August 12, 2007

Putting the No in Nostalgia

I started collecting because I wanted to feel closer to my favorite players and the activity involved in collecting was a good outlet for my mild childhood OCD. And though I was a hard-core baseball card collector for over ten years, it’s hard to say the exact moment I realized my fate. It may have been the first moment I hefted a pack of 1986 Topps in my seven-year-old hand. It may have been when I got my first double. The list of precise moments is endless… and right now I’m not in the mood for nostalgia.

It seems like our hobby is built on nostalgia: it’s probably the number one reason– subconscious or not–why cards are bought (once you strip away the potential investment they may represent). Very few of us buy a card because of its aesthetic makeup or its importance as an historical object.

And that’s okay; I freely admit that I came back to collecting because of nostalgia. Once the spark is lit it’s hard to turn your back on it completely, especially when you’re fresh with the remembrance of an easier time, where saving up for a pack of cards was your biggest worry.

But there’s something nagging about nostalgia today: it’s been hijacked by the card companies. I have to surround it in quotes for it to make sense. Topps and Upper Deck are out to make a buck. And one of the ways they accomplish this is by jamming their versions of “nostalgia” down our throats. Sets like Topps & Bowman Heritage, Allen & Ginter, Turkey Red, the new Sport Kings line, Tri-Star products—they’re aimed at our love of that simpler time, but they’re not simple. They’re just skins for new players or a way to make a buck out of the back catalogue. If anything, they’re a much more expensive version of that old, fading memory. I guess real nostalgia just doesn’t fit into the equation anymore. Then again, maybe it never did and I was too caught up in being sold to to notice.


By the way, if Donruss still had their license, who do you think would’ve been on the 2007 puzzle? My money’s on Willie Mays.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Damn, Beckett has fucked up your writing. What is this crap? You were so much better before.

Thomas said...

Donruss would have been producing Hank Aaron cards, because they have him as an exclusive.

They may have added Mays, but they would have had Aaron for sure.

Anonymous said...

What the hell is Anonymous talking about? Reads just as good to me as anything else on this site. The Beckett article was damn good, too. Christ, man, if you want to bitch so much about his success, at least leave your name.

I'll admit it -- I'm addicted to 2007 Topps Heritage. Still, it is true that they're just screwing us for nostalgia's sake. I'd feel better about it if the 2007 base set had a passable design. I look at those cards and cringe.

e.v.a.n said...

"And that’s okay; I freely admit that I came back to collecting because of nostalgia. Once the spark is lit it’s hard to turn your back on it completely, especially when you’re fresh with the remembrance of an easier time, where saving up for a pack of cards was your biggest worry."

That's it, right there man. I'll probably be buying two packs a year until I'm 80 just for the sake of looking at some old names and poses. Never gonna throw away the stuff.

Ignore 'anonymous', do what you gotta do and we'll cope.