
SUMMARY
In this episode ofRight About Now, host Ryan Alford breaks down the latest business trends shaping the future. He explores Microsoft’s strategic pivot from print to digital media, the NBA’s groundbreaking streaming partnership with Amazon, and the implications of Sam Altman’s eye-scanning technology. Special guest and entrepreneur Gary Vaynerchuk shares insights on the growing value of collectibles and how technology is transforming the trading card industry. The conversation also covers Major League Baseball’s move into digital collectibles and Apple’s manufacturing expansion into India. Key takeaways include the lasting relevance of print, the accelerating shift from cable to streaming, and the critical need for innovation and diversification in today’s business landscape.
TAKEAWAYS
- Microsoft's transition from print to digital media and its implications for branding.
- The NBA's streaming partnership with Amazon and its impact on sports consumption.
- Sam Altman's eye-scanning technology and its potential effects on online security and privacy.
- The significance of collectibles and technology in the trading card industry.
- The resurgence of trading cards and the role of nostalgia in collecting.
- Major League Baseball's initiative in digital collectibles and the merging of physical and digital experiences.
- Apple's strategic shift to increase manufacturing in India and its implications for global supply chains.
- The importance of adapting to changing consumer engagement methods in media and collectibles.
- The projected growth of the trading card market and its cultural and financial significance.
- The need for companies to innovate and diversify to remain competitive in a dynamic business environment.
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This is the story of the one. As a maintenance supervisor at a manufacturing facility, he knows keeping the line up and running is a top priority. That's why he chooses Granger. Because when a drive belt gets damaged, Granger makes it easy to find the exact specs with the replacement product he needs. And next day delivery helps ensure he'll have everything in place and running like clockwork. Go 1-800-GRANGER, click ranger.com or just stop by. Granger for the ones who get it done. This is right about now with Ryan Alford, a Radcast Network production. We are the number one business show on the planet with over 1 million downloads a month. Taking the BS out of business for over six years and over 400 episodes. You ready to start snapping necks and caching checks? Well, it starts right about now. What's up guys? Welcome to right about now. So weekly business news here on Friday, May 23rd, 2025. Hey, hard hitting week this week. Lots of topics crossing the gamut. We got business news pop culture. Hey, we covered the gamut of trading card business. The hobby, everything happens here. All right about now is we keep it real. We keep it raw and we go hard. Right here every week on our news episode this week. Microsoft drops glossy print magazines. The NBA makes a play for streamers and Sam Altman wants to scan your eyeballs. Oh, I don't know about that. Plus YouTube goes full Hollywood. MLB launches digital trading cards and Home Depot prices. And of course, iPhones and India. All that more here on right about now. All right guys, first up today, I did want to give you a little teaser of what's going on in our hobby trading card series. Rule the hobby, baby. We're telling you everything from the top to the bottom. From retail to wholesale. We've had some amazing guests and more to come. Again, telling you about the business that is trading cards, the investment opportunities. And of course, where it's all headed. We've had some amazing guests. Gary Vee. Everybody knows that name. Brian Ludden. He is the founder of LudEx. And several other friends, colleagues, and big players in the industry. Here's just a little sample of what that series is bringing to the table. What the biggest thing is when you open those cards is, what do I have? What is, that's the question. Because you know you got something good. You know, my kids know. But they're like, they don't know how good. And LudEx is kind of the gateway to knowing what you have. Yeah, it's, it's known what you have and know what it's worth. Those are the two pillars that, you know, we kind of go off of. And, you know, it's technology. So it's never done. It's never completed. But yeah, I mean, really that's what we want to be. We don't want to be an authority in anything. What we want to be is we want to be an information tool to help people enjoy this industry and this hobby. I think V friends is probably going to end up being the biggest business I ever built. You know, I feel like it's a very substantial intellectual property collectible business. I think the characters represent the things I most care about. The things I most care about in the world. So I think these 250 characters are going to allow me to extend all these things I want the world to know about. I've done a lot as a human and put myself on the map. But I'm not going to reach all 8 billion people. Meanwhile, a V friends cartoon that talks about tenacity and hustle and kindness can be dubbed in Italian and be running on Netflix Italy in five years. And I'll be accomplishing the same ambition, which is my whole life has been about really a framework of selfish and selfless behavior. Right? Selfishly, I'm an entrepreneur. I want to build things for me and my family. I think I'm allowed. I think you're allowed. I think everyone's