Posts Tagged ‘Pawn Stars’

‘Hardcore Pawn’ Follows in Wake of ‘Pawn Stars’

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

From ABCNEWS Dot GO Dot Com

‘Hardcore Pawn’ Follows in Wake of ‘Pawn Stars’
Imitation or coincidence? ‘Hardcore Pawn’ follows ‘Pawn Stars’
By DAVID BAUDER
The Associated Press
NEW YORK

Even in television, where good ideas are routinely imitated, the debut of “Hardcore Pawn” on TruTV next week is enough to make you marvel.

Just like one of the year’s breakout hits, History’s “Pawn Stars,” it’s a reality series about a family run pawn shop. Both are effectively comedies, drawing on the everyday absurdities of the workplace. Both play on the similarity of “pawn” to “porn” for their titles.

And both are in the same time slot: Monday nights at 10 p.m. Eastern.

Coincidence?

Well, yes, according to Marc Juris, executive vice president and general manager of TruTV.

“Quite honestly, we did absolutely nothing different than we would have done whether or not the other show was on the air,” Juris said. “We look for shows that really hit our sweet spot and when they’re right for our audience is when we put them on the air.”

“Hardcore Pawn” was in development for more than a year and two test episodes were aired in December, he said. “Pawn Stars,” in its third season this year, has seen its viewership jump by 38 percent over the second season. The July 5 episode was seen by 6.3 million viewers, the biggest audience ever for the cable network, the Nielsen Co. said.

The TruTV series stars the patriarch of Detroit’s sprawling American Jewelry and Loan, the nearly too-good-to-be-true named Les Gold, along with his son Seth and daughter Ashley.

As suggested by the title, “Hardcore Pawn” is rougher around the edges than the History series. A customer bringing in a cannon to the “pawn stars” would trigger an examination of its history. TruTV has a customer with a homemade cannon that Gold just wants to see blow up in his parking lot.

The first “Hardcore Pawn” also features a profanity-spewing woman who threatens Gold when he doesn’t hand over jewelry, and the store’s purchase of a stripper’s pole. Yes, several potential buyers try it out.

The show earned the same time slot as “Pawn Stars” because it’s a nice fit with “Operation Repo,” a series about auto repossession that airs at 9 p.m. on Mondays, Juris said.

“We’re certainly not going to change our schedule or our strategy because of one show on another network,” Juris said. “That really isn’t servicing our audience well  that comes to us on Mondays expecting a certain kind of show.”

Nancy DuBuc, president and general manager of History, said she couldn’t speak to whether TruTV’s choice is truly a coincidence.

“I haven’t seen the show,” she said. “There’s no mistaking the power of the show that we’ve launched.”

In the world of cable TV reality, successful ideas rarely stand alone: Hence the outbreak of shows about abnormally large families and high-end pastry decorators. History has been on the other side, too. Discovery accused the network of playing off its own successful “Deadliest Catch” series with History’s “Ice Road Truckers” when that debuted a few years back. Both are shows about tough jobs in forbidding climates.

DuBuc said she’s not concerned that “Hardcore Pawn” would dilute the success of “Pawn Stars” or cause it to burn out more quickly. She noted that shows inspired by the success of similar ideas rarely match the originals.

“I feel very confident that our series and our family has a strong foothold on this genre,” she said.

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Copyright © 2010 ABC News Internet Ventures

‘Pawn Stars’ Brings Bookworm Fame

Saturday, March 27th, 2010

From LVJR Dot Com

Mar. 26, 2010
Copyright © Las Vegas Review-Journal

NORM: ‘Pawn Stars’ brings bookworm fame
Rick Harrison of the hit reality show “Pawn Stars” can’t go anywhere without getting the celebrity treatment.

Still a bit uncomfortable with his newfound stardom, Harrison walked into the DMV office on Decatur on Thursday hiding behind some Ray-Ban shades.

His disguise didn’t work. His bald head gave him away.

“If you didn’t want to be recognized,” one fan told him, “you should have worn a wig.”

Another person ribbed the pawnbroker with: “You want $1,000? I’ll give you $100.”

A lady in the DMV line saw the hubbub and was convinced Bruce Willis was in the building.

That’s funny, Harrison said when I reached him by telephone. “When I was at Terry Fator’s show, this guy came up to me and said, ‘How’s it going? Remember when we did that charity event five years ago?’”

When the brief conversation ended, the man told Harrison, “Nice talking to you, Bruce.”

All this fame from 40-some episodes has Harrison, 45, shaking his head in disbelief. “I’ve been a bookworm my whole life. Just worked hard. Never thought anything like this would happen,” he said.

