I’ve long compared myself to Clark Griswold on this here blog, but he’s not the only over-the-top fictional character I can relate to. I’ve also got a bit of Ralph Kramden in me.

(Jackie Gleason’s short-tempered but soft-hearted bus driver in The Honeymooners, if you live under a rock or are too young to remember.)

This guy:

And it’s not because I’m forever threatening to send Tara “to the moon” or have a best friend who works in a sewer. Ralph Kramden, you see, was always hatching these get-rich-quick schemes, which inevitably blew up in his face.

Totally me.

Over the years, I’ve invented some great products, like Tan In A Can – a spray-on tan that I concocted for an advertising course in college, long before such a thing actually existed. I’m convinced my professor stole the idea, cashed in big, quit teaching, bought a Mercedes, and married a supermodel. I can’t remember my final grade, but if it was anything less than an A, I got screwed.

But wait! There’s more!! (Something else I learned as an advertising major.)

I also invented smoothies, Muddy Bites, spaghetti shirts, ego-stroking fortune cookies, cheese skirt restaurants, and burger dogs, to name but a few. My brain is a fertile place, guys.

And yet, I haven’t seen a single dime from any of these inventions. Damn the man! Foiled at every step by patents not pending, I guess.

That hasn’t stopped me from trying. For a while there, I envisioned becoming a geoduck poacher, but then we moved thousands of miles from the nearest body of salt water.

I did a little better when I decided to try my hand at crypto. I invested (a very minuscule amount) in bitcoin when it was $47,000. In the two point five years since, it has fluctuated wildly, dropping as low as $16,000 and as high as $69,000, pretty close to where it is today. The problem is, I own 0.000024 of one BTC, which amounts to a whopping $1.61. It seems the only thing missing from these schemes has been the get-rich-quick part.

And yet, I keep trying! Which equates to either unbridled optimism or mule-like stubbornness. My latest venture? Coin collecting! What do I know about coins? Not a damn thing!

Allow me to explain…

A couple of months ago, I wrote about unclaimed property after learning the state of Washington owed me $50 from 2004. My brother did even better; he had $357.32 in unclaimed funds from California. We both submitted claims and have since received, and cashed, our checks. At last! A scheme-free way to earn money!

Anyhoo. I was sorting through the contents of these abandoned safe deposit boxes at CheeseGov back in August, and there was some wild stuff in there. And some valuable stuff, too. All items were being collected for a public surplus auction, which kicked off today. So, I created an account this morning and immediately placed bids on several items. I’ve never participated in an auction before, online or in-person, and can I just say OMG WHAT A RUSH! It’s exhilarating and I am hooked.

I’m mainly focusing on coins. Actual, physical ones this time. Like these 1900 U.S. Liberty $20 gold coins that are currently valued around $2,800 apiece. Now, I’m under no illusion that my $22.50 bids are going to win…surely, I’m not the only person in the world smart enough to Google their worth (the internet is one thing I didn’t invent, sadly)…but it’s fun to dream!

The 7-lb. silver bars I bid $27.50 on are already up to $120 after just a few hours, so that ain’t gonna happen. And somebody wants the lot of 50 Franklin Mint Genius of Rembrant sterling silver coins enough to drive the price up out of my range. But following the bidding history is intoxicating. Man, things are going to get wild in the closing hours on Nov. 7! Something tells me I’m going to be glued to my monitor then.

Are you a fan of The Honeymooners? Ever invent something cool? Have you dabbled in auctions – and if so, did you ever win?


49 responses to “Going once, going twice…”

  1. Speaking as someone who has oodles full of useless crap in their cellar… step away from the auction! Once you catch that bug they become a sport and the competition will drive you to buy things you don’t need and pay more for them than you should just to win. It shouldn’t surprise you that my husband collects coins as well. Boxes and boxes of them.
    Sigh.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. But does he have boxes and boxes of rare 124-year-old coins worth thousands of dollars apiece??

