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00:00Daniel is sending this over to a guy
00:02that's got 500,000 square feet to dig through.
00:06Most pickers, they'd be sweating bullets.
00:08Me, I want to put mustard on it and eat it.
00:11Look at this thing.
00:12That steam tractor.
00:13That'd have to go on your side of the van.
00:14This guy likes to collect what we call mantiques,
00:17has another side to him.
00:18These are the drawings you do by hand?
00:20Yeah.
00:20Have you ever sold any of the originals?
00:24Wow, Cecil, you got some stuff in here now.
00:26When you're in Cecil's house, I mean,
00:28you can literally just hear time passing.
00:33That's a backdrop from a sideshow in a carnival.
00:36That's a one-of-a-kind.
00:37This piece is 1940s circus culture
00:40all rolled up on a stick.
00:42We've bought these before,
00:43and some of them can be thousands of dollars.
00:45I'm Mike Wolf, and I'm Frank Frex.
00:48And we're pickers.
00:50We travel the back roads of America
00:52looking to buy rusty gold.
00:56We make a living telling the history of America
00:59one piece at a time.
01:08We're cruising around the back roads
01:09of North Carolina today freestyling.
01:11We're waiting for a call from Danielle.
01:13We've had some great mega picks here,
01:15and hopefully this will be another successful trip.
01:19Hey, what's going on?
01:20Hey.
01:22How are you doing?
01:23We're doing good.
01:25What I've learned about Mike and Frank
01:26is that you have to think outside the box
01:28with those boys.
01:29I just wanted to talk to you about something.
01:31What's up?
01:31I have asked for a raise from them in the past,
01:34and that has been quite a fiasco.
01:35So I'm going to try to outsmart them.
01:38I feel like I take my job very seriously,
01:40and I feel like I really pour 100% into this place,
01:43and I'm also pouring 100% of my car into this place too.
01:49Instead of asking for a straight raise,
01:51I'm going to ask for a monthly allowance
01:52for the use of my personal car.
01:55After all, a dollar's a dollar.
01:57I'm spending a lot of money on gas running errands.
02:00I have to go to the post office.
02:02I have to go to the store to get supplies for the shop.
02:04The storage is like four blocks away,
02:06and the post office is like two blocks away.
02:08I really would appreciate a cushion for mileage
02:11or gas reimbursements or something.
02:15While we're on the road here,
02:16we could probably mow it over a little bit.
02:18Listen, you guys talk about it.
02:19I'm going to work it into the budget.
02:21Budget?
02:21I got to go.
02:22I will talk to you soon.
02:23Danielle!
02:24Yeah.
02:24Do you have any leads for us?
02:27Um, no.
02:28I don't have any leads for you.
02:29I think freestyling is just fine for you for right now.
02:31Be safe.
02:33I'm pretty sure the boys are not going to go for this,
02:35but I've got to try to bug them about it somehow,
02:37and maybe if I can just get that much more,
02:40that'll make me that much happier.
02:43We give her an inch.
02:44She takes a mile.
02:44You know what?
02:45She wanted indoor plumbing.
02:46We got indoor plumbing.
02:47She wanted Arbor Day off.
02:48We gave it to her.
02:48I'm telling you.
02:50What does she want us to do?
02:51You're preaching to the choir.
02:52You give her one thing, that's never good enough.
02:56I'm not sure how to deal with her gas request,
02:59so you know what?
02:59I'm going to worry about getting a pick.
03:00I'll deal with her later.
03:02Here's what I'm going to find you today.
03:03I'm going to find you an old-timey pick
03:06because you're in North Carolina,
03:07and in North Carolina, you don't say antiques,
03:10you say old-timey.
03:11You don't say bundle, you say piling.
03:13So I'm going to find you a piling old-timey pick.
03:15Mmm.
03:23I got the long-distance eyes.
03:26I can see stuff.
03:27I can't just see it.
03:28I smell it.
03:29That's fine.
03:29Wait a second.
03:29Wait a second.
03:30This is it right here.
03:31After so many years of doing this job,
03:33it's like you're a bloodhound,
03:35and you can sniff out the good stuff.
03:36All right.
03:37Now?
03:37But you can smell it?
03:38No, but we're on the main vein right here.
03:40All right.
03:40That's cool.
03:41Look at this.
03:42Look at this.
03:43Look at this.
03:43So we pull around the corner,
03:44and I see everything.
03:46I see old trucks.
03:47I see old buses.
03:48I see old tractors, old cars.
03:51Look at this place.
03:51Stop right here.
03:52Stop right here.
03:52When you can see it from the road,
03:54who knows what he's got hidden
03:55in the back of the woods?
03:58I don't know if anybody lives here, though.
03:59This is a mega pick, dude.
04:00Where would somebody be living?
04:01He lives in this bus.
04:03I don't know where this guy lives.
04:04He could live in a bus.
04:04He could live in a van.
04:05He could live in a trailer.
04:07Nobody lives in there.
04:08Hello!
04:09Man, check this out.
04:10Dude, knock on this trailer right here.
04:15Hey, how you doing?
04:16Hello.
04:16Hey, how you doing?
04:17Hey, I'm Mike.
04:18Gene McLaughlin.
04:19Frank and I both collect old cars
04:20and motorcycles and stuff.
04:22Uh-huh.
04:22This is the kind of stuff that we look for.
04:23Uh-huh.
04:24Right now, I'm overstocked.
04:26I see that.
04:26Overstocked.
04:27Yeah, it looks like it.
04:27And here's where I'm at right now.
04:29I need a lot of stuff, and I got a bunch of money.
04:31You got time to show us around?
04:33Yeah.
04:34The thing that I'm most excited about
04:35when I'm walking around this pick
04:37is the total randomness of it.
04:40Man, I can see driving this.
04:41You see the fire truck.
04:42Hurray!
04:43You see the old tractors.
04:44Those are big boy toys.
04:45Yeah.
04:46So these roads just snake in and out here
04:49with all this stuff.
04:49How many acres is there?
04:5117.
04:5217 acres?
04:53Wow.
04:54Wow.
04:54That's a 16-horse steam tractor.
04:56Frick, double cylinder.
04:58What's your fascination with steam?
04:59I grew up on a farm.
05:01We didn't have a car or a tractor
05:03until I was about 13 years old.
05:06They held a fascination for me.
05:07Uh-huh.
05:08I like old tractors, especially the old type
05:11that's got steam engines.
05:13They sound good running, and they even smell good.
05:16Basically, the first time I saw one, I liked it.
05:19But when a lot of this stuff wasn't worth anything,
05:21why did you accumulate it?
