Pawn_Stars_Season_5《典当之星》

社会科学类纪录片,History Channel 频道 2011 , 2012 年出品,是 HC Pawn Stars 系列之一。

Pawn_Stars_Season_5_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 5
  • 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 :2011/2012

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.

Items appraised include an Aero L-39 Albatros Czechoslovak fighter jet; a baseball glove signed by Babe Ruth and a bat signed by Ruth and Christy Mathewson; a set of mid-to-late-19th-century George Ligowsky glass and clay target balls; and a 1940s Hanovia tanning lamp.

Items appraised include a poster from the movie Bullitt signed by Steve McQueen, Robert Duvall, Jacqueline Bisset and Robert Vaughn; two Civil War diaries from 1864 and 1865 that belonged to Hiram Otis Warren, a captain in the Union Army, 123rd New York Infantry, who was present at Gettysburg, Chancellorsville and Sherman’s March, which are brought in by Warren’s great- great-grandson; and Ricky Bryant’s New England Patriots 2004 Super Bowl ring, whose hand-engraved manufacturer’s mark worries Rick. Rick decides to implement a new rule forbidding staff from keeping items purchased for the shop, but Corey and the Old Man are skeptical of Rick’s own commitment to this idea.

Items appraised include a torch from the 1984 Summer Olympics, brought in by the man who ran with it when he was 17; an early-20th-century Austrian miniature pinfire pistol; a 1937 Oldsmobile L-37 four-door sedan with suicide doors; and a Mario statue.

Items appraised include a five-speed, custom sand rail, which was awarded to the seller in her divorce; a 1930s Levi’s jacket; a collection of unpublished photos of Jimi Hendrix presented by Ron Raffaelli, the Hendrix photographer who took them and kept them in his archives for 40 years; and a 2011 Polaris Razor XP 900 dune buggy. Rick and Corey take the two purchased off-road vehicles to the desert to see which one of them made the better deal.

Items appraised include a a prop policeman’s badge from the TV show Dragnet; 1940s steel mandolin; a post-Civil War era Grand Army of the Republic parade cannon; and a signed Abraham Lincoln photograph.

Items appraised include a certified set of Saddam Hussein’s fingerprints taken after his 2003 capture and arrest; an Olympic drug test pin brought in by the cyclist to whom it was given; a 2003 Lamborghini Murciélago purchased at an IRS auction; a 19th-century solid brass duck press; and a sterling silver Tiffany Walkman originally owned by John Entwistle, which is brought in by his ex-wife, Maxine.

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Items appraised include a collection of Foreign Broadcast Information Service[4] daily impact reports from 1972 to early 1973; a World War II-era handheld Japanese air raid siren; and a limited edition photograph of Albert Einstein by Philippe Halsman that appeared on the cover of Time magazine. The Old Man and Chumlee are given a tour of a World War II-era Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress.

Items appraised include a collection of items that belonged to former Attorney General J. Howard McGrath, including his Secret Service credentials, letters from J. Edgar Hoover and Hubert Humphrey, and a counterfeit $10 bill; a soundwagon record player; a 1979 Mattel Electronics electronic horse race analyzer; and a 1960s M422A1 Mighty Mite jeep.

Items appraised include Nikola Tesla’s original 1887 prototype AC motor; a pair of limited edition Nike Mag sneakers from the film Back to the Future Part II, a 1968 Volkswagen Beetle convertible, a 1920s Gordonair salesman’s sample icebox, and a Breguet Lamborghini Diablo clock c. 1990-1993.

Items appraised include a print of the Albrecht Dürer engraving Knight, Death and the Devil;[5] a nightlight statue of Bud Light advertising icon Spuds MacKenzie; a 2005 customized trike outfitted with built-in speakers, a video screen and a Mack Truck horn; a pre-Civil War daguerreotype studio camera; and a 2001 Boss Hoss trike.

Items appraised include a fake Wells Fargo strongbox with a fake ball-and- chain whose seller says is from Folsom Prison c. the late 19th century or early 20th century; a 1924 Dodge Brothers business sedan; a Terminator skill stop slot machine from Japan; and a large, 70 lb. pair of World War II-era Nikon Coastwatcher binoculars taken from Guam in 1944.

