Posts

Showing posts with the label delivery_security

Garbage Pail Kids - The Gross, Weird, and Wonderful Cards That Took Over the 80s

Image
Garbage Pail Kids - The Gross, Weird, and Wonderful Cards That Took Over the 80s In the mid-1980s, while kids were trading baseball cards and begging for Cabbage Patch Kids dolls, Topps decided to stir the pot. The result? Garbage Pail Kids  - a set of hilariously gross, satirical trading cards that became both a playground sensation and a cultural controversy. Adam Bomb – The most iconic Garbage Pail Kid of them all Where it all began First released in 1985 by Topps, Garbage Pail Kids were designed as a parody of the wildly popular Cabbage Patch Kids dolls. Each card featured a grotesque yet funny character with pun-filled names like Adam Bomb , Leaky Lindsay , or Up Chuck . Kids loved them. Parents… not so much. Artwork came from comic legends like Art Spiegelman (later Pulitzer Prize winner for Maus ) and John Pound, who turned gross-out humor into collectible gold. Every sticker card had two versions: an “A” and “B” name, but with the same artwork — ...

Porch Pirates in 2025: Why Trading Card Packages Go Missing and What Actually Stops Them

Image
Porch Pirates in 2025: Why Trading Card Packages Go Missing and What Actually Stops Them You refresh tracking for the tenth time. “Delivered.” You open the door. Nothing. For collectors, that sick feeling hits hard. The truth is, package theft is organized, fast, and if you do nothing predictable. Let’s map out how thieves really operate and the moves that keep your slabs and sealed boxes safe. How packages disappear in the real world 1) The pre-scan window Drivers sometimes scan a package as delivered a few minutes before they hit your stop to speed the route. Thieves know this. They trail vans or scrape tracking feeds and sweep porches right after a scan. That creates a tiny window where your box is “delivered,” but sitting unattended for a few crucial minutes. 2) Misdelivery that looks like theft In apartments or townhomes, a parcel can land at the wrong unit, lobby, or mailroom shelf. You see “delivered,” check your doorstep, and assume a thief. In real...