 I've got a few interesting things I want to show you here. I was walking down the street and somebody turned this bike lane into a purple rain tribute. I stopped to take a picture and a construction worker who was standing there said, yeah, everybody stops and takes a picture. And then on the sidewalk in front of the store, this caught my eye, D-I-V-O-R-C-E, an album by Tammy Wynette. I couldn't help but stop and look at that. And then right next to it was this vintage board game, Trap the Rat. It was a tiny little resale shop, and I walked inside and I asked the guy, do you have any other board games? And he said, yeah, we have a couple over here. And one of them was this Tennessee Tuxedo game. And there was also this Hoppy the Hoparoo game, the Flintstones tie-in. And next to them was the obligatory Bozo Sings album. And on the shelf below that was this Spider-Man telephone. It was behind something, so I couldn't tell exactly what it was supposed to be. But then next to it was the Fall Guy lunchbox. This is not a $6 million Man lunchbox. This is a Fall Guy lunchbox. Okay, I want to make that distinction. But then I turned around and looked up and on the shelf above the clothes, I cast that loud and stood there in shock because there are the Shogun Warriors toys. Look at the size of these toys in comparison to the hangers on the shelf just below them. If you've never seen these toys before, they came out in the late 70s. They're like 30 inches tall. Each one of them is almost a yard tall. They're the greatest toys ever made. Of course, they're giant robots from Japan. I had this one, the black and blue one called Mazinga, and the red one called Dregun. I saw the yellow one on the shelves is called Gaya King. I didn't need to look these up. I know the names of these toys. And this one is called Dangard Ace. I never saw that one. I also never saw the one on the left called Ray Dean, but I always wanted that one. All of that great stuff aside, this is the thing I wanted to tell you about. It was just sitting by itself in a little basket on the floor with some other random stuff. As you can see, it is the posable Ricardo action figure from Peewee's Playhouse. Ricardo was called the world's greatest athlete. He was a recurring character on Peewee's Playhouse along with Miss Yvonne and Cowboy Curtis and the King of Cartoons and all the rest. This is in the late 80s when Peewee's Playhouse was on Saturday morning and there was a series of Peewee toys made by Matchbox, among them being the talking Peewee and the non-talking Peewee. The box doesn't tell you anything else about Ricardo. It just says, posable Ricardo is seen on TV. But here's why that's caught my eye and why I paid $24 for it. I went to college with this guy. The 1984-85 school year, I studied drama with him and when he showed up on Peewee's Playhouse a couple of years later, I was like, no way. Let's take a good look at the posable Ricardo here. Mr. World's greatest athlete. But this guy went on to have a successful career in Hollywood. I hadn't followed his career, but the last time I saw him in something, the last time I spotted him was Machete.