Podcast appearances and mentions of Josh Adams

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Best podcasts about Josh Adams

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Latest podcast episodes about Josh Adams

Sports Cards Live
The Hobby's Biggest Names Control Everything + Fanatics Premiere Reactions + Modern Card Saturation

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2026 44:03


Jeremy Lee, Joe Poirot, David Chase, Chris McGill, and Josh Adams close out Sports Cards Live with a deep conversation about the modern sports card market, the Fanatics Collect Premiere auction, autograph culture, and whether modern collecting is becoming too concentrated around a handful of superstar athletes. The panel breaks down the dominance of players like Shohei Ohtani, Michael Jordan, LeBron James, Wembanyama, Steph Curry, Tom Brady, and Kobe Bryant in major auctions, while exploring whether modern cards are beginning to feel repetitive compared to vintage and 1990s collecting. Topics include:• Reactions to the Fanatics Premiere auction results• The LeBron James Superfractor auto sale• Why Shohei cards seem to dominate modern auctions• Risk versus stability in current player collecting• The evolution of athlete autographs over time• Why certain players become hobby focal points• Modern card saturation and collector fatigue• Vintage versus modern collecting psychology• Why some collectors prefer retired players and legends The episode also includes discussion about The Hangover on Sports Card Clubhouse, upcoming 90s Auctions, the Hobby Spectrum, and the evolving identity of today's collector market. Subscribe to Sports Cards Live on YouTube for weekly hobby conversations, market discussion, and collector psychology. Take the Hobby Spectrum Assessment and discover your collector archetype:HobbySpectrum.com Get your copy of Pops and Comps on Amazon. Comment below:Do modern card auctions feel exciting to you right now, or are too few players dominating the hobby? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
A New Hobby Grail Revealed… Sort Of + The Psychology of Hype + What Happens When Your Player Gets Hot?

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2026 42:04


Jeremy Lee, Joe Poirot, Chris McGill, Josh Adams, David Chase, and Chris HOJ continue the conversation with a wide-ranging episode covering collector psychology, hidden grails, hobby hype cycles, and the emotional side of chasing cards. The panel discusses what happens when collectors finally identify a true grail card, why some targets are kept secret, and how social media, hype, and market attention can dramatically affect collecting behavior. The conversation also explores the emotional push and pull between passion, greed, scarcity, nostalgia, and fear of missing out. Topics include:• The thrill of identifying a new grail card• Why collectors sometimes hide their targets• Reactions to rising card values and market hype• Vintage versus modern collector psychology• FOMO and hindsight in the hobby• The emotional attachment collectors develop to cards• Why some collectors regret not buying more• The difference between collecting for love versus momentum The episode also features discussion around The Hangover on the Sports Card Clubhouse network, pirate cards, hobby identity, and the evolving ways collectors connect through shared passions and niche interests. Subscribe to Sports Cards Live on YouTube for weekly hobby conversations, market discussion, and collector psychology. Take the Hobby Spectrum Assessment and discover your collector archetype:HobbySpectrum.com Get your copy of Pops and Comps on Amazon. Comment below:Have you ever identified a grail card and intentionally kept it secret from the hobby? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
The Pros and Cons of Sharing Your PC + Building Collector Identity + Protecting Your Targets

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2026 43:11


Jeremy Lee is joined by Jace, Joe Poirot, Chris McGill, Josh Adams, and David Chase for a deep conversation about one of the hobby's most interesting modern dilemmas: should collectors publicly share their want lists and collecting targets? The panel explores the balance between community and competition in today's social media-driven hobby, including the risks and rewards of broadcasting what you collect. The conversation moves through hobby identity, networking, scarcity, collector psychology, and how relationships inside the hobby can help or hurt your ability to land rare cards. Topics include:• The pros and cons of sharing your want list publicly• Building a collector identity online• How social media changes the hunt for cards• Networking versus competition in the hobby• Why some collectors stay private• Collecting rare cards strategically• The emotional side of the chase• The evolution of collecting tastes over time The episode also features thoughtful discussion around hobby culture, authenticity, privacy, and the value of community within collecting. Subscribe to Sports Cards Live on YouTube for weekly hobby conversations, market discussion, and collector psychology. Take the Hobby Spectrum Assessment and discover your collector archetype:HobbySpectrum.com Get your copy of Pops and Comps on Amazon. Comment below:Do you publicly share your want list, or do you keep your targets private? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
Why Collectors Follow Consensus + GOAT Cards vs Contrarian Thinking + Hidden Hobby Opportunities

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2026 54:48


Jeremy, Chris McGill, Joe Poirot, David Chase, and Josh Adams explore: Whether GOAT collecting truly reduces hobby risk Why not all GOAT cards are created equal The difference between hobby relevance and on-court greatness Why Kobe Bryant currently commands enormous hobby attention How consensus shapes hobby demand Whether collectors independently arrive at “GOAT” conclusions or inherit them socially Why cultural influence matters as much as statistics and accolades The conversation becomes increasingly philosophical as Chris McGill breaks down: Groupthink and social consensus in collecting Why iconic cards command premiums How collectors identify hidden value before the broader hobby catches on The concept of “iconic traits without the iconic premium” Why some collectors intentionally search for overlooked cards with elite characteristics Jeremy also reflects on eye appeal, low-grade high-I-appeal cards, contrarian collecting, and the importance of applying hobby concepts to your own lane rather than simply copying others. Later in the episode: Josh Adams discusses owning over 100 copies of the 1990 Leaf Frank Thomas rookie The panel talks about eccentric personal collections and hobby identity Jeremy shares his binder collection of hobby creator cards and custom collectibles Jeremy officially closes the episode by discussing the launch of the new Sports Cards Live Hangover series with the Sports Card Clubhouse crew A fittingly thoughtful and entertaining close to one of the most philosophical Sports Cards Live episodes to date.

Sports Cards Live
Latent Taste Activated + Collecting Psychology Gets Deep + The GOAT Safety Question

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2026 53:31


One of the deepest collector psychology discussions ever featured on Sports Cards Live. Jeremy, Chris McGill, Joe Poirot, David Chase, and Josh Adams continue unpacking the idea of “latent taste” and how collectors discover entirely new lanes over time. The panel explores: Why certain cards suddenly “click” years later How collectors evolve through exposure, research, and experience Whether discovering new collecting lanes is lateral movement or actual growth Why rabbit holes can permanently reshape collector identity The tension between focus and discovery Whether collectors ever truly “arrive” at a final form How collecting tastes mature over time Why some lanes stick while others fade away The conversation expands into philosophy, psychology, music, collecting behavior, and even the emotional architecture behind why collectors chase certain cards. Later in the episode, the panel pivots into another major hobby topic: Does collecting GOATs automatically equal safe collecting? They debate: Whether blue-chip GOAT cards truly protect collectors from risk If financially responsible collecting naturally gravitates toward legends The difference between collecting for enjoyment versus collecting for preservation of capital Why many collectors eventually pivot from prospects toward iconic players Whether “safe collecting” limits hobby excitement and discovery This episode blends hobby philosophy, collector psychology, financial thinking, and pure hobby passion in classic Sports Cards Live fashion.

Sports Cards Live
Should Collectors Give Advice? + Hobby Responsibility + Learning Through Mistakes

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2026 41:24


The final conversation of Episode 311 turns into one of the most thoughtful hobby discussions Sports Cards Live has had in a long time. Chris McGill introduces a deceptively simple question: when is it okay for one collector to give another collector advice? That question opens the door to a deep conversation about hobby influence, responsibility, trust, collecting psychology, financial consequences, relationships, and how collectors actually learn over time. Jeremy, Joe Poirot, David Chase, and Josh Adams explore topics including: The difference between opinions and advice Why unsolicited advice can become dangerous Whether content creators bear responsibility for outcomes “Relationship liability” in the hobby Why some collectors hesitate to answer direct questions The risks of presenting opinions as facts How hobby trust is earned over years Financial advice versus collecting advice Whether mistakes are necessary for growth “Paying tuition” through hobby experience Learning through research versus jumping in immediately Why different collectors approach the hobby differently The tension between caution and opportunity The group also discusses: How collectors build confidence and knowledge Why some people prefer to learn by doing The importance of understanding a player or card “menu” The role of research, community, and experience Why collecting styles are deeply personal How hobby personalities shape collecting behavior Later in the episode: Jeremy previews a future Sports Cards Live episode focused on ticket collecting Discussion about the return of The Crossover Upcoming hobby shows, auctions, and National plans Final thoughts from the panel after another marathon Saturday night episode A reflective and surprisingly philosophical ending to one of the most unique Sports Cards Live episodes to date.

