
Jake Peavy
2011 • Topps
#537

A graded PSA 10 copy of the 2011 Topps American Pie The Price Is Right card #110—a premium entertainment collectible celebrating the iconic game show.
2011 • Topps • American Pie
PSA
110
New
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The catalog profile below summarizes the card identity, featured subject, and notable collectible traits.
The core identity of the card within the set.
The player, team, league, and sport context tied to this card.
Featured
The Price is Right
Production details and format-specific attributes.
Material
Card Stock
Language
English
The Price is Right card from the 2011 Topps American Pie set occupies an interesting niche, bridging classic television nostalgia with the broader Americana-themed insert market that American Pie was designed to celebrate. With only a single active listing currently available, the card effectively operates in a thin market where seller pricing carries outsized influence. Crossover appeal between game show collectors and non-sports card enthusiasts can drive competitive interest when supply is this constrained.
The 2011 Topps American Pie set was structured around a wide checklist of Americana touchstones, with base cards supplemented by tiered insert and parallel programs that created meaningful scarcity distinctions within the product. The presence of graded copies signals that at least some collectors have identified this card as worth the cost of third-party authentication, which typically indicates perceived long-term value or condition sensitivity. Within the era of hobby box releases, insert ratios for themed sets like American Pie often made specific pop culture subject cards harder to pull than their base counterparts, adding chase appeal.
The Price is Right as a franchise carries exceptional longevity and multigenerational recognition, which sustains a baseline of collector demand even when the property is not in an active cultural moment. Set completionists targeting the full American Pie checklist represent a reliable demand driver, particularly when supply is limited to a single listing. As vintage non-sports cards from the 2010s begin attracting renewed attention from collectors who grew up during that era, cards tied to enduring television institutions like this one are positioned to benefit from nostalgia-cycle appreciation.

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