
Free Daily Podcast Summary
by Collector Nation
Trading Cards & Collectibles Podcast is your front-row seat to the stories, strategy, and live action across the entire collectibles universe as the home for the hobby on the Radcast Network. Cards, kicks, vintage, digital collectibles - if it has a story or a market, we cover it. Hosted by marketing disruptor and creator Ryan Alford, each episode blends real market news, on-air pack rips, honest product reviews, and conversations with athletes, investors, creators, and hobby influencers. We even take it live on eBay, selling what we pull so you can follow the journey from pack to purchase.
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Ryan Alford, Brian Ludden, and Bella Shafer are back with a hobby-heavy episode centered on PSA’s submission pause and the ripple effects it could have across grading, liquidity, and collector behavior. Ryan and Brian talk through what happens when the biggest grading company slows the funnel, whether that increases the value of already-graded cards, and why timing and velocity matter so much in modern collecting. They also dig into the NBA Finals, Wemby’s long-term ceiling, Brunson’s card-market upside, the Mantle redemption pull, and the broader size of the global collectibles market. What makes the episode work is the mix of perspectives: Ryan as the hobby operator, Brian as the data-and-product guy, and Bella as the one surfacing the questions collectors are already asking. Topics Covered PSA’s pause and how it affects grading strategy Whether grading bottlenecks help or hurt value How the Finals could impact Wemby and Brunson cards The Topps Mantle redemption and why it matters What the hobby’s real market size may be Why alternative graders may benefit now Ludex Super Search and marketplace discovery The Ryan + Brian + Bella take on what smart collectors should watch next Shop now at onitathlete.com and use code COLLECTORNATION at checkout to receive 15% off your first order! Links Collector Nation https://www.collectibles.show/ https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/collector-nation/id1832831782 https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxYLxZTsggQb44TQxnaNylA Ryan Alford https://www.ryanalford.com/ https://www.instagram.com/ryanalford/ Brian Ludden / Ludex https://www.ludex.com/ https://search.ludex.com/ https://www.instagram.com/ludexapp/ Bella Shafer https://www.instagram.com/isabellashafer/
Welcome to Grading 201 — the next-level conversation collectors need after they already know the basics. Ryan Alford and Mike Baker break down what actually changes a grade once you move beyond surface-level opinions and start looking at cards the way a grader does. From edge chipping and centering to die-cuts, autos, and the factory issues that collectors often overlook, Mike explains why some cards that look perfect still fall short of a 10. The conversation also touches the bigger grading landscape, including PSA’s volume, scaling challenges, digital review, and how tech can improve efficiency without replacing experienced eyes. This is the episode for collectors who want to submit smarter, buy sharper, and develop a more disciplined eye for grading. Topics Covered What actually makes a card a 10 Why “pack fresh” can still grade lower How graders look at corners and edges Why some defects are obvious and others are subtle The role of centering and surface in modern cards Why different card types need different eyes How Mike Baker thinks about grading at scale What collectors should take from grading 201 Links Collector Nation https://www.collectibles.show/ https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/collector-nation/id1832831782 https://thecollectornation.com Ryan Alford https://www.ryanalford.com/ https://www.instagram.com/ryanalford/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryan-alford Mike Baker / MBA https://grading.mba/ https://www.instagram.com/grading.mba/
Ryan Alford, Brian Ludden, and Bella Shafer are back with a wide-ranging conversation on what the hobby feels like right now from inside the business, not just from the outside looking in. This episode covers the headlines everyone sees — multi-million-dollar card sales, product releases, and major market buzz — but it also gets into the friction points hobby businesses are actually dealing with every day. Ryan and Brian talk through sourcing issues, the realities of running without allocation, the strange economics of sealed product, and why the hobby can still feel oddly resilient even when broader consumer pressure is real. What makes this one work is the perspective. Ryan brings the card-shop operator lens, Brian brings the market and product lens, and together they make sense of why collectors keep chasing, why certain price spikes still happen, and where the hobby may be more insulated than outsiders realize. Shop now at onitathlete.com and use code COLLECTORNATION at checkout to receive 15% off your first order! Topics Covered Record-setting Wemby and Ronaldo sales Why sealed product remains hard to source How allocation still shapes the hobby economy The challenge of moving slow product versus hot product Why DealerNet and distribution systems frustrate shops Whether the hobby is truly recession-resistant The psychology of the chase and collector demand Ryan Alford and Brian Ludden on what’s actually happening in the hobby Links Collector Nation https://www.collectibles.show/episodes/ Ryan Alford https://www.ryanalford.com/ https://www.ryanisright.com/ https://www.instagram.com/ryanalford/ Brian Ludden / Ludex https://www.ludex.com/ https://www.instagram.com/ludexapp/ Bella Shafer / Collector Station https://www.instagram.com/isabellashafer/ https://www.thecollectorstation.com/
