Thus revealed, the creature buried its nose in the tire-tilled soil...
June 12, 2008
Snap
Category: Toys

''Would you like a Jelly Baby?''

They're pretty good! Aslan is cool too. ๐Ÿ™‚

-posted by Wes | 2:50 am | Comments (5)
June 8, 2008
Touché, Steven Moffat
Category: Toys … TV, Film, & DVDs

So I wasn't too keen on the first part of the most recent 2-part "Doctor Who" serial, but Steven Moffat managed to almost completely redeem himself in the second by focusing less on creepiness and confusion and more on intrigue and resolution. Granted, there was little about the episode that was particularly clever or unexpected -- apparently I'd guessed correctly regarding pretty much all of the "mysteries" of last week, though there were a few pleasant surprises and one interesting revelation that was never really a major concern in the first place (and that may make studying alone in the stacks even more unsettling for you students out there) -- but I'm a total sucker for happy endings. Talulah Riley even got her adorable face back! Everyone wins.

There was, however, one line that I found to be especially noteworthy:

I have the two qualities you require to see absolute truth: I am brilliant... and unloved.

I'm even tempted to make it the heading quotation of Wesoteric (or at least one of several; I've been thinking of randomizing the display there as I do with the DVD screencaps on the sidebar), since it's a pretty concise summary of my experience in life.

Mai Shiranui & Chun-Li!

In other news, as I mentioned in the latest Scary-Crayon piece, I did receive the replacement item from that seller this week -- so I enthusiastically recommend Treasure Island Sports, Inc. to anyone in the market for some toys. I was initially drawn by the great prices on the figures of my affection (pictured above), but the unexpectedly fantastic and accommodating customer service are what will make a repeat customer of me. Granted, I reserve the right to change my opinion if future orders go less smoothly, but right now I'm singing nothing but praises for TISInc. Many thumbs up. ๐Ÿ™‚

-posted by Wes | 12:07 am | Comments (9)
May 31, 2008
A satisfied customer.
Category: Toys

Apparently, according to the popup that I just encountered before leaving feedback for my latest eBay purchase, sellers can now no longer leave negative feedback for buyers. What a great idea!

That's not sarcasm -- I'm being dead serious. Ever since one of my first eBay experiences years ago in which I left neutral feedback for a seller and the seller returned the favor even though I paid for the auction immediately -- as I always do -- I've felt held hostage by sellers with respect to the eBay feedback system. (In fairness, I left neutral feedback for something that really wasn't the seller's fault and probably should have contacted the seller first, so I learned something there. But if I were a seller and a customer had a problem I would respond to the customer via e-mail and see about getting the issue worked out -- and the feedback amended with a satisfactory comment from the customer -- rather than simply issuing revenge feedback.) Sellers would even emphasize their feedback leverage in the shipping notification e-mails: "Once your order arrives in satisfactory condition, please leave feedback for me. I will do the same for you." The unspoken implication? And if you don't leave positive feedback for me, I'll say something nasty and tarnish your record in kind.

There are plenty of sellers I've left positive feedback who probably should have received neutral ratings at best. For example, I once ordered from a seller who shoved the flimsy cardboard-boxed item into a small padded envelope. As a result, though the toy itself was fine (what, did you think I was ordering jewelry? ๐Ÿ˜‰ ), the box itself was pretty crushed -- which would have pissed me off to no end if I'd intended to keep the item mint in box. I didn't, so I didn't really feel like complaining, but I'd still have given this seller a neutral rating for the poor packing job if it hadn't been for the hostage feedback thing. As it went, I left positive feedback and marked the shipping charges, in the separate ratings the seller can't see, "very unreasonable."

And then there was the seller I from whom I ordered a lot of loose Batman, TMNT, and other assorted figures. They were noted as being in played-with condition, so I expected that, but I did not expect them to be sticky. That was fucking gross, and I totally would not have bought them if I had known that I would spend hours scrubbing them in the sink and scraping gunk off of them with my fingernails (and even then I wasn't entirely successful, so I still keep most of these figures separate from my others). I desperately wanted to leave this seller negative feedback, and here I didn't feel like it was my responsibility to contact the seller about the problem since the seller should have cleaned the figures first or at least mentioned of their stickiness (yuck) in the auction description. I mean, what could the seller have done to make this right -- send me more dirty sticky toys? Yet, fearing revenge feedback, I decided to leave nothing at all.

Apparently, however, those days are over! Sellers of sticky toys, your days of having 100% feedback ratings are numbered! But also -- hopefully -- this will encourage sellers to be more proactive about pleasing customers. Instead of writing, "Once your order arrives in satisfactory condition, please leave feedback for me. I will do the same for you," in e-mails (which I admit I pasted from the shipping notification of my latest purchase; true to form, the seller left me positive feedback not ten minutes after I gave him/her a positive rating), sellers could explicitly encourage unsatisfied customers to e-mail the seller before leaving neutral or negative feedback. After all, this doesn't always go without saying -- and based on past experiences, buyers may be less likely to trust a seller to care once the payment has been received or wary about the possibility of a satisfactory outcome.

For example, I once ordered a computer peripheral from Newegg.com that didn't work. When I contacted customer service, they instructed me to ship it back for a replacement. I did so, and they did ship me a working replacement, but it cost me nearly $10 to send the thing back -- and since the main reason I had ordered from Newegg in the first place was that the product was $5 cheaper there than other online sites, it was ultimately more expensive for me to buy the thing from Newegg. Not their fault, but it still soured the experience for me. I haven't shopped Newegg since.

