Lol. I hit pause in the middle of the First ad. Then read the comments. Now I won’t continue watching the ads and not watching the video. I wonder if the channel gets paid when the ads aren’t watched and zero watch time is given the video. Anyhow, now….time to tell RU-vid to not recommend this channel to me anymore. Thanks to all the #heroes who watched, determined it was clickbait and warned the rest of us.
You come across lots of these in Vietnam, often handed out at banks there when you get money exchanged. You just need to go where these bills were in high circulation to reap the rewards
I have an older (1976) $2 bill, but other than being in uncirculated condition (no folds, creases, etc) it meets none of the more valuable elements mentioned here.
I was a waitress in the 90s & I had a regular customer that would tip me in $2 bills. I loved it but I hated to spend them (I had to). I still have a few of them though.
It was the same as those "gold" 1 dollar coins that were around in the early 2000s. They were cool looking, but I hated getting into arguments now and then, trying to use them to pay for stuff. Cashiers would sometimes look at me like I was trying to pay for my stuff with a game token.
@@jeffjackson9679 LOL! I still have some of those gold colored $1 coins: Sacagawea + 1 that commemorated Jefferson. And some silver colored Susan B. Anthony $1 coins that just looked WAY too much like quarters.
Was given one as a birthday gift 32 years ago from a friend with a note saying keep this and you'll never be broke. It's been in my wallet all this time and it's a total rag, somehow it seems to have brought me luck. I've been down a few times but never out.
I just thought you might like to know that they actually print the star notes at the same time they print the regular notes they print them together so then if the one gets a problem with it then they have the star note ready and they just swap it out
A lot of people consider them 'lucky' or collect them so I keep about 50 of them in my wallet. I give them as tips and since I don't spend them (except as tips), I have more than $50 in my wallet for emergencies.
I have a $2 bill - 1976 Series where above the serial number upper right you can see "This note is legal tender for all debts public and private" but it is printed backwards and faint. Do I have anything here? Also, you can see faint signatures that are printed backwards as well as a different "D number " also printed backwards. Plainly printed "D4" but "D5" is printed faint and backwards. Thanks!!
You can tell many of these bills were actually folded and probably in someone’s wallet for good luck at one time or another. I keep one there myself. Hasn’t been much good luck though☹️
It's honestly beyond time to wake up. Money has the all seeing eye, pyramid, and a host of other more hidden occultic symbology all over it......it's a fiat currency printed out of thin air and not by our government. It's PRIVATELY owned and used to suppress us...........so geeze.....how crazy it wasn't "lucky"!
Reminds me of when the neighbors kids came pounding on my door INSISTING their two dollar bill was either fake or valuable...then they wanted to know what their dollar coins are worth. Woke me up at 6 am...
Two Dollar bills have been traditionally used by process servers to give upon service with the subpoena in my state. Also as Birthday Gifts (old school) and in olden days to buy votes.
Thank you for the information God bless you I have a question where or who I call if I find one especial bill thanks again for your helpful information
I’ve got thirty two dollar bills that have the date of issue postal stamp on them. My friend from school has the same thing. Figure that the value is two dollars apiece.
It can be, depending on the year it was printed, the district it came from and its condition. For example, a 1928 red B district with a star in very fine condition was given a $20,000 estimate on this one site I was looking on, and they didn't even have an estimate for the mint condition ones, seeing as they're so rare! Meanwhile, the 1928 red G district with a star is going for $80 in very fine condition, and $500 on the same site. Just something you may have to look into, because you never know......You may be sitting on a gem, and you don't even know it yet!
While visiting Las Vegas about 30 years ago I was given a 2$ bill in change and it struck me as odd because it was first from the 1920's and then the letters were all in red. I got it saved somewhere
All of the red seals (red marks) are "UNITED STATES NOTES". All of the blue seals (blue marks) are "SILVER CERTIFICATES". All of the green seals (green marks) are "FEDERAL RESERVE NOTES". If you add 2+2 together with regards to the 1963 issue red seal US Notes, and look back in history as to what President JFK did on June 4, 1963, with his EO (executive order) #11110, you may discover some little known history!
I tried to use a few of my $2 bills at a gas station and got the police called on me then was arrested and had to go to court because the officers had never seen a $2 bill as well as the gas station clerk,it was ridiculous and cost me my job and alot of money even though it was thrown out and I was released 5 days later, beware it does happen and it sucks
It's money. If there's nothing unusual about it (like mentioned in the video) then just spend it. If there is something unusual, then take it to your nearest coin dealer and have them make you an offer.
🗣️let's say that you have a couple of the bills.. where would you take the two dollar bills that are special to get the upgraded price amount that they are really worth for being unique?
I love going g to my bank and asking for $2.00 bills. The first time I did the bank teller tried telling me there was no such item. But a Bank manager said Yup no problem how many you want. I have also asked for the $1.00 coins
A 2 dollar bill is worth aprosamatly 200 cent, 20 dimes, 40 nickels, 8 quarters, 4 fifty cents, 2 dollar coins, or 2 papar dollars. Or a combination of all listed equalling 2 dollars.
The only time I can find them is around Christmas. The tellers act like it is odd that I ask for them. I have bought a couple of new bundles, but there always seems to be at least one missing in the sequence. And I have yet to find any star notes.
keep asking. I have collected many stars over the years. don't be afraid to ask at a bank you don't belong to... some banks will still sell them without account
If it has the red stamp on it rather than the green one that you see in today's $2 bills, it's worth a little more money (depending on the bill, maybe around $6 or more).
It depends on a lot of things: The series year, the condition, if it's got what's known as a "fancy" serial number. Without knowing more, the value is somewhere between about $3 and several thousand.
Back in 98 I had a crazy girlfriend who gave me a $2 dollar bill, she wrote "for luck " on it. We broke up and my life was cursed til I got rid of it. Then in 2014 I went to a convenience store they were giving away $2 bills for answering a survey outside. I got one and used it to pay for my drink. The cashier asked if I wanted to save it , I said no, told my ex girlfriend story and said they're bad luck. I know I gave her that bill and later when I opened my wallet it was in there. I got rid of it right away
My great-grandmother gave me a $2 bill when I was in grade school in the 1970s. I thought it was the coolest thing ever. It had ALL red ink, perfect condition, in a Federal Reserve envelope AND it had JFK on the face of it. I can't remember if it was a star note or not. Turns out it was still only worth $2 and I have no idea what ever happened to it.
yeah. probably forgot "against" however, defacing is a not defined as most think. If I wrote my name, or go Blues, or hi Tom, that alone is not defacing. Specifically, defacing is making a bill unusable, unrecognizable key features. To make it unfit for purchace.
If you look on the back right side above the man in the chair there is a man in an iron mask have to zoom in on it to see him and actually all the smaller people in the room look like zombies lol creepy faces try it out it’s hilarious
I know someone who was actually arrested at the bank for trying to deposit a $2 bill. The Teller thought it was fake. The bank manager thought it was fake. The responding police thought it was fake. The DA's office thought it was fake. The judge... Pulled a $2 bill out of his wallet that he kept for luck, and asked if they were going to accuse him of counterfeiting too, lol. Not one person from the bank straight up until he got before the judge thought $2 bills existed, and wouldn't look it up when he was insisting they were real, lol.