![]() Searching to find buried treasure of sorts, Coglianese became addicted to those rare heart-stopping moments when he'd be flipping through a longbox and out of nowhere: Comic book gold. In his distributor career, Coglianese spent countless hours on the road working in Chicago and then in Wisconsin, so to help break up the day he'd always stop at antique stores or used bookstores. ![]() As Coglianese grew up, he settled into a career for a liquor distributor, but he never lost his passion for comics. Immediately after seeing the movie, Coglianese became obsessed with comic books and even tried his hand at both drawing and writing comics, but things just never panned out. Like many kids of his generation, Coglianese's world changed when Tim Burton's Batman arrived on the big screen in 1989. While the app, site and YouTube channel are free, Coglianese's subscription service offers perks like notifications about green-lit TV and movie properties, specialized lists and more. In conjunction with the app, Coglianese launched a YouTube channel and a website where he blogs about comic book speculation and collecting. Launched at the New York Comic Con in 2017, Coglianese's Key Collector app has reached the 75,000 download mark, received praise from people like Neal Adams and Alex Ross, and is expected to exceed 1,000 paid subscribers next month. ![]() With Key Collector, Coglianese put in hundreds of hours of research to create an app focused exclusively on "keys" - first appearances, origins, classic storylines, iconic covers, rare and recalled issues, low print run and a number of other factors that can contribute to a comic book demanding value over another. For instance, last month Key Collector has curated a list of optioned independent comics, listed the first appearances of every version of Iron Man's armor and put together a list of the most collectible issues that may play a part in Captain Marvel. With Key Collector, Coglianese has made it that much easier to find and track key issues. A superhero fan since he saw Tim Burton's Batman on the big screen, Coglianese recently entered the industry in his own way, helping comic book fans track and find the most collectible comic books with his app Key Collector. As he hunted down first appearances and major key issues, he became addicted to that particular moment when the eyes recognize something special but it takes the brain a split second to believe it. Like many comic book fans, once Nick Coglianese started collecting, he was hooked. ![]()
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