- I like the young people. They always got big balls. They always want to talk
[bleep] until you shut 'em-- Who invited the
Kool-Aid Man over here? The Kool-Aid Man? How old are you? I'm 22. Dang, I'm, like,
triple his age. I had a lot of fun
when I was in college. You could be-- we
could be related. [laughter] What do you think is
important at auction? To make money. Well, that's the goal, but
what's important at auction? To buy units. No. Important is not to
have a big mouth. Important part is bring cash. Let me see. Oh, I got it. I got it. I don't need to show you. You'll see when I buy the units. That's OK, young buck. I hate it when inexperienced
millennials talk crap, and can't back it up. Why don't you go buy
some avocado toast? When I find the unit with
the wheelchair in there, I'll make sure I purchase
it just for you, OK? OK. Yeah. You'd better put me
in a wheelchair, son. [inaudible] Hey, don't [bleep] push me. Why don't you give him
some space, Sir Rene? Don't push me like that, OK? And I thought
I was the A-hole. All right, and if you're
ready to go, I'm ready to go. And here we go, how much money?
What's your pleasure? What are you gonna pay?
- $10 bucks. It's him. It'll be 20 where? [auctioneer chant] Now 30. 30 here? 30. 40. Now 50. $40 bucks. $50 bucks. 50 going once, 50 going twice. Last and final call, and 50? [auctioneer chant] Sold his
way. $40 bucks, just in time. Why are you fist pumping? What is that? Yes! Going to the dump again. Going to the dump. I guess Rene
didn't see the piano. Too bad for him. All right, now I'm
gonna make my money back. Let's see what kind
of profit we got. $40 bucks for this
unit was a steal. This is going to be easy. So starting off right here,
just in this dolly alone, I could easily sell
it for $50 bucks, make my profit back
just on those alone. And then right here, we
have these two cases here. Empty. I can easily sell
this case for $30, and there's two of them.
$60 bucks, just right there. Side table here. Looks to be in
really good shape. Clean it up, easily get $20
on this piece right here. And what I'm very interested
to see what's in this case back here. Feels empty. Check it out here. Moment of truth. Naw, just some foam. Still, the case alone, you know,
could at least get another $50 bucks off this case. Got some stands
here, and some wood. Easy $20 bill. Clean up this coffee table,
easy $30 on this right here. All right. I am loving this. Money, money, money all day. They already the
price tag on them, so we got a $20 price
tag, and a $23 price tag. If we replace, say, $15
apiece on each one of those, you know, we got an easy
$130 bucks on these rocks by themselves. A McDonald's toy. Looks like we have all the
other parts in here, too. You know, it's in
good condition. Just wipe it down. Have all the pieces in here. And if I'm going to sell it, I
have to at least get $100 bucks for it. I see we've got a piano here. German scale. [piano notes] Sounds good. It's a clean piano. Has a seat back
here to go with it. You know, something like
this I wouldn't let go for anything less than $1,000. Rene came here talking
trash and throwing elbows, but he isn't making
money like I am. All right. Mm-- what is this? Looks like some
type of power fool. A Luck bone saw. This goes into bones? That's just crazy. Just picture 'em
right now, just-- pretty weird. We're gonna have
to definitely get this checked out, because
I have no clue what something like this goes for. I'm at the Southern
California Medical Museum to see Dr. Hans Davidson. Dr. Davidson? - That's me.
- Justin. You're Justin? And that's the item that
I heard so much about? Yeah, it's my bone saw. Follow me. I know I'm in the right place,
because everything in here is as creepy as my bone saw. This is cool, man. This is unusual. You don't see those very
often, although a lot of them were made. This is a Luck-- L-U-C-K-- bone saw. And Dr. Luck was a very
famous orthopedic surgeon, and this Luck saw is
the first saw that actually could be sterilized. Wow. And so that made
a huge difference. See, in the olden times-- like, this is from
the Civil War-- they did it by hand. And of course, this
couldn't be sterilized. Dr. Luck was a soldier, also,
and he used his own implement during the Second World War. Now, as a surgeon, you need
to have both hands available. And so this had a
foot pedal, so you would operate it with your
foot, and had both hands ready. And so what you would
do is cut something off, like an amputation. We'd cut off your-- Don't look at my arm. My arms are staying on my body. No one's cutting me apart. I can try. All right, doc,
give me the diagnosis. How much is this worth? Well, this is a wonderful,
fairly important instrument. As it is, I would ask-- $300. That's not bad. $300, just
extra money in my pocket. Yeah. It's-- congratulations. You found something real good.