Official Storage Wars Discussion
#26
DVD Talk Hero
re: Official Storage Wars Discussion
I watched one episode of Storage Wars Texas and they mentioned "Texas" about 8 times, one guy brought up The Alamo, and another guy made a "...let's get the flock out of here" joke twice in about 4 minutes.
#30
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re: Official Storage Wars Discussion
I have heard the rumors that the show was staged and I never fully bought into it. After watching a few moments of Texas (about all I could take) it was the first thing that popped to mind ... they were like kids who had caught a glimpse into mom and dad's closet just before Christmas. For some reason EVERYTHING was wrapped and you could tell they knew it was going to be something good. The reactions felt faked ... how bad of an actor are you when you can't even play yourself?
#31
DVD Talk Limited Edition
re: Official Storage Wars Discussion
The Texas show feels like a bad cartoon, I refuse to believe that it's not a Reno 911 type show. They gotta be making fun of southerners, the stupidity that comes out of their mouths can't be real. I swear that's Eugene Levy playing the Bary Weiss guy.
#32
DVD Talk Hero
re: Official Storage Wars Discussion
I'm convinced that they conveniently place that ONE unusual item in the lockers. Every episode is the same: the locker is filled with a bunch of hastily stacked worthless household items (trashbags full of clothes, clothes hangers, old toddler toys, etc.) then they find a cardboard portfolio stuffed carefully in a ratty dresser with original artist prints worth a fortune or ONE rare antique sculpture stuffed in a drawer full of costume jewelry and old papers.
#33
DVD Talk Limited Edition
re: Official Storage Wars Discussion
I've lived in Texas almost my entire life. These people are the worst stereotypes of Texans ever. I knew this by watching a preview a few months ago. SWT is not a show I'd ever want to watch.
#34
re: Official Storage Wars Discussion
I don't mind and understand if a little staging is used. It'd be boring if they always came up with just used CDs, DVDs and crap furniture. The worst thing about the Texas version is there's no Brandi type.
#37
re: Official Storage Wars Discussion
Barry: "Darrod and Jarrel"
Darrell: "Jarrod is dressed like he is going to prison, and Brandi is dressed like she is going to her eighth grade prom."
Darrell: "Jarrod is dressed like he is going to prison, and Brandi is dressed like she is going to her eighth grade prom."
#39
re: Official Storage Wars Discussion
I am not sure if this is true or not, but Barry Weiss net worth is $7 million.
http://www.celebritynetworth.com/ric...iss-net-worth/
The Texas version of the show is really bad. Dull and boring.
Anyone watch Spike TV's Auction Hunters?
http://www.celebritynetworth.com/ric...iss-net-worth/
The Texas version of the show is really bad. Dull and boring.
Anyone watch Spike TV's Auction Hunters?
#40
DVD Talk Ultimate Edition
re: Official Storage Wars Discussion
I am not sure if this is true or not, but Barry Weiss net worth is $7 million.
http://www.celebritynetworth.com/ric...iss-net-worth/
http://www.celebritynetworth.com/ric...iss-net-worth/
#41
DVD Talk Special Edition
re: Official Storage Wars Discussion
I'd say its probably accurate. Its been said Barry has had a very successful/lucrative career in life before he became part of the show working in the produce industry with his brother doing a family owned business.
#42
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re: Official Storage Wars Discussion
I'm convinced that they conveniently place that ONE unusual item in the lockers. Every episode is the same: the locker is filled with a bunch of hastily stacked worthless household items (trashbags full of clothes, clothes hangers, old toddler toys, etc.) then they find a cardboard portfolio stuffed carefully in a ratty dresser with original artist prints worth a fortune or ONE rare antique sculpture stuffed in a drawer full of costume jewelry and old papers.
However there was the recent one with the "quads" ... Jarrod and Brandi "couldn't get them started" until they took them to be appraised and it occurred to them that new batteries were the solution ... WTF?!
Dear Producers -- Please do not "John and Kate" this show ("John and Kate" was adecent show when it was about two struggling parents -- when the producers began lining up free vacations and product placements the show jumped the shark). "Storage Wars" is a good show and it works without your meddling to "up the ante." Quit pre-producing the show and just let it unfold. Tell your story in the editing room. Thank you.