      Liked by 1 person

      1. He does have coins from the 1800’s, so I hope so!

        Liked by 1 person

  2. That would be a good lord no, nope and a no never to the dabble or the win. At this point my retirement investments may have to last another 30+ years if I live as long as the women in my family seem to do. No chance of free-wheeling obscure purchases happening here.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. I totally get that. Better smart and safe than sorry!

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Love the honeymooners, mainly only do silent auctions…although tried a real auction once when i had $$$$ to spend and nearly got something but was outbid..decided to not keep trying.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. My dad is a huge fan of The Honeymooners, so I’ve long appreciated the show.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Even appreciated Eddie Murphys gay take on Ralph & Norton

        Liked by 1 person

  4. Oh wait have also bid on things on ebay, does that count ?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’ve bought a few things off eBay…I was thinking more actual auctions in this case.

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      1. Yeah just once then

        Liked by 1 person

  5. I won an Ebay auction and one for charity. And a door prize once, I think (it was a tee-shirt). But I am generally not a lucky person. I think I invented green-out while doing college applications, too.

    Liked by 1 person

      1. College applications (or maybe scholarship applications or Governor’s School applications, I can’t remember) were sometimes on green paper, back in “the time of dinosaurs,” as my son would say. So it was green food coloring added to Wite-out.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Oh. Interesting! I don’t remember that at all.

        Liked by 1 person

  6. You are quite the idea-driven man! I’m still stuck on the hamburger hotdogs … can you make those yourself?

    I have had only one idea. I used to be so busy and forgetful at my office that I *wanted to invent* (was too busy to actually create this) arms that fit on your eyeglasses with little pads at the tips that you put sticky notes on. The idea is you can swivel the arms so the notes are right in front of your eyeballs when you need them, then swivel them away.

    I should get a chunk of money from AR goggles, am I right?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. There are actually recipes for burger dogs online, so they would be easy enough to make…but no, I’ve never actually tried.

      I love your low-tech AR goggle idea!

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      1. I’m not interested in eating burger dogs, just that you thought of them! Glimpses into your brain are fun. 🤨

        Liked by 1 person

  7. I had this great idea when my kids were babies and refused to take amoxicillin for ear infections. My idea was a pacifier that you could fill with liquid meds/vitamins and the baby would suck on the pacifier and drain it. Years later, I saw something similar online.😤

    Liked by 2 people

    1. That’s a really good one! If somebody could invent a contraption similar to that for pets to take medicine – maybe a chew toy or a catnip ball or something – they’d make a killing.

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  8. I have no idea what you’re talking about in this entire post. 😎

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Really? Not even The Honeymooners??

      Liked by 1 person

      1. No. Remember I moved to Canada in 1980 and knew no English. The two shows I watched without understanding much was The Brady Bunch and Happy Days. 🙂

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  9. Are you a fan of The Honeymooners? I know that in its time it was THE show to watch, but it doesn’t call to me.

    Ever invent something cool? Nope, other than my blogging nom de plume of course

    Have you dabbled in auctions – and if so, did you ever win? Never dabbled in online auctions but have been to real life auctions… which bored me

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Wait. Ally Bean isn’t your real name?! Whoa…

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Nope, it’s a nickname from my younger days!

        Liked by 1 person

  10. You are amazing — those invention ideas – gah! Keep at it! As for the auctions…my heart was palpitating at the thought of competing for some of those prized coins. Good grief. And good luck! As for “The Honeymooners”…my dad loved that show and Jackie Gleason, too. There was some wacky six or seven degrees of separation story about how he’d met Gleason once – through a friend of a friend – and apparently Gleason didn’t disappoint in the bawdy department. 😲

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’ve already been hopelessly outbid on the coins, ha. As expected. But it’s still fun to play the game (and I’ll admit to a certain perverse pleasure in driving the bidding price higher). I can only imagine how cool it would have been to meet Jackie Gleason…OR Art Carney!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. If you ever see Art Carney’s hat up for auction, let me know. Iconic! 😜

        Liked by 1 person

  11. No inventions here – I don’t have that type of brain. And as for auctions – I’m either scared I’ll end up bidding on the wrong something by mistake, or that I’ll get carried away by the vibe and bid on something I don’t really want.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m afraid I’ll get carried away, bid too high, and then end up winning!

