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What is “Internet Scarce” and why should you care?

September 8, 2016 by krisis

Of all of the massive Marvel Omnibuses I own, this slim Golden Age Wonder Woman Archive Edition Vol. 06 is my record-holder for most expensive single collected edition purchase. I'm sure there are some copies sitting forgotten on shelves all across America.

Of all of the massive Marvel Omnibuses I own, this slim Golden Age Wonder Woman Archive Edition Vol. 06 is my record-holder for most expensive single collected edition purchase. I’m sure there are some copies sitting forgotten on shelves all across America.

Have you ever hunted down a rare thing online and paid a little bit more than you intended to spend? Me too. While some of those things are legitimately hard to find, it’s just as likely we’re fallen prey to the phenomenon of “internet scarcity.”

To explain that, first we need to spend a little time in the real world.

Yesterday EV and I were at the home improvement store (yes, again), and one of our objectives for the trip was to pick up some drain declogger. As I surveyed the shelf of options, I found myself thinking, “Why are we even shopping for this in a store? Shouldn’t I be comparing brand reviews on Amazon? I bet I could get this cheaper if I ordered a bulk pack!”

Even if you aren’t as hard core as I am about avoiding physical purchases, online comparison shopping for reviews and deals has became a standard part of the buying experience the same way checking the Sunday paper for sales and coupons before heading to the store was when I grew up. What we’re seeing in the store is never the full story – we could be a quick check of the phone away from a bigger discount!

However, in my experience we don’t usually think in the opposite direction. When it comes to buying things online – especially collectors items that may be rare – we never consider the market may be different in the real world.

Why should we? When we buy a rare book on the internet the entire web is at our disposal to check for prices. We’ve already checked Amazon and eBay and Google Shopping and even Alibris and Biblio. We know that $90 is the least we can pay for this $30 cover price book that started out on sale for $15, and goshdarnit, we’re taking the plunge!

My many colleagues in collecting comics via graphic novels have a term for this phenomenon: “internet scarcity.”

The online market for your favorite collectible is a supply-and-demand system full of context that’s visible to every collector on the planet. It’s great for torpedoing unwarranted markups of common items and equaling out supply and demand across different geographic areas.

Yet, once the item you want becomes even the slightest bit less supplied than demanded, it’s guaranteed that prices will go up.

thor-god-of-thunder-vol01

This outstanding Thor collected edition briefly got absurdly internet rare in 2014, leaping to over 250% its cover price despite a massive printing with hardcovers still on shelves all over the country. As soon as a oversized hardcover was announced, suddenly copies flooded the Marvel. You can currently grab a copy for less than 25% of the cover price.

I’m not here to give you an economics lesson. Heck, there doesn’t even have to be demand! Sellers who discover they have a relatively unsupplied item will start the price high just to see if anyone will bite. The fewer of the item, the higher the price. Eventually, someone desperate for it will show up with money to burn. Suddenly, a precedent is set – and, like our war with Eastasia, now that book has always been $200!

(That was a 1984 reference, by the way – we’re not actually at war with Eastasia because it’s not an actual place with which we can be at war.)

Internet scarcity does not always indicate real world scarcity – and, even if it does, it doesn’t mean the price points will be aligned in both markets. There’s a social proof component to paying internet scarce prices – you can see people have paid them before. No such precedent is available in a physical store or even on Craigslist, so your skepticism takes over – just like mine did with the drain decloggers.

As an example: Marvel Masterworks are premium format hardcover reprints of Silver Age material by Marvel printed in relatively short supply – sometimes less than a 2,000 initial print run for a $75 book that will never be reprinted. Once the books are gone at the distributor level, fans freak out, and the books tend to make an automatic leap to $125 or higher.

Yet, these books are well known to linger on the shelves of comic shops for exactly the reason internet collectors covet them – they’re one in a series of high-dollar items with small print runs spread across many years, which makes it difficult to own entire series of them. They’re not impulse buys for the casual fan. By picking them up over cover price online, we’re simply fortifying their internet scarcity.

