...of a pretty amazing auction lot.
If you're in a certain age group it's pretty much impossible not to be aware of "The Brady Bunch" and its offspring. The Friday Night ABC-TV show premiered on September 26, 1969 and ran for five semi-fun-filled seasons, often with some pretty excruciating musical numbers thrown in. And this was before things devolved into a lucrative universe of never-ending syndication, spin-offs, revivals and two later very tongue-in-cheek homage movies. Unlike the very adjacent "Partridge Family" show it sometimes ran ahead of and was featured in three plain vanilla series releases with Topps, The Brady Bunch led to two very similar Topps card sets that have confused collectors ever since. The first of these sets was a test and I'll leave that for the latter part of today's festivities, focusing on the full 1971 retail issue to start.
Back in June of this year, this lot popped up on eBay and went for a strong price:
Starting at top left and going clockwise, we see a dual-display unit sleeve that originally held two 48 count boxes of Brady's, with 240 cards per box. The there is a nicely preserved display box, s set of the cards (88 of 'em), a mysterious schematic of the display and packaging, a waste strip presumably from the outer sleeve and a wax wrapper. Let's break it down:
To me the sleeve is the unlikely survivor here:
I suspect that little strip somehow secured both boxes inside the sleeve. There's some shots of the sleeve's interior that I'll spare you from but it's not really obvious how that would have worked. As for the sleeve proper, Topps used this sales method for a few years, starting around 1969, often for sets like their Hallow'een offerings, but really anything they wanted to move in a little more quantity fit the bill.
It's possible this method was used to primarily boost flagging sales of a once promising product but I'm not at all sure of that and it could also have been intended for sets with a perceived seasonal sales cycle. The ABC-TV tagline that the outer box added seems like it could have been something that made Topps some extra scratch but who knows at this point. Still, the cards and all the display trappings are somewhat hard to find for this set, although it could also have been sold in cello packs, with some vending thrown in. Vending though, was probably the worst-performing member of the Topps retail ecosystem.
Anyhoo, here's another view:
The display box used an image provided by the show's producers and, while it omitted the Brady parents and their domestic helper Alice, it sure locks in how the kids looked in season one:
You can see the stock and other numbering information from the commodity code matches with the sleeve (1-443-XX-01-1). The cards were described as having glue residue on the reverse due to their being entombed in a Topps file book.
The 88 card full retail set is popular and is often confused with the 55 card test set. We will get to all that shortly but first, the Topps provenance makes me think the schematic card could have been something made up by Topps and inserted into the file book. (UPDATE 8/5/24: the archive belonged to Philadelphia Gum a.k.a. Swell, which kept tabs on their competitors. Tip o'the Topps cap to Lonnie Cummins for that tidbit.)
2 comments:
Too bad they didn't do a 1973 printing of Brady Bunch cards, they could have featured Joe Namath on one of the cards. Speaking of Broadway Joe, do you know the exact outcome of his lawsuit against Topps? I can't seem to find anything concrete on the Internet. I know the lawsuit kind of came up because Namath (under Namanco) was sort of suing everyone (Sports Illustrated, etc.) for what they perceived to be unauthorized use of his image. But I don't know if they ever won any of those cases. Of course it scared (or pissed) Topps off enough to keep him out of football sets after 1973. Anyway, sorry for the tangent, but just wondering if you had any facts about those suits. Thanks.
I can't find much beyond that he sued for $750,000, which is a ridiculous number, and likely way more than the annual Topps profits on football sets. Knowing how the Topps contracts worked, to a degree at least, and with only the players signing at the time without an NFL license in force, I can't imagine Namath was successful and Topps probably told him to pound sand.
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