About three weeks ago, Johnny's Trading Spot held a giveaway for his readers, randomizing off 350-plus cards from one of his many, many, many finds. Most of the cards were of the magazine variety from Baseball Cards Magazine and the like from the late 1980s and early 1990s. I'm very familiar with those, having come across them back in the day and also through adding the Dodgers to my collection. They are pretty cool though nothing I look to collect (except the ones modeled on the 1975 Topps design). When Johnny displayed what was up for the giveaway, my eyes instead gravitated toward a nine-pocket page that contained a certain oddball from the 1960s. I didn't think more of it, the chances of getting that page wasn't great, there were 30 different pages offered up! Well, lo and behold, I ended up landing page #18, the majority of which were 1968 Game cards. I don't know how but I gamed the system! Outside of the one Dodger in...
If I compiled a list of all the major-release movies from the late 1980s and then a separate list of my top five "most glaring nonviews," I believe "Dead Poets Society" would be at the top of the shorter list. I watched just about every movie that came out in the late '80s, that's what I was doing then, going out with the girlfriend, eating at restaurants and going to the movies. On a weekly basis. Somehow I missed "Dead Poets Society". No big deal. The movie is so well-known that I know the plot and the actors and many of the quoted phrases: "Seize the Day," "O Captain, My Captain". I'm not a movie watcher anymore so I'll probably never go back and see it or anything else that's on my top five misses. While I was doing all that movie-watching in the late 1980s, Topps was creating cards that also referenced a captain. Two each, in fact. No, it wasn't a Topps homage to the Walt Whitman poem. Topps included...