Pawn Stars: 7 ANGRY SELLERS LOSE THEIR COOL (Deals Gone Wrong *Part 3*)

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hey how's it going good i've got an 1884 cult that was in the wyoming range wars and the book that goes with it there's nothing like a good book after a good shooting that's what i always say i came here today to sell a gun owned by fred coach that was intimately involved in the wyoming range wars i'm hoping to get 55 000 but i would settle on 45 000 because my mother needs the money so how exactly did you get the gun my father got this from the great-great-granddaughter of fred coates who was one of the guys in the wyoming range wars all right the range wars were basically large cattle barons feuding with really small cattle ranchers the small guys were stealing cattle from the big guys and you had the large cattle barons basically hiring their own llama a lot of people just called them thugs it was just a massive lawless state so who exactly was fred coates he was a sheriff in the area that was hired by the land barons to drive the little guys out of town either by hanging or killing so depending on which side you were on he was either a villain or a hero exactly whoever had the biggest checkbook so what's the deal with the book this book was written by a newspaper publisher during the range wars and on page 140 it reads i understood the parties involved in this assault were frank canton tom smith and fred coates okay uh so what proof do you have at this belong to coach i have a letter from his great great granddaughter who she inherited it from two of it may concern i am ellen lenor coates this colt 45 revolver serial number 110935 that my grandfather used in johnson county was inherited by me all right this is all the paperwork you have i got the original colt letter of authenticity when you get a letter from colt you send them in the serial number and they send back all their information on that gun so you want everything to match like uh this is a 45 caliber that's a 45 caliber it's a five and a half inch barrel that's a five and a half inch barrel so everything's matching up cold firearms are definitely great collectibles even when they're not in great shape but when you throw in a personal story that actually ties a cowboy to a gun that's the kind of thing collectors love what were you looking to do with the gun i'd like to sell it okay how much were you looking to get out of it i'd like 55 000. 55 000 because of the history involved in this gun and book well it's definitely a cult single action army um it's seen as better days the nickel is worn off you can tell it was in someone's holster every day you know i know what a revolver like this and this shape is worth my problem is i need to find out did this coach guy actually own it so let me get someone down here you'll tell me if it actually belonged to this guy okay i'll be right back i have no doubt in my mind that this gun belonged to fred coates and it was in the wyoming range wars and i look forward to his expert coming in and looking at it jeffrey how's it going rick it's nice to see you how you doing i am the gamble curator at the autry national center and i specialize in western history and firearms well this is what i called you about it's an 1884 cult i'll agree with that but he thinks it's historically significant can you tell me a little bit about it it belonged to fred coats and was tied to the wyoming range wars okay the johnson county range war was one of the last great range wars in the history of the american west basically it was control over the land and who was going to control the cattle industry the johnson county range war was a time when the american frontier was coming to a close the kind of wild west that we think of today was moving towards a really urban industrial society rick do you have any concerns about this particular piece i want to know if it was actually his okay we have the colt letter which is not going to tell you if it was his right it's going to tell you where it was shipped what it basically looked like when it left the factory and we have this letter right here okay so this looks to be a notarized letter that is giving some of the provenance of the particular piece that was passed down through the coats family now one of the things that kind of just jumps out at me immediately is this documentation is done in two different ink colors and then this part that directly references the colt is listed in a different ink color so do you think this actually belonged coats basically with what we have here it's really hard to make that connection it looks to me to be the same handwriting but just a different color ink yeah but even if the ink looked fine everything about this looked right you need to be able to trace it a little bit more if the colt letter stated for example that it was shipped to wyoming it would be another piece of information that we could use to help further justify that we can't say definitively that this particular gun was owned by fred koch um so basically the value of this gun is the value of a 1884 colt single action army that's pretty beat up exactly i mean you know more probably than any one of us here how much something like that goes for in your shop okay thanks man i appreciate it it's good to see you i do not agree with anything the expert said i've followed the ancestor i've done it all it goes right down i mean it just goes right to fred coates i know you wanted over 50 grand but the offer i'd make on it is for a beat up cold single action army so i'd give you like 1500 bucks yeah i don't i'm just not gonna be able to do that i think maybe i'll see if i can maybe get some more provenance better luck next time thanks i think what i'm going to do is do a little more research see if i can definitively connect the gun to coats through the place it was sold to in new york and then go from there help me or something i brought something i'd