Items appraised include a triple-barreled, 1891 Sauer & Sohn drilling combination gun consisting of a 16-gauge double-barreled shotgun and a 9.3 mm rifle, whose seller says was taken from Germany by his grandfather during World War II; a contemporary InSTEP child’s police pedal car; a collection of reproduction cast iron children’s piggy banks (“Artillery”, “Speaking Dog”, “Teddy and the Bear”, and “William Tell”); and a 1930s Dunhill clock cigarette lighter. With business picking up during the night shift, Rick decides to hire a new night employee to help Charles, who is adept at dealing with jewelery, but not with antiques.

Items appraised include a 1910 Springfield, Illinois banker’s time lock; an 1873 Springfield Armory single-shot rope gun; a first edition copy of Henry David Thoreau’s Walden; an early 1930s optometry kit that belonged to the seller’s great-grandfather; a Buzz Aldrin G.I. Joe doll found at a swap meet. Also, Corey and Chumlee conduct interviews in order to select the shop’s new night shift broker.

Items appraised include a 1928 Charles Lindbergh aviation doll; a 1920s heavy porcelain over cast iron electric hand dryer; a Piccadilly Circus roulette slot machine from the 1960s or 1970s; a 1980s Brother word processor; a 1905 poster for a vaudeville act; and a harmonica purportedly played by Steven Tyler of Aerosmith.

Items appraised include a backpacker Martin guitar signed by Crosby, Stills and Nash that was won by the seller in a trivia contest; a customized Phat Cycles Fuller chopper; a collection of vintage cigar box labels, some of which featured lithographic images of U.S. Presidents; and a pair of World War II bomb fins. Also, Rick and the Old Man interview Corey and Chumlee’s favorite applicants for the night shift job from “Learning the Ropes”.

Items appraised include an Colt Army Model 1860 percussion revolver; a rare copy of The Amazing Spider-Man #1 (March 1963); a trio of Red Comet fire extinguishers; and an 1876 Goodman Gold & Silver Mining Co. stock certificate issued to Mark Twain.

Items appraised include a fragment of Apollo 11’s heat shield; a World War II cargo pilot’s jacket worn as part of The Hump route; a restored 1940s O’Keefe & Merritt gas stove with chrome finishes that are styled to look like a classic car; a “Fat Man” steering wheel; and a signed copy of J. Edgar Hoover’s book, Persons in Hiding, whose seller acquired it from her great uncle, an FBI agent who worked under Hoover; and a pair of Gerald Ford belt buckles.

Items appraised include a 1961 Les Paul SG guitar and collection of documents that belonged to Paul’s wife, Mary Ford, which are brought in by Paul’s nephew; a handkerchief/bandana from Benjamin Harrison’s 1892 Presidential inauguration; A Hedman Co. check fraud protection kit; and a gold Rolex watch. Also, Chumlee begins training Olivia, the new night shift employee.

Items appraised include an 1833 Whitney percussion musket converted from a flintlock; a collection of five 1960s RuddSpeed whiskey decanters modeled after the grilles of automobiles including Bentley, Bugatti, Mercedes and Rolls-Royce; a golf ball once used by Lyndon B. Johnson, which struck the father of the seller who brings it in; a 1929 World Series Chicago Cubs press pin; and a copy of Nicolas Sanson’s 1632 map of France.

Items appraised include a poster for Jimi Hendrix’s second-to-last concert; a collection of inflatable paintball bunkers; a rare autographed Paul Newman racing suit; an electronic Louis Marx and Company 1949 “Mot-O-Run” tin toy that was found in a dumpster; and a photo signed by Mickey Mantle, Willie Mays and Harmon Killebrew. Also, Rick and the Old Man form a bet on which of their favored items is worth more.

Items appraised include a 1928 letter been flown by Charles Lindbergh on the Spirit of St. Louis; a collection of 14 1970s minibikes, one of which is a Honda Z50; a vintage horse race gambling game; an 1772 Fusee pocketwatch made in London; and a 1915-1920 Spalding “Black Betsy” baseball bat modeled after the one used by Shoeless Joe Jackson.

Items appraised include two memoirs signed by King Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson; a 1961 NFL Championship Game championship program; a 1970s Sun car tune-up tester; and a collection of five 1950s stamped tin army toys made in Japan.

Items appraised include a rare Volcanic Arms pistol; a World War II United States Navy gas mask that was purchased for five dollars; a letter from by James A. Garfield prior to his presidency to a resident of the same home town as the seller; and a 1900s (decade) life-size toy bear made by the Steiff Company, the originator of the teddy bear; packets of NASA tomato seeds flown by the Space Shuttle Challenger to the Long Duration Exposure Facility in orbit in 1984 and returned to earth in 1990 on the Space Shuttle Columbia.

