Wednesday, February 16, 2022

Out and about

Generally speaking, I don't know if I can say that January was busier for me than normal, but I do know that I seemed to have found myself being out and about a little more than usual. And as is often the case, at least when I don't need to be anywhere by a specific time, I tend to try and stop in at places that I hope will be fun in between all of the not so fun places. 

There are only so many places for me to go locally, with most of them being of the variety that don't warrant frequent trips to. That being said, I did bring home a few things throughout the month, and as is my want, will now be subjecting those unfortunate enough to have clicked on this post, with most of those purchases.


I don't know how it is elsewhere, but finding records at thrift stores, records featuring artists that people actually want to listen to, has gotten rather difficult in recent years. Because, in case you haven't heard, there's a lot of money to be made in vinyl these days, especially amongst those #FlipLife dipshits.

Given how the employees of thrift stores, and their volunteers, get first crack at everything that comes in, I suspect that a lot of records aren't even making it past the back rooms anymore. The ones that do, are the ones that nobody on eBay would buy, you know like the old Christmas albums performed by the Nobody's Ever Heard of Sisters. You can't even give those away. 

Even though I know that it's usually pointless, I do still thumb through every stack I come across, no matter how meager that stack may be. I found two whole stacks worth of mostly unwanted records at the Threads of Hope early last month. Those stacks did yield two finds for me, though there is a big BUT attached to that statement, which I'll come back to in a moment. First, the Four Tops! One of my personal favorites. I do have all of these tracks on other formats, but for a quarter, I couldn't leave them there.


I don't imagine that there are a lot of folks out there still clamoring for The Righteous Brothers, but there loss is my gain. I mentioned that there was a "but" attached to these, this being that both records have certainly seen better days, and the quality of their play is very questionable. If they had been any more than 25¢ apiece, I wouldn't have even bothered, but for that price I don't mind taking a chance. Both will need an extensive cleaning, which will be delayed until the weather warms up a little more, so that I can go out to porch to do it... and not freeze my tuchus off!

Oh, and the back of the Righteous Brothers yielded a fun little tidbit written in pencil...

I've cropped out the name and street address, but as you can see, this was a well traveled record. Google tells me that it didn't come from quite as far as I did to get here, but it, and it's original owner, did make quite the trek at some point in the past.

Cassettes are becoming a thing of the past at thrift stores, too. Though in there case, it's more because people just don't care about them anymore and/or don't have any to donate anymore. Somebody must've died, or was put in a home, because there was a whole Rubbermaid tote full of cassettes on this particular day. At only ten cents apiece, it's a real shame that there wasn't more for me. And yeah, I know, you, yes you, you probably hate the Wham! And to that I say, good for you! Good. For. You.

This thrift store doesn't usually have a lot of the four primary things that I go into thrift stores for; videos, books, records, and cassettes. What it does tend to have a lot of though, is puzzles. They normally have a fairly decent amount of board games too, but with no one to play with, I don't spend a lot of time looking through those. Puzzles on the other hand, are something that you don't need anyone else around to do, hence my spending a little more time to look through. This MF'er may not look like much, but is currently proving to be one of the more difficult puzzles I've done in a while. It's the middle section on both sides that's causing the problem. There are so many subtle color changes! [Update: The puzzle has been finished as of this post going live.]


Technically, I did buy this book from The Book Cellar before going across the street and getting all that crap up above, but who's gonna a click on post showing a Three Investigators book in the thumbnail? I mean, besides me 😉. I never see books from this series in the wild, so if I was only destined to find one book that day, this was a good one for me to find.




I stopped into the nearest Dollar Tree three times during January, which is two times more than I normally during any given month. It just doesn't get enough new stuff to make me want to go in there any more frequently. If this was one of those magical DT's that you read about online, the ones get large DVD and Blu-Ray shipments every week, I'd be in there every week, but before this last month, I'd only seen a couple of DVD's there twice in the almost seven years that I've been here. Now, just in the last month, they've had two different shipments of DVD's. One week I went there, and there was maybe a dozen different flicks. Nothing for me, but still fun to look through. Then the next week, there was like 50 different pictures to choose from. It was crazy! I wouldn't be surprised at all if these were just the leavings from other stores, I mean they're are not gonna send top shelf stuff all the way out here, but if everyone else's leavings are gonna include Chuck Bronson and Teri Garr (prrrrrr), then I say, bring on the leavings!

Good or bad, new MOTU stuff is everywhere these days. Most of it isn't for me, but I did have to have this little baby Skeletor. [Note: The puzzle's edge was left in the shot for scale.]

