Pawn_Stars_Season_4《典当之星》
简述
社会科学类纪录片,History Channel 频道 2010 ,2011 年出品,是 HC Pawn Stars 系列之一。
封面
Pawn_Stars_Season_4_cover0.jpg
影片信息
官方网站
http://www.history.com/shows/pawn-stars
影片原始规格:
- 中文片名 :典当之星
- 中文系列名:
- 英文片名 :Pawn Stars Season 4
- 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 :2010/2011
影片内容介绍
剧情简介
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.
分集介绍
Monkey Business
Items appraised include a 1944 Carlisle & Finch Navy spotlight; a hat claimed to have been worn by John Wayne in either Rio Grande or Rio Lobo; a Rembrandt etching whose seller bought it at a garage sale for $10; a 1930s Baldwin Howard grand piano; a 1950s Musical Jolly Chimp clapping cymbal toy; and a Yankees Stadium bleacher seat whose seller claims was taken from the stadium during the 1977 World Series.
Packing Heat
Items appraised include a 1950s, battery-operated bacon-cooking pig chef toy made by Yonezawa; a collection of 1990s Atlanta Braves championship and World Series rings; a 1962 Cadillac Fleetwood limousine; a pair of antique pistol lighters; and a pair of 1860 hand-stitched political dolls depicting Abraham Lincoln and a slave, which were made to be burned in effigy by pre-Civil War, pro-slavery advocates. The Oak Ridge Boys (the Old Man’s favorite band) make a cameo appearance.
Luck of the Draw
Items appraised include a pair of 19th-century pistols; a collection of items that belonged to Wyatt Earp, as well as some photos of Earp and Bat Masterson; a collection of fishing lures; an antique television; a Schlitz beer lamp; and a gold medal from the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.
Houdini’s Handcuffs
Items appraised include handcuffs and leg shackles that belonged to Harry Houdini; a St. Louis Rams Vince Lombardi Trophy from the 2000 Super Bowl; a collection of 1940s comic buttons from Pep Cereal; a 1970s Slingerland jazz drum set; and a Prohibition-era cocktail shaker.
Pedal to the Medal
Items appraised include a 1950s child’s pedal car; a chessboard made with wood from the Titanic; a 1978 Superman record player; a poem handwritten by Jimi Hendrix; and a sealed can of “Can Can” brand canned pearls that Rick wishes to open in order to inspect the contents.
Case Closed
Items appraised include a 17th-century musketoon; a 1974 Lotus Europa sports car; a case file from the Lindbergh baby kidnapping that belonged to Leon Hoage; a private investigator hired by Charles Lindbergh; and a mid-1970s Lasonic boom box.
Darth Pawn
Items appraised include a 1930s Bendix A7 World War II aircraft octant; a 1995 Nintendo Virtual Boy video game console; an 1880s doctor’s buggy whose seller purchased it on the Internet; two life-sized Star Wars figures of Jar Jar Binks and Darth Maul; and a 1763 Stradivarius violin whose seller says was found in a cedar chest in his newly-purchased house, but which Rick thinks is a copy.
Put Up Your Dukes
Items appraised include a book published in 1546 by Georgius Agricola that was once owned by Isaac Newton; an Army jacket from the Spanish-American War whose seller claims belonged to his grandfather (much to the Harrisons’ skepticism); and a 32-year-old, 80-piece collection of John Wayne memorabilia. After buying the Newton book, Rick notices some notes written in it that may be Newton’s actual handwriting.
Pawn Illustrated
Items appraised include a collection of World War II aviator gear, including a P-38 flight jacket, hat and survival kit; a 48-year-old canister of National Biscuit Company fallout shelter survival crackers; a child’s half-scale flintlock musket dated to the 1770s–1780s; a collection of Sahara Casino baccarat chips; and a collection of the first year of issues of Sports Illustrated.
Striking a Chord
Items appraised include a first Acts of Congress book signed by James Smith that was discovered in an old house; a Breitling emergency watch; an A-series 1907 Gibson mandolin Rick thinks might have been made by Lloyd Loar; a 1973 Airstream trailer; and a 1983 RB Robotics 5X home robot that was purchased at a flea market.
