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There are the blogs that exclusively feature vintage cards, vintage topics, and rarely stray into modern day cards or issues. There are more modern blogs that address the up-to-the-second goings on in the hobby, but rarely address anything before 1987.
Then there are a number of blogs that travel through both worlds, and some do it effortlessly. My blog fits into this third category -- sort of. I travel through both the vintage and modern worlds, but I certainly don't do it effortlessly. I stumble, fall, learn, screw up, get corrected, learn again, stumble again, and on and on. The modern card world is a confusing place to someone who first began collecting cardboard when it actually was cardboard.
Take, for example, this card that I received from Rob of the crusading Voice of the Collector: The Anti-Beckett, a blog that speak the truth about our hobby.
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Then I looked at the back and saw it was numbered 72/75, and thought, "well the one I have must be another one of the 75 cards with a different number." And my next thought was, "Well, that's stupid. That's just a double with a different number on the back. What if they numbered all of the 1988 Donruss cards? If you had the '88 Donruss Jose Canseco card numbered 414,386 and the '88 Donruss Jose Canseco card numbered 698,481, wouldn't you still consider them doubles?"
Then, I thought, "If it looks like a double and quacks like a double, then it must be a double."
Well, as clever as I thought my thought process was, it was dead wrong. The modern card world is a mine field for guys like me. We grew up thinking stickers inserted in packs of 1981 Fleer was a mind-blowing concept.
It turns out the card I already had was this one:
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Also, on the back it is numbered to 400, not 75. Strike four.
Now, I don't have the foggiest idea what this means in the world of Co-Signers. And I really don't care to tell you the truth. I just know it involves much too much for me to focus on and is not why I got into collecting.
So, there I am, wrong again. But that's OK. I'm still learning. And I'm learning that if it looks like a double and quacks like a double, maybe I should just get some stronger glasses, because it's probably a different-colored, different-numbered, non-refractory parallel thingy card.
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Schmidt makes me nervous, and he seems to make everyone on the Dodgers nervous, too. They treat him like he's dynamite. He has one decent inning, and everyone's like, "OK, that's enough. That was great Jason. Well done. Don't want to tire out the arm." I hope he can get through more than four innings a start this year.
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One of the drawbacks to being a Dodger fan is you get all kinds of Hollywood people glomming onto the Dodgers. Speaking as a guy, it's cool if the Hollywood person is Alyssa Milano. Not so cool if it's Larry King.
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Still, they're cool, and remind me of when I used to have posters up on my bedroom wall. Kids still do that, right? Put posters up? I don't know. I'm still learning as I go.
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