05:23Partly it was to preserve it.
05:25If I see an old steam engine for sale,
05:27I just think it would look nice around here.
05:30Eventually, steam got replaced by gasoline.
05:32The first gas tractors were out around 1900,
05:35and it took up until the 20s before they replaced steam.
05:38So it phased them out.
05:39Yeah.
05:40Gene loves steam tractors with a passion.
05:42It's like you can feel it when you're talking to them.
05:44How does that feel when you start walking through
05:46some of this stuff?
05:46It's like reminiscing.
05:48It's a little bit, in a way, like meeting some old friends.
05:52Gene has turned his property into an open-air museum.
05:56Museums are great, you know, and I love them.
05:58But, you know, it's time to get dirty,
05:59look around here, and find some good stuff.
06:01We're out of here.
06:04I think he's got a few things.
06:06Hey, this didn't happen overnight.
06:09Gene has got a lot of stuff.
06:11The trick here is pulling something
06:12out of these piles of junk that we can sell.
06:16These are kind of cool.
06:17You have to see the potential in a lot of these items.
06:20It's not about the antiquity value.
06:21It's about the repurposing value.
06:24What do these come off of?
06:25Out of an old cotton mill, I think.
06:27Oh, really?
06:27Uh-huh.
06:28Is this something you'd sell?
06:29Yeah.
06:31You can see they're a little worn in the gear teeth.
06:35And they are still useful for something that runs slow
06:38or just as a decorative item.
06:41What do you got to have for these?
06:43I'll need 50 for the two.
06:45I don't know why I liked them, but they spoke to me.
06:47I think I can repurpose them into something cool,
06:50something clever, something different.
06:52I'm thinking 40 for the two.
06:55I reckon I could take 40.
06:57You do 40?
06:58Uh-huh.
06:58All right, so we've broken the ice.
07:00A lot of times we say guys have tonnage.
07:02Dang.
07:03Look at this thing.
07:04That'd have to go on your side of the van.
07:06Shh.
07:06Gene literally has tonnage.
07:08You've got some road graders over there.
07:10I see you got some steam equipment over here.
07:13This stuff is cool, but it's way too big for us
07:16to take off this property.
07:17Can we go up here?
07:17I noticed you got some buildings up here.
07:19Yeah.
07:19Towards the front of the road.
07:20Okay.
07:20The stuff we're seeing today is from the late 1800s,
07:23early 1900s, the era of steam engines,
07:25cast irons, and handlebar mustaches.
07:27If we can find some smalls today from this same era,
07:31we're in business.
07:31All right, here we go.
07:32Gene says dive in.
07:34Dang.
07:34Can you boys get through?
07:35I'll make an effort to get through this, my friend.
07:37This room is floor-to-ceiling smalls.
07:40Now we're talking.
07:41Gene, man, this place is packed.
07:43Oh, yeah.
07:44Let me see here.
07:45It's rough in there.
07:46It is rough in here, man.
07:48It's really rough.
07:49Gene, what about this footstep?
07:52This cast iron footstep, the camel.
07:54Back when they shined shoes,
07:56they just propped the boots up on that.
07:57Cast iron was the plastic of its day.
07:59The industrial age of America was forged out of iron.
08:02How much you got on this?
08:04About 10.
08:05All right, that's exactly what I was thinking.
08:07Great minds think alike.
08:09Hey, what about this fire extinguisher here?
08:11It's empty.
08:12This was a carbon tetrachloride, you know,
08:14used to pump them, and you used to pump them up,
08:16and then you'd shoot them.
08:17Uh-huh.
08:18The brass fire extinguisher that I found uses a chemical
08:20called carbon tetrachloride.
08:21And what it does is it takes the oxygen out of the fire.
08:24It covers over it.
08:25It was outlawed because it was so toxic.
08:26Made by pyrene, you know, those were makers
08:29just like your American LaFrance.
08:30They made fire extinguishers, too.
08:31Yeah.
08:32What do you get for something like this?
08:34That fire extinguisher is a nice item.
08:37I got it about five or six years ago.
08:41I'd take 15 for it.
08:4315?
08:43Yeah.
08:44All right, you got a deal, Gene.
08:46$15 on the fire extinguisher.
08:48We've had some great luck here in Gene's buildings,
08:50buses, and trailers.
08:51Feel free to look at whatever you want.
08:52You know what?
08:53I appreciate you saying that.
08:54He's still got a lot more places to check out.
08:57There you go.
08:58He's letting you go in first.
08:59I'm going in first.
09:00Just in case there's a big raccoon in there.
09:02I'll deal with him.
09:04Whoa!
09:05Woo!
09:06Right away, I see a lot of pieces that I'm very interested in.
09:09How much for this fan, Gene?
09:11About 40.
09:12There's certain things that we can't get enough of,
09:14and one of them is brass blade fans.
09:16It's an unusual brand.
09:18Sprag.
09:19There's a lot of manufacturers that I'm very familiar with.
09:21This one, I've never seen before.
09:23How about 30?
09:24That's a little cheap for them.
09:26I can't get anything that cheap anymore.
09:28I got that fan from a fella just down the road here 50 years ago.
09:33What are you thinking?
09:35I'm thinking 35.
09:3835?
09:40Fans are cool.
09:41They're mechanical, they're beautiful, and they have a purpose.
09:44This is something in my store that would be easy to sell.
09:47All right, 35.
09:48Okay.
09:49All right, I'm going to put it right here.
09:51Ooh, look at this.
09:52I pick up this cast iron fire call box.
09:55This is a really neat piece.
09:57Gene, what about this fire alarm box?
09:59That is cool, man.
10:01What kind is it?
10:02Gamewell.
10:03That's good fire alarms.
10:04A lot of the early fire boxes were made by Gamewell.
10:06It was called a pull station.
10:07Once they pulled it, that would alert their local authorities
10:10where the fire was actually at.
10:12They were one of the biggest manufacturers of fire alarms.
10:14For fire, brake, glass, open door, pull handle.
10:27Gene, what do you got to have for it?
10:30There's a lot of people that collect old fire equipment, old police equipment.
10:33This is a really neat box.
10:35It's got a fist with a lightning rod going through it.
10:37That's super cool.
10:39I'd take 25.
10:4125.
10:42Oh, okay.
10:43All right, thank you.
10:44Love it.
10:44Hey, Gene, what about this coin taker here from the bus?
10:48This fear box represents a time in history people are very nostalgic about.
10:51A rare find.
10:53How about 40?
10:54I couldn't hardly do it for that.