Harrison for President
Items appraised include an antique Pepsi cooler circa 1939-1950 that needs full restoration; a functional antique Mutoscope arcade claw machine; a political textile sporting the likeness of someone Rick thinks might be William Henry Harrison, but who turns out to be Gilbert du Motier, marquis de Lafayette; a sealed box of 1940s pre-embargo Cuban cigars found by the seller in his father’s old war chest; and a picture book from the 1936 Summer Olympics, and one of the gold medallions that was given to German soldiers at the time.
Wise Guys
Items appraised include an armored 1941 armored M3 Scout Car; a check signed by mobster Carlo Gambino; a 1988 Apple IIGS computer; an 1880 Newfoundland 2 dollar coin and a 1937 Little Orphan Annie decoder pin.
Robosaurus
Items appraised include an 1886 cast-iron Uncle Sam mechanical coin bank; the fire-breathing Robosaurus monster truck; a $1 fold-over error note from the 1960s; and an antique Hohner harmonica. When the shop’s computer system crashes, the Old Man becomes irate with Corey’s inability to hand-write receipts.
Ah, Shoot!
Items appraised include an Ansel Adams print; a 1987 Jaguar XJ6 that the Old Man takes a liking to; a 1942 Chicago Bears football autographed by the entire team; a copy of the November 3, 1948 edition of the Chicago Tribune, which featured the infamous “Dewey Defeats Truman” headline; and two 1934 $500 bill and $1,000 notes.
Going Postal
Items appraised include an 1862 U.S. postage printing plate for a George Washington 24 cent stamp; a recalled poster for the 1983 film Star Wars: Return of the Jedi; a 1960s Alvin Seville marionette; an LP record album of a March 16, 1968 speech by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., made less than three weeks before his assassination; and a Sioux Indian youth vest, which Rick makes a grave mistake in purchasing.
Chummobile
Items appraised include a writing desk that incorporates a gun, which appears to be from the 1890s–1910s; a replica of the Batmobile from the 1989 Batman film; an antique American warship’s passport document featuring an Edward Savage engraving, and signed by Thomas Jefferson and James Madison; and a collection of signed memorabilia of pool champion Willie Mosconi.
Evel Genius
Items appraised include a collection of 24 1960s rock concert posters for Buffalo Springfield, the Grateful Dead and the Rolling Stones; an optometrist’s collection of 400 hand-blown glass prosthetic eyeballs dating from the 1890s – 1939; a 1977 Evel Knievel pinball machine that turns out to be worth much less than what Corey paid for it; and an autographed photo of Babe Ruth.
Pablo Pawncasso
Items appraised include a copy of the first issue of Rolling Stone magazine; a pair of 2002 and 2008 gold-plated pants pendants awarded to Ohio State football players, the latter of which belonged to Doug Worthington; a pair of Picasso lithographs; a 1931 REO Flying Cloud hot rod with bullet-proof glass; and a 1980s coin-operated, computerized breathalyzer formerly used in a California bar.
Sub for Sale
Items appraised include an officer’s commission from the Revolutionary War; a miniature Model T Ford with a working motor; and a one-man midget submarine, whose purchase by Rick surprises both the Old Man and Corey.
Missile Attack
Items appraised include the guidance system to a Cold War–era AIM-9 Sidewinder missile; an original Playboy bunny outfit; a 1986 Buick Regal that Chumlee takes an odd liking to; a 1850s–1860s carpenter’s tool chest; and a 1980 Rubik’s Cube sealed in its original package.
Not on My Watch
Items appraised include a Confederate Civil War Bowie knife known as an “Arkansas Toothpick”; a 1970 Honda Z600; a professionally restored, 1936 Rolex watch previously owned by Bernie Madoff; a boxing gym bell signed by Sonny Liston in 1970; and a 1957 Team Bowling Alley arcade game.
