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Baseball Talk was a set of 164 "talking" baseball cards that were released by Topps and the LJN Corporation during the spring of 1989. Each card featured a plastic disk affixed to the back of an oversized baseball card.
This list of items as of August 20, 2021 is ordered by consumer price index inflation-adjusted value (in bold) in millions of United States dollars in 2023. [note 1]This list includes only the highest price paid for a given card and does not include separate entries for individual copies of the same card or multiple sales prices for the same copy of a card.
First, the 1989 Bowman cards were 2.5" x 3.75" instead of the standard 2.5" x 3.5" card size (they went back to standard size from 1990 onwards however) and second, its main focus was on upcoming minor league players who Topps believed had a good chance of making it to the majors someday, which continues to be the focus of the Bowman set today.
Topps finally issued a third version of all six cards with the team name centered in the box. Topps's 1957 set contained Yankee great Mickey Mantle as card number 95. The card is known among collectors as the "ghost Mantle". Topps editors had long been expert at altering pictures to meet their needs.
Desert Storm trading cards are sets of trading cards that feature people and equipment involved in the Persian Gulf War.The cards were published in the United States by various companies and the size of sets varied greatly in between companies (such as the nine-card set published by Crown Sports Cards, and the 250 card-set published by Pro Set).
In 1989, 15 albums advanced to the peak position of the chart. Bobby Brown 's Don't Be Cruel was the best performing and best-selling album of 1989, spending 6 non-consecutive weeks at number one. The Raw & the Cooked , the second album by rock and soul band Fine Young Cannibals , had the longest run among the releases that reached peak ...
Highest-grossing films of 1989 by In-year release [57]; Rank Title Distributor Domestic gross 1. Batman: Warner Bros. $251,188,924 2. Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
The #1 song of 1989, "Look Away" by Chicago, despite reaching #1 in late 1988, never reached #1 in 1989. An asterisk (*) by a date indicates an unpublished, "frozen" week, due to the special double issues that Billboard published in print at the end of the year for their year-end charts.