#43
DVD Talk Limited Edition
re: Official Storage Wars Discussion
I am not sure if this is true or not, but Barry Weiss net worth is $7 million.
http://www.celebritynetworth.com/ric...iss-net-worth/
The Texas version of the show is really bad. Dull and boring.
Anyone watch Spike TV's Auction Hunters?
http://www.celebritynetworth.com/ric...iss-net-worth/
The Texas version of the show is really bad. Dull and boring.
Anyone watch Spike TV's Auction Hunters?
Anybody watch Hardcore Pawn? It's like slowing down to look at a car accident. It's 100% trash TV, but it's so damn entertaining.
The major thing I hate about Storage Wars is when the guys just pick up an item, "Oh that's $100 right there, that stuff over there's another $5-600..." Just the other night I watched an episode with Darryl finding an original XBOX system and his doofus son says it's worth $100. More like $10 bucks on eBay.
My major fear is that these shows are creating the illusion that this is a get rich quick business, and every locker is full of hidden gems. I'd bet 70% of the lockers they buy are money losers, and it's a very slow grind that requires a lot of trial and error to actually make money buying lockers. I've watched a couple videos on Youtube of real life auction buyers who claim the shows have ruined their way of making a living, because what once was a 50 person turnout at an auction turned into 200+, with everybody overpaying on lockers full of garbage, thinking they can strike it rich.
Still, it's always fun to look in my basement which is full of boxes and random crap and wonder, how much would someone actually pay for this just based on what they can see?
#44
DVD Talk Legend
re: Official Storage Wars Discussion
On an episode of the Storage Hunter show that I just watched tonight there was something that happened that I don't agree with. The guy sold a locker full of stuffed exotic animals and then afterwards said that he had to call the game ranger because of a law stating the sale of these types of animals alive or stuffed had to be looked at by someone. I thought it was shitty that he sold the lot for over 5,000 and then sprang that on the buyers afterwards. They even lost one of the stuffed animals which is now extinct. The ranger even threatened to take the guy to jail for arguing with him about it when he was simply trying to protect what he had just invested in. Kind of shitty on the auctioneers part in my opinion.
#45
re: Official Storage Wars Discussion
I wonder if anyone has ever been watching the show and saw their actual locker being auctioned? "Oh no, there's my stuff!"
But I also wonder why anyone would abandon valuable items from their storage locker? It must take several months of not paying the rental fees and then the companies must have to contact the renters in advance to give them an opportunity to get current on fees before locking them out.
So in that time, before being locked out, why don't the renters go remove the valuable coin collection and signed lithographs, and simply leave the filthy mattresses and boxes of old clothes?
But I also wonder why anyone would abandon valuable items from their storage locker? It must take several months of not paying the rental fees and then the companies must have to contact the renters in advance to give them an opportunity to get current on fees before locking them out.
So in that time, before being locked out, why don't the renters go remove the valuable coin collection and signed lithographs, and simply leave the filthy mattresses and boxes of old clothes?
#46
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re: Official Storage Wars Discussion
My major fear is that these shows are creating the illusion that this is a get rich quick business, and every locker is full of hidden gems. I'd bet 70% of the lockers they buy are money losers, and it's a very slow grind that requires a lot of trial and error to actually make money buying lockers. I've watched a couple videos on Youtube of real life auction buyers who claim the shows have ruined their way of making a living, because what once was a 50 person turnout at an auction turned into 200+, with everybody overpaying on lockers full of garbage, thinking they can strike it rich.
Still, it's always fun to look in my basement which is full of boxes and random crap and wonder, how much would someone actually pay for this just based on what they can see?
Still, it's always fun to look in my basement which is full of boxes and random crap and wonder, how much would someone actually pay for this just based on what they can see?
#47
DVD Talk Legend
re: Official Storage Wars Discussion
They've also tweaked the formula in that the buyers all go through the junk as they pull it out of the lockers. Earlier on, you'd often see Jarrod and Dave pack it all up and go through it as they unloaded from their trucks at their stores. Obviously it's better TV to see the item as it's "discovered" in the locker.
The ATVs didn't bother me too much. I believe they had Brandi state that it probably was just a drained battery before they took them to be appraised, and they likely would've still taken them to the appraiser even if they knew in advance that they ran.