Sports Cards Live
Eye Appeal Grades Coming To PSA? + FIFA Shocks Panini

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2026 36:34


The final hour of Sports Cards Live turns into a wide-ranging hobby roundtable as Jeremy, Joe Poirot, Chris McGill, David Chase, and Josh Adams react to the ancient coin discussion and dive into some of the biggest hobby topics currently shaping the sports card industry. The panel explores whether sports card grading companies like PSA could eventually introduce official eye appeal designations similar to the coin world, and what that might mean for collectors, grading culture, and aftermarket sticker services. Then the conversation shifts into the massive FIFA licensing news involving Fanatics, Topps, and Panini. Topics include: The future of FIFA and World Cup cards Debut patch cards for soccer Why Lamine Yamal World Cup patches could become historic cards Whether Fanatics could eventually acquire Panini The future of Panini's iconic brands like Prizm, National Treasures, and Flawless Whether hobby IP can lose prestige over time Why collectors may eventually become nostalgic for the Panini era How sports history constantly renews demand for sports cards Why sports cards differ from coins, stamps, and other collectibles How active athletes continually reshape hobby relevance and GOAT debates The episode also features: Discussion about the return of The Crossover Why sports card collecting moves faster than almost any other collectible category The relationship between cards, history, pop culture, and legacy The possibility that Fanatics could eventually target hockey licensing Concerns about monopolies, hobby consolidation, and brand dilution A thoughtful and entertaining closing segment that blends hobby philosophy, market discussion, licensing battles, and collector psychology into one long-form conversation.

Sports Cards Live
The Final Verdict on Alteration + Transparency vs Deception + Final Thoughts After 5 Hours

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2026 27:42


After more than five hours, the conversation reaches its natural conclusion—but not before landing on one of the most important themes of the entire episode: transparency. With David Chase, Joe Poirot, Chris McGill, and Josh Adams still engaged, the final stretch brings everything together. The focus shifts from “what is alteration?” to something more practical: What does a buyer actually have the right to know? Are sellers obligated to disclose prior submissions, failed sticker attempts, or past alterations? Or is it on the buyer to ask the right questions? There's also discussion around: The growing role of tracking systems and databases for submissions How uncertainty around “altered” designations creates confusion in the market The difference between innocent handling (like screw-down storage) and intentional modification One of the most grounded takeaways: intent matters—but so does disclosure. Alteration without transparency leads to distrust Transparency changes how the market values a card And in many cases, the issue isn't what was done—it's whether it's being hidden The segment also revisits: Why card collecting treats restoration differently than comics, art, or other collectibles How hobby standards have evolved—and may continue to evolve The importance of personal philosophy in how you collect, buy, and sell And ultimately, the episode ends where it began: with questions, not answers. A marathon session filled with debate, perspective, and real hobby discussion—exactly what Sports Cards Live is all about. Enjoy the show? Follow or subscribe on your podcast platform so you don't miss upcoming episodes. Pick up a copy of Pops & Comps on Amazon to better understand the supply and demand forces driving the sports card market. Take the Hobby Spectrum assessment at HobbySpectrum.com to discover your collector profile, join the directory, and connect with collectors who think and collect like you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
Altered vs Damaged… What's the Difference? + Griffey Controversy + Grading Reality Check

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2026 32:32


This segment pushes the conversation into some of the toughest questions in the hobby—where definitions break down and gray areas take over. With David Chase, Joe Poirot, Chris McGill, and Josh Adams still on the panel, the discussion circles back to eye appeal… but this time through the lens of alteration, intent, and ethics. It starts with a deceptively simple question: Should altered cards ever receive eye appeal stickers? From there, things get complicated quickly: If a card looks amazing but is altered, what are you actually rewarding? Does eye appeal exist independently from originality? Would stickers unintentionally encourage further alteration? Then comes one of the wildest scenarios: A collector intentionally damaging an 1989 Upper Deck Ken Griffey Jr. rookie card to create a PSA 1… because PSA 1s can be rarer and more valuable than mid-grade copies That opens up a deeper conversation: Is intentional damage a form of alteration? Does intent matter more than outcome? Where do we draw the line between natural wear and manufactured condition? The segment also digs into the core purpose of grading: Is grading really about condition… or about trust? Is authentication the most important function? How consistent are grading outcomes, really? And one of the strongest ideas to come out of the discussion:A lot of what we call “alteration” isn't just about the act—it's about whether or not it's disclosed. Would the market behave differently if full transparency existed? Is concealment the real issue, not the alteration itself? This is where the hobby gets uncomfortable—but also where it gets real. A fitting end to a marathon episode that challenged assumptions at every turn. Enjoy the show? Follow or subscribe on your podcast platform so you don't miss upcoming episodes. Pick up a copy of Pops & Comps on Amazon to better understand the supply and demand forces driving the sports card market. Take the Hobby Spectrum assessment at HobbySpectrum.com to discover your collector profile, join the directory, and connect with collectors who think and collect like you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
What's Your Lane Statement? + Eye Appeal Over Rookie Cards + Is Trimming Ever OK?

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2026 28:46


As the marathon continues, the panel—David Chase, Joe Poirot, Chris McGill, and Josh Adams—shifts from theory into something more personal: how you actually define your collecting identity. The conversation introduces a powerful idea: your “lane statement.” How would you describe what you collect in one clear thought? Is it even possible when you collect across multiple lanes? Does defining it help you collect more intentionally? This ties directly into a noticeable shift in philosophy: Moving away from rookie card dependency Prioritizing eye appeal over technical grade Choosing cards based on connection, not checklist From there, the discussion takes a hard turn into one of the most controversial topics in the hobby: Is it ever okay to alter a card? And more specifically: What about hand-cut cards—can they be re-cut? If a card is already altered, does altering it further matter? Does intent change how we judge the action? Where does restoration end and manipulation begin? There's no clean answer—and that's the point. The group works through real scenarios, edge cases, and uncomfortable gray areas, exposing just how complicated this topic actually is when you strip away the easy “never do it” answer. This segment blends identity, evolution, and ethics into one of the most thought-provoking stretches of the entire show. Enjoy the show? Follow or subscribe on your podcast platform so you don't miss upcoming episodes. Pick up a copy of Pops & Comps on Amazon to better understand the supply and demand forces driving the sports card market. Take the Hobby Spectrum assessment at HobbySpectrum.com to discover your collector profile, join the directory, and connect with collectors who think and collect like you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
Taste vs Style vs Lane + Good Taste or Just Agreement? + Hobby Philosophy Deep Dive

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 39:29


The conversation continues to dig deeper as David Chase, Joe Poirot, Chris McGill, and Josh Adams take the idea of “taste” and push it to its limits. What starts as a simple definition quickly unravels into something much more complex: Is taste purely aesthetic… or does it include meaning, rarity, and intent? Can someone actually have “bad taste,” or is everything just subjective? Are we just saying “you have good taste” when someone likes what we like? The discussion introduces new layers: The difference between taste, style, and lane Whether being a “connoisseur” is about expertise… or perception How influence and exposure shape what we think is good There's also a more uncomfortable angle explored: Can two people buy the exact same card… and one be doing it “in good taste” and the other not? Is collecting purely for money a lack of taste? Or is that just another valid lane in the hobby? The panel also gets into real examples: Why some collectors admire off-the-radar cards more than iconic grails How discovery and originality can signal taste more than price The role of content creators in shaping what the hobby sees as desirable And one of the key takeaways that emerges: Taste isn't fixed. It evolves, it's influenced, and sometimes it's revealed only after you actually hold the card in your hands. This is one of the most philosophical segments of the entire show—and one that doesn't try to land on a final answer. Enjoy the show? Follow or subscribe on your podcast platform so you don't miss upcoming episodes. Pick up a copy of Pops & Comps on Amazon to better understand the supply and demand forces driving the sports card market. Take the Hobby Spectrum assessment at HobbySpectrum.com to discover your collector profile, join the directory, and connect with collectors who think and collect like you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
Would You Collect Pirates? + Card Horror Stories + What Is Taste in the Hobby?