Take a Seat
Items appraised include a chair from the U.S. Senate that belonged to Senator Pat McCarran; a photograph of a NASA Gemini spacecraft launch signed by numerous astronauts including Neil Armstrong, Ed White, Buzz Aldrin, and Gus Grissom; a NASCAR driver’s suit, c. 2002-2003, that once belonged to Ryan Newman; and a collection of Asian wood carvings. To address the Old Man’s habit of falling asleep within view of the showroom floor, Rick has a new office built for him.
Pom Pom Pawn
Items appraised include a naval blunderbuss from the 17th century, a 1978 GMC motor home sponsored by Coca Cola; a San Francisco 49ers cheerleader’s 1989 Super Bowl ring; a photo of The Who signed by three of that band’s members; and a Columbia University speed reading machine course.
Patton Pending
Items appraised include a signed George S. Patton photo album, whose seller is the grandson of the lieutenant assigned to photograph Patton for three months; an antique sterling silver travel kit; a pair of jockey boots autographed by Willie Shoemaker; a large collection of decanters; and a Kevlar bulletproof vest with two trauma plates.
Spidey Cents
Items appraised include a piece of the heat shield from the Apollo 13 spacecraft; a 1973 Husqvarna CR 400 dirt bike whose restoration may prove to be a problem for Corey; a World War II Japanese non-commissioned officer’s sword; Todd McFarlane’s original artwork for page 25 of The Amazing Spider-Man #316 (June 1989); and a Curta calculator from the 1950s or 1960s.
Necessary Roughness
Items appraised include a collection of secret plans from the Normandy landings of World War II; a leather football helmet; a pair of saber bayonets from the Franco-Prussian War; and the head of a rare 1978 Stretch Serpent toy that Corey buys for $500, leading to a bet between him and an irritated Old Man over how much it is really worth.
Peacemaker
Items appraised include an early 1890s Colt .45 Peacemaker; a mid-1950s German Binz scooter; photos of a Japanese World War II Mitsubishi A6M Zero fighter plane shot down in the Aleutian Islands on July 10, 1942; a Tiger’s eye gemstone skull; and Elvis Presley’s medical records.
The Great Escape
Items appraised include an original Harry Houdini straitjacket authenticated to have been used by him in a January 1, 1915 performance;[3] a loudspeaker from Ebbets Field in Brooklyn; a letter written and signed by Helen Keller; and a Carl Zeiss telescope from the late 19th century.
Broadsiding Lincoln
Items appraised include a John Wilkes Booth Wanted poster printed on April 20, 1865; a 1930s arcade penny scale; an Air Force fighter pilot’s G-suit and helmet worn by the seller’s brother-in-law when he flew an F-18 during the Gulf War; and a 1930s Chicago police badge.
Sharpe Shooters
Rick and Sean Rich travel to Ashman’s Pioneer Market in Fillmore, Utah to investigate a Civil War-era Gatling gun that just came on the market, as well as an 1863 Sharps carbine. Back in Las Vegas, items appraised at the Gold & Silver include a 1915 Ford Model T taxi and a vintage Charley Weaver Bartender toy.
Late Night Chum
Items appraised include World War II Adolf Hitler novelty matches; a Union Civil War cavalry jacket; a limited edition copy of The Illiterate Digest autographed by author Will Rogers; a porcelain-coated, 1940s Texaco sign; and an original Teddy Ruxpin and Grubby set. Rick assigns Chumlee to the night shift to fill in for someone who is sick.
Buy The Book
Items appraised include a Confederate “CS” belt buckle with a Minié ball bullet lodged in it; a first edition copy of Ernest Hemingway’s For Whom the Bell Tolls, along with a framed autograph of the author, which George Stephanopoulos later purchases when he visits the shop; a 1932 Lincoln Roadster, whose seller is initially reluctant to negotiate; and an antique bamboo fishing pole.