allowed. However, I do like leaving a positive impact. I get pumped when entrepreneurs come up to me that basically make more money than me taking my learnings and applying them. I'm like, good for you. That makes me happy. That doesn't make me unhappy. So that's kind of the goal with the framework here. So I think that we're already five percent of us are genetically predisposed to want to collect stuff. Sort of a remnants of what the human condition a little bit. You know, like that fine nitrogen collecting and hoarding. I think the tide is rising on collecting. Because collecting is the ultimate expression of fandom. And fandom is one of those last safe spaces where we can all come and cheer on a team and not be angry at each other for something else. What made you go from breaks to retail? You know, when I was breaking, I was happy. I had no overhead. And I was doing really good financially. But I got tired. I'm a people person, Ryan. I got tired of sitting in the house by myself, running back and forth from this room to that room. I wanted to be around people again. The only time I was around people was when I went to a show, which was once every month or two. Yeah. You know, I really liked the element of the face-to-face interactions, getting to know people, bonding with people, learning people. Like you said, you know my family. You have a great family as well. And it's been an honor and a pleasure for me to meet your family and become a part of you. I'm an extended family. Yeah, really family. Like I love it. First up today, Microsoft Drops, Glossy Print Magazine. Seriously. Are you kidding? This made a lot of sense to me, actually. And I think here's the punchline. Yeah, there's a lot of niche audiences that are hard to reach. And for whatever reason, we always think there's like one size fits all. Like digital media has proliferated, but there's still a lot of people that read print magazines and that liked the physical touch. Look, we're doing a freaking trading card series right now. My kids love it. Physical media isn't completely dead. It's just there's a lot of synergy and a lot of efficiency that happens with digital media and knowledge spreading digitally on your phone. But people still like to spend time with printed materials, collect those things, people are reading, people are trying to put the phone down even. So it makes a lot of sense, especially with Microsoft's target being a little older. So I love this for a couple of reasons. Number one is niche marketing at its best, but number two, it's also signals away for Microsoft to build brand. It's getting harder and harder to build brand in sort of this performance marketing land that we, everything's for sale, what's the feature, what's the price? Well, Microsoft isn't just telling you about every feature of a computer. They're doing it through the lens of a magazine that tells story, has journalistic content that people actually wanna read. And so again, they've done it in a really slick magazine form here to a target that has a lot of spending power. They're targeting a lot of CEOs, CXOs, people that buy a lot of computer software, different things, they're trying to reach them. And this is the way to do it. It's hard to hit these targets sometimes, because they're not scrolling on Facebook all day like some other people. And they're not always in these digital mediums. So you get them in a space of comfort and somewhere where they're spending time with a product in a magazine and you can tell brand narrative stories that again are building your story through a funnel of getting them through the purchase cycle. And you're not always ever hitting them over the head with a price point. I think physical media still has a place in 2025, but it needs to be done in the right way for the right audiences. And they've done, I think it's 1,500 copies of this. So it's limited, this is a very small audience. But again, you're gonna see this on coffee tables. In some of the wealthiest homes, and this isn't something to just get thrown away like a circular. This is way deeper than that with the storytelling and the way that they're bringing to life the technologies and the partners through the magazine. So I love this. It plays into a little bit of that surprise and delight as well as the novelty of something that might even be collectible. Signal magazine is actually doing the printing. So high quality piece. Smart move here by Microsoft. Next up, NBA is jumping into streaming with Amazon. Hey guys, we've been talking about this every week. The court cutters, we've been talking court cutting for 10 plus years, but it's officially coming for cable. You've got apps, you've got these gigantic platforms, Google, Amazon, Apple, these huge, huge platforms where people are already existing every day, shopping every day, watching content every day. You've got prime video, you've got prime shopping, you have the integration of that. We've talked about that. And now the NBA is eating this deal with Amazon for exclusive games. Makes it tons since. You can see it in Amazon Prime. We saw this a little bit with Netflix as we're playing the NFL space. You can see more and more crossover across all of these different apps and communities that are already built where people are already spending time. Again, I'm going to get the remote control out. I'm going to go from phone to a big screen, casting in the living room. And the cable box is going out the window. It's going to be an app world. It's going to be streaming world. All of these things are starting to come together