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2026 30:07


The conversation movs into some unexpected territory as David Chase, Joe Poirot, Chris McGill, and Josh Adams explore the deeper and sometimes strange psychology behind collecting. It starts with a simple question that turns into something bigger: Would you collect cards of controversial or morally complex figures? That opens the door to discussions around: Separating history from behavior Why some collectors avoid certain players entirely How storytelling and mythology influence what we're drawn to Then comes one of the wildest hobby stories you'll hear: A one-of-one card dropped into a lake during a photo attempt. It sounds funny… until you realize it could happen to anyone. That leads into real talk about: Handling mistakes and damage in the hobby The emotional side of owning cards Why some moments stick with you more than the cards themselves From there, Chris introduces a deceptively simple question: What does “taste” actually mean in collecting? And that takes the conversation into a deeper layer: Is taste just liking what looks good to you? Is it about curation and how your collection comes together? Can someone collect without having taste at all? Or is taste just another way of saying identity? There's also a strong distinction made between: Your lane (what you collect) And your taste (how and why you collect it) Less about the cards themselves, and more about what they represent, how we relate to them, and what they say about us as collectors. Enjoy the show? Follow or subscribe on your podcast platform so you don't miss upcoming episodes. Pick up a copy of Pops & Comps on Amazon to better understand the supply and demand forces driving the sports card market. Take the Hobby Spectrum assessment at HobbySpectrum.com to discover your collector profile, join the directory, and connect with collectors who think and collect like you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
Changing Card History? + Rookie Card Identity Crisis + The Joy of Discovery

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2026 33:46


The conversation rolls on with David Chase, Joe Poirot, Chris McGill, and Josh Adams as the discussion shifts into one of the hobby's most foundational debates. Is it 1948 Leaf… or 1949 Leaf? What starts as a technical question quickly turns into something much bigger: Does the actual release year even matter anymore? What really defines a “rookie card”? If the label changed tomorrow, would collectors actually change how they value the card? The group explores how hobby consensus forms, how it evolves, and whether certain cards are simply too iconic to ever be redefined—regardless of what new research might uncover. From there, the discussion ties back into a deeper theme that runs through this entire segment: meaning in collecting. Do you value what the hobby tells you is important? Or what you discover and connect with yourself? Is finding something on your own more rewarding than being told why it matters? There are also great side discussions around: Player vs card importance (why Jackie outweighs scarcity debates) Why some historically important players were left out of early sets The difference between collecting cards… and understanding them This is one of those segments that reminds you the hobby isn't just about what something is worth—it's about what it means to you, and how you got there. Enjoy the show? Follow or subscribe on your podcast platform so you don't miss upcoming episodes. Pick up a copy of Pops & Comps on Amazon to better understand the supply and demand forces driving the sports card market. Take the Hobby Spectrum assessment at HobbySpectrum.com to discover your collector profile, join the directory, and connect with collectors who think and collect like you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
Sticker Debate Gets Heated + Dealer Reality Check + Deep Hobby Research Stories

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2026 34:06


The crew is back together as David Chase rejoins alongside Joe Poirot, Chris McGill, and Josh Adams for the final stretch of Part 3. This segment turns into a real, unfiltered hobby roundtable. We revisit the sticker debate from earlier in the show, but this time with opposing viewpoints in the room. Is it a useful signal of eye appeal… or just another way for companies to take a cut? The pushback is real, and the discussion gets honest quickly. From there, the conversation shifts into how the market actually works: Do collectors really pay premiums for better-looking cards? Are dealers setting comps… or chasing them? What's actually happening when dealers buy from each other and resell at higher prices? Is any of this new, or just more visible now? Then things take a turn into one of the most underrated parts of the hobby: research. Chris introduces a question that sparks stories from the group: What's something you only learned by doing your own research—and how did it change how you view a card? That leads to: Discoveries about vintage sets and production quirks Why certain cards carry more meaning after deeper digging The kind of knowledge that separates casual collectors from serious ones There's even a surprising nugget about the dating of the iconic 1948/49 Leaf set that opens up a whole new rabbit hole. This is one of those segments that feels like being at a table with experienced collectors just talking it out—no script, just real hobby perspective. Enjoy the show? Follow or subscribe on your podcast platform so you don't miss upcoming episodes. Pick up a copy of Pops & Comps on Amazon to better understand the supply and demand forces driving the sports card market. Take the Hobby Spectrum assessment at HobbySpectrum.com to discover your collector profile, join the directory, and connect with collectors who think and collect like you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
Public Sales vs Private Deals + The Real Market Nobody Sees

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2026 43:41


Chris McGill and Josh Adams join the show as the conversation shifts into a deeper analysis of hobby data, market visibility, and how we interpret the numbers. Using Card Ladder's reported $600 million month as a starting point, the discussion explores what is actually being tracked and, more importantly, what is not. The panel examines the gap between public sales data and private transactions, raising questions about how much of the hobby's true activity is happening off-platform. They also discuss how collectors, investors, and content creators rely on incomplete data to form opinions about market strength and direction. This episode dives into the limitations of hobby data, the unseen layers of the market, and why understanding both is critical to making informed decisions. Subscribe to the podcast and leave a rating or review if you enjoy the show. Get your copy of Pops & Comps on Amazon. Take the Hobby Spectrum assessment and join the directory at HobbySpectrum.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
He Sold Half His Collection for This… + Is the Hobby Way Bigger Than We Think? + Chasing Grails

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2026 36:46


Joe Poirot joins the show as the Strongsville conversation continues, bringing fresh pickups and hobby momentum into the discussion. From trade night stories to major vintage acquisitions, the segment highlights the decisions collectors make when upgrading, selling, and refining their collections. The conversation then transitions into a deeper look at the hobby's scale and trajectory as Chris McGill and Josh Adams join. Topics include Card Ladder's reported $600 million month, what that number actually represents, and how much of the hobby's true transaction volume may exist beyond tracked platforms. This episode blends collector behavior, big card energy, and thoughtful discussion around the size, sustainability, and direction of the sports card market. Subscribe to the podcast and leave a rating or review if you enjoy the show. Get your copy of Pops & Comps on Amazon. Take the Hobby Spectrum assessment and join the directory at HobbySpectrum.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
Good for the Hobby… or Not? + When Cards Become a Spectacle + The Line Between Exposure and Excess

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2026 37:21


Jeremy is joined by Joe Poirot, Josh Adams, and Chris McGill as the conversation turns to one of the most talked about moments in the hobby right now… and a bigger question underneath it all. Is this kind of attention actually good for the hobby… or does it risk taking it in the wrong direction? Using the recent Kevin O'Leary moment as a jumping off point, the group digs into the idea of spectacle versus substance, and whether the hobby needs that kind of exposure to grow… or if it already stands strong on its own. Different viewpoints come through clearly: Whether hype and visibility help bring in new collectors If staged moments create skepticism in a trust-based hobby The difference between showing a card… and turning it into a spectacle Who really represents the hobby to the outside world There's also a deeper layer to the discussion… around ownership, voice, and the idea that while anyone can participate in the hobby, the community still has the right to react, critique, and define what it stands for. This segment closes out the episode by tying together a central tension… exposure versus authenticity, and where each collector lands on that spectrum.

Sports Cards Live
The Hobby Isn't What It Used to Be + A Clash of Perspectives + Where Do You Fit In?

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2026 33:52


Jeremy is joined by Joe Poirot, with Josh Adams and Chris McGill joining the conversation as it opens up into a broader look at the hobby itself… and whether what we're seeing today is evolution, or something else entirely. Different perspectives start to surface around how the hobby has changed over time, with a clear tension between old school approaches and newer ways of collecting. Along the way, the group gets into: How newer collectors are entering and shaping the hobby Whether today's approach is more transactional or more intentional The role of nostalgia versus opportunity How different generations view collecting differently It becomes less about right or wrong… and more about understanding where you fit within it all. This segment zooms out to the bigger picture… the direction of the hobby, and how each collector navigates it in their own way.

