone to bother with. 383. Scantortionist When a seller has obviously and deceptively photoshopped an image to make a card appear to be in much better shape than it really is, the silly apologist who jumps in to argue, “No, it’s just because of the scanner settings used.” See also: Fappologist - someone who’s always such a vigorous defender of a bad apple in the hobby, that you know he’s looking at photos of that guy during his private ‘self-entertainment’ activities. 384. Poison Woke An irritating post by a pea-brain who feels the need to purposely inject his pathetic ‘wokeness’ into a thread, when it has no business being there. 385. Endrunaissance The start of the exciting new era when Fleer and Donruss were finally able to get around all of the Topps roadblocks and start widely distributing their new sets of cards. 386. Pathogenuine A card that you only realize has a fatal flaw when it comes back (unknown to you) as ‘Authentic Altered.’ 387. Grintruders (also Sleepwalk-Ons) Traveling secretaries, equipment managers and other randos who appear on team cards to fill some spaces. 388. “Of all the card joints in all the towns in all the world, he walks into mine.” The plaintive grumble issued by a seller when he catches a glimpse of a card show attendee who he’s had bad dealings with in the past. 389. Street Sweeper An off-centered card where the image is nearly falling off the bottom edge. See also: Ceiling Fan - an off-centered card where the image is pushed up toward the top edge. See also: Minor’easter - a card that is slightly off centered, pushed a little toward the bottom left corner. See also: Leanness De Milo - a card that has undoubtedly been trimmed on the sides. 390. Biñata The large plastic storage container at a show that is packed with inexpensive cards (which aren’t in toploaders) that are quickly getting destroyed by all the grubby hands rifling through them. 391. Bumping Off Point The minimum increase in grade your card would need to receive in order to make a resubmission financially worthwhile. See also: Resubmitzvah - cracking a card out of its slab, resubmitting it to the TPG and feeling blessed by the new, higher number it received. 392. Huebie Doo Someone who is able to conclusively solve the mystery and tell you the card you’re asking about is real or fake, based solely on the colors and tones in play. 393. Gettysburger Any card having an SGC 80 (“four score”) grade on the label. Also used in some circles to indicate a grand slam home run. 394. Shamnesia Accidentally buying a card from an absolutely disreputable seller who has been exposed time and time again, because you didn’t realize or forgot it was this seller. 395. Shillicon Tally When a member outlines specifically how an expensive auction price was nefariously run up by conspirators. 396. Nonbindary A collector who isn’t interested in completing full sets. See also: Teamophiliac - a person whose collection is centered around grabbing cards from only one particular club. 397. Relish You Were Here (informal) A thread where a member posts that he’s done being a member of net54, but you know damn well he’s going to quickly return to the thread to enthusiastically count the number of people imploring him to stay. 398. Winstability When you enter a bid with only moments to go and the screen tells you you’re the high bidder...but there’s a few seconds left and you stare at the screen (even AFTER the auction ends) wondering if that’s going to suddenly change. 399. Choptimist A person who while watching a video of an enthusiastic ‘rack pack rip’ harbors a secret desire for the guy to accidentally damage the cards or cut his finger as he wields the sharp scissors. 400. Hemingwaste Someone writing a long, rambling, in-depth post who actually thinks he’s adding all sorts of insight to the thread, but when you’re done with it you realize, ”That’s ten minutes of my life I’ll never get back.” 401. Flipper-Swiffer A person getting a long-ago graded card reholdered in a clean new slab, for the express purpose of tricking potential buyers into thinking it was newly graded under ‘stricter’ guidelines. 402. Trademarquee The large, unavoidable presence that the multiple branding imprints on modern cards have become, as all the TM and © symbols are impossible to ignore. 403. Rants in Your Pants A member who seemingly out of nowhere starts bitterly complaining about someone or something. 404. Amelia Snarehart Seeing a great card at a great price on eBay, so you immediately click ‘buy it now’...but as the page loads, it suddenly says “This listing has ended.” and you realize someone else swooped in and grabbed it...and this wondrous card has vanished right before your very eyes!!! 405. Pink Eye Appeal (or Eye Appall) A card that a seller touts as having “Great eye appeal!!,” when everyone can plainly see it most certainly does not. See also: Iconjunctivitis - a Hall of Famer card that sadly has really bad eye appeal. 406. Crow-tahni A collector who loves talking up how Shohei Ohtani is the best thing since sliced bread. See also: Dough-tahni - an optimistic collector who is extremely bullish on Shohei Ohtani, and is investing big time in his cards. See also: Woe-tahni - a pessimistic collector who has no doubt that be it an injury or otherwise, Shohei Ohtani is headed for a big downfall. See also: Yenigma - the odd status that the 1965 Topps #282 Masanori Murakami rookie card enjoys due to him being the first Japanese player to play for a Major League Baseball team. 407. Hit By Q-Pid’s Arrow The newfound desire for cards with qualifiers in the current boom market, as they are now regularly selling for much larger sums than ever before. See also: Flippery Slope - seeing all of the problems to come now that PSA has unilaterally decided to stop using qualifiers when grading cards. 408. Sniper Rash The bitter irritation you feel after waking to find your sniping app failed to place your bids last night. See also: GrabHub - any sniping tool app. 409. Grail Fraud Not understanding the unbridled adoration and enthusiasm for a certain set that is cherished by so many collectors, when you have no problem saying that it absolutely sucks. 410. Fold Blooded A seller who doesn’t consider an obviously bent corner to be a crease or a wrinkle. 411. Remissing Link When you run across a card on eBay that you’ve somehow never seen before...but it comes from a set you are highly familiar with. 412. Twerp Walk When the feds make an arrest during the National and haul the miserable miscreant out in front of everyone. 413. Covidiocy How the sudden interest in baseball cards by well-heeled investors has so insidiously infected the hobby that reasonably affordable purchases for lifelong collectors have now become a thing of the past. And I bid you adieu!!!
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All the cool kids love my YouTube Channel:
Elm's Adventures in Cardboard Land ![]() https://www.youtube.com/@TheJollyElm Looking to trade? Here's my bucket: https://www.flickr.com/photos/152396...57685904801706 “I was such a dangerous hitter I even got intentional walks during batting practice.” Casey Stengel Spelling "Yastrzemski" correctly without needing to look it up since the 1980s. Overpaying yesterday is simply underpaying tomorrow. ![]() Last edited by JollyElm; 08-07-2024 at 04:25 PM. |
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Absolutely hysterical, Darren. I'm a #361.
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Please visit my website at http://t206.monkberry.com/index.html |
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__________________
All the cool kids love my YouTube Channel:
Elm's Adventures in Cardboard Land ![]() https://www.youtube.com/@TheJollyElm Looking to trade? Here's my bucket: https://www.flickr.com/photos/152396...57685904801706 “I was such a dangerous hitter I even got intentional walks during batting practice.” Casey Stengel Spelling "Yastrzemski" correctly without needing to look it up since the 1980s. Overpaying yesterday is simply underpaying tomorrow. ![]() |
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