That’s is a cool note and it even has a star. Really nice that it’s in that strong condition so a nice pick up.
I just started watching Star Trek lately. The one from 1966-1969. When Kirk was a "ladies man". The episodes are funnier than I remember as a kid. Maybe I just was too young to know what was going on.
Love Star Trek. I have DVDs of the original TV series and the Next Generation. I also have the movies.
I'm not a paper money guy so not terribly familiar with the grading standards, but that looks pretty nice for an EF40, to me. Star note, too.
The stain is what held it back from a higher grade. Look at the back right side, then look in the same place on the front. Graders are very tough on paper money in my opinion.
That's easily one of the coolest looking red seals I've seen. I bet this one cost quite a bit too! In a 40, the CPG is $525 but with the low number, it's probably worth $750 or more.
Nice serial #. I agree it looks better than a 40 grade however, I see that there was a crease down the center through the portrait. That prob took the grade down. VN Paddy. Didn't want to start a new thread or be put in CT timeout, the president's signature will be on the 1 dollar bill later this year. They are bumping the Sec'y of the Treasury to make room.
Nice notes, guys. I've wanted one for years.....and my understanding is that most are fairly-low numbered as not many were made.
I got the TV show set recently, I've noticed that too, more humor than I remembered, a lot of Spock and McCoy picking on each other, for instance. And lots of lovely women
If it's in a 1-hour time block, you're probably missing 3-4 minutes of original footage from the OAD length. I believe DVDs or Blu-Rays or 4Ks' probably are the correct length of 50-51 minutes. In reruns, you're lucky to get 44-45 minutes.
It's amazing how much has been cut out from 1960's and 1970's hour-long programs (about 2 minutes on a 30-minute sitcom). FETV shows programs close to their OAD length -- I have seen new footage on TV shows like "The Jeffersons" that I never saw in NY-area or cable TV reruns. They still might have left some stuff on the cutting room floor, it's just longer than we're used to seeing. They allow 70 minutes for hour-long programs and 35 minutes for 1/2 hour shows. I wonder how much was cut from TV shows like "Batman", "Gilligan's Island", and "The Brady Bunch" that I grew up with in reruns (though I did see TBB when it originally aired, too).