This doesn’t just apply to comic books. Many of us are guilty of succumbing to the cult of Amazon, where we’ll drop anything into our cart if it’s PRIME. After doing that few times doing it with my favorite lip balm I checked its price in the local drug store – it was cheaper than Amazon.

What’s the solution to overpaying for the the things we want online? We internet shoppers need must occasionally pick up the dreaded phone and call or – Bowie help us – visit these forsaken physical locations to avoid paying a hefty premium for our convenience.

Filed Under: comic books

Clinton’s Cough and Trump’s Kryptonian Children

September 7, 2016 by krisis

Today the leading story on the political internet is that Hillary Clinton coughed yesterday, closed followed by Trump’s children being a cadre of evil Kryptonians escaped from the Phantom Zone.

Hold on, I am just going to fashion my framed Journalism diploma into a deadly throwing star that I can use as a weapon during the impending end times. I’ll be right back.

Let’s start with Hillary. It’s not that she coughed once. She coughed several times. It was a coughing fit, actually, enough so that she excused herself from the presence of reporters.

On one hand, it’s a lightweight story that humanizes a candidate. We’ve all had that moment of coughing, sneezing, or eye-itching in the middle of a meeting. Hey, it happens to Clinton, too! She’s not a robot. On the other hand, it’s part of a continuing narrative about Clinton’s declining health and unfitness for the presidency.

trump-millenial-outreach-outsider-01None of that is the actual story. We’ll get back to that in a moment.

The big politic meme of the week has been a Trump outreach campaign targeted at millennials. In the outreach, three of Trump’s children pose stonefaced in a either a terrible photo or a terrible photoshop job above the caption “This is not a Republican vs Democrat election. This is about an insider versus an outsider.”

There is so much to unpack about that photo and caption, and why this outreach is warranted in the first place. However, do you know what people were mostly tweeting about? How much the junior Trumps resembled a host of cinematic villains – from Children of the Corn to Slytherins to the Kryptonians who escaped the Phantom Zone in Superman 2.

The reality is that Donald Trump is barely beating the collective third party candidates among likely voters of the millennial generation. An August Quinnipiac University poll had him at 24% to Clinton’s 48% in a four-way race against Johnson and Stein (here’s the raw poll results). Yes, that’s right, Clinton is beating him by a 100%.

I have not seen that fact tweeted or commented a single time on all the villainous memes. I also haven’t seen discussion of the fact that the youth vote is purely a turnout game, since this huge swath of voters rarely hits the 50% mark in participation. What other Get Out The Vote efforts is Trump’s campaign undertaking with this population? Should he even engage, given his low percentage of support? [Read more…] about Clinton’s Cough and Trump’s Kryptonian Children

Filed Under: politics

New Collecting Guide: Marvel’s Shang Chi, Master of Kung Fu

September 6, 2016 by krisis

shang-chi-3596575-avengers_world_3_alessio_variantFrequently, my comic guides begin as one of two questions – either, “Where has this character appeared?” or “Can you buy collections of this character?”

That’s what makes my Shang Chi collecting guide and reading order a bit of an outlier. You see, I started working on it after picking up his first omnibus earlier this summer and loving the first few issues. There is a total of six scheduled volumes to cover both his long-running Master of Kung Fu (MoKF) series and its magazine companion, Deadly Hands of Kung Fu.

(If you don’t already know who Shang Chi is, I cover his history at length in the intro the guide).

With that beautiful volume one omnibus in my hands, I began sketching Shang Chi’s guide to see how those two series intertwined, and to understand how much Shang-Chi of the 80s and 90s would remain uncollected after the Omnibus line was completed.

I knew Shang Chi wasn’t used too widely after his series since I didn’t really remember him from my active collecting in year back in the day, but I was surprised to see just how sparse his appearances really were. Shang Chi appeared only in 50 issues between the end of MoKF in 1983 and his joining Heroes For Hire in 2006. And, not all of those appearances are significant!