Over the Top
Items appraised include a quick-draw gun holster and blank-firing gun used on the TV series Gunsmoke in 1957 and 1958; a 1930s Steelcraft zeppelin pull toy; a World War I 5th Marine Regiment helmet; and an antique clock with four Morgan silver dollars and two Peace Dollars embedded in it. Rick hires a personal trainer and insists that he, Corey, the Old Man and Chumlee begin exercising every morning.
Honor Thy Father
Items appraised include the document signed by John Hancock with which he was inducted as a captain in the American militia; a framed, limited print photo of Jimi Hendrix by Gered Mankowitz that Corey wants to buy as a Father’s Day gift for Rick; a 1934 steel Rickenbacker frying pan guitar; and a 1960s Schwinn Sting-Ray Runabout that’s been outfitted with a motor that Corey says needs to be removed in order for it to be sold as a collectible.
The Pick, the Pawn, and the Polish
The conclusion of a three-part crossover episode that began on American Pickers and continued on American Restoration. Rick asks Mike Wolfe and Frank Fritz to find a 1957 Chevrolet for his father’s 70th birthday, and then meets with Rick Dale and Danny Koker to have it restored in time for the party. At the Gold & Silver, items appraised including a rare, 19th-century Imperial Protector 4mm gun ring; a collection of approximately 50 original animation cels and their color guides that include Scooby Doo, Fat Albert, The Smurfs, and Looney Tunes; and an unused ticket for a 1966 Beatles concert at Shea Stadium.
Making Cents
Items appraised include a script of The Godfather purported signed by Al Pacino, but actually signed by Al Ruddy, a co-producer; a sterling silver Cartier bottle opener and a pair of caps; a vintage Excelsior accordion; a World War II Celestial Navigation trainer book; and a 1950s coin-operated Bally “Western Express” kiddie ride that Chumlee, working on a $1,000 spending limit from Rick, investigates in an attempt to prove himself.
Kings and McQueens
Items appraised include a 19th-century shotgun disguised as a cane; a 1940 Indian motorcycle that belonged to Steve McQueen; and a book printed by Benjamin Franklin.
Face the Music
Items appraised include a framed business card of John Wesley Hardin, authentication of which proves to be difficult; a 1950s Shopsmith woodworking machine; a jacket worn by actor Clint Walker in the 1964 movie Send Me No Flowers, which the seller says he purchased from Walker personally; and an early 1930s Gibson mandolin that an ambitious Chumlee buys for $1,500.
Off the Wall
Items appraised include an 1854 Civil War musket made in Harpers Ferry that Rick observes is loaded; replica Master Chief armor suit and rifle based on the video game Halo that was made by the seller; a 1950s Murray atomic missile pedal car; two liberty passes from the USS Arizona and USS Mississippi; and a collection of four vintage pawn shop movie posters that Rick wants to keep to decorate the shop, but for which Corey has other ideas.
Buffalo Bull
Items appraised include a chest filled with puppets and other memorabilia belonging to Buffalo Ben, who may have been a member of Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show; a phone booth from the 1950s or 1960s whose phone still functions; a collection of three vintage railroad lamps; and an unsigned copy of Ronald Reagan’s 1928 high school yearbook and a signed letter that belonged to the seller’s grandfather, who graduated with Reagan.
Cannons and Klingons
Items appraised include a military lighter, I.D. and scrapbook that belonged to the seller’s grandfather, a writer/producer made who propaganda films for the U.S. government’s atomic testing program in the 1950s; a shirt that belonged to Roy Rogers; a collection of 200 pieces of signed Star Trek memorabilia; and an antique signal cannon used by Jonathan Higgins (John Hillerman) on the TV series Magnum, P.I..
Silent and Deadly
Items appraised include a piece of marble from Abraham Lincoln’s tomb; a Schuco Charlie Chaplin wind-up doll; a 1970 Chevy Impala; an antique African sword from the Congo;[disambiguation needed] and a rare copy of a limited edition of The Authorized Al, a biography of “Weird Al” Yankovic.
