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Home » How a Single Card Show in Fresno Drew Thousands Within Hours of Opening
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How a Single Card Show in Fresno Drew Thousands Within Hours of Opening

Melissa BridwellBy Melissa BridwellJuly 6, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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Single Card Show in Fresno Drew Thousands
Single Card Show in Fresno Drew Thousands
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The line started to form early. People were already lining up outside the Fresno Fairgrounds Commerce Building on June 20 before it even opened. Kids were carrying binders, adults had backpacks, and some vendors were still carrying boxes across the parking lot. The crowd had grown to over 3,000 by mid-morning. That’s a lot of people for a card show in the Central Valley of California. That is an assertion.

It’s been two years since The Big Fresno Card Show began. At first, it was small, with only about 70 to 80 vendor tables and, on a good day, 500 people. It’s now 25,000 square feet and has over 160 tables full of sports cards, Pokémon Trading Card Games, old toys, and other goods. When you say it out loud, the growth is kind of hard to believe. It was clear to Nathan Diaz, the event organizer, that the crowds went from 500 to 1,000, then to 3,000, and kept going up. That path doesn’t just happen by chance.

Diaz has worked hard to make sure that everyone can watch the show. Five dollars to get in. Parking is free. Free for kids under 12 years old. He’s made it clear that he’s not in it to make money—he wants it to be the cheapest card show in the Central Valley. Something quietly refreshing about that in a time when hobby events seem to charge more and more each season. For now, that model is bringing in people who might not have gone to the show otherwise. It’s not clear if it will work in the long run, though.

The mix of people from different backgrounds on the floor is a little surprising. Andrew Chavez, a collector who has been going since the beginning, said that about 70% of the tables are Pokémon-related and the other 30% are sports cards-related. It’s true that that ratio shows where the hobby is at the moment. A younger generation with a lot of money and enthusiasm has become interested in Pokémon. People from that group and traditional sports card collectors hang out together, making the atmosphere feel generational in a good way—not split, just layered.

Single Card Show in Fresno Drew Thousands
Single Card Show in Fresno Drew Thousands

Will Robeson of Southpaw Sports Cards said that he has been collecting cards all his life. He talked about it like people talk about fishing or woodworking: as a hobby, not as a way to make money. “It’s a great way to meet people, handle money, talk to people,” he replied. There’s a sense that the regulars here care more about that than the cards. People get together for the show.

Diz said the same thing in his own way. He told collectors to focus on what they like, not what’s popular or how much a card might sell for at auction. “If you’re happy with what the item you have,” he replied, “then it’s just as valuable as a thousand dollar card.” In a hobby that can quickly turn into speculation and worry about values, this thought keeps you grounded.

Back at the Fairgrounds, the next shows are already set for August 15 and November 14. It’s worth keeping an eye on to see if the momentum stays. People from all over the state are starting to come to what started out as a local get-together. It’s hard to make that kind of natural pull. It was still built in Fresno.

Card Fresno Drew
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Melissa Bridwell

    Melissa Bridwell is a Professor at Cambridge University and Senior Editor at theorycards.org.uk, where she writes about Theory Trading Cards, David Gauntlett's iconic sociology card series, and the thinkers who shaped modern cultural and media theory. Melissa brings both scholarly accuracy and sincere passion to every piece she writes. She has a strong academic foundation and a contagious enthusiasm for the nexus of ideas and collectibles. Her writing brings complex theory to life and makes it worthwhile, whether she is deciphering the philosophy behind a Foucault card or following Bell Hooks' cultural legacy.

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