Pawn_Stars_Season_2《典当之星》

社会科学类纪录片,History Channel 频道 2009 ,2010 年出品,是 HC Pawn Stars 系列之一。

Pawn_Stars_Season_2_cover0.jpg

http://www.history.com/shows/pawn-stars

  • 中文片名 :典当之星
  • 中文系列名:
  • 英文片名 :Pawn Stars Season 2
  • 英文系列名:Pawn Stars
  • 电视台 :History Channel
  • 地区 :美国
  • 语言 :英語
  • 时间 :约 23 分钟 / EP
  • 版本 :TV
  • 发行时间 :2009/2010

It s one of the oldest forms of banking, and until the 1950s, it was the leading form of consumer credit in the U.S. See the fascinating past and present of the pawning business in Pawn Stars, an inside look at the only family-run pawn shop in Las Vegas, where three generations of men grandfather, father and son use their sharp-eyed skills to carefully assess the value of items ranging from the obscure to the historic. From a 15th-century samurai sword to a Picasso painting, there isn t much the Harrison family hasn t seen or heard, inevitably making Richard, Rick and Corey experts in rare collectables and negotiating. Each episode of Pawn Stars features an array of quirky characters attempting to sell, purchase or pawn items that the Harrisons must carefully appraise, determine if they re real or fake and then reveal the often surprising answer to What s it worth? Everything and everyone has a story and it s the Harrisons job to decipher fact from fiction, because in this business the customer isn t always right.

Rick’s doctor has informed him that he is suffering from too much stress. Items appraised include a 17th-century musketoon and a wooden airplane propeller that may have been a gift from Charles Lindbergh.

Items appraised include a rare 1965 Shelby Cobra racecar bodyframe that requires authentication; a World War II-era chronometer; a collection of megalodon teeth; and a Cobra 1.8 power kite.

Items appraised include a set of World War I-era trench knives; a locked treasure chest whose contents are unknown; and a police cap stolen from a Russian Militsiya. Rick and Corey secretly take the Old Man’s prized 1966 Chrysler Imperial to have it restored as a 50th wedding anniversary gift, though they tell him that they sold it to a customer who wanted to convert it into a lowrider.

Items appraised include a 1845 Harpers Ferry musket; a quilt covered with hundreds of celebrity signatures; an ice marker and ATM receipt from McMurdo Station in Antarctica; and a 1950s barber’s chair that causes Rick to reminisce of days gone by.

Items appraised include a pair of rare 1925 McKenzie Mitts handcuffs, a bottle of Prohibition-era whisky; and a Gibson Les Paul guitar whose seller claims is from 1960 but whose true date Rick feels is uncertain. To expand the shop’s inventory, Corey buys a 2003 Cameron A250 hot air balloon for $38,000, much to the dismay of his father, who requires Corey to consult him first when spending more than $10,000 on an item.

Items appraised include some Colonial era coat buttons; a collection of Montie Montana memorabilia; an antique comptometer; and a Suzuki GSX1300R Hayabusa motorcycle. Upset over dwindling profit margins, the Old Man offers a steak dinner and $500 prize to whoever exhibits the highest profit margin by the end of the month.

In this clip episode, as Rick, Corey, and Chumlee prepare to be taken out by a grumpy Richard to a surprise location to celebrate Christmas, they reminisce about the purchases they’ve made over the course of the past year.

The staff engages in a Secret Santa gift exchange. Items appraised include American Revolutionary War-era currency printed by Benjamin Franklin; a battle axe purported to be from the 15th century; and a 1950 ship’s camera purported to be from the USS Wisconsin.

Items appraised include a 16th-century replica signal cannon that makes Rick question if it is truly a replica; a Volvo semi truck used as collateral for a loan; an antique 19th-century demijohn that Chumlee promptly uses to make his own foot-crushed wine; and a 1923 Louis Vuitton trunk.