Weird Science
Items appraised include an antique Master Violet Ray #11 electrotherapy kit; a 19th-century, five-barrel, 37mm Hotchkiss revolving cannon that fires one- pound projectiles, which Rick and Sean Rich investigate at Ashman’s Pioneer Market in Utah; a 1973 Wurlitzer 1050 jukebox; a 50-year-old electric waffle iron; and an unused, early-20th-century hog oiler.
The Wright Stuff
Items appraised include a collection of letters and pilot licenses signed by Orville Wright; a 1930s Jennings Bronze Chief nickel slot machine; and a Model 1830 percussion musket from West Point Military Academy.
Out of Gas
Items appraised include an early-19th-century W. Child percussion dueling pistol; a hat once owned by Ronnie Van Zant of Lynyrd Skynyrd, who gave it to the seller in 1977; a first edition copy of David Copperfield; a 2000 Porsche Carrera 911 engine from a junkyard; and a vintage rotary dial pay phone that’s been converted for home use.
The King’s Bling
Items appraised include a collection of over 200 vintage Matchbox cars; a pair of World War I German Pickelhaube helmets; a trio of vintage Japanese arcade games (Dig Dug, Yie-Ar Kung Fu and Super Dodgeball); and a necklace owned by Elvis Presley that was given to the seller when she was a teenager.
Pipe Dreams
Items appraised include Robert E. Lee’s silver spoon and Ulysses S. Grant’s meerschaum pipe, which are brought in by the same seller; four volumes of Don Quixote; a vintage Metrotech metal detector; a U.S. Vietnam War-era practice bomb; and one of Secretariat’s horseshoes.
High Stakes
Items appraised include an 1830s Knock percussion pistol; a 1958 Glastron Seaflight boat; a copy of Dracula signed by Bram Stoker that was purchased at a charity auction; a Penn State University 1973 Orange Bowl championship ring; and a collection of antique billiard items, including ivory billiard balls.
Pirate’s Booty
Items appraised include a 1787 carriage strongbox; a pirate ship parade float that Chumlee investigates; a collection of 17 one ounce silver art bars from the early 1970s; a World War II bomber jacket and flight mission logs that belonged to the seller’s father, a B-17 pilot; and two Native American Kachina figurines made of sterling silver and turquoise.
Teacher’s Pet
Items appraised include a World War II Sperry bombsight purchased at a garage sale for $10, which turns out to be not a bombsight, but a compensating mechanism from a B-26 or B-24 turret; a 1930s Dow-Jones stock ticker; two 1903 volumes of Charles Paul de Kock’s novel, Le Barbier de Paris, hand-written and illustrated by John French Sloan on vellum in 1903; and a toy car vetted by Antwaun, after he asks Chumlee to teach him more about the pawn business.
Bugs Money
Items appraised include a golf putter owned by Dean Martin; a 1941 741 Indian motorcycle; a homemade suit of armor; a tin Louis Armstrong toy; and a Bugs Bunny 50th anniversary poster signed by Mel Blanc and Friz Freleng.
Security
Items appraised include a Civil War drum; a 1922 photographer’s printing table; a Royal Riders motorcycle club uniform; and a 1652 sixpence coin. Antwaun, in preparation to take a few days off, attempts to train Chumlee on how to work the door in his absence.
Poker Night
Items appraised include a 1956 Winter Olympics competitor’s stadium coat that was purchased at a New England thrift store for less than $15; a 1940s pinup poster by Earl MacPherson; a 19th-century gambling kit; and a 2002 Snoop Dogg doll in its package. The Old Man challenges the others to a game of poker.
Rick or Treat
Items appraised in this Halloween-themed episode include a 19th-century vampire-killing kit; a collection equipment used in paranormal investigations that includes several tape recorders, a full spectrum camera and a laser grid, whose sellers offer to use to search for paranormal activity around the shop; a 1940s keypunch machine whose seller was a punchcard accounting instructor in the early 1950s; and a 1983 Jabba the Hutt Play-Doh set. Also, Rick orders the entire staff to come in on Halloween in costume, with the best costume awarded $100 of in-store credit.
截图
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Category:片名 Category:History Channel Category:HC Pawn Stars Category:2010 Category:2011 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