His profit margin isn't as bad as those other shows, which are a minimum doubling of their money... and he doesn't haggle as much as the guys on "Hardcore Pawn".

It is a negative element to the show, but gives the show more depth than just travelling around the country-side, looking at toys and valuing them, making it necessary to interest non-toy-collectors. (which could be a paid service in itself, like those British antique valuation shows)

Besides, the other positive element to the show (aside from the brief look at collections), is seeing rare and pre-production prototypes that you'd never know existed otherwise.... and then seeing how much someone was willing to pay for them. (I'm sure they would have gone a lot higher if auctioned off to a global audience)


The show appears to have moved to Sunday nights now, but even if you miss it (or its two repeats), there is always those Authorised online sources that were linked further up the topic, that play like youtube, so you don't have to download anything that could be a risk to your computer.