Quote:
Originally Posted by Rob D.
Rhys,
I've had similar thoughts about Pickers: How do these guys make a living? Many times the synopsis of a trip will show an item that they bought for $40 was sold for $100, a $20 item for $50, etc. Given that they're not dealing in very big volume (at least on the show), I wonder how they can make a living. Even taking into account that in real life they're buying more stuff, it doesn't seem like they're turning over enough inventory at high enough margins.
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I was anxiously awaiting this series and after I watched the first episode I was a bit put off at how these guys operated so I found the History Channel forums to see what others were saying and I've stuck around since then. They aren't showing everything because some of the people who have been "picked" have had relatives show up to tell you what they aren't showing...one guy sold them his tin toys, but you don't see that...all you see is them buying an old Mobil Oil can...possibly/probably an edit job after History found out the family was pissed... The last episode I watched there was an old opera/movie house with a bunch of old posters underneath the stage...this place is not really an old shuttered opera house it's actually an antique store and the guy was probably storing these movie posters under the stage. And why wouldn't they just buy the crap out of those when the guy told them he'd sell them for $25???? Oh yeah, and that gal in the small town that lived in an old warehouse like building? Friend of the family of one of the pickers...yet they made it seem like this was some hidden away place that their secretary found for them. It was all staged.
There is also a forum for Pawn Stars over there and while that show is more interesting than American Pickers much of it is staged also. The old Coke Machine they bought and had restored magically turned into a completely different model of machine...The guy who traded the gun for the guitar actually works in the guitar shop where the guitar he traded for came from..they had it on their website for over a year. That pinball machine they bought a few weeks ago for $1,000 that cost them $3,000 to restore and the guy told them they could get $5,000 for it...what world are they living in??? You can get a total restore of a vintage pinball for way less than 3 Grand, and that particular game isn't worth more than $700 completely restored.
I know they can't know everything, but those baseball cards looked real to me...I DVR'ed the show and watched it on a 52 inch HDTV and they looked authentic to me when I paused it and took a good look.
All that said the show is still interesting and I love watching it. I still watch American Pickers too, but it's more like watching a train wreck and I can't avert my eyes.