The Serenity Thrift store is right next door to the Dollar Tree, and even though I normally only go in there once every couple of months, I was in there three times during January too. Three trips yielded one binder. I don't know anything about car racing, and aside from knowing that it was a thing, don't know anything about MAXX Race Cards, but I do know a thing or two about good binders; and this is a good binder. I can't remember the last time I paid as much as $1.99 for a binder, but this one was worth it.

This probably wasn't one of my more exciting "other stuff" posts, but it gave me a break from card posts, so it's served it's purpose. Now that the palate has been cleansed, I can bang out a few more card posts before I need another break. 

26 comments:

  1. That Four Tops album is LOADED with hits. And, for some reason, two Monkees covers. (Hey, they were big at the time, and Motown was always happy to jump on a trend.)

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    1. Hey hey they were big at the time. Get it right.

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    2. To be fair, I'd rather hear the Four Tops covering The Monkees, than the other way around.

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  2. The Three Investigators seems like a Hardy Boys knock-off. Hills on a mountain? Hmmm.

    Careless Whisper still holds up.

    The Teri Garr movie wins it.


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    1. They are in the same vein, but not as much of a knock-off as some of the series' that would come along later.

      I agree.

      She was one of my earlier crushes.

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  3. I still have a couple big stacks of cassettes somewhere if you're into guitar solos from the 80's...

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    1. Greg: I am! Are these cassettes that you no longer want?

      Steve: I wish I knew how to use emoji's in the comments section too.

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  4. Replies
    1. Agreed. Being cooped up at home all of the time isn't healthy.

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  5. The Maxx binders are actually rather unusual. I believe they were only available by mail order. 1994 Maxx is the largest NASCAR set in history, at 340 cards.

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    1. Thank you for the information, Billy. Hearing that it was available via an offer isn't too surprising, as obviously they used to do that all of the time back in the 90's. Now that I've started using it, I want more! It's got a D-ring (that looks dirty when typed) with a very subtle slope, it's actually one of the better binders I've ever encountered.

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  6. I definitely had some Maxx race cards in the early '90s, although never saw the binder.

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    1. I didn't know that you were into racing too?

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  7. I'm just starting to love looking for albums in thrift stores, so it bothers me that they've become victim to flippers, too. It makes me feel like running right out to the store and grabbing the ones I saw.

    Nothing wrong with Wham, their songs were damn catchy. Except that Careless Whisper, that can die in a fire.

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    1. I've spent the last couple of decades looking for records at thrift stores, and it bothers me that I can't find them as easily as I used to. The whole flipping thing has just gotten out of hand, I've even read online, multiple times, about people who volunteer at thrift stores just so they can get access to stuff before it hit's the floor, buy it cheap, and of course then... flip it!

      Oh no, Careless Whisper is still really great. Though, I could see how someone could've grown tired of it after all of these years.

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  8. My wife got me a record player last Father's Day, so I've been checking out the thrift store selections a lot more myself. There's an actual record store here in town too, but their stuff tends to be overpriced.

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    1. That was a good gift! The motor on my turntable is going out. I've been looking for a new (old) one, but so far am not having much luck. And yeah, record store prices, in most areas, have gotten bonkers over the last couple of years.

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  9. There's a part of me that regrets not building my vinyl collection a decade earlier. There are so many albums I want, but the budget collector in me won't allow me to shell out more than a few dollars for each one. Although... occasionally... I'll buy a brand new one off of Amazon or Target. I wonder if cassette tapes will eventually become popular like vinyl. I kept all of the ones I really liked from my youth. They're sitting in a rack mounted in my garage.

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    1. That's because most of the mainstream stuff should still only be a couple of dollars. Nothing that had a couple of million pressings should be $20, and yet you see it all the time now. Like everything else, I never saw this trend coming, so despite having been buying records for quite a while now, I wish that I would've bought even more, because there's quite a few that I still want that are now way out of my price range. Cassettes started to make a bit of comeback a few years ago, but I think it's mostly died back down again. Will they come back again? I wouldn't be surprised.

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  10. Does "Alfred Hitchcock and the Three Investigators" mean Alfred Hitchcock is a character in the book?

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    1. In the early books, yes. If you're interested, this link might explain it better:
      http://www.series-books.com/threeinvestigators/threeinvestigators.html

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  11. That's good to know for future reference :)

    And here's hoping that you and the missus do start getting out there again pretty soon, especially since spring and early summer are usually the best times to find things, thanks to all of the cleaning and donating that people tend to do during that time.

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  12. Ah Murphys Law...grew up watching Bronson movies as my dad is a big fan. The non-action Action Hero!

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    1. Watching Charlie Bronson flicks with dad... doesn't get much better than that!

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