like to show you okay i'm assuming that's a guitar not just any guitar this is semi mosley's personal blue gospel guitar prototype a moe's right well hallelujah [Laughter] sammy mosley was a great gospel musician he founded the moserite guitar company and i got this guitar directly from semi-mosley 44 years ago i know it's really rare so it's worth a lot of money where did you get it well i got it directly from semi-mosley really that's really really cool i know a little bit about him i know that he started off repairing guitars and then actually started making guitars so why is it a prototype it's a prototype because when he was at a guitar convention in europe he met a spanish luthier who was building flamenco guitars with violin joints and they had such a remarkable tone that semi thought gospel musicians should have something that sings when they do the lord's work so consequently he came back and he did this prototype okay he hand wound the pickups he made the pickards and the volume plate and it's built with violin joints all right that's extremely interesting right around semi mosley's time the late 50s early 60s gospel blues and rock and roll were exploding so people like mosley really started experimenting with new sounds i mean it looks brand new i mean we have this one little chip here but there's no belt buckle marks on it that's definitely cool you got paperwork on all this yes this guitar is probably the most well-known rare guitar anywhere it's listed in the celebrity registry 009 1965 gospel prototype blue semi mosley's personal gospel all right i'm interested it sounds really really cool jimi hendrix the beach boys kurt cobain these are just a few of the guys who have played mo's rights so if this is the actual gospel prototype there will definitely be a market for me to sell this thing how much do you want for it well it's about the rarest prototype guitar that exists at a high energy auction event it would bring somewhere between 200 000 250 000. i know this is not an auction but realistically i'd take a hundred thousand for it [Music] quite frankly that sounds expensive let me give a buddy of mine a call um deals and rare guitars all the time great i welcome that however you should know since i've had this guitar since 1969 continuously and got it from the guy who made it i am considered the industry expert on this guitar okay well um it's not that i don't trust you but you know if i started trusting my customers i wouldn't be in business log i understand i understand sure so i will be right back thanks the moment you walk into my store and try and sell me something you are no longer the expert i have to get an unbiased opinion on what this thing is worth before i make an offer jesse my man what's up come on so is this the moe's writing question yes it is a really cool guitar man very very cool where'd you get this at i got it from semi mosley the man who made it for his own use awesome awesome awesome my idol johnny ramone played it most right absolutely mosley he's a really interesting guy i mean he's got his start doing repairs apprenticed under rickenbacker um the most right is one of my favorite companies and i'm a big fan of surf music if you ever listen to any surf music from the 1960s that really cool reverby twangy guitar that's the moserite guitar he's telling me this is the prototype the only one that exists like this and wants a lot of money for it it's kind of a pretty well documented guitar there's a couple things i can get a date on this the mosley tail piece for one the most right of california on the pickups the style of the knobs i would say this guitar is probably 67 or 68. the serial number is ga009 so this is the prototype gospel guitar all right big question what do you think it's worth well i've seen one of johnny ramone's most rights um that was very well documented and played guitar went for right around thirty five forty thousand dollars in the guitar market of today a realistic selling price on this instrument would probably be twenty five thousand dollars that's absolutely ridiculous because it's been appraised over the years uh back in the 90s it was appraised at a minimum of a hundred thousand dollars and that was in the 90s i'm just saying from knowing what i've just recently sold myself i don't think anybody's going to step up that high for it well the guitar has been insured for a hundred thousand dollars or better i i mean i can insure my shoes for a hundred thousand dollars with an insurance company i understand that but your number's not realistic it's a really rare piece prototypes of les pauls at the les paul auction did not bring a hundred thousand dollars les paul is credited with inventing the solid body electric guitar that's why i'm giving this the 25 000 mark on my eyes i can't agree with your assessment oh yeah and that's that's we're just at where we are i mean thanks jesse you know it was really cool to see simi's guitar but to be honest with you i'm just kind of glad i got out of there without a black eye he can't know what i know about it after 44 years okay he just told us that les paul's prototypes went for less money than you're asking it's not only rare but it's also beautiful it's a cool guitar i'll give you that but one-of-a-kind doesn't always bring a fortune come on you know you like it [Music] obviously we're not going to make a deal so all i can tell you is good luck thanks [Music] i think he just made a huge mistake i know when it goes to an auction house that recognizes this guitar and knows how to market it i'll probably get 200 000 or more for it what do we got here i got an old steven shotgun three triggers it's been in the family for about 60 years i travel around the country with my line of work and i've been toting the shotgun around for the last 15 years what do you do for a living i'm an insurance adjuster sounds like you should have a briefcase not a shotgun i came to the pawn shop today to see