Sports Cards Live
The Ultimate Collector Dilemma + Favorites, Value, or Both? + Why No One Agrees

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2026 34:18


Jeremy Lee is joined by Joe Poirot, Chris McGill, and Josh Adams as the final segment brings the conversation full circle, digging into one of the most deceptively difficult exercises in the hobby: ranking your own cards. What starts as a simple question quickly unravels into a deeper discussion around whether “top cards” should be defined by market value, personal preference, nostalgia, or some combination of all three. The panel explores different approaches collectors are using, from value-based rankings to fully subjective lists, and the risks that come with each, including perception, bias, and even accusations of “pumping.” Joe introduces a structured framework with multiple categories including personal, value, nostalgic, and hybrid, while others question whether ranking is even possible when collections span multiple lanes, eras, and emotional connections. The conversation also touches on how comps are formed, why market value can sometimes be shaped by just a couple of transactions, and what it really means to “own” your own opinions in a hobby that leans so heavily on external validation. The episode closes with a mix of insight, humor, and live chat interaction, leaving listeners with a question that doesn't have a clean answer… and that's exactly the point. Subscribe to Sports Cards Live on YouTube and your favorite podcast platform, and if you enjoy the content, please leave a rating and review. Pick up a copy of POPs & COMPs: Truths, Insights & Psychology into the Numbers that Drive the Sports Card Market on Amazon. Explore the Hobby Spectrum and discover your collector profile at thehobbyspectrum.com. And as always, thank you for being part of the community. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
What Is an Advanced Collector… Really? + Value vs Knowledge Debate Continues + Can You Rank Your Own Cards?

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2026 34:23


Jeremy Lee is joined by Joe Poirot, Chris McGill, and Josh Adams as the conversation zeroes in on one deceptively simple question that turns out to be anything but… what actually defines an advanced collector? What begins as a continuation of the earlier discussion quickly sharpens into a multi-layered debate, with input from the panel and the chat helping to shape the definition in real time. Is it knowledge? Experience? Research? Or some combination of all three? Chris introduces a compelling framework, suggesting that an advanced collector should be able to both deliver a concise “elevator pitch” on a card and go deep enough to build a full narrative around it, connecting it to the broader hobby landscape. From there, the group explores how collectors can be highly advanced in one niche while still learning in others, why understanding eye appeal and context matters, and how different eras of the hobby demand different types of expertise. The discussion also branches into how collectors evaluate their own cards, whether ranking by value is a shortcut or a practical tool, and why defining your own criteria might be more important than following anyone else's. This is one of those segments where the hobby turns inward and challenges how we define growth, expertise, and what it really means to “know” what you're collecting. Subscribe to Sports Cards Live on YouTube and your favorite podcast platform, and if you enjoy the content, please leave a rating and review. Pick up a copy of POPs & COMPS: Truths, Insights & Psychology into the Numbers that Drive the Sports Card Market on Amazon. Explore the Hobby Spectrum and discover your collector profile at thehobbyspectrum.com. And as always, thank you for being part of the community. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
Are We Thinking About Cards Backwards? + Defining the Advanced Collector + Value Isn't What You Think

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2026 44:05


Jeremy Lee is joined by David Chase, Jeremy “Texas Snowman” Donson, and Joe Poirot as the conversation takes a more philosophical turn before Chris McGill and Josh Adams join the panel. What starts as a continuation of the value discussion quickly evolves into a much deeper debate around how collectors should actually think about cards. Chris introduces a sharp perspective that flips the typical approach, arguing that value should be the result of understanding a card, not the starting point. That idea opens the door to a broader conversation about what it really means to be an advanced collector. Is it about budget, experience, or something else entirely? The group explores the importance of research, context, and understanding the full landscape of a player or set before making decisions, while also acknowledging that not every collector is at that stage. Along the way, concepts like “own appeal,” long-term holding, and the role of value as both a tool and a distraction are unpacked through multiple lenses. This is one of those segments where the hobby gets broken down at a higher level and forces you to reconsider how you approach collecting. Subscribe to Sports Cards Live on YouTube and your favorite podcast platform, and if you enjoy the content, please leave a rating and review. Pick up a copy of POPs & COMPs: Truths, Insights & Psychology into the Numbers that Drive the Sports Card Market on Amazon. Explore the Hobby Spectrum and discover your collector profile at sportscardslive.com. And as always, thank you for being part of the community. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
If the Hobby Crashes, Then What? + Nostalgia and Long Term Collecting + Are Cards Cool Again?

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2026 31:16


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. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
Are New Collectors Just Chasing Profit? + Social Media's Impact on the Hobby + The Future of the Hobby

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2026 32:24


In this episode, Jeremy Lee continues the conversation with Joey from Hoops Hobby Hangout, David Chase, and Josh Adams for a deeper discussion about what today's hobby is becoming and where it may be headed next. The episode begins with Joey sharing how Hoops Hobby Hangout came together, from early Instagram relationships and shared basketball card interests to building a group focused more on the cards than clout, value chasing, or social media status. It is a thoughtful look at how smaller hobby communities form and why collector-first spaces still matter. From there, the conversation opens up into a bigger debate around the changing nature of collecting itself. Are today's new entrants into the hobby mostly collectors, or are many of them entering through the lens of flipping, growth potential, and short term profit? The group explores how social media, breakers, card shows, and content culture have changed the way younger collectors view cards, and whether the hobby is doing enough to create real long term collectors instead of just feeding a cycle of quick transactions. Jeremy, David, Josh, and Joey also dig into what happens if the market cools in a major way. Would a big drop in card values hurt the hobby, or would true collectors simply keep collecting and see it as an opportunity? It is a wide ranging conversation about hobby cycles, risk tolerance, collector psychology, and the difference between owning cards because you love them versus owning them because you hope someone else will pay more later. If you enjoy hobby conversations that go beyond the surface and wrestle with where collecting is really headed, 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. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Profitable Steward
Ep. 87 Can Regenerative Farming Replace Commodity Agriculture?

The Profitable Steward

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2026 64:16


Send a text In this episode of the Profitable Steward Podcast, I'm joined by Josh Adams of Living Soil Management and returning guest William DeMille for a powerful conversation about the future of regenerative agriculture, commodity farming, and soil health. We talk about the economic pressure facing today's farmers, especially those trapped in large scale, low margin commodity agriculture, and why many are searching for practical solutions that go beyond simply cutting costs. Josh shares how living soil management offers a different path, one built on soil biology, targeted minerals, microbiology, plant diversity, and management systems that work with nature instead of against it. This episode explores how regenerative farming can help producers reduce dependence on synthetic chemicals, improve nutrient density, suppress weed pressure naturally, restore degraded soils, and create opportunities to move from commodity markets into more profitable direct and specialty markets. We also discuss the connection between healthy soil, healthy plants, healthy livestock, and human health, along with the growing consumer demand for cleaner, more nutrient dense food. If you are a farmer, rancher, steward, or agriculture entrepreneur looking for hope, practical insight, and a clearer vision for the future of profitable regenerative agriculture, this conversation is for you. Jump over to YouTube to catch the video of this and all podcast episodes.https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLpLUbiwmZtkszQAjdtlO8ZQiJjgrYGr1x

Sports Cards Live
Card Capital and Tough Choices + Consolidation Risk + Collector Regret

