Saturday Morning Cartoons: KD even looks good signing stuff
(Good morning friends and family. Thank you for reading and supporting Daily Thunder. Remember, I’m here, but not here so play nice.)
I think autographs are stupid. Very stupid. Like I HATE them. But I do find it cool that superstar athletes take the time to scribble their name on crap and I especially like it when they’re personable. Even if they are signing stuff for money-grubbing scumbags half the time. I mean, look at them, they’ve got their stuff in freaking binders. Like they’re going to go home and actually look at the signature. I bet those pictures were on Ebay before KD even got in the hotel. But Kevin Durant was nice and signed. Looks like he had a nice signature too. Clean, cool and a nice little swoop. Can you tell I couldn’t really find a worthy video this week?

To be honest with you. I’m one of the people who collect autographs from players, but I save all of them, I want to eventually be able to show them to all of my grandchildren and pass them on to them. As far as me being a scumbag for that, you can go screw yourself. If you knew anything about collecting autographs then you would know that the autographs you get in person are not worth anything on ebay, unless authenticated by a grader. There is no money in selling those on ebay, any person with common sense knows that most of these on ebay are fake. unless authenticated by Beckett,PSA,UpperDeck,Topps, Etc.
Your hobby annoys people.
Whats with all the sonics pics?
Rookie stuff is the most valuable, right? Used to be back in the day anyway.
Ok,that explains why.
Did Jim Traber shut down his Twitter? I can’t find him…If he did, I’d like to think that Daily Thunder and Westbrook’s play had something to do with it…
@Alex
I can’t check, but his twitter is “jimtraber”. Without a space.
@DizzyDai I guess he hasn’t shut it down…I was hoping to see some angry reply posts about Westbrook’s play last night…Something like this-Jim Traber: People… Please don’t turn this into every game westbrook plays well, you tweet. Lets wait til the end of the year, OK? I could do the opp.
If Westbrook keeps playing well, I think he’ll crack…
@Alex
In Traber’s mind Westbrook probably did play bad last night. W-Brook only had 7 assists and 5 turns.
@Floppy Punch! I’m not one of those people who wait outside at the hotels or wait outside the practice facility. thats just stalkerish. also there is nothing wrong with the occasional autograph at the games which is where I get mine. Now as far as every game getting autographs from the same people like Durant, I have no idea why anyone would need more than 1 or 2 from them.
@Floppy Punch!
and yes the rookie stuff is usually more valuable.
Well, I’m glad to see that KD puts an effort into things like that, even though I know it must sometimes get a little old. But the way someone acts when they’re signing an autograph can leave an impression that long outlasts the moment.
I remember one time, as a teenager, asking for the autograph of a pretty famous person in his sport (who shall remain nameless), who sighed as he approached and saw us standing there hoping he might have a moment for us, shook his head a little, and in a slightly disgusted sort of way quite literally said this: “You know, of all the things I have to go through, I hate doing this the most.”
If I had been older or maybe had a little more presence of mind, I would have told him to forget it. If it was that much trouble, then screw it, and you. Mind you, I’m not talking about 50 screaming fans all pressing pen and paper in his face. Just two slightly intimidated kids, quietly standing there and looking at him hopefully. We really looked up to him, and then he went and said that.
He signed the autographs without smiling, saying thank you, you’re welcome, drop dead, or anything else, and left. I have no idea what happened to my copy and don’t care, but I’ve never forgotten that moment. And to this day I don’t really care for him because of it. Maybe he was just having a bad day, although I found out later it was typical of the way he treated many fans. But bad day or not, it left a bad impression.
On the other side of that, I once met baseball legend Bob Feller at a baseball game, again when I was pretty young, and he not only signed a baseball for me, he literally sat there and talked with me for several minutes. Just the absolute epitome of politeness. I’d read a little bit about him before meeting him, but I came away from that short visit as a life-long Bob Feller fan.
I realize it can get to wear on athletes who constantly have to deal with autograph hounds and requests to sign this or that, and pose for yet another stupid picture with some fan. Chances are they don’t remember many of those encounter because they all probably start to run together before very long. But I would think for the fans, and especially the fans who aren’t just after something to sell but genuinely want to meet the person, those brief encounters can form lasting impressions, right or wrong. I suspect Kevin Durant understands that, and may also remember what it used to be like when he was the one asking for autographs instead of signing them.
@Todd
I can see it both ways. I really think an athlete being friendly and personable is worth way more than an autograph. I kinda see it like Halloween; autographs should be for the children. I would rather say a quick hello and maybe a handshake. There is no need for me to prove that I met someone.
If everyone demands autographs, then it becomes a chore for the athlete. For example, my son and I bumped into Blake Griffin at a Thunder game last year. He was nice enough to take a picture with my son. I was only sitting a few rows behind him and I noticed he was constantly being barraged by fans. The poor guy was just trying to watch a basketball game. He was nice and friendly to everyone, but I’m sure deep down inside he was bothered.