Showing posts with label NSCC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NSCC. Show all posts

August 05, 2012

PBS from the NSCC...

Unfortunately, I was not able to travel with our fearless leader, Ben Henry, to the National Sports Collectors Convention in Baltimore. I'm getting married in less than a month. A prenuptial, cross-country journey to support my hobby was strongly discouraged. It's not that I didn't try to persuade her:

"Baby, it isn't just about baseball cards. It would also be important for the blog... Expand coverage, bring in new readers, get some great new ideas for posts..." I implored.

"When was the last time you posted on either of your blogs?" She asked.

Sooooooo... Needless to say, I am still in San Diego.

I really wanted to stay in touch with what was going on at the convention. Following the action on twitter was fine, but it was more voyeuristic than participatory. I felt the need to be a part of the action, so I asked Ben if he could find me some cool cards to inspire some new posts.

Ben has a pretty good grasp on what I collect, so I left it up to him to do the shopping. Here are the first two cards he found for me:

1968 Topps AS - Mr. Rogers

Ben certainly knows what I like! It isn't the famous '68 rookie card that he shares with Daniel Striped Tiger, but nonetheless awesome! Despite the all-encompassing amazingness that this card represents it isn't my favorite one that he bought for me...

1998 Topps Gallery of Heroes - Richard Lederer

This bad boy takes the cake! If you aren't familiar with Richard "Verbivore" Lederer, you really should be. Mr. Lederer hosted "A Way with Words" on PBS radio. I rarely made time to listen to a radio show, but from 1998 through 2006 I hardly missed an episode. The show was (and still is) wonderfully informative and entertaining. While Richard co-hosted the show it was amazingly pun-tacular. I love puns, and Mr. Lederer is the undisputed king of wordplay.

The Gallery of Heroes inserts from the 1998 Topps Gallery set were a pretty tough pull at 1:24 packs. I didn't buy more than three or four packs that year, and beat the odds by pulling TWO of them! Of course, both were Jeff Bagwell. Nothing against him, but I am pretty sure every insert card I got in the 90's was a Bagwell.

But I digress... Did you now that Richard Lederer is the father of poker superstars Howard Lederer and Annie Duke. Annie got a card in this year's Allen & Ginter set. Now I have a card of her dad too!

Thanks Ben!

I'll continue posting some of the best cards that Ben found for me at the National...

Maybe.


May 15, 2012

National-sized Expectations

It's less than three months away... The autograph-guest lineup for the National has been announced and it looks like the entire Major-League roster from the late 1970s will be in attendance: Carlton Fisk, Jim Rice, Pete Rose, Ferguson Jenkins, George Foster, Joe Morgan, Jim Palmer, Bruce Sutter, etc. It should be interesting to see what the hierarchy of superstars will be, if everyone will sit peacefully side by side at long tables, or if some of the old timers will conspire on a power grab or coup for the best folding chair and a spot near the men's room ...

I'm interested to see what some of these guys look like now. Did Bruce Sutter just let his beard consume the rest of his face? Does George Foster still look like he did on his 1986 Topps card (the one where he's wearing shades like he's getting ready for his moonlighting gig as a keyboardist in a funk band)? Or do they all look like normal, older men?...

I don't see this anywhere on the NSCC website, but I would love to see some panel discussions as part of the show. Certainly on the state and future of the sports trading card and memorabilia industry, but also on the emergence of blogging (probably about four or five years overdue on this topic) and customer interaction ...

I also hope Topps, Tristar, Panini, Upper Deck, and some of the other larger companies do Apple-like product presentations. It would be encouraging to see the thought-leader companies take a commanding presence with customers in a venue away from the trade show floor, because I have a feeling I know what the industry trade show floor booths will be like: tons of people grabbing for anything and everything not bolted down. I'm thinking stacks of sell sheets, bins of individually wrapped promo packs, boxes of VIP card sets stacked behind presentation tables, lanyard-wearing industry types swigging bottled water and checking their BlackBerrys, and kids presenting fistfuls of bunched-up pack wrappers to trade in for a special Cal Ripken card. Oh, and lots of pushing ...

I'm not a fan of big crowds, which will make my few days at the National all the more harrowing, but I'll be impressed greatly if the show is anything like or anywhere near the intensity of Comic Con ...

What I'm hoping to accomplish at the show:

1. Meet the company representatives. Learn about their stuff for 2013 and beyond.
2. Meet reps from smaller, more eccentric companies and independent entrepreneurs with booths.
3. Get a few cards I've always wanted and hoard up on miscuts, blank-backs, and wrong-backs
4. Try to talk with some of the autograph guests without waiting in line for an hour (or more)
5. Swig bottled water with a lanyard around my neck and try not to get trampled by the teeming masses.

The reason I'm going:

To live-blog and tweet about what I find. This has been one of my goals since all the way back in 2006, when I started The Baseball Card Blog. I figure I'll post some videos, maybe an audio interview, some Twitter and Facebook updates, and write, write, write. I've never been to a show of this size, and despite all my bluster, I really don't know what kind of experience I'll have.