Items appraised include a reel of film of Franklin Delano Roosevelt; a 1913 New York City Fire Department log book; a collection of 1966 Miami Dolphins playbooks; and a 1923 National cash register.

Items appraised include three life-size Pinocchio marionettes handcrafted by Bob Baker Marionettes; a collection of 1945 issues of Yank magazine; an early-20th-century C.M. Sorensen Co. manual blood transfusion kit; a battered 1909 Cy Young baseball card that’s missing a corner; and a Blues Harp harmonica said to have been played by Steven Tyler during his rendition of The Star-Spangled Banner at the 2001 Indianapolis 500.

Items appraised include a rare, Civil War-era, Confederate LeMat combination .42 caliber nine shot revolver/20-gauge shotgun; an original poster for the 1965 Italian film War of the Zombies; a collection of 1980s Nintendo Game & Watch handheld games; Dad’s Root Beer outdoor thermometer sign from the late 1950s or early 1960s; and an autographed Goodyear tire from one of Dale Earnhardt’s cars that was purchased from a memorabilia store as a gift for the seller, and later signed by Earnhardt following his 1998 Daytona 500 victory.

Items appraised include a collection of 11 original tintype photographs of what the seller says is the outlaw Jesse James and his gang; a 1950s Model 145 Leslie organ speaker; a 19th-century spoon bit drill set; and a 1930s Boy Scouts of America first aid kit.

Items appraised include a signed letter from Knute Rockne to the seller’s grandfather, dated March 13, 1931, 18 days before Rockne died; a collection of five antique Cracker Jack tin toys; an antique heirloom ring that belonged to mobster Lucky Luciano, brought in buy the son of a woman who ran errands for the mob; a solid wood, 19th-century dentist’s pole; and a 1954 De Luxe scintillator.

Items appraised include a short snorter $1 bill signed by Clark Gable, brought in by a woman who says her uncle flew with Gable in World War II; an antique hand-crank electricity generator; a rare, a 19th-century Wells Fargo double- barrel shotgun; and a souvenir card from Ulysses S. Grant’s funeral.

Items appraised include copies of Harry S. Truman’s two-volume memoir and his book, Mr. Citizen, autographed by Truman to his Chief Economist, Leon Keyserling; a novelty can of elephant manure from the Washington Park Zoo; a toy Mechanized Robot that is an imitation Robby the Robot from the 1956 film Forbidden Planet; and a 1950s Minox camera.

Items appraised include a Star Trek Klingon bat’leth sword brought in by the same seller who presented the Star Trek memorabilia collection in “Cannons and Klingons”; an R. Clarke over/under flintlock four-barrel handgun from the late 1700s; a 1930s Chicago police callbox; and a 1971 book of misprinted and miscut Dwight D. Eisenhower postage stamps. Also, Rick finds a broken, $200 lamp in the warehouse, and must investigate when no one claims responsibility.

Items appraised include an exploding dye pack of $10 bills; a burnt copy of the program from the 1932 NFL Playoff Game whose $2,750 purchase by Corey concerns Rick and the Old Man; a 1960s Schwinn tandem bicycle that is examined by Chumlee and Olivia when a man brings it in during the night shift; and a lithograph by Evel Knievel that features a sketch of a train jump on its reverse side.

Items appraised include a 1974 Volkswagen Thing; a collection of three Civil War-era cannonballs; a 1942 AT-6 Texan fighter plane; and a World War II-era book of war rations.

Items appraised include Jackie Gleason’s custom-ordered, 1978 Lincoln Continental limousine; a Mount Rushmore commemorative plaque made of pure silver, which the Old Man wishes to melt down for fast money, but which Rick thinks will sell for more intact; a 1967 Super Bowl I football signed by the victorious Green Bay Packers, including Vince Lombardi; and a 1960s toy Disneyland Monorail set.

Items appraised include a collection of authenticated and graded notes of 1838

  • 1840 paper money from the Republic of Texas and the Government of Texas; an 1886 Winchester repeating rifle that was passed down through four generations of the seller’s family; a pair of movie poster printing plates for the 1943 film The Outlaw; and a Discovery Zone “Z-BOP” robot. Also, the men compete in a rifle-shooting competition.

Items appraised include a 35mm Bell & Howell documentary film camera used by the U.S. Military during World War II; a rare, three-trigger Stevens shotgun; a 1961 Mercedes-Benz 190 that’s been customized to include features such as 19-inch wheels; and an Abraham Lincoln campaign token from the 1864 Presidential election, which is brought in during the night shift, and requires Olivia to contact Rick.

