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Showing posts from January, 2022

Soon, Major League Baseball Cards Will No Longer Be Topps

Topps baseball cards and I share a common birth year - we both came to be in 1952.  Eight years later, I started collecting baseball cards, a passion I kept up until I entered high school. I kept my cards until our son was born in 1973. He too became a passionate collector when he was young. And now, my grandson Owen, is also collecting cards, although he is much more passionate about amassing a collection of basketball jerseys. Topps cards therefore have been a part of the Price family for 3 generations. But that connection  is coming to end. Major League Baseball is ending its contract with Topps to produce its cards. Major League Baseball will abandon Topps as its partner for trading cards, ending a relationship that’s been in place since 1952. Fanatics, the company that makes sports apparel, is expected to get the trading card deal instead, according to two people familiar with the matter. Fanatics and MLB declined to comment. MLB renewed its deal with Topps in 2018, and the existi

Norman Lear Looks Back at 'All in the Family'

  It would seem unthinkable by today's standards: the most popular character on television was a blue-collar bigot from Queens, New York — who, despite his prejudices, was often considered lovable at the same time. But that was the case for much of the 1970s with the character Archie Bunker on  All in the Family , which debuted in 1971. For five years, it was the most-watched show on television. The show was groundbreaking for openly talking about serious issues of the day. While other shows featured surface-level plots,  All in the Family 's storylines often involved deeper discussions of racism, women's rights, the Vietnam War, homosexuality, rape and more. To keep reading this article, click here.