what kind of money i can get out of my rare three-trigger 12-gauge shotgun i hope today i get a check for a hundred thousand dollars one thing that i think is really cool about the shotgun is because of the third trigger is the one that opens up the breach okay so instead of the little lever on the side they use that okay and i believe it was made for somebody special that's all hand engraved right there oh absolutely stevens they made good rifles they made excellent shotguns we get steven's guns in here every now and again but this three trigger model shotgun is something you only hear about it's rumored wyatt earp had one it's definitely bad ass how old is this shotgun i would put that at about 150 years old it's in really good shape what you have here is you got a barrel that's made out of damascus steel i mean damascus steel comes from damascus syria and there's a few things with the steel there that just made it better you can see kind of like the wavy lines of the barrel pretty much what they would do is they would take wire wrap it around a solid piece of steel and heat it up and hammer it till it became one solid piece of steel real expensive process at the time the best steel in the world so do you have any idea what you're looking to get out of it 100 000. are we just shooting in the dark there nobody's ever seen one before i've never seen a three trigger shotgun in all my life for all i know the thing could be worth tens of thousands on the flip side of that coin it could be worth absolutely nothing would you mind if i called a buddy of mine down to have him take a look at it that'd be fantastic all right man appreciate it i really want this thing but when you're dealing with a gun that's this old lots of things can affect value and the last thing i want to do is make an offer and find that i'm way off jefferson how you doing man hey big holst how's it going going good i've been a gun appraiser for approximately 16 years and specialize in antique firearms particularly western firearms like colts and winchesters well corey i have to say this is one of the rarest shotguns that i've ever seen i've only seen maybe four or five in about 16 years of doing this and most of them they're unengraved it's all on the frame and also on the trigger guard very nice scroll engraving i mean i kind of figured that to engrave it and make it look that good i'm assuming you had to be kind of a wealthy guy to own it back then well reasonably wealthy i think people back then appreciated firearms more than they do now in a way because they were a sense of livelihood this shotgun was used for hunting primarily it does capture your attention with the three triggers other than having the front trigger unlatch the barrels it's pretty much a standard hammer shotgun they were very good quality for that period this gun's seen a lot of wear a lot of use this might be a repair you can see where the grain doesn't quite match so it might be a little splice right here you can see the butt is really worn like it's been used quite a bit it does have pitting on the barrel this gun would classify to me in fair condition well hold on there how would you rate that because not being in excellent condition it's 150 years old how many have you seen yeah it doesn't matter sir you know in the gun trade it has to be in really really mint condition i think there's a misconception out there that rarity is always worth money most of the time it needs to be old and in excellent condition i just don't know what it's worth that's to be expected it's unusual most people wouldn't know what it's worth this gun and the condition that it's in now would be worth about seven to a thousand dollars how much 700 to a thousand dollars no way if it were in much better condition it would be worth a lot more money how much more if it were in really nice shape maybe two to three thousand and i'm saying that maybe jefferson thanks for coming in thanks a lot sir i don't think he will get a better price if he sells it to anyone who knows firearms they're not going to give me much more than that for it if you're going to hold me to make you an offer i'm going to offer you around 500 bucks there's no way i've done turned down 2500 i honestly would like 10 000 if i were you i would chase down the guy that offered to 2 500 and shake him down for i think maybe the three trigger thing it might have just not been practical which could have been why they stopped making the three trigger models uh so you want the 500 bucks no i can't take the 500. it's worth more than that just to show the people my friends when they come to visit you know man it's been in your family this long you might as well treat it for another 60 years i'm going to continue doing my research in my own heart i know it's worth more money these yours yes what exactly are they oh we got a couple of murray eliminator muscle bikes from 1969. and that one is actually in os it has never been written so we're gonna have to take these for a test spin before you sell them just hear them say that no one's ever ridden this one that's why i want to make sure it works i've been collecting bikes for about 20 years i got into the murrays probably about 10 years ago i liked them because they were different from any other bike out there i'm hoping to get 8 000 for the pair and the least amount i would take was probably 7 500. so what can you tell me about the bikes man that one is a murray f3 three-speed bike guy i got it from uh found it in a bicycle shop that been shut down since the 80s it was in the box and uh i tried to keep everybody off my kids have tried to ride it i told them no you're not riding this one all right and this one is a murray eliminator mark ii this is the first year they offered these uh they're pretty unique because of the pretzel handlebars kind of funky this one has a brake shift they called it a drag shifter you would pull it down and it would lock the back wheel out and