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Mr Mint gets spoofed in HBO movie "Diminished Capacity"

Much to Mr Mint's chagrin, he was spoofed in the HBO movie Diminished Capacity where a character named "The Mint-Mint Man" buys a high end T206 Schulte for $500 bucks! The movie starring Matthew Broderick and Alan Alda has a limited release in NYC, Chicago and LA.

Alan Rosen was totally pissed off - saying that it's obvious people are going to assume it's based on his career and brand him in that light.

As a side note, here's a youtuber of Mr Mint on his most recent "buy" which was also mentioned in this week's SCD. Here's one of the accounts. And here's more footage from the same buy. And here's the 3rd part of the buy. - and this appears to be the Introduction - Mr Mints entering the home. And last, scroll down from this blog and you'll see footage of Mr Mint laying out the 80K on the table and then taking a picture with the seller. Very exciting stuff! image

Just thought this was kinda funny stuff - the spoof and then the real Mr Mint in-action for what it's worth.

mike

Mike

Comments

  • PoppaJPoppaJ Posts: 2,818
    Mike,

    Very interesting videos of Al, and what a nice collection that elderly gentleman HAD!

    The old guy reminded me of my father who was also a long-time collector. My father always enjoyed giving his seemingly memorized, almost-word-for-word tour of his collection, to anyone that was interested.

    Thanks for taking your time to put this together .... Great Stuff!

    PoppaJ
  • MphilkingMphilking Posts: 1,570 ✭✭✭
    He seems a bit more rough with the stuff than I would have liked. I can't believe he threw that Braves Jersey in the oil.


  • << <i>He seems a bit more rough with the stuff than I would have liked. I can't believe he threw that Braves Jersey in the oil. >>




    +1
    imageimageimage
  • nam812nam812 Posts: 10,600 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Great videos Mike, thanks for posting them.

    The only part that bugged me was that the older gentleman kept pointing out all the flaws in the sets for Rosen.
  • AllenAllen Posts: 7,165 ✭✭✭
    The movie has been discused multiple times, but I had not seen the YouTube videos. He was very rough with that stuff and telling people the prices he paid for stuff in buys might not be the best idea. Who here would pay $2,000 for that sweet 54 Topps Set? I still cannot believe he threw that Braves jersey.
  • nam812nam812 Posts: 10,600 ✭✭✭✭✭


    << <i>......I still cannot believe he threw that Braves jersey. >>



    I'm pretty sure at that point Rosen knew he was buying the guy out, but I agree he was very rough with the stuff.
  • TNTonPMSTNTonPMS Posts: 2,279 ✭✭
    I wonder if Mr. Mint is packin heat ?
  • AllenAllen Posts: 7,165 ✭✭✭
    I doubt he packs, but the other guy does. The goofy kid with glasses- prolly not.
  • fiveninerfiveniner Posts: 4,111 ✭✭✭
    Very entertaining.
    Tony(AN ANGEL WATCHES OVER ME)
  • rugbymarinerugbymarine Posts: 409 ✭✭✭✭
    Waaayyyyy too rough with the page turning. I'd be livid if those were my cards. Also notice the old man has them 'double stacked' in the pages.

    He seems very short with his mannerisms. Like he forgot some of his people skills or something.
  • TNTonPMSTNTonPMS Posts: 2,279 ✭✭
    Walkin around with all that cash could be dangerous to your health .

    That's kinda like walkin through upper Central Park wearing gold and diamonds all alone .

    You might not get killed , but you're definitely gettin robbed .

  • colebearcolebear Posts: 886 ✭✭


    << <i>He seems a bit more rough with the stuff than I would have liked. I can't believe he threw that Braves Jersey in the oil. >>



    +2

    not only the jersey but also the way he shoved that Clemente rookie page into the page. Very sad portrayal of him.
  • TNTonPMSTNTonPMS Posts: 2,279 ✭✭
    That reminds me of a time when I was showing my 1932 Yankees baseball to a potential buyer /collector in Manhattan .

    The guy goes to take the baseball out of it's holder ,
    I felt my heart skip a beat litterally .

    I told the guy he could take it out of the holder only if he wears gloves , other than that , it's staying in it's holder .