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2026 40:48


The conversation begins with a deeper look at selling in the hobby and whether there is still a negative stigma around trying to maximize returns, flipping cards, or moving inventory strategically. Jeremy, Joe, Greg, and Jason talk through the difference between ethical selling and short-term opportunism, the role of dealers and flippers in the ecosystem, and why so many collectors still have conflicted feelings about money, pricing, and reputation in the hobby. From there, the show shifts as Jason exits and Josh Adams and Chris McGill join the conversation. Chris returns from the injured reserve list and immediately gets into the aftermath of the Michael Jordan 1 of 1 auction that had captured so much attention. Rather than just revisiting the final price, the group explores the bigger question: why didn't Chris buy the card, and what did he learn from going through that process so deeply? That leads into one of the most insightful parts of the segment, as Chris reflects on the value proposition, the research, the emotional pull of a grail, and the reality of deciding what cards would have to go in order to make room for one massive acquisition. Jeremy, Joe, and Josh all weigh in on consolidation, regret, collecting discipline, and the psychological cost of moving deliberate, carefully chosen cards out of a collection for one apex piece. The result is a thoughtful discussion on what it means to go all in, when it makes sense to tap out, and how collectors should think about major decisions when a once-in-a-lifetime card comes to market. The segment also touches on the difference between rooting for a grail pursuit and believing it is truly the right move. If you enjoy thoughtful hobby conversation, real collector perspective, and live stream energy carried over into podcast form, make sure to subscribe to Sports Cards Live across your podcast platform of choice, follow the show on YouTube, and share this episode with another collector. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Stacking Slabs
'90s Demand Is Different: Josh Adams on PMGs, Patience, and Playing the Long Game

Stacking Slabs

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2026 44:06


What is really happening in the '90s category right now?Josh Adams from 90s Auctions joins me to break it down. We talk about healthy growth, why some grails spike and then cool off, and what collectors misunderstand when they look at big comps in isolation.We unpack the recent 1998 Metal Universe Peyton Manning PMG sale and why the PSA 8 brought $24K while BGS copies trailed far behind. Is it a PSA premium? Timing? Platform? Or something deeper about collector cards versus commodity cards?Josh shares how he thinks about patience, consolidation, and why he stops checking comps once a card hits his PC. We also walk through key pieces from his collection, including a 1998 PMG Frank Thomas, 1997 Diamond Dimensions Jordan, and a 1997 Essential Credentials Future Jordan he consolidated heavily to land.If you care about scarcity, availability, and building a collection that lasts, this one is for you.Check out PSA Vault's Spotlight AuctionFollow Andy (@byebyebabycards)Get your free copy of Collecting For Keeps: Finding Meaning In A Hobby Built On HypeStart your 7 day free trial of Stacking Slabs Patreon Today[Distributed on Sunday] Sign up for the Stacking Slabs Weekly Rip Newsletter using this linkFollow Stacking Slabs: | Twitter | Instagram | Facebook | Tiktok ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

Sports Cards Live
Why We Care About Cards + Predicting What Becomes Iconic + Rookie Logos on Inserts?

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2026 47:41


Part 4 shifts from “what annoys us” to the deeper stuff: what becomes iconic, what makes us anxious, and what actually fires us up as collectors. Chris McGill lays out what might be the biggest collector question of the next decade: you can't reliably predict which cards will transcend their peers, but you can study how it happens. His take is that a card needs to hit the “main stage” of the hobby consciousness. People need to see it, compare it, and give it time for lineage and tradition to develop. He uses Nikola Jokic as an example, contrasting staple products with one season “one offs” like Clear Vision. Then he goes even further: what if the next wave is driven by collectors chasing obscurities and “forgotten artifacts” because everyone keeps posting the same cards? Josh Adams agrees prediction is brutal and adds a personal angle from the 1990s. Sometimes your collecting tastes are shaped by what your local shop actually had, and those experiences stick. From the chat and the panel: unpriced cards at shows are still a top annoyance whether the rookie card logo belongs on inserts why some collectors accept rookie year cards as meaningful even if they are not base rookies sticker autos vs on card autos, and how scarcity of options can force exceptions redemptions, and how Upper Deck says they have cut them down significantly Then Chris tosses a great question: what is your biggest source of hobby anxiety? Shipping cards, traveling with cards, auctions, and that final 10 seconds of bidding all come up. The chat adds more: postal delays, collection value swings, and fear that the hobby gets mistreated by people who do not love it. We also get a quick prospect moment: Josh asks about Oliver Moore, and Jason explains how inclusion can depend on debut timing and autograph deals. Finally, Chris flips the script to the opposite of anxiety: what actually gets your hobby juices flowing? For Jason it's new product concepts and the rush to get them to market. For Josh it's the hunt and finally landing the card you've been chasing. For Jeremy it's discovery, aesthetics, and going down rabbit holes on platforms like COMC, plus the real physical “butterflies” reaction a card can create. This is one of those segments that explains why we do this in the first place. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
Top 5 Hobby Annoyances + Breaker Card Handling + Why “Best Card” Is a Trap

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2026 41:28


Part 3 is where the panel expands. Chris McGill from Card Ladder and hobby lawyer Josh Adams jump in with Jason Masherah, and we get into the kind of hobby conversation everyone relates to: the stuff that drives collectors nuts. We start with the “Top 5 hobby annoyances” trend (with a hat tip to Sports Illustrated) and then Jason adds a couple of his own. His first one is simple and needed: online hobby spaces don't give enough grace to legitimate newbie questions, and that pushes people away when we're supposedly trying to grow the hobby. Josh's first annoyance is an instant classic: sellers posting “taking offers” instead of putting a price on the card. Same energy as unpriced cards at shows. Save everybody time. Chris goes two directions: a funny shot at Rodman's unreal collecting instincts a real point that matters: people throw around “best card” like it means something objective, when “best” could mean highest grade, highest sale, rarest, or just someone's personal taste. If you don't define “best,” you're not saying anything. Then we hit a breaker rant that needed to happen: handle cards properly. Stop touching the face of chrome cards. Hold by the edges. Sleeve them like you actually care. We also talk grading backlogs and why “just hire more graders” is lazy thinking if you also want grading accuracy. Jason brings it back to collecting, and highlights a reward system a lot of people still don't know exists: the Upper Deck Bounty program, where completing certain coded sets earns achievement cards. It's a real way to reward set builders and collectors, not just hype and flipping. From the chat, we dig into: the toxicity and flex culture on Instagram and why curating your feed is work the “calling cards trash” issue and why it's actually disrespecting the person, not just the cardboard “low pop” being thrown around like a magic spell fake slabs, and why eBay authentication exists in the first place We also take a detour into ugly card designs, nostalgia, and how opinions change over time. Then we land on a point that ties back to your world: predicting what becomes iconic is way harder than people pretend. Some products that didn't sell at all when they released later become staples, and sometimes a whole category flips from “nobody wants this” to “everyone needs this.” Subscribe and leave a review if you want more long-form hobby conversations. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
PSA 10 as a Financial Instrument + Nuking a Collection for a Grail? + Inclusion, Identity, and the Hobby Grind

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2026 38:17


We wrap Jonathan's debut, run through some of the best chat comments from the “house of slabs” discussion, and one line stops the show: “A PSA 10 transforms a sports card into a financial instrument.” From there, the conversation sharpens into what grading really does, how speed impacts accuracy, and why some collectors are starting to sober up from slab worship. Jonathan gets a proper community welcome and we bring on Chris HOJ, followed by Josh Adams. Then the episode pivots hard into a collector dilemma that hits every nerve in the hobby: a major Michael Jordan 90s 1 of 1 is headed to auction, and Chris is considering a seismic consolidation to chase it. We debate what you gain, what you lose, and whether “nuking” a carefully curated collection is ever worth one apex card. Jeremy argues the memories, stories, and future content pipeline matter more than the trophy. Josh says do it and never look back. Joe lands in the middle: the 1 of 1 stamp matters, it's probably financially defensible, but you still need a number and a plan because deeper pockets exist. Chris explains the real point of talking it out: dialogue changes how you see everything, and collectors make versions of this decision every day, including the decision to do nothing. In this part, we cover: The chat's best lines on grading, consistency, and “too big to fail” thinking “PSA 10 as a financial instrument” and why that framing is so accurate Jonathan's official welcome into the community Chris HOJ and Josh Adams join, and the MJ 1 of 1 auction dilemma kicks off One card vs a whole collection, and what “replaceable” really means Consolidation as sacrifice, strategy, and identity, not just money Why talking it out changes decisions, and why inaction is still a decision Follow Sports Cards Live on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen Subscribe to Sports Cards Live on YouTube for full episodes and live shows Leave a rating and review to help more collectors find the show Drop a comment: would you consolidate your collection for one apex grail, or never? Follow @jlee_sportscardslive on Instagram for clips and updates Take the Hobby Spectrum assessment and request your access code at TheHobbySpectrum.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
Card Shows by the Numbers + The Value of Hobby Friendships + Who Really “Owns” a Player's Legacy