you'd be able to make a cool burnout and then this is a billboard chain guard this is all new for murray they made the chain guard big and allowed to uh make the kids go ooh and all right any particular reason you got murrays instead of twins or yes i've been collecting bikes for about 20 years and i started collecting twins like most guys do and i just said you know what i want to collect something that nobody has i've seen these on on a picture and i thought i gotta have one of these all right um yeah in late 1950s early 1960s a lot of people started customizing cars there was a lot of motorcycle movies out there naturally kids started doing with their bicycles schwinn was like one of the first people to catch on and start doing the big bars and they called him wheely bikes schwinn was extremely successful with the stingray and so murray said hey sounds like a good idea to us so they started making them too murray has been producing bikes since the 1930s and while at first they were pretty expensive they eventually became known by their competitors as the ones to follow when it came to pricing kind of like us here at gold and silver what do you want to do with it man i'd like to sell them any idea of how much you're looking to get or uh this one i'm asking 6 000 for and that one i'm asking 2 000 for a lot of money for murray's man they're all original everything yes uh they're all original out into the nuts and bolts all right you mind if everybody come down and check them out oh no go ahead let me bring in somebody that i know that kind of tell me a little bit about these let me know if they're all original sounds good all right i'll be right back all right uh i i pretty much know what it is and i'm open to somebody coming in and basically confirming my knowledge and what i have got some murray eliminator bikes nice back in the 50s across the country people were customizing motorcycles same thing was going on with the bike spectant guys were customizing their bikes and making them look like the choppers they were seeing out there so in 62 huffy came out with the first of the muscle bikes they came out with this type of styling and then you had the stingray that came out a year after that and murray was trying to get on the bandwagon too they started coming out with this f series and they made that bike from 67 for about 10 years and this style of bike i believe only came out one year which was 69 and this had all the bells and whistles i mean this is definitely the holy grail when it comes to murray bikes here all right so what are your concerns cory um you want to get my look over and see if they're all original okay yeah i'll check them out um there's a few things we look for we want to see the temples are original here you know we got a few nicks and um the cobra temple seems to be coming off a little bit but all looks original all feels right all the chrome seems right doesn't seem like it's been refinished what we're looking for is factory correctness and everything's factory correct all the parts are original this is exactly the way the bike would have looked like let me look over this one what i love is just the feel of the seat i mean it seems like you've stored them in a nice cool place because they're not hard or cracky that's what you want to see everything checks out everything's 100 original on both of them all right um it's a big question man what do you think they're worth well that bike they're about 1200 okay you don't think the fact that uh being in os would make it worth a lot more 1200 be the premium on that bike this bike here definitely the holy grail you don't see too many of these come to market 3 000 to the right buyer nah johnny i appreciate you man all right take care guys the sellers seem to disagree with my appraisal but just like the stock market these items go up and down all the time the mark ii is one of the more sought after murray bikes but in today's market i believe it would bring three thousand dollar tops so i'll go three for the pair or if you just wanna sell me this one i'll do seven hundred i can't do that huh i've got more than that in that one i gotta have at least fifteen and i can't go down any lower than 5 500 on this one man we are really really far off buddy um looks like we're not gonna make a deal all right take care thank you guess i won't be riding the bike today they definitely made a mistake today they'll never find another one like that in the same condition uh you know their loss what do we have here this is a hohner harmonica store display okay we've all played a harmonica once in our lives right we have um and we thought we were good at it [Laughter] i'm at the pawn shop today to try to sell my giant honer harmonica store display i found it about three years ago at a flea market in california it just looks like a giant harmonica so it's fun to display and i've just got it in my office right now i am asking 500 for the harmonica just from doing some research i think that's what it's worth it's really cool so we got m horner here which is matteus hohner and potato's honor was born in germany in the 1830s he was an apprentice to some watchmakers the 1850s though he realized the watch business for an individual watchmaker was going away very very quickly there was all these watches from the united states flooding europe because they had a manufacturing process that could make watches a lot less expensive than they can in europe so he saw the writing on the wall but he was also working with an instrument maker and got really really interested with the harmonica and he started off making a quality harmonica ended up getting salespeople the united states and um the united states just fell in love with the harmonica especially when blues music hit the scene in the 1870s but at one point they were selling 10 million harmonicas a year wow okay so i mean this is probably 60s or 70s this would have been in most likely a music store