Wrong. It was in Autograph Collectors Magazine 2007 (not sure which month) highlighting the value of autographs by dead wrestlers based on how big of a star they were, how available they were regarding autographs, and the uniqueness of the items the autograph is on. They weren't talkin about dollar figure but it's rarity on the market and offered estimated figures base off of previous auctions with that signature.mrmickiejames wrote:Im not sure if you just worded it badly, but it wasnt an article about the piece, it was an article about deaths in wrestling, and the ticket is only shown as a throwaway "item signed hours before his death". The seller even states it was his own article being published. The magazine likely wouldve done minimal (if any) checks on the sig, because its irrelevant to the piece as a whole.roulette wrote:There's a photo included in the item description where the ticket and an article was published regarding it in a collectors magazine, any piece that receives that kind of press in a collectors publication has been checked.
I dont think you can use the magazine as any proof/reasoning/support that its legit at all.
(Im not being hostile to you by the way, Im just aware that sometimes my typing can come across that way, so putting this just to be safe!)
The guy selling the ticket has been interviewed multiple times by various websites, magazines, and other forms of media with articles aimed towards pro wrestling autograph collectors, and he's the published author of a book called 'Dead Wrestlers, Broken Necks, and The Women Who Screwed Me Over'