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2026 45:21


Chris HOJ and Josh Adams join Jeremy for a loose but surprisingly revealing roundtable that starts with NFL playoff energy and quickly turns into real hobby discussion. The group digs into what actually makes a card show worth attending, how many tables matter, and why inventory quality almost always beats raw table count. They also talk honestly about travel costs, expectations, and how card shows have shifted from pure buying trips into social and relationship driven hobby experiences. From there, the conversation pivots into one of the most relatable collector debates out there: when a player changes teams, which uniform do they truly belong to? Using examples like Christian McCaffrey, Reggie Jackson, Michael Jordan, Ohtani, Gretzky, Nolan Ryan, and more, the panel explores how moments, championships, market size, hometown ties, and personal collecting boundaries shape how each collector answers that question differently. The discussion naturally spills into collecting behavior itself, including team collecting versus player collecting, why some collectors restrict uniforms to stay focused, when exceptions make sense, and how iconic moments often outweigh years played. The chat explodes with examples, disagreements, and edge cases, proving just how personal and subjective this topic really is. This segment is equal parts hobby philosophy, collector psychology, and pure Sports Cards Live banter, with strong audience participation and no single “right” answer, just thoughtful perspectives from every angle. Listen on Apple Podcasts and Spotify, and join us live Saturday nights on YouTube for Sports Cards Live. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
The Day PSA Bought Beckett: Market Control, IPOs, and Fallout

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2025 38:18


(As there was no livestrewam on Saturday December 27, this weeks podcasts will be from the previously unreleased emergency episode we recorded on December 15, the day the Beckett acquisition was announced, before the letter was written from congressman Patrick Ryan to the FTC to look into the competitive power of Collectors Holdings.) In this emergency episode of Sports Cards Live, we react in real time to one of the biggest hobby developments of the year: PSA has acquired Beckett. Joined by Graig Miller (Midlife Cards), Ari, Josh Adams, and Mike Petty, the conversation quickly turns intense as we break down what this acquisition could actually mean for collectors, graders, and the future of the hobby. Topics covered in Part 1 include: Why almost nobody wanted PSA to be the buyer Whether this was about grading, talent, or pure market control The Fanatics factor and why keeping Beckett away mattered Lessons learned from the SGC acquisition Monopoly concerns and antitrust realities IPO speculation and why investor optics may matter more than collectors Who this deal actually helps, and who it doesn't This is raw, unfiltered reaction from people who have lived through multiple hobby cycles and aren't buying the corporate spin. Part 1 sets the table. The temperature only rises from here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
Hobby Reality vs Social Media Noise + Where the Real Collectors Are + Finding New Joy in Collecting

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2025 43:41


The conversation continues with a wide ranging conversation that starts in Los Angeles and ends at the core of what the hobby really looks like. Ryan Veres shares his view on the Lakers market, LeBron's long term place in LA after retirement, and why Luka in a Lakers uniform has instantly reshaped demand. The discussion highlights how superstar legacies evolve locally and why LeBron's appeal goes far beyond one franchise. From there, the show pivots into a deeper conversation about hobby perception versus reality. Jeremy, Josh Adams, Joe Poirot, and Leighton Sheldon unpack the idea that “everyone is a flipper” and why that narrative simply does not hold up. Real world examples from card shows, shops, and personal collections point to a much quieter majority of collectors who buy for nostalgia, personal meaning, and long term enjoyment, often spending modest amounts and never posting online. The group digs into how social media distorts what we think the hobby is, why big money cards dominate feeds while everyday collectors stay invisible, and how platforms like Instagram and YouTube shape different versions of reality. They also discuss consolidation trends, why the same handful of vintage cards appear everywhere, and how many collectors are deliberately moving off the beaten path into second year cards, oddballs, sets, and under the radar material. The episode closes with reflections on collecting purely for joy. Stories of collectors building stacks from $5 to $50 boxes, discovering new personal collecting lanes late in life, and even shopping your own inventory underline a simple truth: there are endless ways to collect, and most of them have nothing to do with flipping, flexing, or chasing approval. Sports Cards Live streams every Saturday night on YouTube, and the chat is part of the show. Jump in live with your questions, takes, and debates. If you are watching on YouTube, subscribe and hit the notification bell so you never miss a stream. If you are listening on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, follow the show and leave a rating and review. It helps more than you think. And if you enjoyed this episode, share it with a hobby friend who will appreciate the conversation. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
Behind the Hobby Spectrum Launch + PSA's Buyer Program Questions

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2025 44:01


Josh Adams joins Jeremy and Joe to close out the night and reflect on the first public reveal of the Hobby Spectrum project. The chat reacts in real time, asking about access keys, badges, the directory, archetype blends, the science behind the scoring system, and how collectors will eventually share and connect based on their profiles. Jeremy explains how early access works, why the waiting list is open, and how testers so far have responded to their archetype results. Joe shares what it was like to take the assessment, including how tough some questions can be when they force real self reflection. The conversation turns to how the directory will function, why opt in privacy matters, and how this tool can help collectors find people who think and collect the same way. From there, the group moves into wider hobby issues. Josh presses Jeremy about the PSA 9 to 10 controversy and the idea of reevaluation without new cert numbers. They talk through what makes the story suspicious, what is known so far, and where transparency is still missing. They also connect the dots between PSA Vault offers, approved buyers, repackers, and the structural opacity around who is actually placing bids and offers. The chat then raises the question of legal exposure for Upper Deck after the Gretzky Exquisite Tribute Cup card surfaced with a smudged autograph and a completely different patch than the solicitation image. Jeremy and Josh walk through the legal reality versus the ethical reality, why mockups give companies cover, and why the right move would still be to replace the card to protect the brand. The episode winds down with talk of auctions, employee bidding, the collector experience at shows, and a bit of football before Jeremy closes the night with gratitude for everyone who has helped bring the Hobby Spectrum to life. Follow or subscribe, leave a rating and review if you enjoy the show, and join us Saturday nights on YouTube for the live conversation. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
Gambling Debate + What A Better Hobby Culture Looks Like + Bankrupt On Wax

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2025 46:08


The conversation moves from Card Ladder and comps into a bigger, uncomfortable question: is opening modern product basically gambling, and what kind of culture do we actually want in the hobby going forward? Jeremy, Chris McGill (HoJ), and Josh Adams dig into group breaks, pack odds, “hits,” and the reality that some collectors have gone bankrupt chasing boxes. They balance that against the fun and nostalgia of ripping with kids, Tim Hortons packs, and building sets the way many of us did in the 80s and 90s. Along the way they tackle advertising, culture, and where the hobby goes next. Topics in this segment include: • PSA upcharges, comps, and why some people think PSA should have to buy your card at the value they assign• Arena Club criticism, “where collecting begins” marketing, and whether repack-centric products are aimed more at gamblers than collectors• Is opening any sealed product gambling, or does it depend on intent, price point, and expected return?• Pack odds, box price vs expected value, and why the emotional hit of losing on wax feels exactly like losing at the casino for some people• Breakers, gamblers, and the argument that the hobby “needs” high-volume product rippers to create singles for everyone else• Direct-to-consumer vs LCS distribution and whether cards should always come from packs or could one day go straight to auction• Getting more women in the hobby and how to treat everyone at shows as collectors first• What kind of culture shift the hobby actually needs: less divisiveness, more mutual understanding, more integrity from individuals and institutions, and less “my way is the only right way”• Leadership, voting with your wallet, and why content and conversations matter in shaping where the hobby goes next Sports Cards Live streams live on YouTube every Saturday night, and this audio comes from that live video show. If you enjoy the podcast, please follow, subscribe, and leave a rating and review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, and check out the full video replays on the Sports Cards Live YouTube channel. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
Beckett Conflict Questions + “Where Collecting Begins” Claims by Arena Club + Card Ladder Value Myths

