Source:
https://www.podbean.com/eau/pb-4rhae-1ad3125
lDr. James Beckett shares (very poor, apologies!) audio from a wide-ranging hobby dinner conversation at the Watters Creek Show discussing how to broaden sports card collecting across race, gender, and socioeconomic lines by “planting seeds” through outreach and welcoming environments. The group notes increased diversity and more female collectors, considers barriers like storage space, access, and rising prices, and points to entry points such as affordable retail products, low-cost packs, and Panini soccer stickers. They debate how breaks, allocations, and day-one FOMO affect affordability and wax pricing, and highlight direct-to-consumer models like Upper Deck ePack and on-demand platforms such as Whatnot. The conversation also contrasts the magic of blind pack opening with deterministic buying, touches on complete sets as a low-cost onramp for kids, and mentions growing athlete participation in collecting.
00:33 Growing a Diverse Collector Base
03:19 Meritocracy and Inclusion
03:41 Global Hobby Seed Planting
05:48 Prices and Entry Barriers
07:31 Stickers and Cheap Entry
08:40 Breaks and Staircase Strategy
10:26 Breaker Economics and FOMO
13:09 ePack and On Demand Buying
13:59 Is Convenience Killing Magic
15:39 Complete Sets and Kid Collecting