GUEST 1: We brought in comic books. Old Marvel comic books from the '60s. We have our collection on shelves.
GUEST 2: Most of it on shelves.
GUEST 1: But, there's a certain handful of them that we don't leave out on the show.
GUEST 2: Expensive ones, we put in the safe.
GUEST 1: Yeah. That's where they spend their whole life. They've enjoyed today.
GUEST 2: Yeah, the comics enjoyed today. They got out. (laughs)
APPRAISER: As a package today, if all these were to be professionally graded, we'd be looking at $60,000 to $90,000 at auction.
GUEST 2: Wow, okay. That's still good. That's good.
GUEST 1: Yeah, we'll take it.
GUEST 2: We'll take it.
GUEST 2: We learned that one of our real expensive comics was actually restored.
GUEST 1: Restored, yes.
GUEST 2: And so it's worth a lot less than we thought but that's okay. We're not going to sell it anyway.
GUEST 1: Yeah, (laughs) yeah.
GUEST 2: I've been watching Roadshow for for the last 15, 20 years, and I kept waiting for one that would come close enough to Springfield, Missouri, and I go, "Wow Russ, come on, let's go." I've always just been excited to do it, show them off and have fun.
GUEST 1: I always say he's six years older than me, so you know he'll die first, and it'll all be mine. And then- (laughs)
GUEST 2: Seven. Yeah, well we plan on probably keeping them and then sel- we never collected these with the intention of selling them. We just collect them for fun. We don't like care about selling them and making money. We're just gonna go ahead and give them to his kids probably.
GUEST 1: Probably my, my son will probably just inherit them all.
GUEST 2: Yeah, well unless something big comes up and I need the money, but otherwise.
(laughs)
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