While that’s kind of crummy for having reading material of a character you love, it’s a good thing when it comes to collected editions. Even if the Omnibuses stop right at the end of Master of Kung Fu and don’t touch things like his MCP run, by the time they’re all released at the end of 2017 we’ll have gone from less than 25% of all Shang-Chi featured appearances collected to over 85%! [Read more…] about New Collecting Guide: Marvel’s Shang Chi, Master of Kung Fu

Filed Under: comic books

Music Monday: “Can’t Get Enough of Myself” – Santigold, featuring B.C

September 5, 2016 by krisis

santigold-99cI love Santigold’s album 99¢, out earlier this year. It’s easily accessible and mercilessly catchy.

Does it sacrifice some of Santigold’s idiosyncrasies to get there? I’m not sure. Santigold is among a number of late-00s Electropop artists that I never entirely absorbed upon their first hit of fame. I don’t know where she’s coming from and I don’t have a raft of expectations to battle against on each new LP.

Maybe that’s s why I don’t know quite know how to talk about “Can’t Get Enough of Myself.”

Its easy, loping stroll topped with a constant bustle of triplets and a whistling high synth flute melody. The sound calls back to Stevie Wonder and post-Motown/pre-Disco 70s soul (even with modern touches, like a slight digital detuning on the flute riff).

(My mother loves an obscure (though frequently-sampled) 1976 LP by the band Dr. Buzzard’s Original Savannah Band that occupies that some space in my mind, particularly “Sunshower.” I remember when it was finally released in CD she was rapturous.

Oh, the 90s.)

Is it typical of Santigold? Are these her typical influences? I don’t know, and when a song is this good I’m happy to delay my research while I listen to it on repeat for a few more hours.

Aside from the inherently sunny charm of the throwback sound, there’s the unabashed happiness of the track. It’s infectiously cheerful, both melodically and in lyrics. Here’s the opening verse and chorus:

If I wasn’t me, I can be sure I’d wanna be
I’m pretty major and I’ll say it out loud
Living my life in a fantasy
Living my life in my vanity
Hey mom maybe you’ll see me now

…

All I wanna do is what I do well
Ain’t a gambler but honey I’d put money on myself
All I wanna do is bottle it to sell
Cuz my brand does vainglorious much better for your health

That’s a refreshing take on modern “drunk on my own fumes” braggadocio without lessening the intensity of self-love. It simply removes the component of superiority from self-love. When Santigold sings, “look at them liking me,” there’s no indication that just because she’s the the best she’s any better than anyone else.

In fact, maybe everyone should be exactly this vainglorious in their own heads as they walk down the street. They certainly might feel that way if they had this song pumped into their ears.

Filed Under: Crushing On Tagged With: Santigold

on unsolicited compliments, and how little girls should respond to them

September 4, 2016 by krisis

I’ve written about the difference between me getting an unsolicited compliment and EV getting one, and about how she is not a princess.

What those two situations – and posts – have in common is me responding on EV’s behalf, which has been my habit since she was pre-verbal continuing through the typical two-year-old stranger-danger shyness. If someone reduced her to a pretty girl or a princess, I got the claws out.

Now I’m the parent of a three-year-old who is much more attentive to the sorts of responses I dole out, and who sometimes wants to respond (or, emphatically not respond) on her own … and I’m not sure what to do. It’s one of the few situations where I find that the difference in EV and my genders is making me unsure of my parenting decisions.

2016-08-17 12.17.26That’s a big deal for me. E and I were just discussing how relatively neutral our parenting style is when it comes to gender. Aside from wearing a bathing top at the pool and some undefinable level of unconscious bias, I don’t think EV has experiencing a remarkable different toddlerdom in this household than a boy would.

We restrict certain tough play and violence, just as we would from a boy. Aside from screening out toxic princess culture, it’s not as though we’re hiding anything coded explicitly for girls from her. E and I even present a relatively similar role to EV – she’s seen both of us do most chores and caretaking tasks. We both have fancy colored hair.