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  12. Wow, I can’t wait to see if those bids pay off! Patents not pending — funny! Here’s to winning on Nov. 7th!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Spoiler alert: I’m WAY out of my league. Let’s hope for a win at the polls instead!

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  13. When I joined a few online auctions last year, I thought I was getting lucky when my early bids held. Until the last 15 minutes before closing. I couldn’t type fast enough to keep up with the frantic pace of people out biding me. They must have had some kind of bot or automatic response programmed to re-bid again & again. Maybe you won’t see that. Good luck!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. You can (and I did) set up auto bidding with a maximum limit, so as soon as someone places a bid, there’s an incrementally higher one. I can only imagine what the last few minutes are going to look like. Probably pretty wild!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I guess I didn’t pay enough attention to notice the auto-option. I got a false sense of security when I won a few items on the first auction that I tried. After that success I quickly realized that I was out of my league with so many serious bidders going after so many items. Hope your works like a charm.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. If you use the auto option, just be sure to set a reasonable limit. Otherwise, I’d be up to $3,000 for the silver bars with no way in hell of being able to pay for them!

        Liked by 1 person

  14. eBay is about as close to online auctions as I’ve ever been. Only moderately thrilling. Oh, and a silent auction is one reason I’m a homebrewer. I bid on a starting kit…

    As for inventions, I suppose every business software application I ever designed and built could be considered an invention. No patents, just the going salary rate. I can’t complain. You could probably say the same about all your copywriting.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Oh, that’s interesting about the home brewing kit! When you found out you won, were you thinking, Great!…Now what?!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Well, I’d been thinking about it anyway. Otherwise I would not have bid. I’d done “brewing” at U-Brew sorts of places with groups. Those places give you the lowdown and hold your hand all the way down the line, and you get to enjoy the fruits. Doing it at home was just the next step.

        Of course, if the starter kit wasn’t at the silent auction, I’d likely still be procrastinating. (For what it’s worth, the auction was a fund raiser for the Food Bank, where I’d been regularly volunteering. I felt semi-obligated to bid on something.)

        Liked by 1 person

  15. I’ve never been to a live auction, but I LOVE silent auctions. You get your heart set on something and then you end up hovering around it all night trying not to get outbid. So much fun!!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Even though I won’t come even close to winning this one, I get the appeal!

      Liked by 1 person

  16. […] it didn’t take long to discover I was hopelessly out of my league with the auction stuff. Those four rare coins I bid on – I went as high as $100 on one of them, the rest I held firm at […]

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  17. To the Moon with your schemes! HA

    My husband has forever been coming up with business ideas, while also building our current one UP. Tan in a can? You absolutely got screwed on that one, but like they say: No risk, no reward. You had to get it out there before someone else!

    Mark, I have SO many coins from my Mom and Coach’s Grandpa, but I have no idea how to find out if I’m hoarding a goldmine or just lots of nothing.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The name alone is worth a lot of coins! As for your collection, based on how valuable the ones I was bidding on turned out to be, you could very well be sitting on a goldmine. You should have them appraised!

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  18. fearless5a5a717b5f Avatar
    fearless5a5a717b5f

    Surprised that employees are allowed to place bids – did you “win” anything? But some fantastic (in all senses of the word) ideas in there – keep trying!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Well, CheeseGov was only the middleman – it wasn’t our property; we merely sorted through it and forwarded it on to the auction company. Regardless of that, I was WAY overbid on everything!

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  19. […] will concede that Bitcoin’s value has skyrocketed. Why, I might be able to cash out my crypto account and treat myself to a Quarter Pounder with Cheese, aka a Royale with Cheese, with those proceeds […]

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  20. […] again. Naturally, this got the ol’ wheels turning. My inner entrepreneur – who never met a get-rich-quick scheme he didn’t love – suddenly envisioned a future where the streets leading up to MarTar Manor […]

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