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The Difficult Second Album đ§
Issue #2 - We sit down with MUNDIAL co-founder Seb White to discuss difficult second albums and where you go once you've reached the top. Our team go through what's on their cultural radar, highlight some of the best shirt-sellers in the U.K. and delve into the best drops this month...

After the rampant success of our debut newsletter last month weâre back trying to repeat the trick. Do we stick to a winning formula (Room on Fire), aim higher with something more audacious (The Bends) or move towards the masses (A Rush of Blood to the Head)? Itâs a fine balancing act and one thatâll probably only become clear when weâre out of the Priory.
For the latecomers who werenât around to see us fine-tuning our debut newsletter up and down the country in front of tiny audiences last monthâŠwelcome to Showboat, a collection of three mates obsessed with football and the culture around it. Weâve been buying, collecting and selling football shirts for years and are now putting the finishing touches on Showboat, a community-led platform for dedicated to football sportswear. From vintage classics to modern grails, weâre creating the go-to platform for collectors and enthusiasts who live and breathe football culture.
Time for Issue #2âŠ
Team Selections - The definitive Showboat picks
Pre-Match Interview: A pint withâŠSeb White
On The Bench: And not a chance of getting a kick
Half-Time - A quick delve into the matchday programme
Sunday Showboaters - Those in our community who stand out
Post Match Clobber - Kits and benchwear weâre loving at the minute
Singing us off - How do you end that difficult second album?
Team Selections
Our team tell you whoâs made their team sheet todayâŠ
⣠Parthenope - Paulo Sorrentinoâs latest love letter to Naples doesnât match âThe Hand of Godâ for emotion but itâs everything youâd expect from Italyâs finest filmmaker and the depth of the visuals are worth the price of a cinema ticket alone. LK
⣠Hermit by Chris McQueer - A deep-seated exploration of the toxic culture young men can quickly find themselves falling into. Like doom-scrolling something great. RL
⣠Magnetic by Tunde Adebimpe - The lead single from his debut solo record is on par with almost anything in his TV on the Radio back catalogue. A banger. LK.
A Pint with⊠Seb White
Hi Seb, MUNDIAL is a massive inspiration for anyone wanting to do anything interesting or culturally relevant in the football space. What was the moment you felt MUNDIAL had 'made it'?
Thank you, it will genuinely always mean an awful lot when people say stuff like that about MUNDIAL. Itâs a little easier for me to answer this question as Iâve had a lot of time to reflect recently - when youâre in the weeds and relentlessness of it all you donât have much time to ever think anything other than whatâs next on the list.. And if you do find time to even think youâve âmade itâ, I think youâre not constantly pushing yourself to do better. Sounds a bit LinkedIn but even doing something as nostalgia heavy as MUNDIAL you always have to keep looking forward.
But if I had to choose moments where I was thinking âweâve done something hereâ, I suppose the first night we put the mag on sale in 2014. Me and Dan Sandison sat in the pub watching the notifications ping on our phones for the orders. âFirstly, we have to make this good now. Secondly, get the beers in. The other time would be in 2016, when I realised I could actually make it a full-time job and work everyday with my mates and get paid for it. Within the first weeks the contract weâd signed that made me finally make the jump got cancelled, so then we had to actually âmake itâ. Then I eventually came up for air at the start of 2025.
After achieving success, how do you resist the urge to just repeat the formula?
Given Iâve spent the last few months reflecting and working out whatâs next this is a very timely question as I try and work out what is actually next? Itâs certainly hard to not just resort to type and think can I do a MUNDIAL 2.0, but whenever I think that I remember the real hard work and graft throughout the last ten years, and Iâm at a different stage of my life. That isnât to say I wonât be building on the contacts and connections Iâve built up over the last two decades in football though. Itâs more of a case of feeling refreshed and energised to do something different that isnât quite as demanding as being an independent football magazine in the digital age. Some irons are in the fire, but by all means please enquire within, as Iâm all ears and very much available for the right thing.
Culturally, success can be inhibiting. Did it make you braver or more cautious?
The way MUNDIAL was, we had to be brave because cautious wasnât going to pay mine or my mates bills. Of course there are times when you have to be serious and sensible but you canât be too cautious in an industry that just never stops. Football is a 24/7, 365 days of the year industry, thereâs very little time to stop.