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2025 48:42


IN this installment of SCL the conversation turns to conflicts of interest, price guides, and how the hobby leans on data. Jeremy, Chris McGill (HoJ), and Josh Adams unpack a pointed question about Beckett running both a price guide and a grading company, and whether that structure was ever as conflicted as people now claim it to be. From there, they move into how PSA uses Card Ladder as one data source, what Card Ladder Value actually is, and why no single comp should ever be treated as “the” price of a card. Topics in this segment include: • Beckett's price guide plus grading model and whether the real concern is what would happen if someone launched that structure today• How conflicts exist everywhere in business and why safeguards and transparency matter more than pretending they do not• Chris's breakdown of Card Ladder Value, confidence levels, and why different sales of the same card can show different CL values• Dan's Gene Hackman one-of-one example and why getting a “good buy” can make algorithmic estimates look off• The problem with overreliance on comps and why the hobby is nothing like an efficient stock market• How shill bidding, thin markets, and buyer ignorance can distort individual sales• Josh's card show story about sellers who freeze when there is no recent comp and what real critical thinking should look like• Arena Club's “where collecting begins” slogan and a candid debate on repacks, gambling, and what collecting actually is• Whether Card Ladder is a price guide or simply a historical data tool that PSA and others use for due diligence Sports Cards Live streams live on YouTube every Saturday night, and this audio comes from that live video show. If you enjoy the podcast, please follow, subscribe, and leave a rating and review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, and check out the full video replays on the Sports Cards Live YouTube channel. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
How To Share Pickups Without Pumping + Autograph Grades + Legibility Debates + What PSA 10 Really Means

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2025 44:21


Episode 291 continues with Jeremy Lee, Chris McGill (HoJ), Leighton Sheldon, Joe Poirot, and Josh Adams dig into two big threads: what autograph grades actually mean and how to tell real stories about your cards on social media without slipping into pump mode. They start with whether a PSA 10 autograph should factor in legibility, contrast, and visibility, then pivot into how collectors can write posts that go beyond “look what I got” and actually teach, connect, and document why a card matters. Topics in this segment include: • What grading companies might be grading on autograph labels: legibility, placement, contrast, or just ink quality• Why some collectors refuse autos they cannot read or see clearly, no matter what the label says• Using objective facts (print runs, set history, parallel structure) to balance out personal hype in card posts• Jeremy's approach to pickup posts: why he wanted the card, how it fits his collection, and giving credit to the source• Leighton's framework for when a pickup deserves a story and why provenance, history, and feelings matter• How to share genuine excitement about a card without coming across as a pumper• Joe's behind the scenes perspective from writing auction house descriptions and trying to add value without empty sales fluff• Why posts that explain “why this matters to me” stand out more than pure flex shots• Josh's Ice Bowl ticket win as a quick case study in concise, memorable storytelling Sports Cards Live streams live on YouTube every Saturday night, and this audio comes from that live video show. If you enjoy the podcast, please follow, subscribe, and leave a rating and review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, and check out the full video replays on the Sports Cards Live YouTube channel. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
Panini vs Fanatics Escalates + Million Dollar Card Disputes + Genericide Risk

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2025 48:19


Sports Cards Live 290 keeps rolling as hobby attorney Paul Lesko sticks around and is joined by Chris McGill and Josh Adams from Card Ladder to unpack more of the biggest legal battles shaping the hobby. In this segment they hit: Panini vs Fanatics antitrust Wild Card vs Panini antitrust BCW vs Ultra Pro over “penny sleeve” and “top loader” trademarks LeBron RPA / Goldin / Card Porn business disparagement dispute Messi Green Kaboom one of one broken contract case Collectable fractional fallout and investor information rights Shill bidding, specific performance, and how courts might treat unique grails Sponsor notes:  Go to ⁠hellofresh.com/cards10fm⁠ to get 10 free meals plus free breakfast for life, one per box.

Sports Cards Live
How Much Shill Is Baked Into COMPs? + New School Pushback + What Buyers Should Demand

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2025 42:13


Dan the Card Lawyer and Josh Adams from 90s Auctions join us to keep pulling back the curtain on shill bidding, reserves, and how auction houses really work behind the scenes. We look at where “accepted hobby practice” ends and fraud begins, why some newer hobby-first auction houses are drawing hard lines, and how much shill is quietly baked into the prices we all rely on. We also touch on eBay authentication horror stories, stolen mail, and whether it is even possible to collect without being touched by any of this. Highlights include: A criminal defense lawyer's perspective on shill bidding, fraud, and why some practices cross the line An auction owner explaining why 90s Auctions walked away from reserves and house bidding How guarantees, reserves, and “system bids” can warp prices long before you place your max bid The uncomfortable question of how much shill is baked into almost every COMP in the hobby Your comments drive the show, so bring your questions and experiences to the live chat. If you find value in this conversation, please hit like, subscribe to Sports Cards Live, and share the episode with another collector who needs to hear it. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Nuus
Eddie Jones vra optrede teen 'belaglike' rooikaarte

Nuus

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2025 0:18


Rugby: Japan se hoofafrigter, Eddie Jones, het Wêreldrugby se huidige dissiplinêre raamwerk gekritiseer ná sy span se naelskraapse nederlaag van 24-23 teen Wallis in Cardiff. Drie Japanese spelers het geelkaarte gekry, terwyl die Walliese vleuel, Josh Adams, se geelkaart verander is na 'n rooie weens gevaarlike spel. Jones beskryf ook die Springbok-slot Franco Mostert se rooikaart vir 'n gevaarlike duikslag op Italië se losskakel, Paolo Garbisi, as belaglik:

Sports Cards Live
Expo Recap: PC Buyers, Big Pickups & One Awkward Return

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2025 59:24


Jeremy Lee and Sam Genova sit down with their Expo booth crew to decompress from what might have been the best Toronto Sport Card Expo they've ever had. From Tim Hortons in the morning to the late-night hangs, and the 35 hours of show floor action over 4 four straight days at a new booth location that turned into one of the busiest rows in the building. Joined by longtime hobby friends Jay Z, Daniel, and Josh Adams, the group talks about how this Expo felt different: packed aisles from open to close, real collectors buying for their PCs, and a hobby that looks very healthy north of the border. Jeremy shares that he did roughly 120 deals at the show, and the guys compare notes on how Sunday felt more like a second Saturday than a wind-down day. Sam also opens up about a tough situation at the booth: a high-end card sale that a buyer tried to reverse after the fact. The panel walks through what happened, the “all sales are final” norm vs. the human side of the hobby, and why Sam ultimately chose to take the high road and undo the deal. They wrap Part 1 by showing and describing some of their favorite pickups from the weekend — from McDavid, Crosby, Forsberg, and Lemieux to Hank Aaron, Phil Rizzuto, Babe Ruth, and some pristine 80s Oilers rookies — and why the booth felt more like a clubhouse than a table. This is Part 1 of 2 from the live BoothMates Expo recap. Part 2 drops tomorrow with the stories, pickups, and hobby talk from the Toronto floor. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Rugby Pod
#8 England's New Bomb Squad, Josh Adams on Welsh Revival, and Ireland Controversy in Chicago

The Rugby Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2025 79:12


This week on The Pod, Jim, Goodey, Bigs dive into a massive opening weekend of the Quilter Nations Series — red cards, redemptions, and peroxide-blond hair. England made it eight wins on the bounce with a dominant bench-inspired victory over Australia, with Borthwick building his own “Bomb Squad.” Ireland meanwhile, were left reeling after a controversial red card and second-half collapse against the All Blacks in Chicago, while Scotland and South Africa both flexed with huge wins over the USA and Japan respectively. Plus, Wales and Lions winger Josh Adams joins the show to chat about life in camp, the mood under Steve Tandy, and where Wales are going into some massive games with World Cup qualification implictions. Plenty of laughs this week as the lads are on great form after their US trip. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
PSA's Business Model Exposed: Upcharges, Insurance, and Guarantees—Collectors Fire Back + “Buy the Card, Not the Slab” Rant