10:56Look at the size of this place, Frank.
10:58This place is huge.
10:59You'll find some old, some new stuff.
11:01So it doesn't even have to be old for you to buy it.
11:03If this pick is going to be 500,000 square feet of plastic trinkets and amateur oil paintings,
11:08it's going to be a big disappointment.
11:09This is all new stuff.
11:13I could hardly do it without my toys, the ad machines, movie projectors and things like that.
11:18You got to have that kind of stuff.
11:19Oh, yeah, I have to have that.
11:21Hey, Gene.
11:23Yes, sir.
11:23What about this coin taker here from the bus?
11:26This would have been something that would have been put on a bus or a trolley.
11:29You deposited your coins in as you got in.
11:32I mean, this thing is in great condition.
11:33A rare find.
11:35I think it came out of a streetcar in Salisbury.
11:38All righty.
11:39This is a cool piece.
11:40I mean, it's transportation.
11:41It's coin operated.
11:43It has glass sides to it.
11:44I mean, it shows the money going through and trickling down.
11:46What would you have to have for that, Gene?
11:48I'd have to have 60 out of it.
11:4960?
11:50Ooh.
11:52How about 40?
11:54I couldn't hardly do it for that.
11:57Could we split the difference?
11:58It's all right for a person to jockey a little bit about a price.
12:02We all do that.
12:03I respect them for that.
12:05Well, I can take 50.
12:0750?
12:08I can do that.
12:09Okay.
12:10All right.
12:11Thank you, sir.
12:11It's good to have something like that preserved.
12:14That's right.
12:15Highlight of my trip so far.
12:16Yeah.
12:17All right.
12:17I'm going to keep looking.
12:19Oh, yeah.
12:20Yeah.
12:21Can we look in this building here?
12:22Yeah.
12:23You can.
12:24Dang, dang, dang.
12:26Oh, that's three dangs.
12:27What kind of machine is this?
12:28Kind of a riveter.
12:29I see these really nice, ornate cast iron legs.
12:33I see a wood top, but there's a bunch of stuff piled on top of it.
12:36And there's a pedal underneath.
12:37You're working by foot, right?
12:38Yeah.
12:39It's got the...
12:39Foot feet on the back side.
12:40He thinks it's some sort of a riveter.
12:43I'm not sure why I'm even attracted to this thing.
12:45Probably for the same reason that Gene bought it.
12:47I like the industrial look.
12:49I like the way it moves.
12:51I like the way the gears flow.
12:52I like the lines of it.
12:54I like the base and the wood top.
12:55It's small.
12:56The size of this piece is great.
12:58It's very versatile.
12:59I mean, a lot of this stuff that you see that's industrial, it's huge.
13:02It used to be in factories.
13:03It's too big to put in someone's home.
13:05I'll pull it out of here a little bit so we can see.
13:07Yeah.
13:07That's there.
13:08It still has some original paint on it.
13:10There's some gilding.
13:11There's some pin striping on the top of it.
13:12It's got the manufacturer's name.
13:14The last patent date on this machine is from the 1890s,
13:18so I know it's at least from the turn of the century.
13:20They probably had hundreds of these people in factories
13:22probably sat there all day long making some little piece.
13:24Some guy might have retired running this thing.
13:27Working on these.
13:27If someone's trying to create a certain look,
13:29this is a piece to that puzzle.
13:31What do you get for the riveting machine?
13:35That's like a little $100.
13:36A hundred bucks?
13:38Uh-huh.
13:39You know what?
13:39I love it.
13:41Thank you, my friend.
13:42I love it.
13:43Finally, we circle back to Gene's home where we first met him.
13:47There you go.
13:49Cool.
13:50Alright, this place is packed too.
13:51He's got a lot of things hanging from wires.
13:54Little knobs, little wheels, little lights.
13:57Just things that he thinks that somebody can reuse
13:59or he can use himself.
14:01We're looking around in there and I see some artwork.
14:04Wow.
14:05That's cool as hell.
14:06What is that?
14:06I like to draw.
14:07It's all drawn by you?
14:08Yeah.
14:08Are you serious?
14:09That was a bad .
14:10This guy that has a passion for big industrial steam engines
14:14has another side to him.
14:16So these are the drawings you do by hand?
14:18Yeah.
14:18I started drawing really at about five years old.
14:22And I didn't always have paper.
14:24Sometimes it was the sand in the yard.
14:27My folks got me a new tablet and a pencil at six years old.
14:32I made use of that thing too.
14:34So you'll draw one by hand and make prints of it?
14:37Yeah.
14:37When we were walking through this property,
14:39I could tell that Gene had a real appreciation
14:41for the beauty of these machines.
14:43You could say that's a piece of artwork.
14:45The designers went to a lot of work to make that.
14:48They're beautiful.
14:48That makes perfect sense now
14:50because he's been looking at these machines
14:52with an artist's eye for his entire life.
14:54I saw the sawmill running when I was five years old.
14:56I was going to ask you if these are like memories of yours.
14:59Yeah.
14:59When I was about five years old.
15:01So this is an original here?
15:03That's the original.
15:06I see.
15:07So this would have been just a memory of yours
15:09when you were a child.
15:09Yeah.
15:10I was five years old.
15:12I followed my dad and brothers down
15:15to where the steam engine was hooked to a sawmill.
15:18From that, I liked to watch a steam engine.
15:21I could watch it about as long as they would let me stay there
15:24and look at it.
15:26I love it.
15:27It's really done well.
15:28When you're looking at a piece of art
15:30and you're having the artist explain to you
15:32what their inspiration was, what their memory was,
15:35it's amazing.
15:36Have you ever sold any of the originals?
15:40I believe I sold one.
15:41What do you get for that?
15:43I think I got $25.
15:44I thought right away, that's way too low.
15:46I see the one hanging on the wall.
15:48It's framed.
15:49It's beautiful.
15:49Well, let me ask you this.
15:50I would love to have something original of yours.
15:53Is that something that you would consider selling?
15:55Yeah, I would consider selling that one.
15:57Can I make you an offer on it?
15:59Yeah.
16:01How about...
16:04So I thought I was going to stand tall.
16:06I was going to offer him a number that was going to blow his mind
16:10since he sold the last piece for $25.
16:13How about $200?
16:14I can't hardly take $200.
16:16It takes longer than that to make one.
16:18What are you thinking on it?
16:20I was thinking up around $500.
16:23$500?
16:23How much are the reprints?
16:24Yeah.
16:25You can still have memories.
16:27Yeah.
16:27Make me an offer on the reprint.
16:29Okay.
