字幕表 動画を再生する
-
[MUSIC PLAYING] - I wouldn't touch them at all.
-
They look completely fake to me.
-
Does somebody wanna buy a football?
-
COREY: Where in the world did you get this?
-
One of the toughest parts of my job
-
is telling people that their prized
-
family possession is fake.
-
What do we have here?
-
PAINTING SELLER: Well, it's a Claude Monet painting.
-
I'm hoping to walk out with $1 million.
-
Now, was it on exhibit at the Las Vegas Art Museum?
-
PAINTING SELLER: It was, in 1997.
-
PAINTING EXPERT 1: All right.
-
OK.
-
They say early period, which is very vague.
-
I mean, he lived a very long life.
-
RICK: Yeah.
-
PAINTING EXPERT 1: He started painting very
-
early, so what's early period?
-
It doesn't-- it doesn't really tell you a whole lot.
-
I'd like to get a second opinion.
-
Sure, yeah. Give him a call.
-
PAINTING EXPERT 1: OK. OK, I will.
-
If we look on the back of this painting,
-
yeah, what I'm looking at is all indication of who it could be.
-
You will have old oil paint sweating through the canvas.
-
Here, you don't see that.
-
RICK: So is it real?
-
It's in the style of Monet, but it's not-- absolutely not
-
by the hand of Claude Monet.
-
[INAUDIBLE]
-
Not real.
-
Not real.
-
Ugh.
-
I got a couple of Scottish blades here.
-
They were handed down from me from my dad, which
-
was handed down to him from his father, so
-
basically my grandfather.
-
OK.
-
First off, I can tell you right off this is a reproduction.
-
- Really? - Yeah.
-
Look at this.
-
This was silver.
-
Silver is the most reflective metal there is.
-
You can see the difference in color in them.
-
When silver oxidizes, it turns black.
-
This one's already turning green.
-
KNIFE SELLER: Right. RICK: OK?
-
KNIFE SELLER: Hm.
-
I wouldn't think my grandfather would pick up something
-
that wasn't authentic.
-
RICK: Well, but this one I'm confident is
-
not worth anything.
-
No?
-
That really sucks.
-
PAPER SELLER: Got something for y'all.
-
COREY: What's that?
-
PAPER SELLER: This is a newspaper
-
from the Boston Globe the morning after the Titanic sank.
-
RICK: For a 1912 newspaper, it's in perfect condition.
-
I mean, perfect.
-
I mean, there's no yellowing on the inside papers,
-
which is amazing considering this is, um--
-
COREY: It's a hundred years old.
-
RICK: Yeah.
-
All right.
-
Well, here's my problem.
-
It's fake.
-
Why do you say that?
-
RICK: You see right here?
-
PAPER SELLER: Mhm.
-
RICK: That's from a copy machine.
-
PAPER SELLER: OK.
-
So when would they have copied it?
-
Probably right after the movie came out.
-
[LAUGHS]
-
PAPER SELLER: Oh, to resell?
-
Yeah.
-
PAPER SELLER: After he opened it up,
-
I really thought, yeah, it was fake,
-
and I probably won't get a second opinion.
-
I guess I'm just gonna go home and soak in my own misery.
-
Oh well.
-
I got a 1967 autographed Chicago Bears football.
-
Da Bears.
-
COREY: You know, here are some of the concerns I have with it.
-
We have absolutely no authentication for the ball.
-
Do you mind if I give a buddy of mine a call?
-
He can kind of appraise it.
-
Sure, that's fine with me.
-
FOOTBALL EXPERT: You really gotta focus
-
on the characteristics of the autograph
-
compared against other ones that have
-
been proven to be authentic.
-
If we compare the Brian Piccolo signature
-
here to the one on the football, primarily
-
in the B, how it forms, and how at the end here,
-
the L and the O dips off, these are
-
contrasting signatures and very typical for what you
-
see in a clubhouse signature.
-
This is very common, and all it really
-
is, somebody knows his signature,
-
and does their best interpretation of it
-
to try to make it look as authentic as possible.
-
FOOTBALL SELLER: I feel pretty let down.
-
I think clubhouse signatures are very deceitful.
-
I'd like to meet the people that do that
-
and give them a piece of my mind.
-
Does somebody wanna buy a football?
-
I have some Wells Fargo belt buckles made by Tiffany.
-
Tiffany would never make a belt
-
buckle then solder the little latch over their logo.
-
Anything associated with Tiffany was done perfectly.
-
This is not perfectly, therefore I know it's not Tiffany's.
-
I never buy anything fake, no matter what.
-
Just having it around the shop is
-
risky because an employee might think it's genuine and sell it.
-
That could turn into a real nightmare.
-
What do we have here?
-
A 1777 French musket.
-
RICK: I have a buddy that knows all about these guys.
-
GUN SELLER: OK.
-
All of this grime and what looks to be, you know, old rust
-
is artificial patina that was put on by a paint brush
-
and then wiped off.
-
From everything I'm seeing here, this most likely
-
is a movie prop gun.
-
I can't believe this isn't a real gun.
-
This sucks.
-
COREY: What do we got?
-
CARD SELLER: I got five Topps 1967 Pete Rose baseball
-
cards here, mint condition.
-
My concerns are that they're like
-
in almost too-perfect shape, and that you've got five of them.
-
If these cards are fake, then I need to re-evaluate
-
my entire card collection.
-
COREY: This guy's got five Pete Rose cards.
-
I figured I'd let you look at them.
-
So what do you want to know about these?
-
If they're real.
-
No.
-
How do you-- how can you tell that?
-
What do you-- what do you mean?
-
RICK: Because the color's all faded.
-
Everything's a blur, even his face.
-
It doesn't look silkscreened.
-
[INAUDIBLE] printed with an inkjet printer.
-
And the picture looks overexposed.
-
They probably scanned it and reprinted it.
-
It's just not right at all.
-
These things right here, I wouldn't--
-
I wouldn't touch them at all.
-
They look completely fake to me.
-
CARD SELLER: If these cards are fake, then you know,
-
what else is real?
-
Is the wife real?
-
The dog?
-
The cat?
-
You know, what's real?