How did your approach to storytelling change? Does more eyeballs on what you're doing change the kind of stories you wanted to tell?
Hopefully people will agree that our approach didnât really change that much from the first few issues. Eyeballs were nice and kept the machine chugging along, but the quality and type of stories we wanted to tell remained the same across whatever format we were doing it in. Stories that could largely only be told by going there, speaking to the people, experiencing the place for yourself and packaging all that up in the best way possible. Itâs harder work, costs more and requires a genuine passion for the sport but the story will be so much better for the recipient as a result. If you chase the numbers and more eyeballs at the expense of the story youâre doing it wrong, even if thatâs what increasingly more people seem to be doing these days!
What's harder: building a unique voice or keeping the initial one intact once the world is reading?
The latter I think, mainly because âbuilding a unique voiceâ as you put it wasnât as hard or calculated as it sounds. We just put together a magazine that was just our natural and authentic voices, we wrote about things we like, in the way weâd talk to each other down the pub or in the office. It just so happened that all chimed with a lot of other people. Keeping that in tact was harder when there were your mates wages to pay, and people wanted to offer you cold hard cash so they could get a piece of MUNDIAL . We had the luxury at times, but also the balls to say âthis isnât very MUNDIALâ. In the short term that was riskier but in my opinion thatâs why we kept going as long as we did, we never strayed too far from our original and authentic voice.
We know you're big into your music. Where do you stand on bands trying to repeat the trick? Everyone yearns for Arctic Monkeys to make another AM don't they?
Iâm someone who still listens to Oasisâ âBe Here Nowâ on a regular basis so maybe Iâm not the best person to ask! Yes, I know itâs not as good as the first two, but music like football is all about the emotions it conveys. I was doing my A-Levels, doing things kids shouldnât do, having the time of my life and all with the whole world in front of me. Be Here Now soundtracked that specific period of my life, and itâs why I keep returning to it. A good album is like a season or match youâll always remember. A good single is like a favourite shirt youâll always love all because it meant something to you for whatever reason at a specific time. Thatâs okay. Nostalgia is a wonderful drug, increasingly so in the messed up world we currently live in where people like Farage, Trump, Putin, Musk seem to be calling the shots.
On that note, letâs segue into favourite second albums quicklyâŠ
My current top 5 (always liable to change) would be: Verveâs âA Northern Soulâ, Interpolâs âAnticsâ, âThe Last Broadcastâ by Doves, âOnly Foreverâ by Puressence and Fontaineâs D.Câs âA Heroâs Death.â
Interpol is a lovely shout there. Print deadlines, interviewing footballers...did you ever get creatively stuck working in football? Where do you look for inspiration?
Creatively, we had a lot of freedom. Of course, like any creative you can get frustrated when a client brings you onto a project, but then doesnât allow you to actually create. That was rare, because we quickly learnt to spot the red flags in the initial meetings.
The best work we did like the award-winning podcast series GIANT with Spotify was because they saw we were really good at what we did. They knew we could do something really good with some background support and we did.
Inspiration wise, for all its ills, it is still social media - once you battle past the algorithm gives you that every day. Iâm as guilty as the next person at getting pissed off with everything that seems to be happening at the moment in the world. And I need to do it even more myself, but we should all do our best to make sure social media is a happy and exciting place. Crucially we need to support good people doing good things, wherever and whoever they are, and share their work, support the independents and hopefully inspire others.
Would you do it all in the same way again?
This is definitely something Iâve been thinking about lately. If I had to be ultra critical, Iâd probably chuck a business plan at some point of the first five years when we were an independent business. It was great being agile and free, but sometimes it was to our detriment to a point, and a little bit of structure and forward-thinking wouldnât have hurt.
Iâd have loved to see what wouldâve happened without the world shutting down for a year or two due to a global pandemic. Like for everyone else, COVID changed so much including MUNDIALs direction of travel.
That aside Iâm extremely proud of what we did and how we did it. Whilst you do create most of your own luck, I still consider myself very lucky to have done something that people genuinely cared and still care about.
Is there an untapped intersection of football and culture?