16:30I'll make you an...
16:30How about for a reprint, $100?
16:34I reckon I can take $100.
16:36You got to sign it.
16:37Oh, I'll do that.
16:38Signed piece of artwork, baby.
16:40When we walked onto Gene's property today, we saw the dirt, the dust, the grime, the sun-baked
16:44stuff, the rusty stuff.
16:45The last thing that I thought I was ever going to buy on this property was a piece of artwork.
16:50The fine lines, the colors.
16:52This guy was amazing.
16:54Thanks for letting us look around, buddy.
16:55Well, you're certainly welcome.
16:56I bought this antique fire extinguisher for $15.
16:59I'm going to ask $45.
17:01I shelled out $50 for this vintage fare box.
17:04I think I can at least get $125.
17:07Ugh.
17:07I paid $25 for this cast iron fire alarm box.
17:11I think I can more than double my money.
17:14Thanks for letting us treasure hunt.
17:16Heck yeah.
17:16Thanks for giving us a tour.
17:17I appreciate it.
17:18You're certainly welcome.
17:19I've enjoyed having both of y'all down today.
17:21Great.
17:21I think Mike and Frank are happy with what they got.
17:25I felt like it's going into somebody's hands who will preserve it.
17:31And I will not be here forever.
17:33All right, Gene.
17:34Sweet picking.
17:41Danny D.
17:42Danny D, what's up?
17:43I'm lead for you guys.
17:44Okay.
17:45All right.
17:45Pastor Cecil is this guy's name.
17:47I mean, how much cuter can you get than Pastor Cecil?
17:50Terry, he's always cute.
17:51So you're saying that Frank's got to be on his best behavior?
17:53Gosh darn.
17:54He was touchmen learned and inspired to preach at 14 years old.
17:58Okay.
17:58He collected a lot of stuff with his late wife Margaret for years and years and years.
18:02So you're saying this guy's been a collector for a long time.
18:04He used to collect with his wife.
18:06Now she's passed on.
18:07She's passed on.
18:08He wants to sell some of this stuff, move on with his life.
18:10Yep.
18:10Check out the email.
18:11I think you're going to dig him.
18:12All right, honey.
18:13Thanks for the lead.
18:13So I'm just curious.
18:15You know, we were talking about earlier about the gas mileage or helping out with that cost.
18:20Have you given any more thought to that?
18:22Oh, Frank's grabbing the phone.
18:23I got to go.
18:23Bye.
18:26Danny's still on our case about giving her a cash allowance for her car.
18:29We can't dodge this bullet forever.
18:31We're going to have to think of something.
18:33At least she's not holding out on the leads.
18:35And this one sounds interesting.
18:36I mean, we haven't picked too many preachers.
18:38Here, this is it.
18:38Oh, yeah, this is it.
18:40Yeah, but there's the buildings.
18:41Look at the buildings.
18:42When we pulled into Cecil's property, the first thing I saw was all the outbuildings behind
18:46the house.
18:47There was a lot of them and they were packed with stuff.
18:49Well, look at the size of that house.
18:50The house is huge.
18:51Oh, look at all that stuff.
18:52Hey, hey, hey, there we go.
18:58Remember, you'll be cussing and stuff.
18:59This guy's a preacher.
19:01Hey.
19:03Hey, Cecil.
19:04Hey, hey, hey, hey.
19:05Hey, I'm Mike.
19:05Nice to meet you.
19:06Okay, Cecil.
19:07Cecil, how you doing?
19:07My name's Frank.
19:08How you doing?
19:09You talked to Danny on the phone?
19:10Yes.
19:10Yeah, here's a list of just some random stuff, anything from doorstops.
19:14All the way to pinball machines.
19:16Okay, clocks, watches.
19:17I'll be right here into clocks.
19:18We've got a few clocks.
19:19Do you?
19:19Well, can we look around a little bit?
19:20Yes, be glad for you to come on in.
19:22Look at all the clocks I can see on a staircase, Frankie.
19:24All I can see is clocks, all the way up the staircase, all over the walls.
19:28And I'm thinking, man, this guy's really into time management.
19:31When you're in Cecil's house, I mean, you can literally just hear time passing.
19:46Wow, Cecil, you got some stuff in here now.
19:48What year is your house?
19:49This is 1840.
19:51Look at that, Frankie.
19:51That's a German.
19:52That's a German.
19:53That's a German guy.
19:53German almost like Black Forest type stuff.
19:55I like clocks.
19:56I like the looks of them.
19:57And there was something about them that the more I looked at them, the more I liked about
20:00them.
20:01Cecil, how many clocks do you think you have?
20:03I have about 300.
20:04300, huh?
20:05The more I learned there were so many different varieties of clocks, and they just got a hold
20:10of me.
20:11Well, you got some random stuff.
20:13Can I look around a little bit?
20:13Yeah, yeah, I'd be glad for you, too.
20:16All right.
20:17Frank and I were wandering around this whole place.
20:19There was a lot of clocks.
20:20Jeez, look how many pocket watches you got.
20:22There was a lot of furniture.
20:24This is a guy that's been to estate sales, that's been to auctions for many years.
20:29Oh, that's cool.
20:30His whole house is a reflection of that.
20:33What about this old BB gun?
20:35Yeah.
20:36It's a Daisy, it says.
20:38In the first few decades of the 20th century, Daisy emerged as the most popular manufacturer
20:43of BB guns in America.
20:44Every boy wanted one of these things.
20:46To me, this one looks like it's from the 1920s.
20:49That's kind of an old one.
20:50Yeah.
20:50Well, it's got the wood stock.
20:52It doesn't have a plastic stock, so it's an earlier one.
20:54Right.
20:54But I can't read the model number on it.
20:57Most of the boys that grew up fighting in World War I and World War II learned how to
21:01shoot with one of these guns.
21:03You know what I like about it?
21:04It's got the shot tube in it.
21:05Yeah.
21:06And the shot tube is always gone.
21:08Right, right.
21:08And then once it was gone, then they just used it as a pop gun.
21:11Yeah, yeah, right.
21:23What do you value something like this at?
21:25Like $25.
21:26$25?
21:27Yeah.
21:28All right.
21:2825 bucks.
21:29I'm going to break the ice on this piece.
21:30I think it's pretty cool.
21:31Okay.
21:32Thank you so much.
21:33Okay, thank you.
21:34I'm excited about this BB gun, but I'm even more excited that Cecil is giving really good
21:38prices off the bat.
21:40All right.
21:40Let's go see if we can dig up Frankie now.
21:43Frank, I bought something.
