Quote:
Originally Posted by Lucas00
the ability to drive a short time enables people who can't spend exorbitant amounts on flights and hotel rooms the ability to go to the national. Its not subjective or an "I think I'm right" moment. Its objective and a fact. Crunching some simple numbers $100 in gas and a single day trip vs a $500 round trip economy flight and $200 a night in a hotel room or more depending on nights spent are pretty drastic differences. Most people aren't going to a show with thousands of dollars in their pockets. They are going with 50 or a few hundred bucks to spend on a single card or a bunch of cheap cards. So saving probably damn near $1000 after everything else is added up is massive.
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I am going to have to disagree with you on these points.
The target audience of the show is not people with modest collecting budgets, it is collectors who are going to the show with thousands of dollars to spend, and they really don't care if the travel expenses are a thousand dollars more or less in any given year.
Also, the show is not the same as another card show. There is no economic argument that justifies the show in bargain shopping terms. If that is the focus, stay at home and buy on eBay. The National has bargains but is not the right show for bargain and budget-conscious collecting. It is the place for hunting down rare and obscure issues, finishing sets when you can see the cards in hand, finding crazy memorabilia, seeing insane eye candy on display, getting autographs, etc.
For me, at least, the most significant aspect of the National is that everyone goes. It is a great social week for me, a party to celebrate collecting with all the other at-heart ten-year-old boys and girls, a place to have hours-long conversations about cards like we did when we were kids. I dunno about most people but my wife and daughter have no interest at all in discussing which 1933 Goudey Ruth pose is the best one.