or some department stores you know that might have carried them um you know it's plastic you know back in the day though like they built giant ones for like uh big department stores they put out in the window there that were actually metal and i actually worked and everything else like that uh and this one is sort of cool because it's the marine band one okay and i'm pretty sure that's john philip souza right there john philip souza was a rock star you wouldn't think of like a marine corps band being like the hippest coolest music but background in the 1890s it was they were very very popular and in his marine band he actually had a guy playing a harmonica it's cute i mean it's it doesn't light up or anything which would be no no it sure doesn't it's non-functioning so big thing how much you want for it i want 500 for it okay hot it's really really cool but it's not 500 school if it was even non-functioning metal and wood you know i you get in the ballpark okay all right it's plastic and it's not the greatest shape i don't know it's not too bad of shape the cardboard's coming off okay here's 75 bucks for it it cost me 150 to fill my truck up with gas right now i can't take 75 bucks for it how about if we meet in the middle at like 400. yeah i'll tell you what i'll give you a hundred bucks for it yeah i mean honestly for for that i'd probably just hang on to it i i just i think it's cool and and i i think it's worth more money than that no okay all right um if you changed your mind i'm in for a hundred bucks have a good one thank you yeah in all honesty i feel like uh rick's offer kind of blows so i'll take it home what do we have here obviously a very old painting yes i believe this is the earliest known painting by anger house and i think this was painted by him when he was about 12 13 years old okay i know that he did some impressionist paintings you know how to tell the difference between impressionism and post-impressionism no blurry extra blurry [Laughter] i took a risk when i purchased the painting online but the one thing that i'm very proud of is that i saved this painting from ending up in a trash heap someplace and i actually was fortunate enough to preserve this part of history i know a little bit about him he was really famous american painter and he got famous for painting american indians it was always family life it was like a mother and a child a father weaving a basket he was one of those artists i mean not quite norman rockwell but people know him because he did all the calendars for the santa fe railroad right and that's how everyone got to know his art you mind if i pick it up oh no not at all go ahead okay um and why do you think kaus did this i mean i i see his signature there but right his paintings don't look anything like this well i contacted the house foundation and i talked to his granddaughter and she is the foremost expert on kyle's paintings and she invited me out to taos and when i showed her the painting she took me in a back room and showed me a really early signature that nobody's seen and she's like you're not going to believe this but this is a dead ringer signature okay well it's definitely old i'll tell you that right okay but it's also in really really bad shape and my big concern is we have brackets here that say 1885. okay he was already a sophisticated artist by 1885 he would have not painted what was on the other side of this it looks to me like these brackets were used to make the stretcher and this isn't a cause if it was made after 1885. what did you want for it i i was told that it could possibly be worth 75 to 100 000 to the right collector but i i'd be comfortable letting it go for around 50 000. there might be something here i don't know if it's 50 grand but there might be something here i have a friend he's coming down anyway so um i'll have him look at it i'll get his opinion and we'll go for there okay when he gets here we'll come and help you out sounds great all right thank you i think when the art appraiser comes in and looks at the painting looks at the paperwork that i have i believe he's going to say that it is the real deal check this out this guy says he has an anger cause and it doesn't look like his stuff no not at all well we're going by what uh 12 year old boy would think of native americans at that point is that when this is believed to have been painted yes 12 years old yeah okay this is like the earliest painting that we think exists okay well i guess that explains things i mean this isn't bad for a 12 year old but for a cows it's pretty pretty rudimentary yes from what i know of the artist he grew up surrounded by native american culture right the chippewa tribes were around the area that he grew up so i could he had an early fascination and this kind of demonstrates a little bit of that inspiration without having a full understanding of what goes into it now since you obtained the piece did you do anything to authenticate it or trace the history well i called virginia house levitt okay and she's the foremost expert on on his work so after inspecting it looking under black light on the signature she made the decision that the signature was original to the painting okay well that's good it's not in great shape it's obviously faded the colors are very muted you know it's kind of funny to say this but i think i'm less concerned about the authenticity than i am you know the piece itself you did a nice job tracing the history and the authenticity you went to the right source she's recognized as kind of the go-to on cow's artworks and the fact that she says it's authentic that's good enough for me cool the problem you get into i mean this is a piece that i think would be much more valuable to a museum somebody that had an exhibition of kausas work it's it you know it's in poor condition it would take a lot of restoration just to get this you know to a real marketable state how much would it cost to repair this you'd probably