21:44What'd you buy?
21:45A BB gun.
21:46There you go.
21:47Behave yourself.
21:48All right.
21:49You got a preacher here and a guy with a gun, so you better behave.
21:51Uh-oh.
21:52That's right.
21:52I saw you got some microphones.
21:54It's almost like this is a recording studio back here.
21:56You got some 8-track players and stuff?
21:57I used to broadcast on the radio, and we recorded the sermons back in here.
22:01What was the name of the show?
22:02It was Pentecostal Witness.
22:05Okay.
22:05Give me the intro into it.
22:07Just like, you know.
22:09This is Cecil Coates, pastor of Emmanuel Pentecostal Holmest Church in Dr. Fort Virginia.
22:13Have some songs, and then, of course, a sermon, and then we conclude.
22:18Well, I know Danny said you found your calling to be a preacher at a young age.
22:22I was 16.
22:2216?
22:23Yeah.
22:24There was a preacher on the radio, and I listened to him, and the Lord just spoke to
22:27my heart that I was supposed to be a preacher.
22:29And so the Lord has always done that.
22:31I've passed it for 55 years.
22:34Boom.
22:36What's this windshield off of, do you know?
22:37Probably a 20s or 30s, a Ford or a Chevrolet.
22:40How much is that?
22:41That's $100.
22:42Woo!
22:43Let me stay focused here.
22:47Whoa.
22:48Look at that, man.
22:49King Tut-looking thing.
22:50You know, the King Tut laugh, when I seen that hanging up in the rafters, I'm like,
22:54this is a real unusual item, and that's the kind of stuff I like to buy.
22:57If you don't buy it, you're going to wish you did.
22:59I know.
23:00How much is that?
23:01$25.
23:01$25?
23:02$25?
23:02That's a good deal for you.
23:03That's too expensive.
23:06Let's see the back of it here.
23:07I don't think it has a lot of age, maybe 70s, but heck, that's still 40 years old.
23:12The more you look at it, the more you'll like it.
23:14$15 is where I'm at.
23:15$25.
23:16I could never do $25.
23:18It'd have to be totally rewired.
23:19I mean, with your expertise, you can wire that thing in five minutes.
23:22$15, you need to sell it.
23:23$200, that's the bottle.
23:24It's really cool.
23:26I mean, it's got a little patina to it.
23:27It's got like a little cracking in the face and stuff.
23:29You know, you can see the paint.
23:30I mean, I don't know.
23:32I've never seen one.
23:32I just thought it was a cool, unusual item.
23:34I'll take it for $20.
23:35Okay.
23:36I think it's pretty cool.
23:37I like the face.
23:38I like the face.
23:39That's all there is.
23:41Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
23:43Ho!
23:44It's got some outbuildings, stuff all stacked up, a ton of stuff I'm interested in.
23:48It's like a little printing press here.
23:50Who knows what was printed on this thing?
23:51It's got some scrolling on the side.
23:53Yeah, yeah, that's a nice piece.
23:54These were like the Twitter of the 19th century.
23:57So far, things are going great.
23:59Cecil's been very welcoming, and there's still a lot of ground to cover.
24:03This is my study.
24:04Sermons are born here, and they preach elsewhere.
24:06Okay.
24:06I like that.
24:07That's neat.
24:08What is this, like an old inkwell or something?
24:10I see this very fancy piece of wood with, like, some binoculars mounted to it.
24:13Like, they're part of it.
24:14That's kind of a magnifying glass.
24:17This is sort of a thing that you put your Bible on to read.
24:21I think it was rosewood.
24:22Oh, yeah, it's a larger piece.
24:23Yeah.
24:24Oh, it goes all the way back.
24:25Yeah, yeah.
24:26It's a reading desk, and it's very ornate, very beautiful.
24:29The wood, the detail, you can tell this is a high-quality piece.
24:32That's an extremely old piece there.
24:34That's neat.
24:34I would guess that this piece was from the Victorian era or even earlier.
24:39That folds up.
24:40And then you put your book on this side of it.
24:41Yeah.
24:42The larger magnifying glass is up in there, too.
24:45There's another magnifying glass?
24:46Oh, yeah, yeah.
24:46He opens the top, whoa, and flips out this really large magnifying glass.
25:01Where did you find this at?
25:03I bought that in Greenville, South Carolina.
25:05I got that when I was going to Holmes Bible College.
25:08I bought that from an old man in an old shop, and that's been about 40 years ago.
25:1240 years ago?
25:13Yeah.
25:15Let me see what the underneath of it's like.
25:16It's got a little piece of felt up there.
25:18It's got some felt on it.
25:20I like that.
25:21What's something like that worth?
25:22That's $200.
25:24I'm not really anxious about selling it, but of course I may be blind one day and I may
25:28have to have...
25:30Hey, I'm almost there now.
25:32Yeah.
25:32All right.
25:32If you take $200 for it, I'd buy it.
25:34Okay.
25:35All right.
25:35I love it.
25:36I absolutely love it.
25:37Now that we're done with the house, Cecil takes us outside to check out his buildings
25:40and his storage containers.
25:42I mean, you want to sell.
25:43Why do you want to get rid of your stuff?
25:44Well, my wife died a couple of years ago, and when she died, something in me died.
25:49And so I realized that I just got the downsides.
25:52We were sort of saving up some things and thinking about the time when we would retire.
25:56We could sort of live off the things that we had.
25:59After she passed, well, then I knew I just had to let it go.
26:03This stuff just doesn't interest you as much anymore.
26:05This stuff don't mean the thing in the world.
26:13Holy moly.
26:14All right, my friend.
26:15What I loved about this pick was finding this stuff, digging through this stuff.
26:18This guy has been collecting for over 40 years.
26:23All right.
26:25This stuff is piled.
26:26Whoa.
26:28This guy's got tonnage, man.
26:34Looks like a little printing press here.
26:36It looks like it's from the early 1900s.
26:38I mean, it's really cool.
26:40It's cast iron.
26:40It's got some intricate designs on the side, and I think it even works.
26:44Looks like this comes up like this.
26:46You were to put some kind of, you know, some type of ink or something in there.
26:50Technology always makes things smaller.
26:54First, she had a printing press that took up the whole room and took four people to operate.
26:59They'll never make anything like this again.
27:01How much?
27:02$25.
27:03$25.
27:03These little early printing presses were like the Twitter of the 19th century.
27:08Revolutionaries would print out little leaflets and distribute them to people for their cause.
27:12I'll do $25.
27:13Okay.
27:14Who knows what was printed on this thing?