Items appraised include a 19th-century miniature reproduction of a 16th- century suit of armor; a 1940 quartermaster’s spyglass; a set of V-44 and Mark 1 military knives whose seller says his grandfather smuggled back from World War II; and a customized 1996 Harley Road King motorcycle whose paint job may limit its range of potential customers.

Items appraised include a Le Coultre “perpetual motion” Atmos clock; a pair of halberd axes; a prisoner’s ball and chain; a fake Ford’s Theatre playbill for the night of Abraham Lincoln’s assassination; and an antique potty chair. A number of unfortunate events, from bad purchases to multiple mishaps involving destroyed or broken merchandise, make it a bad day for Rick and the others.

Items appraised include a Dutch East India ship’s bell supposedly from a 1602 shipwreck; an early-20th-century roulette wheel; a 1970s Indian racing mini motorcycle; and a pair of Scottish daggers whose owner claims are 200 years old.

Items appraised include a 1901 Edison phonograph; an AYT XP 2200 speedboat in need of restoration; a collection of gold demonic figurines painted black; a 1922 antique savings book, and a Binion’s playing card vending machine. Chumlee gets sent to the Old Man’s house for a simple errand, but takes his time doing it.

Items appraised include a 1948 portable electric shock therapy machine; a bag filled with antique stamps; a Yamaha Rhino; and a clump of silver 1702 rupees discovered as a part of sunken treasure in 1961 by Arthur C. Clarke’s team, from the Great Basses wreck.

Items appraised include an 18th-century French double-barrel musket coach gun; a collection of Pez dispensers from the 1960s and 1970s; a 1932-S Washington Quarter; and a U.S. Navy uniform whose time period of origin becomes the point of a bet between Rick and the Old Man.

Items appraised include an 1888 McClellan saddle purported to have been used by Kevin Costner in the film Dances with Wolves; an 1886 Winchester rifle; and a large, early-20th-century cast-iron sheet metal shear. Corey buys a tattoo kit that he then takes to a tattoo shop to trade for a tattoo, much to the irritation of his father and grandfather.

Items appraised include a 1997 NASCAR trophy that was presented to Jeff Gordon; antique portraits of Napoleon Bonaparte and Joséphine de Beauharnais; an antique matchlock key gun dating from about the 17th century; an ivory tusk that Rick immediately rejects; and a life-size, fiberglass Power Ranger whose owner refurbished and outfitted with a cell phone charger after finding it in a dumpster.

Items appraised include a 1973 Bally’s “Odds & Evens” pinball machine whose owner presents it, disassembled, to Corey and a surprisingly knowledgeable Chumlee; a 1924 St. Gaudens Double Eagle $20 gold coin; a Segway i2 whose owner wishes to upgrade to an offroad model; a portable gramophone dated between 1931–1944; and a couch shaped like the rear end of a Shelby Cobra.

Items appraised include a 1768 colonial lottery ticket signed by George Washington; a set of five 1967 Pete Rose baseball cards; a 1992 crashed Schweizer 300C helicopter in need of restoration, whose space needs are a concern for the Old Man; and a pair of antique Plug 8 handcuffs.

Items appraised include a handmade, Anton Schneider cuckoo clock from the 19th century; an antique thermometer from the 19th century that features the Celsius, Fahrenheit, and Réaumur scales; a silver table spoon said to have been made by Paul Revere; and a vintage Kam-Act MK-2 archery bow.

Items appraised include an 1890 Auto Wheel coaster wagon; a Civil War saber believed to have belonged to a Confederate officer; a cast iron, Kelsey Excelsior printing press from the 19th century; and a rare 1942 Saroléa motorcycle that Corey tries to convince Rick can turn a profit if restored.

Items appraised include a World War I U.S. military flamethrower; a 1963 Volkswagen Baja Bug; and a Manhattan Firearms pepper-box revolver from the mid-19th century. Corey and Chumlee also investigate a gypsy fortune teller machine whose owner is auctioning it off, and refuses to sell it prior to auction.