Ryan Alford sits down with Brian Pirrip for a conversation about design, collecting, and why some of the hobby’s most valuable cards still live in packaging that feels stuck in the past. Brian shares the thinking behind M1NT and the G1 case, what it took to get the product right, and why he believes collectors, athletes, and high-end cards all deserve something more intentional than the same old plastic slab. He also talks about product rollout, showing cases in person, working with Mike Baker, and why the in-hand experience changes how people think about display immediately. Ryan connects with Brian not just on product, but on what makes the hobby healthy long term: better shops, better experiences, stronger design, and a culture that still values collecting over status chasing. This episode is for anyone who cares about where the hobby is headed and what it looks like when someone tries to build something genuinely better inside it. Topics Covered The origin story behind M1NT Why the G1 case exists What collectors notice the second they hold it The role of Mike Baker in the early rollout Why hobby innovation often moves too slowly Brian’s view on grading, Fanatics, and the current state of the hobby Why experience and presentation still matter M1NT’s roadmap, events, and long-term vision Brian Pirrip / M1NT https://m1ntaverse.com/ https://www.instagram.com/brianpirrip/ https://x.com/brianpirrip https://www.facebook.com/BrianPirripOfficial/ Ryan Alford / Collector Nation https://www.thecollectornation https://www.instagram.com/ryanalford/
Ryan Alford and Brian Ludden are back to break down what is really happening beneath the surface of the hobby right now. This episode covers PSA’s reported hiring push, the challenge of maintaining grading quality at scale, the growing speed of new product releases, and how companies like Ludex are trying to keep up with collector demand in real time. Ryan brings the card-shop and operator perspective, Brian brings the product and data perspective, and together they connect the dots between infrastructure, hype, and what collectors are actually dealing with day to day. They also touch on major sales, market signals, and why so much of the hobby is now building toward one thing: The National. It is a good episode for collectors who want more than product hype and are paying attention to how the business side of the hobby is evolving. Topics Covered PSA growth and grading backlog pressure Whether more graders means better or worse outcomes Ludex’s approach to product launches and scan demand The market meaning behind major card sales Why release cadence is getting harder to track How Ryan and Brian think about hobby infrastructure The road to The National and why it matters Links Collector Nation YouTube: youtube.com/@TheCollectorNation Right About Now / Ryan’s main podcast hub: ryanisright.com Collector Station: thecollectorstation.com Collector Station Instagram: instagram.com/thecollectorstation Ludex: ludex.com or Download the LUDEX app
Ryan Alford sits down with Tyler “T-Pott” Nethercott from Sports Card Investor and Market Movers for a deep conversation about what is really happening inside the hobby right now. From collection data and curation to grading inconsistency, price comps, hype cycles, and the limits of “last sale” logic, T-Pott explains why the hobby still has major gaps — and why that also creates huge opportunities for better tools and smarter collectors. He also shares his perspective on Panini, Topps, allocation, hobby growth, and why he still believes we have not even scratched the surface. Ryan brings the operator and marketer mindset, T-Pott brings the pricing and product lens, and together they unpack where the hobby is today — and where it may be headed next. Topics Covered - Sports Card Investor, Market Movers, and hobby software growth - Why pricing tools need to move beyond just comps - The role of discovery and education in card collecting - The real problem with grading culture - Condition vs quality in card valuation - Why allocation and licensing still frustrate collectors - How social awareness and exposure affect card value - Why T-Pott remains bullish on the hobby’s long-term growth Connect with Tyler “T-Pott” Nethercott / Sports Card Investor - Sports Card Investor: sportscardinvestor.com - Market Movers: marketmoversapp.com - CardsHQ: cardshq.com Connect with Ryan Alford - Ryan Alford: ryanalford.com - Right About Now: ryanisright.com Collector Nation / Collector Station - Collector Nation: Thecollectornation.com - Collector Station: thecollectorstation.com
Ryan Alford and Brian Ludden are back to talk about what is actually changing in the hobby — not just on the surface, but underneath it. This episode covers the hobby’s messy pricing reality, the limits of public comps, eBay’s evolving card tools, Beckett’s rebrand, PSA’s huge grading volume, and why old-school collection habits are about to collide with better software. Along the way, Ryan and Brian connect the dots between collector behavior, product design, and the bigger opportunity sitting in collection management and hobby infrastructure. It is part hobby conversation, part business conversation, and part look ahead at the systems that could shape how collectors buy, track, value, and move cards in the years ahead. Topics Covered God Packs and hobby randomness GameStop vs eBay and hobby platform power Why eBay pricing data is useful but still incomplete How off-platform sales distort true market value Beckett’s visual update and what it may foreshadow PSA submission scale and grading consistency questions The shift from notebooks and spreadsheets to smarter collection tools Ryan Alford and Brian Ludden on what collectors will need next
In this episode of Collector Nation, Ryan Alford talks with Jared Kavlie, Founder of Pristine Auction, about the evolution of one of the fastest-growing auction platforms in the collectibles space. Jared shares how the company scaled from a simple idea into a high-volume operation moving thousands of items daily through a unique $1 starting bid model. The discussion explores the rapid growth of live auctions, shifting buyer behavior, and how pricing dynamics are evolving across the hobby. This episode provides a behind-the-scenes look at how auctions, technology, and community are shaping the future of collectibles. 🔑 Topics Covered Pristine Auction origin story Daily vs live auction models Consignment structure and pricing Live auction growth and engagement Market trends in sports cards and collectibles
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Trading Cards & Collectibles Podcast is your front-row seat to the stories, strategy, and live action across the entire collectibles universe as the home for the hobby on the Radcast Network. Cards, kicks, vintage, digital collectibles - if it has a story or a market, we cover it. Hosted by marketing disruptor and creator Ryan Alford, each episode blends real market news, on-air pack rips, honest product reviews, and conversations with athletes, investors, creators, and hobby influencers. We even take it live on eBay, selling what we pull so you can follow the journey from pack to purchase.
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