27:16Pillow speaker radio.
27:18Deposit.
27:19Let's see this.
27:20One to five dimes.
27:22Before there were Sony Walkmans, before there were iPods, there were pillow speakers.
27:27Oh, see here.
27:28Look at this.
27:28It says pillow radio.
27:30It's the speaker.
27:31It says, place me under your pillow.
27:33Imagine going into a hotel.
27:35You put the speaker under the pillow.
27:36You crank a couple dimes into this thing.
27:38And all of a sudden, Elvis is singing Love Me Tender, and you're falling asleep.
27:42What I don't understand is, how come this is upside down?
27:44When you're laying in bed.
27:46You're looking backwards like that?
27:47Oh, I can see how I can adjust it now.
27:49That's what I'm saying.
27:50Okay.
27:51This is a perfect piece.
27:52It's colorful plastic.
27:54It's got graphics on it.
27:55This radio, to me, screamed the 50s.
27:58Cecil, how much is this?
27:59$100.
28:00That's the best I can do on that.
28:01He's got 50 and 100.
28:02Sounds like a standard or plus.
28:03And what's the best you can do on this?
28:0475.
28:04That's 175 for both pieces.
28:06Another thing I'm looking at is this really cool plastic fixed-tuned radio from the 1960s.
28:11It's fixed-tuned because it only receives one station.
28:14In this case, AM 1400.
28:17175.
28:18Radio stations back in the day used to give these out as promotional items.
28:22175 is a great deal.
28:23Unless you want to do 185.
28:25I'd do 165.
28:27No, 175.
28:28Cecil is firm on his price, and I can understand that.
28:31These are two great radio items that are from a bygone era.
28:34170.
28:35Oh, okay.
28:36170.
28:37All right.
28:38Thanks.
28:39You really got a good deal.
28:40I did?
28:40Why are you going to find another one like that?
28:42I paid $170 for these two radios.
28:44I'm going to ask $200 a piece.
28:47I paid $25 for the printing press.
28:49I think I can get at least 125.
28:52You got it?
28:53All right.
28:53You carry my BB gun and I'll carry this.
28:55I shelled out $200 for this item.
28:57I don't know exactly what it is, but hopefully I can double my money.
29:02Thanks, buddy.
29:03Thanks for letting us in.
29:03Come in.
29:04Yeah, yeah, yeah.
29:04Hey, thanks a lot.
29:06Somehow I feel like my spirit's been lifted.
29:08Well, that's great.
29:09That's the way life is supposed to be.
29:10My concept of life has always been once a friend, always a friend.
29:15And so I consider them my friends today.
29:17Okay, okay.
29:19Goodbye.
29:24I've asked for a raise in the past and honestly that was a fiasco.
29:27But first thing, Danielle, where do you see yourself two years from now here at Antique Archeology?
29:33I legitimately hate you.
29:34As anticipated, the boys did not go for my idea of extra gas mileage.
29:39I've got to drive to the bank.
29:41I've got to drive to the post office.
29:42I've got to drive to the recycling center, to the office supply store.
29:45This is a lot of wear and tear on my car.
29:46They get their satellite radio.
29:48They get their happy hours on the road.
29:50They get their fancy motels.
29:52I should get a little something.
29:54But persistence is key.
29:56So I just have to re-approach them about it tomorrow.
30:00Oh, wow, look at that.
30:03Baseball cards.
30:04So many cards I can't even imagine.
30:06Baseball cards are the ultimate collectible.
30:08How much would a couple of these boxes be if I took a chance on a couple of them?
30:11I could strike gold.
30:12Make me an offer.
30:17Frank and I are kicking it on the back roads in North Carolina.
30:20We get the call from Danielle.
30:22She tells us she's got a guy named Jeff that's got 500,000 square feet to dig through.
30:28Set up as a big warehouse.
30:29This looks it.
30:30This has got to be it.
30:31More with 500,000.
30:32500,000.
30:33Now, most pickers, they'd be sweating bullets.
30:35Me, I want to put mustard on it and eat it.
30:38This is half the town.
30:39Look at the size of this place, Frank.
30:41This place is huge.
30:42Do you pack your good manners?
30:43I pack my good manners.
30:44I'm on my good manners every day, dude.
30:50Hey, are you Jeff?
30:52Yeah, Jeff.
30:52Hey, I'm Mike.
30:53Nice to meet you.
30:54How you doing?
30:54I'm Frank.
30:54Hey, Frank.
30:55Can I help you?
30:55You talking to Danielle on the phone?
30:56Yes.
30:57She said you had 500,000 square feet.
30:59There's a half a million feet here, yeah.
31:01Half a million.
31:01Of just collectibles or what else do you do here?
31:03Uh, it's a warehouse where we bring stuff in from all other buildings.
31:07There's this stuff that I've collected over the years.
31:09I own thousands of pieces of property in about 30 states, and I rent.
31:13I rent space, warehouse space, manufacturing space, retail space, residential space.
31:20Danielle said you buy buildings, and then whatever's inside of the buildings, you just,
31:23this is the location.
31:24Yeah, a lot of old buildings.
31:25Well, can we look around?
31:26Yeah, come on.
31:27All right.
31:28Give us a tour.
31:28Well, guys, here's a pull.
31:30Wow, this looks like, what's this?
31:31Scratch and dent area?
31:33We walk into this insane room.
31:35It's literally packed with stuff.
31:37How do you get all this stuff?
31:38Fork truck.
31:39No, I mean, who calls you?
31:40Hey, I got a bunch of broken stuff.
31:41People that rented warehouses and buildings from me and different people.
31:43We get rid of the things that come out of our many buildings that people leave,
31:47which is the reason we accumulate so much stuff.
31:49What's the end objective here?
31:51I mean, you're storing all this.
31:52This is taking up a lot of square footage here.
31:53Yeah.
31:54That's what I'm saying.
31:55Well, I got a lot of square footage.
31:58Whoo!
31:59Whoo!
31:59This keeps on going and going.
32:01Man!
32:02We're just getting started.
32:04500,000 square feet of storage.
32:06I've never seen this much stuff in one space.
32:09This came out of the Waldorf Astoria.
32:11Ooh, check this out.
32:12He's got roulette wheels.
32:13He's got mannequins.
32:14He's got Roman armor.
32:15Frank, you need a king tut?
32:17No.
32:18I got the lamp already.
32:19I got two words for you.
32:20Junk drunk.
32:21There's things everywhere.
32:23Let's get into some of these little rooms back here.
32:24I think there's 400 or 500 oil paintings around here.
32:28Is this open to the general public?