I’d say the big differences are that E will put her in dresses more often and is better at painting nails than I am.

Yet, this little issue of how (if at all) EV ought to respond to unsolicited compliments has stopped me in my tracks, while E has no hesitation contending with it.

I generally respond to any remark directed my way from a stranger so long as they aren’t physically threatening, whether it’s meant positively or negatively. That’s a hard-won ease for me, rather than a chauvinistic obliviousness. I went a long time assuming any comment I received would be a mocking one. I’ve been harassed from passing cars just for walking down the street and threatened with violence because I “talk gay.” I was a strident teen, but it took two more decades for me to own my self-image enough to withstand that. Luckily, society changed a bit, too. Now I look and talk however the hell I want with no apology.

However, none of my experiences compare to the near-constant sexualization every woman fields from every comment, whether its complimentary or mocking, no matter the gender of the commenter. And, while I’ve been threatened with physical violence, I’ve rarely if ever had to walk down the street with the specter of sexual violence haunting my steps.

That’s what I find myself up against when EV receives a comment from a stranger.

The first few times, I encouraged her to say “hi” in return or “thank you.” I immediately sensed the dissonance there and the bad precedent I was setting. No one deserves EV’s attention just for talking to her. She might develop a social contract that dictates reciprocity with someone she sees frequently, but she owes nothing to strangers.

Yet, I also don’t want to encourage EV to simply passively absorb these opinions. If one of them makes her feel positive or negative, she should be vocal about that. If she doesn’t care, she should ignore them.

Last week presented a pair of examples in a span of hours.

First, at the library, a pair of young black women were sitting across from us at the library while EV carefully fussed over a book and I filled out our card applications. After observing us for a minute and laughing to themselves, they both complimented EV – one to me, and the other to EV directly. I thanked and chatted the woman who spoke to me. EV didn’t respond to the other one. She seemed for a moment as if she might press it with EV, but then let it go.

That felt fine to me. The second example didn’t. We were at a home improvement store, coincidentally being helped by another young black woman. She had been with us for several minutes, and had chatted with EV about the projects we were doing without making any comments about her appearance. When we hit a snag in my shopping, she asked an older, white, male co-worker. He answered her in an annoyed, condescending way, and then turned his eye to EV.

“Aren’t you a cutie?” he said to her.

She ignored him.

“Aww, are you a little shy?”

I was only halfway absorbing this, as I was having my own conversation with the woman, who seemed slightly cowed by her coworker’s rude response. I don’t think EV was being especially shy. She was doing a silly dance in the middle of the plumbing aisle. It seemed obvious that she simply wasn’t interesting in engaging.

Yet, the man kept talking to her in an insistent, insincerely cloying way, pressing her from all angles to respond with increasing annoyance. At this point, I was tuned in.

“What did you do this summer? Did you go to the beach? Did you make castles? Did you bury dad in the sand? Huh, did you?”

I spent an agonizing hour on post-game analysis with E last week. Why didn’t I say anything? Why didn’t I indicate to EV she shouldn’t feel the need to answer?

I know what a sincere interest in my kid looks like from a speaker of any gender presentation. Not only have I learned to see it, but whether or not EV responds she always remembers the sincere people and brings them up later. This was not that. Maybe this guy was a father of daughters of his own, but he was also probably going to make a comment about the ass of the next women who walked down the aisle as soon as she was out of earshot. I could just feel it. (And, it’s borne itself out in the following days with no remarks from EV about the conversation.)

EV’s instincts were better than mine in that moment: she was absolutely right to keep on doing her silly dance and completely ignore this guy. But the point is she shouldn’t have had to.

That doesn’t just apply to leering older gentlemen. It’s for kind young women at the library, doting teens at the pool, and every other human being who wants to ascribe value to EV’s appearance and then tell her about it and then stand there expecting something in return.

She owes them nothing, and while she seems to already sense that on her own, it’s one good choice I’m not sure how to model and reinforce.

Filed Under: thoughts, Year 17 Tagged With: parenting

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