I think football shirts might be the next big thing, keep an eye on them!
In all seriousness, I think actually going to the match and experiencing everything that involves feels like itâs become errâŠless tapped. In the digital age, people can consume, reflect and report the game via screens and usually in short sharp moments all tailored to the algorithm. The beauty of football is as much the stuff around the 90 minutes on the pitch. These days, most of the focus in homogenised coverage is relentless chase for clicks, and that misses so much more important things. Those things make football brilliant, and are underreported positive stories from the beautiful game. I genuinely worry weâre heading towards a game that is less fun, too, divisive, more toxic and one that is absolutely forgetting what makes it the best game in the world.
Is there still room for physical indie football publications in 2025?
I hope so, itâs a constant battle against the swathes of digital content out there. Indie publications as a whole have had a renaissance these last few years, just go to a MagCulture or a Rare Mags, and youâll find a magazine for you.
The key thing for me is niche is fine and niche can work. Maybe, just maybe, a niche is actually a better way of doing things. You canât always be rushing for the unattainable, and, or chasing big numbers that only look good on a google slide or on stage, at yet another panel with a load of people in suits. The priority should be to do stuff that actually has a cultural impact or legacy, to be authentic, and then make the very most and look after the audience you have, however niche.
What advice would you give to someone trying to force a career in the football landscape now?
Volunteer your services at a non-league football club. Whatever you want to do in the industry, I can guarantee you can add value somewhere along the line at the base of the football pyramid. Itâs a level of football that deserves support, it feeds into everything above it. Youâll have a great time, meet amazing people and make a difference. Crucially, youâll show to any prospective employers you genuinely have an interest and determination to succeed in an increasingly competitive industry.
đșOn The Bench
Amazon. Not for the constant undercutting, the dubious political donations, Bezosâs space antics or because theyâre generally not a force for good in society in any single way. No, Amazon is on the bench because of their decision to host a âbig book saleâ on Independent Bookstore Day. It felt like a calculated move by a company in the business of strong-arming the small guy. It felt cruel. As individuals weâve long avoided Amazonâs nefarious practices and seductive prices, as a new business weâll go one further and only support and promote independent booksellers every step of our journey. Enough is enough.
Half-Time Read
This week we did a deep-dive into the inaugural MLS season that took place in 1996. It year that saw the league shrouded in doubt and controversy. It was also the year the league went from minor to major. You can read the full piece on our site here.
Sunday Showboaters
Shoutouts to our followers & subscribers, because paying it forward is always encouragedâŠ
⣠ASB Shirts in Middlesbrough are doing something quite extraordinary at the minute. Their shop is a trove of football shirts and memorabilia run by the larger life Mark Bythway (aka Bodger). The shop has breathed new life into a quiet shopping centre and a town not known for its independents. For our money, it stands out in the football shirt space and is easily the best value shirt seller weâve seen in 2025. The collection of Boro shirts is something to behold too.
⣠John Blair announced the release of a new book âFootball Kit Italiaâ, following on from what many consider to be the bible of football shirt books âA Culture of Kitsâ. Itâs out in August and will be available in your local independent bookshops.
⣠That 90âs Premier League Podcast is a wonderfully nostalgic excavation of cult players and moments that most of us fell in love with the game watching. Top blokes too.

ASB Shirts in Middlesbrough
Post Match Clobber
Football Finery continue to source some of the finest footballing threads in Europe and the Real Zaragoza away shirt from 95-97 they listed recently is one of the best weâve seen this year.
Umbro brought back Liam Gallagherâs iconic drill top from Oasisâ 90s Maine Road gig. Worth the wait.
Kith canât miss at the minute. Their latest collaboration with adidas hit just about every piece out of the park.
Thatâs it for issue #2 of Showboat. Our collectors app is now going through a testing stage before we launch it to football collectors across the globe. We think itâs something youâll all love. In the meantime, give us a follow on social and help us grow our community of collectors.
Cheers
Lee, Rob & Antonio
We canât have new music playing us out every month so we thought weâd throw it back to a pairing between one of our favourite directors and bands. Jonathan Glazer directing Radiohead in arguably the greatest music video ever. Hope youâve enjoyed the show.
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