Going Down Memory Lane: Weekday Afternoon Cartoons and Trading Cards (Upper Deck Buying Out Topps?)
Today’s blog will take me on a trip down Memory Lane. Pardon me if I get a bit emotional *sniff*.
- (from Krunk) Here’s CRACKED.com’s list of 15 (Painfully) Unforgettable Cartoon Theme Songs. My thoughts on this list:
- Haha, I completely forgot that Steven Spielberg is the genius behind Tiny Toon Adventures and Animaniacs. I may be in the minority here, but I actually liked Tiny Toon Adventures more than Animaniacs.
- Speaking of Tiny Toon Adventures, why is that at the beginning of the list?
- The second and third comments are spot on! How are Chip ‘n Dale Rescue Rangers and Darkwing Duck not on this list? And what about Conan the Adventurer?
I remember, back in elementary school, coming home every day to catch The Disney Afternoon; more specifically, Duck Tales, Rescue Rangers, and Darkwing Duck, as well as Tiny Toon Adventures and, eventually, Animanics on FOX. I recall never starting on my homework until 5pm.
(Yeah, as a kid, I watched too much TV. Don’t get me started on how much TV I watch now.)
And yes, I’ll admit it; when the show first came out, I watched Power Rangers. What can I say? Lots of my friends watched the show too!
(Wow, I never noticed how ridiculously cheesy the intro to that show was! Actually, what’s really sad is that I remember a show similar to Power Rangers, called VR Troopers. Now that was a cheesy intro!)
In my defense, the only reason why I watched Power Rangers was because of the Pink Ranger. Didn’t every adolescent male around that time watch the show for the same reason? Didn’t they???
- Trading card company Upper Deck is trying to buy out the last major trading card company out there, Topps. This is terrible news for an already dying market; dying because trading cards have gotten so unaffordable, only adults could afford packs these days. Back in the early 90s, I would often visit this card shop with my cousins–I forget the name–and usually spent $10-20 per visit there. I remember getting a whole assortment of stuff; some cheaper $1 packs, and a couple of the “premium” packs that went for $3-5 each. I remember opening each premium pack as if it was a Christmas present, being careful not to harm the foil packaging.
(Of course, I had to open the packs carefully, for fear of damaging the fancy cards that were stuffed inside.)
I remember back in 1993, buying a pack of Fleer Ultra Basketball for $3–Shaq’s rookie year–and pulling out an insert card of Shaq. That card was worth $75 at the time, and it’s still one of the top five insert cards I’ve ever pulled out of a deck of cards. I still have the card today, even though it’s probably not worth $5, just because of the sentiment behind it. In 1998, when my interest in trading cards was waning, I pulled a Ken Griffey Jr. card numbered to 100 (there were only 100 copies of that card in existence). That card, valued at $100-150 at the time, was probably the coolest card I’ve ever pulled out of a pack, and it was nothing more than a regular card with the letters in gold-colored foil, with a stamped number on the back (also in gold).
I stopped collecting as a hobby years ago, when the prices of premium packs got ridiculous; premium packs now range anywhere from $25-100 each. Back in the day, a rare card was a limited-print, glossy looking card. Today, only cards have a piece of memorabilia or an autograph on it–swatches of jersey, pieces of ball, shoelaces, nets, sticks, etc.–have any value in the market. What made getting rare cards back in the day so much fun were the improbable odds of getting one; the odds of getting one card similar to the Shaq card I pulled in 1993 was 1:72 (if there were 10 cards in that set, that would make the odds of me pulling Shaq’s card itself 1:720). Nowadays, with these expensive packs, the odds of pulling inserts are sometimes 1:1. What fun is that to guarantee yourself a card with a piece of memorabilia on it in every pack?
(Tangent: Between 1999 and 2001, I realized that trading cards was an affordable investment, rather than just a fun hobby. Between Yahoo! Auctions and eBay, I made about $2,000 during my senior year in high school (1999-2000) buying and reselling trading cards. While I don’t regret making that kind of money, I do have to point to that time period as the time when I stopped looking at trading cards as a hobby.)
I’ll still buy a pack every now and then, but I won’t touch those ridiculously expensive packs with a ten-foot pole. I hope, if Upper Deck does acquire Topps, they use the Topps brand to reintroduce affordable, marketable packs for the collector (in the form of $1-2 packs), while keeping the Upper Deck brand for the investor (the more expensive stuff). Bring back the days of holograms, parallel sets, and fancy (non-memorabilia) inserts for the casual collector!
I have the urge to swing by Target and pick up a box of cards, just for fun.
I always liked Talespin and Darkwing Duck, but hated the Power Rangers (or anything live action, really). I don’t remember VR Troopers, but I do recall Beetleborgs — I’m willing to bet it was worse.