“A friend of mine in junior high called,” said Harrison, who grew up in San Diego before moving to Las Vegas in 1981. “Cousins who I didn’t know existed.”

Business at the family-run Gold and Silver Pawn at 713 S. Las Vegas Blvd. has been booming so much that a $400,000 expansion is in the works to double the size of the showroom. It’s costing a lot because his two structures are among the oldest on the Strip, he said. They were built in 1935, the year before Hoover Dam was completed. Las Vegas had all of 8,500 residents.

How popular is the show? This month, it drew a record 5.3 rating on the History Channel and 5.8 a week later.

Harrison said Jessica Simpson chalked up terrible ratings for her VHI reality show, “The Price of Beauty,” to going head-to-head with “Pawn Stars.”

Norm Clarke can be reached at (702) 383-0244 or norm@reviewjournal.com. Find additional sightings and more online at www.normclarke.com.

Quick Cash – Explained By The Pawn Stars

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Pawn Stars Is a Smash Success

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

From Trans World News Dot Com

Pawn Stars Is a Smash Success
Pawn Stars Show On History Channel

Denville NJ 01/26/2010 1/26/2010 08:26 PM GMT (TransWorldNews)

Hailed by viewers as a really “cool Antiques Roadshow,” Pawn Stars is one of the most popular TV shows on the History Channel, which is part of the American Cable TV network. The show is produced by Leftfield Pictures and shot in and around the Las Vegas, Nevada area. Pawn Stars chronicles the activities that take place inside a Gold and Silver Pawn Shop. The first episode was aired back in July 26, 2009. Today, Pawn Stars is telecasted every Monday at 10 pm (Eastern Time). Each one-hour block features two episodes. This show has a loyal viewership that tunes in every week to see the latest events happening in the pawn shop.

Until the 1950s, pawning was actually one of the most popular form of consumer credit in the USA. Even today, you can still find pawn shops that have an extremely large customer base. You will find them all over the United States. Over the years with so many objects changing hands, it’s not unusual to find that several artifacts of historical importance have found their way to the many pawn shops in America today. Tracing the history behind such artifacts is undoubtedly be a wonderful walk down memory lane. It is precisely this feeling that each episode of Pawn Stars manages to bring into the home to the average viewer.

The show revolves around a Pawn Shop owned by the Harrison family. The shop was opened by Richard Harrison (“The Old Man”) and his son Rick Harrison (“The Appraiser”) back in 1988. The youngest Harrison, Corey (“Big Hoss”), is being trained by his father and grandfather to one day run the entire operation of the Pawn Shop.

Customers enter the shop with artifacts for pawning and interact with the staff is inevitable. Discussions and a lot of talk ensue; there is always much haggling over the prices as well as good old fashioned talk amongst all. These are punctured by knowledgeable narrations usually led by Rick and Corey on the historical value of the objects in question.

The charm of the TV show lies mainly on these deeply historical, yet extremely interesting historical narrations. Doubts regarding the authenticity of the object in question are settled by the wide variety of experts (on armory, handwriting, automobile restoration, early American history and on pretty much anything you can think of) called in by the shop. No wonder the show has completed more than 25 episodes and there is no end in sight.

As a pleasant diversion from the deeply historical thread of Pawn Stars, there is also much focus on the interpersonal conflicts between the Harrisons. Differences of opinion arise regarding the overall operation of the shop. Corey, being the youngest, often finds his management decisions questioned by his father and grandfather. An employee of the shop Austin “Chumlee” Russel, a friend of Corey’s, is also a major topic of conflict between the Harrisons. The obvious sentiments harbored by Chumlee for Danielle “Peaches” Rainey (another employee of the shop) is yet another entertaining diversion.

Both reviews and ratings of the show are very encouraging. Christopher Long of DVD Town finds the show “addictive.” He praises the cast and considers the educational value of the examined artifacts above par. He even goes as far as to describe Pawn Stars the best show on History Channel. April McIntyre, who writes for Monsters and Critics, disapproves of pawning and pawn shops in general. But she was the one who described Pawn Stars as a “cool Antiques Roadshow.” The Pawn Stars was awarded an awesome 8.9 out of 10 by TV.com (ranked by the votes of 30 viewers). Further, Common Sense Media (who provides program reviews for parents) found it to be suitable for viewing by children above 13.

 

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Copyright © 2009 - Stephen Krupnik - All Rights Reserved
Pawnonomics by Stephen Krupnik tells the infamous history of the pawn broking industry and shines a bright light into
its darkest corners, while also pointing out some pinnacles along the way.