Items appraised include a titanium nosepiece from an Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird jet, brought in by the son of an engineer who worked on the vehicle, and signed by pilots Bill Flanagan and Robert Gilliland; a solid bronze 16th century cannon; a large pair of vintage Levi’s jeans; a homemade Stand Up and Ride motor scooter; and a pair of vintage 1970 Snoopy and Red Baron music boxes.

Items appraised include an 1890s 18-karat gold Tiffany’s pocket watch; a collection of 82 first series Garbage Pail Kids trading cards from 1985; a 1960s Mercedes Unimog military truck; and a sign that hung on the Berlin Wall. Racecar driver Matt Kenseth has a cameo.

Items appraised include rare 1875[6] one dollar and 1883 brownback five dollar bill, which were professionally graded Very Fine and Choice About New, respectively, and which were given to the seller by her aunt, whose grandfather was the United States Secretary of the Treasury at the time; a Big-Bang toy cannon purchased by the seller at a yard sale twenty years earlier; a paperweight from the USS Guadalcanal commemorating its 1944 sinking of the German submarine UB-68; a pair of prop coconut cups from the TV series Gilligan’s Island, brought in by the daughter of Dick Johnson, the special effects technician who worked on that series.

Items appraised include Cap Hatfield’s Winchester Model 1892 rifle, which he used during the Hatfield-McCoy feud; a painting of John Lennon by Denny Dent; and a Gorham sterling silver inkwell, shaped like a gavel, that belonged to William Andrews Clark.

Items appraised include a piece of stained glass art depicting dogs playing poker with a joker from a cigar shop; an early 19th century manuscript of John Chrysostom’s writings handwritten in Russian Church Slavonic; one hundred pounds of silver in the form of bars and coins that Rick needs to test before making an offer on; and a collection of props from the 1995 film Batman Forever, including a batarang and one of the pop-up riddles used by the Riddler.

Items appraised include a collection of 19th century Wells Fargo Tiffany belt buckles with Wells Fargo engraved on them; a first edition 1955 Chevy pickup truck purchased by the seller from the original owner 46 years previously; a collection of casino gaming tokens that belonged to Nevada Senator Howard Cannon, which are brought in by Cannon’s grandson; an 1871 Smith and Wesson revolver; and a 1950s U.S. Navy admiral’s telephone that the Old Man wants restored for his desk, much to the irritation of Rick, who wants it resold.

Items appraised include four original paintings by Andy Warhol; a World War II aerial bomber camera, which is accompanied by a photo of it mounted inside a bomber; a pair of 10-carat gold sunglasses that Chumlee purchases during the night shift to resell, but which Rick thinks should better be melted down; and a baseball rule book and baseball signed by seven players, including Hall of Famers Red Faber and Ray Sharp[who?] and two members of the 1919 Chicago Black Sox.

Items appraised include a medal commemorating the 1915 sinking of the RMS Lusitania, found by the seller’s mother about 20 years previously; an antique voltmeter; an autographed copy of Charles Lindbergh’s autobiography, We, which Chumlee buys without authenticating the signature, much to Rick’s anger; and a 1662 century Dutch balance scale.

Items appraised include an odd-looking snaphance rifle from the 16th or 17th century, brought in by the seller of the 70 lb. binoculars in “Corey’s Big Play”; a collection of about 70 vintage pin backs, mostly from the 1930s and 1940s, featuring the images of players such as Roy Campanella, Pee Wee Reese, Jackie Robinson, Satchel Paige, Suitcase Simpson and Babe Ruth; a signed serigraph print of LeRoy Neiman’s 1973 painting “Love Story”; and a World War II-era leather bomber’s helmet.

Items appraised include a 1955 contract signed by Elvis Presley; a collection of 1945 Japanese militaria, including an enemy plane ID card and manual compass; an early 1890s Winchester Model 1885 .22 Long caliber rifle with an octagon barrel; and a set of 12 paste diamond buttons that was owned by Marie Antoinette.

Items appraised include a 1918 Buick touring car; a set of wooden boxes carved to look like books that were used in an attempt to smuggle German guns out of Germany during World War II, accompanied by a note indicating that an attempt at their use was unsuccessful; a tennis racket and poster signed by Arthur Ashe; and a copy of the Boston Globe printed the day after the sinking of the Titanic.