    The look on the guys face was priceless but I don't care what he felt .

    I was in absolute disbelief . . . the balls of some people , I tell ya !

    Personally I'd have asked him to leave my house if he treated my stuff like that .

    People still have a lot of feelings for that stuff even though they are selling it , they still do not want to see it manhandled at anytime or at any price .

    Put the Crack Pipe Down !
  • Stone193Stone193 Posts: 24,485 ✭✭✭✭✭
    image

    I figured that the movie had been covered in my brief absence - I brought it up since there was an article in SCD this week and the movie was put in context with Mr Mint - so I thought it would be entertaining to talk about - of course - again - with respect to the notorious Alan Rosen.

    On the "handling" thing - I believe he likes to play to the camera and make it look like all this stuff is no big deal.

    I've watched guys before at the National review stuff - I'm amazed at the speed at which they review stuff - tho, since they're giving - at best - low end wholesale - a few errors here and there probably doesn't make much difference.

    On the 80K the guy got? If he took the time to ebay the stuff - I wonder how much he could've gotten? Tho, let's face it - who can put a price on the work and aggrevation that might accompany such a sales endeavor?

    Thanx for the comments.
    mike
    Mike
  • jrinckjrinck Posts: 1,321 ✭✭
    I didn't like the movie--bad script--and poor acting from Broderick and Alda. And the way they manhandled that card so many times, if it even was mint at one time, it wouldn't have been by the end as it floated down from the rafters.

    So much potential and they just phoned it in.
  • MphilkingMphilking Posts: 1,570 ✭✭✭
    TNT I can't believe sometimes when I go to card shows and people are just yanking out stuff from album sleeves. They shove them back in with no concern at all. Amazing.
  • SoFLPhillyFanSoFLPhillyFan Posts: 3,931 ✭✭
    It's possible that the seller did not have any stars that were near mint or mint, but did anyone notice that these words were never used by Rosen when looking at the cards?

    He used VG and EX, but then also said "------- is OK" and "------- is beautiful" when looking at other cards.

    Did I miss something and is this perhaps intentional? Maybe part of his patter in trying to downplay the condition?
  • Any good salesman will try to downplay anything brought in and uplay anything they are trying to sell.

    If I were a car salesman and you brought me a trade-in that tiny rock chip in the windshield is going to become a bid deal, but the one in the car you want to buy is going to be nothing. Its the way the game is played.
  • He has such a song and a dance going. Looks at a few cards, makes some comments and throws out a number. He knows going in what is going to be an attractive enough price that the seller isn't going to say no, but will turn him a large profit. I mean I'm sure he knows what to look for (the money is in the BIG player cards .. people aren't exactly knocking down doors for a 1954 Bob Trice) but in the end, he'll come up with a total where the seller can't walk away from, yet leaves him open to making a rather large profit.

    It reminds me when after my grandmother died and the estate buyers came through. We entertained a few of them and you could feel you were getting low balled, but in reality, who else is going to come through and take everything at once?

    The task of selling these individually is not only a pain in the ass, but could lead to a potential IRS nightmare. This guy walked away with 80K in cash that he could stash under his mattress and never tell the IRS about. You sell that kind of volume on ebay, you are going to cough up alot in fees as well as having to give over about 30-40% to the IRS at the end of the year. To clear 80K selling on ebay (assuming you claim it on your taxes), you are going to have to sell about 120-150K and that's not counting all the hours it takes to list the items. And let's not get into deadbeat buyers and chargebacks.
  • TJMACTJMAC Posts: 864 ✭✭
    Mike, that was a lot of fun to watch. Wow, what an amazing collection!!! I have to admit the way Mr. Mint was treating the cards made me cringe. I have never joined in bashing the guy since I have never met him, but he could of shown the guys collection a little more respect. The guy seemed pretty content with the decision to sell. I hope if I ever have to, I handle it as well as he did.

    To be balanced, Mr. Mint did say a card was nice when he saw one.
  • I don't think he was all that careless with the cards... He has to do it quickly or he would be there all week.
    Always collecting vintage basketball and any ABA memorabilia.
  • billwaltonsbeardbillwaltonsbeard Posts: 3,748 ✭✭✭✭
    That was really interesting! That guy had quite a collection.