Items appraised include a pocket-sized, antique ivory sundial believed to be from the 17th century; an album of original 1963 Jimmy Hoffa photographs; and a 1964 Midway “Rifle Champ” sharpshooting arcade game. Rick and the Old Man’s complaints to Corey about the disorganized back room, where thousands of pawned items items are kept, leads to the discovery of a bronze, 1986 art deco statue by Erté called La Danseuse (The Dancer), which appears to be valuable.

Items appraised include a pair of scaled up, World War II model training rifles; a 1965 Gilbert Erector Set; two Soviet launch keys whose owner claims were used to launch ICBMs; a rare, 1920s Gibson banjo ukulele; and a 1940 steel Supermen of America membership ring.

Items appraised include a Perseus statue by Émile Louis Picault, whose owner says is an 1888 original; a watchmaker’s staking kit; a rare, 1950s Las Vegas Club $5 casino chip; a jersey autographed by Lou Gehrig; and a vintage Schweizer SGS 2-33 glider that needs restoration.

Items appraised include Ronald Dunbar and General Johnson’s 1970 Grammy Award for Best Rhythm and Blues Song; a 1930s Coca-Cola salesman’s sampler cooler; a 1676 Spanish silver coin; a rickshaw once used by Siegfried and Roy’s tiger show; and a 1777 French musket.

Items appraised include a 1964 Austin-Healey Sprite; an antique diving helmet authenticated to date from 1865–1870; a collection of fractional currency notes; a Miami Heat 2006 NBA Championship ring; and an antique wooden chest that was purchased at a Miami pirate store, which appears to the Old Man to be rather modern.

Items appraised include an 18th-century pegleg; an all-wooden motorcycle; a flintlock pistol and kindjal dagger from the Ottoman Empire; a 2010 Hoyt carbon matrix compound bow, which is said to be the best, strongest, and most expensive bow ever made; and an antique Kalliope Musikwerke music box that Rick estimates to be about 130 years old.

Items appraised include a 19th-century Fairbanks Morse & Co. coffee grinder; a 1967 The Rat Patrol lunchbox,; a hard-carved, antique Native American tobacco store statue; and an 8mm home movie of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, dated between 1939 and 1945. When the subject of Corey and Chumlee’s weight comes up, Rick challenges them to an obstacle course, with the loser required to buy lunch for a week.[1]

Items appraised include an 1884, single-action Colt revolver whose nickel plating concerns Rick; a collection of 26 U.S. Presidential campaign buttons from between the 1860s and the 1960s; a Country Craftsman reproduction of an antique spinning wheel; and a commercial grade, Astra Mega I espresso machine and coffee grinder, which Chumlee wishes to use to address the Old Man’s more frequently napping of late.

Items appraised include a rare, 1775 war bond engraved by Paul Revere right after the American Revolutionary War began; a pneumatic-powered, music- playing, 1981 replica of a 1909 fire engine; a 1965 Chevy Impala station wagon whose engine swap and other modifications dissatisfy Rick and the Old Man; and a 1946 Seeburg jukebox that needs extensive restoration.

Items appraised include an antique 19th-century Ives toy train set that was found in a 120-year-old house; an 1862 three-cent, George Washington postage stamp encased in a token; a 1980 10th anniversary edition Datsun 280ZX; a copy of the final draft script to the James Bond movie Goldfinger; which the seller says was given to him by his friend, actor Harold Sakata, who played Oddjob in the film; and a 19th-century antique tricycle that Rick thinks is a reproduction.

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Category:片名 Category:History Channel Category:HC Pawn Stars Category:2009 Category:2010 Category:5. 社会科学类 Category:5.1 社会 Category:5.17 行业 Category:5.3 财经 Category:5.31 微观经济 Category:6. 史地类 Category:6.2 地理 Category:6.24 美洲 Category:6.241 北美洲 Category:6.2417 美国 Category:缺翻译