as people buy and engage with the content that they want to. And not just the 400 channels that have been curated of which 390 you don't watch. So again, Amazon is growing every single day, behemoth. But they need that younger tech savvy audience. So this attracts them in. Because again, you got a lot of moms, a lot of people at shop on Amazon every day. So they've got to keep it relevant with the content that they're bringing in. So that's where the NBA play is. And then the NBA has got more audience, more reach across the Amazon universe. Makes a lot of sense. I can see totally alignment. Here's where it gets real interesting. You're watching the game and the Jersey that they're wearing a little button flashes up. And you can order that and get it the next day or even in two hours to your house straight from Amazon. Don't think we're that far from that where you are here. This integration for this shopping giant with the media makes it a perfect play for commerce and entertainment coming together. So big deals ESPN last week, Amazon this week, NBA jumping heavy in the streaming. This next one gets into that space of sci-fi a little bit. I think you're back into the days watching Star Trek, different things scanning. We've know it's coming. Biometrics have been out there. Fingerprint scanning. Now Sam Altman, one of the founders and original players with chat GPT and always in the ring with Elon Musk. Sam Altman and Elon Musk don't like one another. If you were cool, yeah, let's just get over. Let's get to UFC fight going already. Anyway, Altman has got eye scanning. Big look, I saw this device it literally. And look, let's say while we're doing it before we get into sort of the scary part of it. You know, you have all this deep fake, all this personal fake, everything happening where you don't know what's real and what is. You don't know what identity is or isn't because you don't know if someone's just really the video of them. The eye scanning creates literally, it's like the fingerprint. You know that this is the person that you're doing with it. So that whenever you're doing activity online, if it's scanned your eye, it's identified you. And again, it can be part of creating safety and assurance online. Also, when you're going into a store or different places. Now, you can go down the rabbit hole that a lot of people do, which is, okay, they start scanning your eye, it's going to allow you to do things or not do things. It's going to create gatekeepers because, hey, you can. I won't, I'll stop sort of that. I will just say, how do we control how this information kind of gets out? What's this eye scan and it's out there? Can it be protected? I'm sure they've thought of all of these things, but that's where my mind goes. And you know, it's one thing, deep fake, that someone steals your perfect iris pattern and they're going around impersonating you and doing things. So I don't know, we'll see. I think you could go down the privacy nightmare or the smart future. It's hard to say which one is right or wrong. I don't know, I don't have a crystal ball, but maybe your eyeball is the crystal ball. It's all about black chain, deep thinking here. Black chain is where this all ties into its ID. So again, I'm going to start short of all the code and everything that's involved with blockchain. I don't want anyone's eyes or ears to go crazy. But this is the future of identification. It's not going to be a future where we're scanning our driver's license off of our iPhone app. There's got to be a more safe and secure identical way to verify identity. It's getting really important because in a world where you don't know what you're watching is real or fake, we want to have that identity guaranteed. So that's where I agree with it. It's just in whose hands and when and how is it used? We'll see where it goes, but Sam Altman sees this as a future and if it takes off it being the worldwide standard for which identification is measured and deployed. Hard to believe, YouTube's turning 20 and is officially declaring itself TV. It's funny how we classify things. TV, video, what is television? Is television on your phone? Is it the location? Is it in the living room? Or is your TV, your phone sitting in the shopping line? It's hard to know, but officially, YouTube's taking off the gloves saying we are the TV. And I think what we're really talking about is what we said before, which is cable. It's the way with which content is delivered and the app, the web, et cetera, for how content gets delivered to your phone or your TV, doesn't really matter, but what does matter is more 18 to 49's are watching it than all of linear TV, which is TV that plays on its own schedule and not yours. Not hard to see that that was coming, but YouTube has also made it where you can discover more content. I mean, think about how hard it is even today. I have YouTube TV and I wanna know what's on. So I go to the guide. Going to the guide is like the death by a thousand pinpricks. Oh my God, what is on? What's not on? Okay, I'm done. I'll just watch sports again. I've already seen this game. I'm still watching it because I don't wanna go back to the guide, shoot me now. YouTube, you can discover new things. They have an algorithm. They know what you've watched. You think cable TV has figured out in 45 years how to show what I am actually interested in? Hell no. It's with those showing me lifetime movies when I log on. Maybe my wife was watching them. I don't know, but she didn't have time to watch them. So this is about ease of discovery, removing