All righty, guys, here we go. Might be something
valuable in there. You never know. And I don't know,
what do you say? 25? $25. Can I get $25? Can I get 25? Can I get 10? $10. [auctioneer chant] $5.00 on it? Five! Can I get 7 and 1/2? I said five. [auctioneer chant]
$7.50? $7.50? Sold to Kenny. 7 and 1/2? Sold it to you, $5.00, Kenny. Thank you very much. Thank you. Woo! I did this for you. You know that, right?
- For me? Yeah. Cause you're--
[imitating auctioneer chant] It's like I'm mesmerizing. You can't resist it. Emily just charmed the
dollars right out of my wallet. Your superpowers said ain't
nothing in here, right? Right. I got a feeling they
got something in one of these containers, bro. Let's see what's in our
first container here. All right. Come on. What do we got? Uh-oh. Hey, we've got some little mugs. Shot glass. Jack [inaudible]. What you go? Atlanta 1996 shot glass. Oh, we've got a
collection of shot glasses? Yes. Like, 40 shot glasses
at $1.00 apiece. $40, bro. I'm in the green. At least there's a shot at
making some money out of here. Come on, bro. Come on, bro. I need something good. Hey! Got Skil saw. A DeWalt. Maybe 100? What do we got? Scuba suit. Oh, yeah. That's good. Not for me. I don't swim. I'd look like a big-ass seal. That's OK. You can still
sell it, can't you? I'll say $50. And you can sell those. Hey, you got some
jeans, brother. A little too big. 40/32. - I'm a 38 now.
- All right. Getting down. You remember when I
first came out here, you used to laugh at me? Yeah. You had a big ass. You didn't have to
say it like that, bro. Hey, you can get $5.00
for these, the used ones. Another phone. $5.00 apiece, you know? Yeah. Uh-oh. Look at that. Half a surfboard? It's worth something. Take your drawers off. Yeah. You never know. You know, people like
this kind of stuff. Yeah. I don't know much about this. I think I should go get
this checked out, bro. This is really sharp, bro. Like, you could hurt
yourself on these fins. Oh, yeah. Let me put this right here. You sit your dangerous
ass right here, boy. Leather jacket. Oh. Fonzarelli. All right. And actually-- shoot, looks
like a Harley Davidson-- And it got the tag. It's got the tag. It might fit me. Let me see here. Fat man. Huh. Where Jared at now? I'm ready for the
motorcycle club, boy. Hey, it works. Check it out. Oh! [laughter] Can't move. Hee hee! Kid ain't got nothing on MJ. RIP. I know it might not look like
a lot, with all this riff-raff, but I actually made some money. And plus, I still
gotta get this death trap checked out over here. Here we go, America. Cowabunga. [inaudible] boy. Hey, that's me. How you doing? Kenny. Today I'm meeting a dude name
Bird with my half a surfboard. Man, look at all these
surfboards in here, bro. All of them have
been written on. Yep. All of them have
history, that's for sure. How many of them got
shark bites in 'em? We don't mention
that S word here. Oh, I'm sorry. Wow. What you got here is
pretty interesting, though. Everybody knows
about surfboards, and they know about
boogie boards. But prior to boogie
boards, there were these types of boards. And they're called belly boards. Belly boards? Belly board. Yeah, well, there you go, huh? Yeah. So they're constructed
the same as surfboards are. They're built out of foam
on the inside, fiberglass cloth, and then resin. This is standard foam. The center piece of foam
running up the middle is actually high density foam. And then on either side of
that are these runners of wood. That gives the board strength. This was made to ride some
pretty powerful waves. This is fins that are put
on there for stability. Most boards would
have just one fin, but better belly boards had
dual fins to give you more bite. Bite, you said? Yeah, bite. When you're riding
the wave, it gives you bite into the face of the wave. The thing about--
you was talking about bite from something else.
- Nope. No bites from
anything else, man. All right. How much you think I could
get for it now, Bird? It's in pretty good
condition overall. A lot of this I could clean up. I could make it look
about 50% better. Then you start to add on
that nice, high density foam stringer. You've got twin fins on it. Most boards had a
single fin on it. Ah-- hm. I'd sell that thing
for about $500. Now, Bird, that's the word. $500 for a half a surfboard? Maybe I need to learn
how to surf, after all. Cowabunga.