In this episode, Jeremy Lee closes out Episode 305 with Joey Elmasri, David Chase, and Josh Adams by digging deeper into one of the biggest underlying questions in the hobby: what happens if card values take a major hit?
The conversation explores how each collector might respond to a serious market drop, whether that would actually change their approach, and why unrealized losses only matter if you decide to sell. From there, the discussion expands into nostalgia, long term collecting behavior, and the difference between buying cards for value versus buying them for meaning, memory, and the simple joy of the chase.
The group also talks about kids in the hobby, father and son collecting, the role nostalgia may play for today’s younger participants down the road, and whether the next generation will eventually become true long term collectors. Along the way, the conversation touches on junk wax parallels, hobby cycles, modern overproduction, and the ongoing tension between hype, flipping, and real collecting.
The episode closes on a fun but honest discussion about whether sports cards are actually cool, or whether collectors are just comfortable being cardboard nerds. It is a fitting ending to a wide ranging conversation about identity, passion, and what keeps people in the hobby beyond prices and headlines.
If you enjoy hobby conversations that mix market reality, nostalgia, and collector perspective, please follow the podcast, leave a rating or review, and share this episode with a fellow collector. You can also check out Jeremy’s new book Pops and Comps and take the Hobby Spectrum assessment to discover your collector identity and connect with other hobbyists in the directory.
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