be looking at about five thousand dollars i think if you used a real competent conservator and if it was restored what do you think it would be worth to a fine art collector if it was restored it might be because of the name it might be a you know maybe a twenty thousand dollar piece but that's about as much as you can put on it i think okay thanks man hey rick my pleasure good to see you as always if you go out front travis has got some stuff for you to look at excellent i'll take a look thank you guys all right have a great day thank you the painting isn't bad for a 12 year old but when you consider how esteemed the artist became it's a pretty bad piece that's a piece that would have interest to a museum to show how the artist progressed and transitioned to the type of work that he was famous for but it's not the type of work that an astute collector is going to hold an esteem i know it's not what you want to hear no i mean but if you listen to him you understand what he has to say yeah i totally understand i know you wanted 50 grand for it but i just don't see a deal happening here it's just too difficult for me to sell all right okay have a good man thank you very much not to have an offer made i feel a little deflated i believe the painting was worth more than what appraisal was hey how's it going hey what's happening i've got something here which i think is pretty spectacular a magnifying glass no it's better than that bam that is 18th century onyx diamond authentic spectacles sweet i think sherlock himself would be rather proud [Laughter] i came to the pawn shop today to sell a very unique pair of glasses i'd like to sell them because i have no use for them what i'd like to get for them today would be up to five thousand dollars if i break even i'll be happy so where'd you get these i bought these about 10 years ago while i was visiting an antique store mind if i take a look at them absolutely god are these platinum platinum onyx with diamonds in them you have to imagine the amount of money someone would have had to be able to afford this stupid of a luxury i don't know about stupid but oh come on i mean you really need platinum sapphire and diamond reading glasses at night these glasses definitely weren't just the type of thing someone could pick up at a drugstore a couple hundred years ago there's enough stones and precious metals in them to make them worth a lot of money any idea what you want for them five thousand dollars how's that if you broke it all apart i can tell you exactly what the platinum's worth and what the diamonds are worth and what the sapphires are worth but when you put them all together like this it kind of puts you in a conundrum you mind if i call my dad over here he's just going to give me a better idea of what they're worth okay let me go grab him real quick i'll be right back okay thank you i think there's definitely something here but since i've never seen a pair before it's worth asking for a second opinion hey how's it going you've been here before haven't you yeah i was uh with the pedal car remember that one a black and white oh okay yeah it was great doing business with you okay all right what do we got here these are 18th century spectacles okay oh chap you know what i mean so what do you think about them rick um they're probably 1920s the whole art deco style this was what was popular during the time period spectacles were probably first invented in the 13th century and by the 16th century people were buying them and personalizing them making them a fashion statement what do you think they're worth as is generally jewelry from this time period to this quality is worth a lot of money good but technically this isn't jewelry got probably um 10 grams of platinum there and some very inexpensive stones and you can't exactly wear these around your neck so what do you think they're worth seven or eight hundred bucks seriously yeah when he brought out his dad and told me they were worth seven to eight hundred dollars i was a little bit disappointed i honestly thought they were more valuable than that i'm gonna disagree because i've seen similar ones online valued at five thousand dollars plus is that what they want for them or is that what they're selling them for oh that i don't know thanks these things look really cool and aren't deco but spectacles aren't used by a lot of people today so they're basically worth the raw materials how much were you looking to get give me 8.50 i'll leave a happy man what do you think big huss [Music] what'd my dad say 800 yeah i feel a lot better about these now that my dad looked him over but i think he might have lowballed a little bit hey 50 come on it's a win-win situation don't you think i'll give you the 850. goodbye cheers thanks you sure about that yeah i'm sure all right i'll meet you down over here at the counter all right appreciate it my dad knows a lot about diamonds and precious metals but what he doesn't know is how hot vintage jewelry is right now if i'm gonna prove i deserve a piece of this company i'm willing to take risks like this to show i know what i'm doing even if it does piss my dad off
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Channel: Pawn Stars
Views: 11,585,551
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Keywords: pawn, pawn stars, pawn stars episode, pawn stars full episode, the pawn stars, pawn star, pawn stars episodes, pawn stars chumlee, pawn shop, pawnstars, pawn stars old man, pawn stars full episodes, chumlee, Pawn Stars: 7 ANGRY SELLERS LOSE THEIR COOL, pawn stars angry sellers, angry pawn sellers, pawn sellers, pawners, pawn shop sellers, pawn stars angry, pawn stars fight, pawn stars compilation, compilation pawn stars, compilation, pawn stars new episodes, pawn stars full
Id: 4PPTu4g2_hg
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Length: 37min 19sec (2239 seconds)
Published: Fri Apr 29 2022
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