32:30People come here and buy stuff?
32:30No, no.
32:31I just put it here.
32:32I just got no place to put it.
32:33After the shock of the space wore off,
32:35I was starting to realize this is going to be an extremely challenging pick.
32:39There's more rooms.
32:40Any girly stuff?
32:41No, nothing early.
32:43That's what I was looking for.
32:43Picking 101.
32:44What I'm looking for is different and unusual,
32:46but bottom line, it's got to be old.
32:51You're making funny noises.
32:52If this pick is going to be 500,000 square feet of plastic trinkets,
32:56gaudy furniture, and amateur oil paintings,
32:58it's going to be a big disappointment.
33:00This is all new stuff.
33:03Okay.
33:04Let's try a few of these rooms.
33:06There's hundreds of rooms in this place.
33:07There's a bunch of old collectible stuff in here, guys.
33:10I'm like, old, collectible, finally.
33:14Oh, yeah.
33:15Oh, yeah.
33:18What's in here?
33:21Check this out.
33:22What is it?
33:23Oh, yeah.
33:24This is a banner.
33:25Is this a circus banner?
33:26That's a backdrop from a sideshow and a carnival from the 40s.
33:30We've actually had great luck with these things in the past.
33:33Let's step back and check it out.
33:34Let's check it out.
33:34What do you think it's worth?
33:36In my opinion, it is a Fred Johnson.
33:37So I would say in perfect condition to be a $10,000 piece.
33:41No way.
33:42When we struck gold last time,
33:44we learned never to ignore these banners when we see them.
33:46What's the subject matter?
33:47That thing is neat.
33:49Midget horse family.
33:50Midget horse family?
33:51There's one on each side.
33:53Yeah.
33:53That's got an elephant, a rhino on it.
33:55What's this?
33:56Pig.
33:56Nose rhino.
33:57Pig with the elephant's trunk, one eye in center.
34:01Then this was the little midget horses.
34:03The guy probably had two sideshows.
34:05Back in the 1940s,
34:07small-town America didn't have much for entertainment.
34:10So when the circus rolled into town like a band of old west outlaws,
34:14the kids went nuts.
34:15And the best part of the circus wasn't the Ferris wheel.
34:18It was the sideshow.
34:19That's where you could pay your dime, see the pinheads,
34:22the bearded lady, and who knows what else.
34:25This piece is 1940s circus culture all rolled up on a stick.
34:30That's a one-of-a-kind.
34:31It is one-of-a-kind.
34:33I don't make them like that anymore.
34:35Where did you get it at?
34:36How long have you had it?
34:36A friend of mine was a carny.
34:39I probably had it over 30 years.
34:50We've bought these before, and some of them can be thousands of dollars.
34:53All right, I'll take 2,000.
34:56This is an important piece of Americana,
34:58and it deserves a way better home than being buried in a pile of junk in this room.
35:03It needs to be taken out and seen.
35:05This one's ripped from here to here, and there's a patchwork right on the most important part,
35:09right on the trunk.
35:10What kind of offers have you had on this in the past?
35:12I don't know.
35:13I've been offered a few hundred dollars.
35:14I never sold it.
35:15I'd take a chance on it for like 800 bucks.
35:17You're cheap, Mike.
35:19Would you do, 1,000 bucks?
35:22Absolutely.
35:23You got it.
35:24That was easy.
35:26That was easy.
35:27Looking around this room, finally, I think we might have hit the jackpot.
35:31How much for this head?
35:3210 bucks.
35:33All right, I'll do five.
35:34Oh, you got it.
35:36I was going to pay you to take it.
35:38Check these out.
35:40They're little banks.
35:41This is carnival stuff.
35:43I'll give you 50 bucks for the dog banks.
35:45You got it.
35:45The dog banks are yours.
35:47I'm dog banking it.
35:48Baseball cards.
35:49So many cards, I can't even imagine here.
35:51I'm standing on just literally boxes and boxes and boxes of cards.
35:57Oh, and I've probably got more, too.
35:59Baseball cards are the ultimate collectible.
36:01An entire stack can be worthless or a single card can fetch $400,000.
36:06You just have to really know what you're looking for.
36:08Some of them look old, some of them look new.
36:10Back in the 50s, kids would actually play with their baseball cards just like toys.
36:14I mean, they would put them in their bicycle spokes, and that's a lot of wear and tear.
36:17These are 1986, 1979s.
36:21But in the 1980s, people started looking at cards as not toys, but as a collectible item.
36:25They started putting them in protective cases and storing them.
36:29Companies started cashing in and overproducing cards like crazy.
36:32And because of that, there's so many mint cards from that era, they're just not worth that much money.
36:37This is 1985.
36:39Woo-hoo!
36:39There you go, baby.
36:40It's 26 years old.
36:41It's not too old.
36:42Now it comes to cards.
36:53I don't have enough time to handpick every card in here, but I do see enough variety that I'll take
36:58a chance on them.
36:59Well, Jeff, how much would a couple of these boxes be if I took a chance on a couple of
37:02them?
37:03I don't know.
37:03Tell me what you want to pay.
37:05How about $100 a box?
37:09Okay.
37:10Pick out what you want.
37:12At $100 a box, I think I can do okay.
37:14Or you know what?
37:15I could strike gold.
37:19Whoa!
37:21Jeff, what do you know about this wheel here?
37:22It's an old carny gaff, I think.
37:24It's called grandfather's clock.
37:26It was something they used somehow.
37:28The wheel spun.
37:29It's got two hands on it.
37:30Yeah.
37:30Yeah.
37:31I don't know how the game came.
37:32It was a carnival wheel.
37:34This is the kind of item that a carny guy called a barker would say,
37:38Step right up.
37:39Try your luck.
37:40Then you'd pay your nickel, spin the wheel, and you'd never win.
37:43Let me see what it's made out of.
37:45It's a big piece of wood, yeah.
37:47It's not metal.
37:48It's wood.
37:48No, it's wood.
37:49It's real.
37:50Did you get it from the same guy that was in the carnival business?
37:51It came from the same person.
37:53What would you have to have for this?
37:56$1,000 sounds good.
37:57I was thinking around $300.
37:59I can't do that.
38:00You can't do that?
38:01That's too cheap.
38:02That's too cheap.
38:03What about $950?
38:07What about $400?
38:13Look at that.
38:14That's the first smart car there.
38:15Well, this looks like a motorcycle engine.
38:16I bought Messerschmitts.
38:18I bought Isettas.
38:19You've never bought one of these.
38:20I've never seen one of these.
38:21It's a rare car.