Contrast that with my most recent Amazon Marketplace purchase, where one of the figures I bought broke right out of the package. Given the discount price of the items, I might otherwise have just shrugged it off, glued the broken piece on, and just had a figure with one non-working joint -- which I likely would have done if the seller had asked me to ship it back for a replacement, since the shipping cost here would have been worth more to me than the missing joint. (The shipping would also have been roughly 1/3 of the cost of a small dremel tool that I could probably use to fix the figure myself, not to mention fix other toys and make various figure modifications and even sand Bacardi's nails.) But since I really did and do want this figure in proper working order, I decided to e-mail the seller to see about getting a replacement -- and lo and behold, he responded in less than an hour and apparently shipped me a replacement the very next day without asking me to send the broken figure back. Assuming that it actually arrives (and isn't damaged in some really obvious way that's clearly visible through the windowed box), this guy will have made a repeat customer of me. Heck, I'm already scouring his online store looking for additional figures I can buy with my stimulus money -- figures I don't even want that badly and likely wouldn't buy otherwise -- just so I can give him more of my business as a token of my appreciation. (It's too bad he doesn't have DC Universe Classics Wave 3 available for preorder!) And of course I'll be sure to plug and link to the retailer both here and on Scary-Crayon.

Anyway, I'll stop this here before I start going on about my past experiences in retail or describing in detail the time I bought two meals from a Chinese food shop in a mall food court because of how impressed I was with their apparent emphasis on presenting potential customers with fresh and piping hot free samples, but yeah -- I do appreciate good business practices and attempts to improve the customer's experience. So thanks a bunch, eBay and as yet unnamed Amazon Marketplace seller. I look forward to doing business with you again! :mrgreen:

-posted by Wes | 11:20 pm | Comments (2)
May 9, 2008
The Edible Mystery revealed...
Category: Dreams … Photo … Toys

Remember that post from the other day with the unknown food item? Well, it's time to reveal its true identity:

Dollar store stuffing and vegetables!

DOLLAR STORE STUFFING!!! Well, dollar store stuffing mix, mixed with frozen vegetables (last time okra and mashed up Brussels sprouts; here with stir fry vegetables), flax seeds (fiber supplements = win), and occasionally other stuff like fake crabmeat, cheese, and/or mayonnaise. Once all this stuff is in the bowl together, I usually add a generous portion of oil, some water, mix the stuff up well, and then nuke it in the microwave for upwards of fifteen minutes or so -- basically until most of the mixture is cooked out of it and I'm left with a semi-spongy but mostly crunchy sort of casserole. It's pretty good! And as long as they keep selling stuffing mix at the dollar store, it'll probably be a staple of my diet for quite some time... or at least until I finish the two bags of stuffing mix currently in the cupboard.

I've also become quite fond of fake crabmeat and cream cheese sandwiches lately. I got the idea from Boston sushi rolls, which I quite like, but somehow these sandwiches manage to be even more palatable. I'll have to start using light or fat-free cream cheese to make them, though, so that I can even start claiming that they're healthy and low in calories. ๐Ÿ˜‰

A shot of my usual drinking cups.Figures currently on my desk!

Other random photos: a shot of the cups from which I usually drink and one of the figures currently decorating my desk. I've had the Foot Tech Ninja and Donatello since December, and Skeletor has been here for a few years (and if you can see Cubone behind him, he's been here even longer), but I took this photo primarily to showcase Emma Frost -- a new addition courtesy of the delightful Mickey! She'll make it down to the basement and get a proper photo shoot in a few days -- I tend to keep new figures in my room for a bit before relocating them to the subterranean studio -- but for now I'm very much enjoying having her upstairs and placing her in various poses and whatnot. Not pictured is the Transformer Landmine on my bed. I keep new Transformers in my room to fiddle with as well -- they tend to stay until I get another Transformer to replace them. Landmine has been up here for a couple of weeks, though I imagine the turnaround period will be much shorter whenever those new Animated toys hit. ๐Ÿ™‚

And I had a very strange set of dreams during today's nap. One of them involved alligators entering via some hidden entrance and attacking me in the living room, which prompted me to contact the Justice League of America for help. Just before I woke up, Batman was on his way and Firestorm was creating an anti-alligator enclosure to keep everyone safe until he arrived. Yep.

-posted by Wes | 4:02 pm | Comments (4)
May 5, 2008
Most recent figure acquisitions
Category: Photo … Toys

My hands must be secreting some sort of anti-Batdude chemical. First my new Movie Masters Batman snapped in half at the waist this weekend (luckily I was able to return him), and then I managed to snap off Batzarro's arm during today's photo extended shoot. The fit of the arm is tight enough that I can still wedge it back into position and have it stay (the extreme tightness of the joint requires some pretty forceful motion to turn the arm to begin with, which is likely how I managed to break it off), but I'm still not too pleased about that. ๐Ÿ™

Anyway, here are the figures I picked up this weekend and some of the ones that arrived in a box today. Click on the thumbnails to see larger pics!

Edward ScissorhandsAnother Scarecrow?

I've actually had Edward Scissorhands around here a while -- my sister gave him to me for Christmas several years ago -- but I didn't take him out of his package until last Friday. Although he's not superarticulated (though he gets a fairly high joint count because all of his scissorfingers move individually), he's still pretty cool. The Scarecrow, however, is completely new to the collection. I actually considering ordering him on eBay a few weeks ago -- I was thinking of using him in my Legion of Doom, although this Scarecrow is the Marvel version -- but dropped that idea when I happened upon a legitimate DC Scarecrow on clearance. Still, I thought it was pretty amazing that I happened upon this figure for $3.97 at KB Toys this weekend, since he's pretty much been out of retail circulation since 2006. (He must have been hidden away in the back room, since I've been to that KB before and never come across the toy.) It almost felt like this Scarecrow was destined to come home with me... and so he did. (more...)

-posted by Wes | 11:30 pm | Comments (3)