    Mr Mint was being a little carefree and casual with the sheet turning and the commentary. And as someone in this thread previously mentioned, he could use a little better people skills.

    Not to defend him or anything, but this is the guy who at one time went through a find of several thousand 1952 Topps, that included almost 100 Mantles! Do you really think someone who has gone through that could ever get excited about seeing 60s and 70s sets? I think that's the cause of his behavior.

    great stuff, thanks to the OP for the work.
  • MorgothMorgoth Posts: 3,950 ✭✭✭
    Thats the issue with Mr. Mint, he views this as buying and selling poker chips. The problem is people have emotional ties to their collections. Nothing can make him excited so I think really it just annoys him to look at "average" cards no matter how nice. I truly think he is just looking for the next big find to make him a big deal again and get publicity, but he has alot of competition today and most with better customer skills.

    Wonder what would have happened if he would have gotten that Ruth HR bat that Mile High sold
    Currently completing the following registry sets: Cardinal HOF's, 1961 Pittsburgh Pirates Team, 1972 Pittsburgh Pirates Team, 1980 Pittsburgh Pirates Team, Bill Mazeroski Master & Basic Sets, Roberto Clemente Master & Basic Sets, Willie Stargell Master & Basic Sets and Terry Bradshaw Basic Set
  • jrinckjrinck Posts: 1,321 ✭✭
    The way he roughly scanned through everything means he must have been seriously lowballing.

    And the way he just tossed that jersey aside was very disrespectful. I would have kicked him the hell out right then and there.
  • This is a great Mr. Mint story and I promise, it got him VERY EXCITED!

    http://gavelchat.sportscollectorsdigest.com/Mr+Mint+Talks+To+Gavel+Chat+About+His+Most+Famous+Find.aspx
    Always collecting vintage basketball and any ABA memorabilia.
  • Revenge is Mr. Mint's condition to attend memorabilia show
    BY Nicholas Hirshon
    DAILY NEWS WRITER

    Friday, November 13th 2009, 4:00 AM

    No more Mr. Nice Guy from Alan (Mr. Mint) Rosen.

    The celebrated baseball card dealer - who became so disenchanted with industry "greed" that he hasn't visited a New York City sports show in nearly a decade - is returning for revenge.

    Rosen, once dubbed the "King of Cards" by Sports Illustrated, admitted he signed up for a memorabilia show in Queens this weekend to get back at a rival promoter who he claims reneged on a deal.

    "That's the main reason I'm doing this show, to rub a little salt," Rosen said of his feud with promoter Jim Ryan, who runs competing conventions in Nassau and Westchester counties.

    The 64-year-old Rosen, nicknamed Mr. Mint after his quest for cards in mint condition, contends Ryan promised him a prime spot at a convention four years ago, only to dump him near the back.

    Rosen, among the hobby's best-known faces, said he took offense and left the show when Ryan refused to honor their pact.

    "I'd love to see that guy get crushed," said Rosen, whose likeness is printed on baseballs that he autographs. "He deserves to get smacked in the head."

    Ryan, reached by e-mail, declined to comment.

    Promoter Joe Coppa, who inked Rosen for this weekend's show at Queens College in Flushing, said Mr. Mint automatically boosts the expo's profile.

    The eccentric New Jersey dealer became legendary for lugging cash-lined suitcases to collectors' homes to buy their entire stock.

    Sports Illustrated labeled him the "Duke of Dough" in 1988, citing his emergence "as a figure of near mythic proportions in a world suddenly gone mad over soaring baseball card prices."

    "He's a godsend in the industry," Coppa said. He added he is mulling a lawsuit against Ryan for "illegal restraint of trade," charging Ryan refused to let him solicit dealers at Ryan's conventions.

    Ryan also declined comment on Coppa's accusation.
    imageimageimage
  • storm888storm888 Posts: 11,701 ✭✭✭
    Full Movie..........


    Very Cute
    Folks Who Bite Get Bitten. Folks Who Don't Bite Get Eaten.
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