Chicagotalks » Kaitlyn McAvoy http://www.chicagotalks.org Community & Citizen journalism for your block, your neighborhood, our city Fri, 24 Dec 2010 16:57:49 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.3 With Inauguration Coming, Whither 2008 Campaign Gear? /2008/12/20/with-inauguration-coming-whither-2008-campaign-gear/#utm_source=feed&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=feed /2008/12/20/with-inauguration-coming-whither-2008-campaign-gear/#comments Sat, 20 Dec 2008 23:39:29 +0000 Kaitlyn McAvoy /wiki/with-inaugeration-coming-whither-2008-campaign-gear

Dec. 19, 2008 – Long after the polling machines have been put away and the campaign yard signs taken down, political memorabilia stores and online auction sites still have plenty of presidential campaign items to get rid of. Candidate buttons, bumper stickers, T-shirts and masks are still being sold — even from the losing candidate.

Sets of McCain/Palin campaign pins are being sold on eBay for up to $79 with individual pins going for around $20. A McCain/Palin poster signed by both the GOP candidates is $299 on the online auction website. Even McCain's website still has hundreds items for sale from different stores including GOPTrunk.com.

Lori Ferber Presidential Memorabilia, an online political memorabilia store, is selling McCain single buttons for $3.95 each. A set of 5 buttons is going for $12.95 and a life-size standup cut-out of McCain is $34.95.

But are people still buying these items?

About a week after the election, orders for McCain items were plentiful, said Steve Ferber, who runs the Web site collection with his wife, Lori, in Scottsdale, Ariz. Now, more than a month after the election, orders are dying down.

While the number of sales has decreased, people are still paying as much as they did before the election, said Ferber, but he imagines prices will drop with time.

"Prices are always determined by supply and demand," said Ferber.

People buying memorabilia of a losing candidate after the election is not unusual, said Ferber, who has been selling political memorabilia for the past 35 years. Unsuccessful candidates dating back 50 years were sometimes of more interest to collectors because their memorabilia disappeared faster than those who won, he said.

Today memorabilia from President-elect Barack Obama's campaign is more widely bought, but items featuring former Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.) continue to be top sellers, said Ferber, at times outselling Obama gear.

And now that Obama nominated Clinton to be the nation's new secretary of State, Ferber thinks interest will remain high for her items because people believe she will continue to be a force in politics and may even run again for president.

However, Ferber doesn't think that will be the case for McCain. 

Jim Warlick, a personal political memorabilia collector and owner of the store Political Americana in Washington, D.C., said people mostly buy items of a losing candidate to be part of a collection, not because of any personal reason or tie to the candidate.

Warlick said there are two completely different groups of memorabilia buyers — people who buy during the campaign to show support for their favorite candidate and those who buy items as collectables. 

Many collectors, like the ones that are members of the national collectors' organization American Political Items Collectors, purchase items of value to make a profit, said Ben Rogers, director of Baylor University's Collections of Political Materials in Texas. But a lot of the McCain/Palin items being sold are not worth what some people are paying for them, he said.

Rogers said the same for some Obama items, like all the inaugural special issues of newspapers on sale. The more that are produced and widely bought, the less they will be worth in the future, he said.

However, Rogers thinks people are still interested in McCain items because Sarah Palin brought the real possibility of the first-ever female vice president.

Warlick agreed that what makes McCain items valuable to some people is Palin, and the possibility that she will run for higher political office beyond governor of Alaska. Warlick said he's had customers asking for Palin gear without McCain on it.

But McCain memorabilia will not be worth much or sell well until the 72-year-old senator dies, as it usually goes for any losing candidate, said Warlick. For example, he saw a spike in sales for memorabilia of Barry Goldwater when he died in 1987. Goldwater was the Republican Party presidential nominee in 1964 who was beat in the general election by Lyndon B. Johnson.

After the election, Political Americana pulled all its McCain items off the shelves and moved them to a warehouse with other campaign gear of political past, such as a million and a half buttons from other political candidates.

The items were taken off the shelves because the store shifts to selling inaugural gear after an election, but the McCain memorabilia will probably emerge from the warehouse in March, said Warlick. He'll give the items a year on the shelves and hopes that some will sell at collectors' shows. However, he is not optimistic about getting rid of it all.

"It just will not sell probably," said Warlick. "Not in my lifetime."


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Big and Bold, but Welcome? New Lakeview Development Creates Mixed Reactions /2008/05/15/big-and-bold-but-welcome-new-lakeview-development-creates-mixed-reactions/#utm_source=feed&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=feed /2008/05/15/big-and-bold-but-welcome-new-lakeview-development-creates-mixed-reactions/#comments Fri, 16 May 2008 02:31:39 +0000 Kaitlyn McAvoy /wiki/big-and-bold-but-welcome-new-lakeview-development-creates-mixed-reactions

Submitted on Thu, 05/15/2008 – 19:31.

Lakeview residents and business owners are skeptical of a proposed multimillion-dollar development to include hotel rooms, rental apartments and stores near the busy intersection of Clark and Addison streets.

The project calls for two nine-story buildings. A 137-room Hyatt hotel will face Clark Street and an apartment building with 150 one-bedroom apartments will sit at the corner of Addison Street and Sheffield Avenue. Retail space for new and existing businesses in the area and a health club are other amenities included in the design plan according to the 44th Ward Web site.

Alderman Tom Tunney (44th) thinks the proposed buildings are too tall and is waiting for the developer, M&R Development, to revise the plans within what zoning has allowed, said Bennett Lawson, Tunney’s deputy alderman. Original plans called for the height of the building to be 105 feet tall, however zoning only allows a maximum height of 65 feet.

Lawson said a development this large has not attempted to come into the area before.

“This is a very unique situation,” said Bennett. “I don’t know if we will ever see a situation like this again.”

The development is being dubbed a “planned development” giving the community a larger voice in the outcome. The project plans have been sent back to the developer after residents voiced their concerns about increased traffic, the building being too high and neighborhood businesses being forced to close, said Maureen Martino, executive director of the Lakeview East Chamber of Commerce.

Results from an online survey, conducted by the Lakeview Citizen’s Council, show that 53 percent of the 970 participants oppose the development.

Rob Nash, spokesman for M&R Development, downplayed the results from the survey saying they were typical when change or a new project is proposed in the North Side neighborhood.

I.O., a well-known comedy theatre just yards away from the proposed development, is one of the businesses that would be most affected if the development were built. The theatre might be temporarily moved behind Goose Island Beer Company, therefore losing the attention it now receives from being directly on Clark Street, said Charna Halpern, artistic director and founder of I.O.

Halpern said she supported the new development as long as she can keep her theatre space on Clark Street when construction is done.

The development plans are in the refining process and M&R Development has no scheduled dates for the start or finish of the project, said Nash, who has been out talking to neighborhood organizations to get their reactions. He added that traffic studies are also being conducted to address the major concern among area residents.

According to Lawson, as of now, the estimated cost of the development is $30 million.

Lakeview | Lakeview | lakeview citizens council | new development | News | Planning & Development | Tom Tunney | wrigley field


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