Items appraised include a Colt Paterson revolver prototype; a 1955 Early Series GMC half-ton pickup truck that needs much restoration; a limited edition 1993 reproduction animation cel from the 1960s cartoon Tennessee Tuxedo and His Tales, which features a character, a walrus named Chumley, from which Chumlee’s nickname is derived; and a 1964 Flamingo Hotel appraisal book, brought in by a local who grew up in the area.

Items appraised include a Smith & Wesson Model 320 revolving rifle, of which only 977 were made, which was purchased at a yard sale; a railroad inspection mirror and a piece of rail from the 1800s; a collection of three mounted animals, one of which is a wolf’s head mounted in a deer’s rear end that Corey and the Old Man find disturbing; and a collection of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles comics.

Items appraised include an 1868 over/under Wesson derringer that was passed down through four generations of the seller’s family; a collection of Boeing aviation memorabilia, including a rare color photograph taken during one of test pilot Alvin M. Johnston’s flights; a Stanhope letter opener that incorporates a tiny microphotograph viewer, brought in by the same seller as the Civil War-era cannonballs in “Wild Thing”; a pocket watch that appears to Rick to have been given from one veteran of the Battle of Cross Keys to another. Also, Rick and the Old Man’s worries that Corey has inherited the bad eyesight that runs in their family spur him to see an optometrist.

Items appraised include a trio of antique wooden duck decoys; a 1995 World Series Atlanta Braves ring; a 19th century lighthouse oil can; and a Sho-Bud steel guitar. Also, the men compete in a shotgun target shooting contest in which the loser must pay for a duck dinner.

Items appraised include a US Army Signal Corps mobile telegraph unit whose seller says was used in France during World War I in 1917-1918, but which Rick identifies as being from World War II; an 1858 Smith & Wesson Model 1 pistol; a 1968 Ford Mustang GT fastback; a copy of the first Phillips Cigar Ad from the turn of the 20th century; and an autographed photo of the early cast of Rawhide, including Clint Eastwood, brought by a woman whose great aunt was a chauffeur for MGM Studios.

Items appraised include a copy of Crusade in Europe, Dwight Eisenhower’s wartime memoirs, signed by Eisenhower when he was President of Columbia University; a set of three Continental Can Company freeze-dried food bags made for the Apollo 11 flight; and a circa 1864 Remington New Model Army revolver; and a 1970 bottle of Pétrus Pomerol wine.

Items appraised include a fully functional brass hand cannon that Rick recognizes as having been made in the past 20 years; a three-wheeled prop taxi from the 1992 science fiction film Freejack; a 1961 San Francisco Giants uniform owned by Willie Mays; and a poster for the Beatles last official concert, on August 29, 1966 in Candlestick Park, San Francisco. Also, Rick and Chumlee form a wager over Chumlee’s accuracy with the hand cannon.

Item appraised include a piece of one of the $20 bills stolen by D. B. Cooper during his 1971 hijacking; a pair of paintings by actor Tony Curtis; a Model 1832 artillery foot soldier’s sword purchased for $75 at a garage sale; and an original newsroom teletype reporting the Kennedy assassination, found in an Iowa antique store. Also, Corey and Chumlee are assigned to do the shop’s annual inventory check, both for tax purposes and to decide which employee will get the store’s “booby prize” for the buying the most number of items that have failed to sell.

Items appraised include a book signed by Shoeless Joe Jackson; and an MTV2 Video Music Award “Moonman” statuette that lacks an inscription or any indication of the person to whom it was awarded; a “proto-double-action”, .36 caliber Savage 1861 Navy pistol; and a Franklin D. Roosevelt reelection poster for the 1944 United States Presidential election.

Items appraised include a fork from the Hindenburg, brought in by the nephew of a Marine who guarded the wreckage; a dilapidated 1958 Packard Baker which Rick wishes to purchase but which the Old Man characterizes as scrap metal; an 1892 .45-90 Winchester Model 1886 “elephant gun” rifle handed down through at least four generations of the seller’s family; and a Yellow Submarine Ringo Starr piggy bank.

Items appraised include a 1975 police Identi-Kit Model II, used to create criminal suspect facial composites sketches; a pair of 1963 Baseball Hall of Fame bust molds of John McGraw and Joe DiMaggio; a 1955 Murray pedal car; and a 1985 Harley-Davidson FXR, which Corey and Rick plan as a 30th birthday surprise for Chumlee, who wishes to go to the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally with Rick and Corey, but lacks a working motorcycle.

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Category:片名 Category:History Channel Category:HC Pawn Stars Category:2011 Category:2012 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