friction. You should apply, this could apply to any industry. You wanna know what things die? Because people, services, apps, insert product here comes along and removes friction. Solves a problem, makes it easier. YouTube makes it easy to find what you're looking for. Quick search, quick find, and it's learning constantly. Just like that TikTok algorithm, it's got you staying up till 2 a.m. down the rabbit hole. Similar thing here with YouTube. So TV's not dead, friction is dead. That's what YouTube figured out. That's why they're winning. That's why people like me don't wanna go, hey, don't let friends go to the TV guide. I'm telling you, you'll thank me. I can't stand it. That's why people are watching more YouTube. That's why podcast discovery is happening faster on YouTube than anywhere else. It's not necessarily that watching content and video or TV, none of that's dead. All of that is alive and well. What is dead is friction and making it hard and staying with old solutions that don't solve new problems and new expectations. The expectations have changed. We don't live with things that get in our way to find what we want. We watch when we want, watch what we want, when we want, how we want it. That's what YouTube mastered and that's why they're winning and that's why it's gonna be a while before anyone replaces them. We've been talking trading cards, why don't I go right it again. MLB is launching digital collectibles. We talked to Gary V recently and look, it's not Ann. Is it physical trading cards or excuse me, it's not OR, it's Ann. It's not physical trading cards or digital cards. It's one or the other. You can do either one. Neither one of them is killing the other because they both still have value. And again, the MLB is leading into this and leading in to both the nostalgia of trading cards but leading into the digital aspect of online trading. So again, MLB has seen it. They want to get in on the game. They watch all these other companies making tons of money in the arbitrage that is the hobby and they're getting in with their own digital collectibles. iPhone, hey, all this tariff stuff, people start making moves, big companies start making moves, costs, diversification, and Apple is no different. They're leaning into getting stuff made and put together in India, leveraging the incredible workforce they have, the size and scale of India and again, getting less reliant on China. Hey, if you make it hard to work with you, you raise costs and you have all this government oversight, it is certain point companies aren't going to keep dealing with that. So China's going to have to recognize that. They're going to have to realize that you can't have it both ways, all this control but still want all this world money coming to you. And Apple recognizes it leaning into India becoming a real player in the tech manufacturing space at the same time. They got a huge population, they could scale these kind of things and good for them. They're an ally of the US and it's great for business to diversify Apple teaching us the way. Let's talk about some key takeaways from today. Print isn't dead. There's a time and a place for everything, niche audiences, print included. Again, it's not about printing everything, it's about printing the right thing for the right audience. Sport leagues are ditching cable like it's 2013. Look, we've been talking cable cutting forever. It's going fast and look, I don't want to watch the same 400 channels, 390 that I don't like. It's about choice, yes, but it's about the right choice when you want it, where you want it, how you want it. Same thing with YouTube, that's your takeaway. Remove friction and realize that the ways of doing the thing in the past, what people would deal with, isn't the same. You got to get that stuff out of the way if you want to advance. Baseball cards, still cool. Yeah, digital, yeah, physical, yeah, lots of money. Hell yeah. Finally, Apple wants less China, more India. Point noted, that's your episode for today, your business news, business trends, and all the highlights that you need to get ahead, the stuff you need, none of the fluff you don't. We removed the span, we take it, where you want to go right now. This is now media. This is right about now. Billions of dollars, millions of collectors. One booming industry. Trading cards aren't just back, they're taking over. Projected to hit 52 billion by 2027. The hobby has evolved into a full blown business, with culture, cash, and cloud, all at the center. From the fall to the back room, we're talking to the heavy hitters, right in the future of the hobby. We feature Brian Ludden from LudX, the fastest and most accurate trading card scanning app, Gary Vaynerchuk, CEO of VaynerMedia, and creator of VFriends. South Carolina card king, Maddie Rich, one of South Carolina's largest retail store owners, an SI collectibles contributor and sports executive, Jeremy Eisenberg, plus some other surprise guests. This isn't just about collecting, it's about investing, scaling, and ruling the hobby. Right about now, we're making the hobby make sense. Massive dollars. Don't miss this incredible series. Go to RyanIsRite.com, find highlight clips, all the episode information, links to social media, YouTube, all the good stuff. None of the bad stuff. We appreciate you. See you next time. All right about now. This has been right about now with Ryan Alford, a Radcast Network production. Visit RyanIsRite.com for full audio and video versions of the show or to inquire about sponsorship opportunities. Thanks for listening.