38:22A very unusual car.
38:23What do you got to have for that?
38:27$950.
38:28What about $400?
38:30I'll split it.
38:31$950 to $400 is $500.
38:37I didn't go very far in school, so I take advantage of my math.
38:40It seems like Jeff has so much money that he can afford to be generous with his prices.
38:44I really appreciate it.
38:45How about $450?
38:46How about $450 would make you happy?
38:49$500 would make me happy.
38:50$500 would make me happy.
38:50$500 would make me sad.
38:51Okay, $450 sold.
38:52$450?
38:52You got it.
38:53All right.
38:55You want the other two I got in the back?
38:56Do you really have two more in the back?
38:58No.
38:59Oh, Lord.
38:59Which way are we going now?
39:01We've had a run of great stuff here.
39:03One more big ticket item, and this pick is going to be a success.
39:06Do you have any stuffed giraffes?
39:07No.
39:08I have a 9'2 Kodiak that Jackie Gleason killed.
39:13Really?
39:14Yeah.
39:14Where'd you find that at?
39:15I got it in New Orleans.
39:17Look at that.
39:18That's the first smart car there.
39:19Yeah.
39:20Yeah.
39:221975 Mini Comtesse French micro car.
39:25Yeah, it's a three-wheeler too, isn't it?
39:26I see that, yeah.
39:27Yeah.
39:27I bought that car at an auction in Atlanta, Georgia.
39:30It's a rare car, but a very unusual car.
39:33This looks like a little miniature one in my van.
39:35Can we put an antique archeology symbol on the door there, Frankie?
39:38You know what, Mike?
39:39This might be good for Danielle.
39:40Danielle loved this.
39:41I can UPS it to you.
39:44That's when it hit me.
39:45I mean, this could be the perfect company car for Danielle.
39:48We may just have found our solution to our problem.
39:51Let's see what we got here.
39:54Oh, it's got like a little Sachs motor.
39:56Sachs made the motors for the Messerschmitts, which is another mini car.
39:59And then they also made motors for motorcycles as well.
40:02This looks like a motorcycle engine.
40:03Today's mini cars are really scaled down automobiles.
40:06Cycle cars are inexpensive vehicles built around the components of motorcycles.
40:11Basically, a motorcycle plus.
40:12This mini Contessa is a 70s equivalent to a 1930s classic cycle car.
40:18This is perfect for Danny to run errands in.
40:20When's the last time this thing started?
40:21Probably 40 years ago.
40:23No, it can't be 40.
40:24It can only be 37.
40:25Let me see.
40:26All right, Frank.
40:27Woo!
40:28Doggy!
40:29Can you turn the wheel?
40:29Is that straight?
40:30Yeah, it's chain drive.
40:31The motor turns on the wheel.
40:33You know what?
40:34Usually, you got to worry about running into a deer.
40:36Yeah?
40:36This thing, you got to worry about running into a June bug.
40:40The body itself is in good condition, but that seat's toast.
40:44This thing is going to need a little bit of work at first, but once it's up and running,
40:47and Danny's behind the wheel, it's going to be great rolling advertising for antique archeology.
40:52I bought Messerschmitts.
40:54I bought Izettas.
40:55You've never bought one of these.
40:56I've never bought one of these.
40:57I've never seen one of these.
40:58It's unusual.
40:59I'll give you that.
41:00It is unusual.
41:00What do you value this at?
41:02$5,000.
41:04Tell me what you want to pay.
41:05Realistically, I'd be interested for like a...
41:11It's unique.
41:12I'd take a chance on it for like $1,800.
41:14Can't do it.
41:15You got to go for more.
41:17I don't know if the motor runs.
41:18If the motor doesn't run, you're cooked.
41:19It ran when I bought it.
41:22You know what, $2,000 buy it?
41:25Nope, I can't do it.
41:26Well, tell me where you're at with it.
41:28Okay.
41:29Three best.
41:30Three Gs.
41:33Yeah.
41:33You're at three.
41:35I'm at two.
41:35We're not too far apart.
41:36We're close.
41:37What's $1,000 between friends?
41:38That's right.
41:39Pay me the thousands.
41:4224.
41:45You want to flip 24 or 5?
41:47I'll flip you.
41:48Okay.
41:49$2,500, Mike loses.
41:50$2,400, you lose.
41:52You got it.
41:53All right.
41:53I'm on tails.
41:58Tails.
42:00Eat your heart out.
42:01Damn.
42:02So it's $2,500.
42:03$2,500.
42:04You got it.
42:05All right.
42:05I got the carnival clock for $450.
42:07I think I get at least $650.
42:09I'm going to grab this.
42:10You got it?
42:10I paid $1,000 for this sideshow banner.
42:13I think I can get at least $1,800.
42:16Put the front wheel in.
42:17Danny's going to love this.
42:19She'll like it.
42:19If we keep ignoring Danny, we're going to spend about $4,000 in aspirin from the headaches
42:24that we get from her bugging us.
42:26But I just paid $2,500 for this car.
42:31Right now, I'm considering this making money.
42:34Whew.
42:34That barely fit.
42:35Whew.
42:36Mike and Frank, we're just regular people.
42:39Everyday guys.
42:40Duh.
42:41I also own four or five large flea markets.
42:45They're the kind of guys you'd expect to see out there looking for bargains.
42:47All right, buddy.
42:48Thanks.
43:05What are you looking for?
43:07Hey, girl.
43:08Hi.
43:09Oh, my God.
43:09This is a great trip.
43:11Oh.
43:11We got something for you.
43:12That's a surprise for you.
43:13This is going to blow your mind, girl.
43:15I can't see.
43:16I got to see it.
43:17Andy.
43:18Andy.
43:18Andy.
43:19What do you think?
43:21Check this out.
43:22Bow, chicka, chicka, bow, bow, bow.
43:25I'm confused.
43:26We've been thinking about it.
43:27The maintenance on your car, the mileage and everything.
43:30This is it.
43:30You love it?
43:31What do you mean this is it?
43:32This is it.
43:33This is your company car.
43:33We're paying for the gas.
43:34This isn't a clown car.
43:36This is made in France.
43:38With a company car that's this big?
43:41Where did I hook my iPod up?
43:43What am I going to do with a car the size of a Tic Tac?
43:46Oh, where's the seat belt?
43:48Pop the clutch.
43:48Pop the clutch.
43:50Pop it.
43:50Pop it.
43:51Ah!
43:53Does that have brakes?
43:54Did you chuck them?
43:56Ah!
43:57Ah!
43:58Where are the brakes?
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