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Go Back   Net54baseball.com Forums > Net54baseball Postwar Sportscard Forums > Postwar Baseball Cards Forum (Pre-1980)

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  #1  
Old 08-24-2021, 08:11 AM
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jchcollins jchcollins is offline
John Collins
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Originally Posted by ASF123 View Post
The thing is, if you can get cards anywhere, no one will want them anymore.
I would disagree with that as a blanket statement. The most popular time in hobby history was the late 80's and early 90's - when new packs of current product were available everywhere.

If you are one who buys into the hobby-only, super limited contrived scarcity thing - well then yeah. You might not want those cards.
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  #2  
Old 08-24-2021, 08:34 AM
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Originally Posted by jchcollins View Post
I would disagree with that as a blanket statement. The most popular time in hobby history was the late 80's and early 90's - when new packs of current product were available everywhere.

If you are one who buys into the hobby-only, super limited contrived scarcity thing - well then yeah. You might not want those cards.
There have been massive cultural changes since the junk wax heyday, most notably involving technology, the fragmentation of mass culture into countless consumption options, and what kids are into as a result of the first two.

Responding to this and the post above, color me skeptical that kids will ever again be into collecting pieces of cardboard with athlete photos on them simply for the sake of having them, at least on anything approaching a mass scale. That's not how 21st century kids relate to sports, or the broader world around them for that matter. I know this is not a unique view around here.

Also - even if cultivating a base of youth collectors were a viable strategy, when do corporations ever focus on long-term sustainable development over short-term windfalls these days?
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  #3  
Old 08-24-2021, 08:48 AM
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Originally Posted by ASF123 View Post
There have been massive cultural changes since the junk wax heyday, most notably involving technology, the fragmentation of mass culture into countless consumption options, and what kids are into as a result of the first two.

Responding to this and the post above, color me skeptical that kids will ever again be into collecting pieces of cardboard with athlete photos on them simply for the sake of having them, at least on anything approaching a mass scale. That's not how 21st century kids relate to sports, or the broader world around them for that matter. I know this is not a unique view around here.

Also - even if cultivating a base of youth collectors were a viable strategy, when do corporations ever focus on long-term sustainable development over short-term windfalls these days?
My comments were made at the risk of being a bit too wistful for the past, for a moment - I suppose. I would agree with you that the hobby has passed kids as mass consumers by for long enough to where it would be difficult to ever get those kinds of numbers back.

If it remains purely or even mostly about the money (and I have no reason to believe it won't...) then any type of physical distribution strategy may not be of concern to Fanatics or anyone else. They are just going to maximize profit and move on to the next thing when whatever it is is no longer grandly profitable.
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  #4  
Old 08-24-2021, 09:46 AM
deweyinthehall deweyinthehall is offline
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Originally Posted by jchcollins View Post
My comments were made at the risk of being a bit too wistful for the past, for a moment - I suppose. I would agree with you that the hobby has passed kids as mass consumers by for long enough to where it would be difficult to ever get those kinds of numbers back.

If it remains purely or even mostly about the money (and I have no reason to believe it won't...) then any type of physical distribution strategy may not be of concern to Fanatics or anyone else. They are just going to maximize profit and move on to the next thing when whatever it is is no longer grandly profitable.
Me too and, sadly, I agree. Had our generation (boomers and those immediately after) been presented with the options kids have today, traditional cards would have died out before Donruss and Fleer came to market. We were lucky we managed come of age in a different era. For many reasons, some not having anything to do with cards.
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Old 08-24-2021, 10:03 AM
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Me too and, sadly, I agree. Had our generation (boomers and those immediately after) been presented with the options kids have today, traditional cards would have died out before Donruss and Fleer came to market. We were lucky we managed come of age in a different era. For many reasons, some not having anything to do with cards.
Lucky for you, maybe. But aren't those people who grew up with wax packs the same people who now run these companies and have decided to shift the market to adult-only consumers?
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  #6  
Old 08-24-2021, 10:39 AM
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Lucky for you, maybe. But aren't those people who grew up with wax packs the same people who now run these companies and have decided to shift the market to adult-only consumers?
I don't think they're the ones "deciding" to shift the market. They're responding to structural changes.
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  #7  
Old 08-24-2021, 11:24 AM
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Those changes are driven internally. No one asked for products that cost 300 or more per box.
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  #8  
Old 08-24-2021, 11:30 AM
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Lucky for you, maybe. But aren't those people who grew up with wax packs the same people who now run these companies and have decided to shift the market to adult-only consumers?
Me personally, no. If you want to blame it on a generation I suppose you can but not sure what that solves.
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  #9  
Old 08-24-2021, 11:35 AM
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Me personally, no. If you want to blame it on a generation I suppose you can but not sure what that solves.
I don't know if every problem needs a solution but they all have a start.
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  #10  
Old 08-24-2021, 10:04 PM
cardsagain74 cardsagain74 is offline
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Originally Posted by jchcollins View Post
Me personally, no. If you want to blame it on a generation I suppose you can but not sure what that solves.
But no day on the internet would be complete without bumping into the "my generation is so superior to younger one" ego-massaging posts somewhere

I just found the news disappointing from a sentimental perspective. Even with all the industry changes since '81, I think most of us who grew up anytime from the '50s through the '80s (when it comes to baseball cards and especially all the nostalgia we feel from them) think "Topps".

So it's a bit sad how the name won't be part of the hobby now. Especially after 70 years.
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