I think a lot of these situations are cases where the storage unit holder dies, and the remaining family is either unaware of the items of value in the unit, or maybe even unaware of the unit altogether. In some cases, it's possible that the renters or their inheritors did go through and clean out a lot of stuff, but missed something.
#48
DVD Talk Platinum Edition
re: Official Storage Wars Discussion
The problem with the show is that it has exploded the growth of morons who think they can go do it too.
It's TOUGH! You have to keep money out all the time while looking through stuff hours on end trying to find things worth selling. Yeah you might run across something big, but that takes time and buying a great many lockers. Generally your dealing with things selling for 5 bucks, 10 bucks, 50 bucks...that's about it!
It takes REAL intellect to make it work.
Sure a blind squirrel can find a nut every now and then but to keep it rolling regularly you need to have a broad knowledge of things and know when to spend and when not to.
That's the problem that has occurred because of the show.
More people coming to auctions = higher priced lockers = harder to make money.
Before the show aired you could get lockers for next to nothing sometimes. lockers that go for 2 Grand now once sold for 3-5 hundred bucks. Some lockers have always sold big, of course depending on how much you could see, but the other day at an auction a locker that was basically completely empty with one box in the middle sold for about 250 bucks! This is insane, and I'm sure the buyer and bidders were compulsive gamblers who paid for a 250 dollar lottery ticket that more than likely held nothing.
I feel that, just like any balloon, this will bust and when it does occur people will be left scratching their heads, wondering how they lost so much money.
It's TOUGH! You have to keep money out all the time while looking through stuff hours on end trying to find things worth selling. Yeah you might run across something big, but that takes time and buying a great many lockers. Generally your dealing with things selling for 5 bucks, 10 bucks, 50 bucks...that's about it!
It takes REAL intellect to make it work.
Sure a blind squirrel can find a nut every now and then but to keep it rolling regularly you need to have a broad knowledge of things and know when to spend and when not to.
That's the problem that has occurred because of the show.
More people coming to auctions = higher priced lockers = harder to make money.
Before the show aired you could get lockers for next to nothing sometimes. lockers that go for 2 Grand now once sold for 3-5 hundred bucks. Some lockers have always sold big, of course depending on how much you could see, but the other day at an auction a locker that was basically completely empty with one box in the middle sold for about 250 bucks! This is insane, and I'm sure the buyer and bidders were compulsive gamblers who paid for a 250 dollar lottery ticket that more than likely held nothing.
I feel that, just like any balloon, this will bust and when it does occur people will be left scratching their heads, wondering how they lost so much money.
#49
DVD Talk Gold Edition
Thread Starter
re: Official Storage Wars Discussion
I wonder if anyone has ever been watching the show and saw their actual locker being auctioned? "Oh no, there's my stuff!"
But I also wonder why anyone would abandon valuable items from their storage locker? It must take several months of not paying the rental fees and then the companies must have to contact the renters in advance to give them an opportunity to get current on fees before locking them out.
So in that time, before being locked out, why don't the renters go remove the valuable coin collection and signed lithographs, and simply leave the filthy mattresses and boxes of old clothes?
But I also wonder why anyone would abandon valuable items from their storage locker? It must take several months of not paying the rental fees and then the companies must have to contact the renters in advance to give them an opportunity to get current on fees before locking them out.
So in that time, before being locked out, why don't the renters go remove the valuable coin collection and signed lithographs, and simply leave the filthy mattresses and boxes of old clothes?
I suspect many of the lockers for sale are simply people who died or their life changed so drastically they left town and left everything behind. I don't think it's a coincidence the show is shot in southern California and not, say, Iowa.
#50
DVD Talk Limited Edition
re: Official Storage Wars Discussion
I talked to the manager of my storage facility. He said it takes months of repeated calls and letters, including certified letters, before a locker goes to auction. By law they have to make repeated and documented efforts to reach people.
I suspect many of the lockers for sale are simply people who died or their life changed so drastically they left town and left everything behind. I don't think it's a coincidence the show is shot in southern California and not, say, Iowa.
I suspect many of the lockers for sale are simply people who died or their life changed so drastically they left town and left everything behind. I don't think it's a coincidence the show is shot in southern California and not, say, Iowa.