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2025 47:32


Community crossfire with Chris McGill & Josh Adams. Joe signs off and we sprint through 70+ starred comments: Is PSA's upcharge model fair capitalism or a predatory practice? Would a flat-fee grading tier solve the rage (and reduce cheap slabs)? Who actually benefits from the PSA guarantee—and why doesn't the submitter get it? We dig into Nat Turner's pre-ownership take vs today, authenticity vs condition guarantees, and the collector vs flipper divide. Jeremy also shares a real $6,000 guarantee payout story—and the designer-clothes analogy for why slabs drive value even though the card hasn't changed. Highlights Flat-fee grading idea: demand control, less plastic, fewer low-value slabs Free market lens vs “predatory” framing—who's choosing to pay? Guarantee realities: per-card and lifetime caps, submitter exclusion “Buy the card, not the slab” vs registry/set-building culture Do changing standards make old grades obsolete? Expiring-grade thought experiment Collector feedback as a feature, not a bug—why companies should listen Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Contacts
Journey and Insights: Josh Adams' Path from Coach to Athletic Director

Contacts

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2025 56:16


In this episode of the Contacts Coaching Podcast, Josh Adams, the Athletic Director at Gilroy High School, discusses his extensive journey in sports starting from humble beginnings. Adams shares experiences from his background in high school sports, coaching youth wrestling, and various administrative roles in different districts. He highlights his progression from volunteering to becoming a head coach, and eventually an Athletic Director. Adams delves into the challenges he faced, the importance of adapting to different school environments, and the lessons learned along the way. He underscores the value of clear communication, commitment, and multi-sport participation. Additionally, Adams reflects on the importance of understanding unique community needs and fostering relationships among students, parents, and administrators. This episode is a rich resource for current and aspiring coaches and athletic directors seeking comprehensive insight into effective athletic program management.00:00 Introduction and Guest Welcome00:16 Josh Adams' Early Coaching Journey01:12 High School and College Experiences02:04 Coaching Successes and Challenges05:15 Transition to Administrative Roles09:14 Differences in Athletic Programs12:19 Insights on Coaching and Administration15:36 Comparing Different Sections and Their Impact22:19 Setting Expectations and Team Branding26:19 Balancing Multi-Sport Participation29:42 Learning from Other Sports and Coaches33:42 Adapting to New Environments and Challenges39:25 Reflecting on Changes and Growth46:29 Advice for New Athletic Directors

Harbor Church Podcast
From Death to Life — God's Grace at Work - Pastor Josh Adams

Harbor Church Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2025 55:10


What does it really mean to go from death to life? In this message from Ephesians 2, we are unpacking our condition without Christ, God's powerful intervention through grace, and the new identity and unity we receive through Jesus. If you've ever questioned your worth, your purpose, or your place in God's family, this message is for you.If you'd like to follow along as we read Ephesians together, text “BIBLE” to 508-500-6656. You'll get a daily text with that morning's specific verses!If you're new to Harbor or want to get connected in any way click this link to get your New Here gift, find upcoming events or get involved!https://harborchurch.com/connect

Sports Cards Live
Antitrust Clouds, LCS Squeeze, and Eulogizing the Panini Era - Can Topps Replace NT & Flawless?

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2025 33:13


Chris McGill and Josh Adams join Jeremy to unpack the post-Adam Martin discussion and press into the biggest questions of the moment: Can Topps/Fanatics instantly stand up high-end basketball brands to replace National Treasures/Flawless/Immaculate, or are we headed for high-end uncertainty in a truly new basketball card era? They get into allocations, LCS margins, breaker dynamics, and whether live platforms tilt the field. The trio “eulogizes” the Panini era—gold /10, black 1/1s, shields/logomen, and the rise of case hits (Kaboom, Downtown, Color Blast)—and asks if we're ready for “kabooms without logos.” On the legal front, Josh flags potential antitrust and injunction scenarios, why timelines drag, and how outcomes could reshape competition. Plus: a shout-out to Dave & Adam's for surfacing early MJ 1/1s (and how one just resurfaced on Fanatics Collect). Smart, candid hobby talk with real implications for collectors, shops, and breakers. Recorded live Sept 20, 2025 Sponsor Note:  Go to ⁠⁠⁠hellofresh.com/cards10fm⁠⁠⁠ now to get 10 free meals plus a free item for life, one per box with active subscription free meals applied as a discount on the first box. New subscribers only, and it varies by plan. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
Cracking a PSA 10 Gretzky $1M+ Topps RC + Calling the Peak of the Market + Supply Surging

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2025 36:25


We close out with Chris HOJ and Josh Adams and dig into hobby risk and reward. We revisit the Gretzky vs Messi debate, then unpack PSA's guarantee caps and what happens when a pop two becomes a pop one after an autograph. We talk through why someone might crack a seven-figure Gretzky, the record price for an autographed rookie, and whether you would rather have a 10 holder or a 9 with a 10 auto. Chris shares two telling charts on Fanatics Collect Premier: trading card lots climbing from ~120 early in the year to ~400 this month. We consider post-National consignment waves, private deals moving to public auctions, and simple supply and demand. Josh recaps his 90s auction, explains smart consolidation into a grail, and we each answer whether the current surge makes us sell or hold. We finish on whether a modern card holding the all-time record feels right, and why some vintage pieces may still be more valuable even without a recent public sale. Recorded: September 13, 2025 Sponsor Note:  Go to ⁠hellofresh.com/cards10fm⁠ now to get 10 free meals plus a free item for life, one per box with active subscription free meals applied as a discount on the first box. New subscribers only, and it varies by plan. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Sports Cards Live
Pop Counts + Playing Days + The MJ Insert Dilemma + Messi vs Gretzky

Sports Cards Live

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2025 38:31


We continue with Graig Miller and Leighton Sheldon, then bring on Chris HOJ and Josh Adams before Graig and Leighton sign off. Leighton puts a real-world choice to the panel: 1992 Upper Deck Michael Jordan 15,000 Point Club PSA 10 around a thousand, or 1993 Ultra Power in the Key PSA 9 around thirteen hundred. We walk through a clean decision framework that weighs playing-days status, design appeal, pop counts, grade premiums, and how much future value should matter when you are buying for joy. Josh casts his vote for the 15,000 Point Club, and Chris explains why earlier inserts and lower pops can be decisive. We close with a market gut check using Messi's surging Megacracks PSA 10 and a Gretzky comparison. Chris lays out recent public private sales, pops, and why skepticism can be healthy when prices sprint. We also touch on league scale, cultural pull, and what “GOAT” means when you try to price it. Highlights A practical head-to-head: MJ 15,000 Point Club PSA 10 vs Power in the Key PSA 9 How to break ties: playing days, aesthetics, pop reports, and budget discipline Chat perspectives on collecting for love vs future value Messi Megacracks PSA 10 run, pop context, and why to sanity-check bull markets Gretzky as a useful comp when defining GOAT and market depth Segment ends with Jeremy, Chris, and Josh Recorded: Saturday, September 13, 2025 Sponsor Note:  Go to ⁠hellofresh.com/cards10fm⁠ now to get 10 free meals plus a free item for life, one per box with active subscription free meals applied as a discount on the first box. New subscribers only, and it varies by plan. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Rockharbor Church  -  www.rockharbor.tv
Episode 480: What Matters Most

Rockharbor Church - www.rockharbor.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2025 36:46


Servant King Series | August 24th, 2025 | Josh Adams

The Shallow End
Failing Up #12 of 18: The DiMaggios that Refuse to Leave

The Shallow End

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2025 14:10


Today we welcome to the program Josh Adams, @MidwestVintageCards on IG and one of the driving forces behind the 90s Auctions platform. Many years ago, nearly two decades, Josh said he had a great plan to make some money in the hobby. He's here today with a warning for all of us: Not all plans … work out.The Shallow End is hosted by Dave Schwartz @Iowa_Dave_Sportscards

Harbor Church Podcast
Discerning vs. Deciphering: Finding Peace in God's Will - Pastor Josh Adams

Harbor Church Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2025 49:58


We often treat God's will like a puzzle we're meant to solve: searching for signs, trying to crack the code, and getting frustrated when life doesn't make sense. But what if His will isn't meant to be deciphered at all? In our last week of Mind Games, we're looking at how God's will is sovereign, moral, and deeply personal, and why it's discovered not through control, but through humble surrender. If you're new to Harbor or want to get connected in any way click this link to get your New Here gift, find upcoming events or get involved!https://harborchurch.com/connect