Product Description
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Fast-talking auctioneers Dan and Laura Dotson and the loyal
bidders that frequent their storage unit sales are back for more
Storage Wars. Aided only by the beam of a flashlight, the bidders
get a quick peek inside the units, then have mere minutes to
decide if they're going to take the gamble, make a bid and see if
the resulting buy is full of mostly t... or true treasure.
Storage addict and 32-year bidding veteran Darrell and his son
Brandon Sheets, secondhand store owner Jarrod Schultz,
entrepreneur Dave Hester and antique collector Barry Weiss return
for more high-stakes fun as they try to outbid one another in the
pursuit of storage treasure. Part gamblers and part detectives,
these seasoned veterans negotiate the fascinating and obscure
world of storage auction and consignment, with personalities as
colorful and varied as the treasures they uncover.
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Fallen behind on your Storage Wars viewing? Here's an update:
Barry paid $900 for a locker and there was nothing in it; Dave
said "yuuuup!" and picked a fight with someone; Darrell made a
couple of non sequitur asides to the camera; Brandi and Jarrod
fought over a unit, but they weren't really fighting. No matter
which episode or DVD set you're watching, consider yourself
caught up with that recap. Nevertheless, rabid fans of this
addictive show will still want to include volume three for some
binge viewing, whether it's a guilty pleasure or an unabashed
obsession. The premise of this irresistible reality show gathers
a gang of four second-hand-goods dealers as they trek around
Southern California plundering the thousands of storage lockers
that go on the auction block each year after the renters default
or disappear. They're allowed a quick peek with a flashlight when
the lock is cut and the door raised, then it's on to the
cutthroat bidding between the main characters as they gleefully
and often greedily describe what treasures they think might be
inside. Is it a fortune in expensive electronics? A cache of rare
coins? Jewels? Antique furniture? Some bizarre medical device?
Shrunken heads? It could be any of the above or just as likely a
few musty cardboard boxes or plastic containers filled with
nothing but dust. The show's structure provides a nicely devised
feeling of suspense--it really could be anything inside these
dark closets that hold weird secrets from other people's lives.
But it's the personalities of the bidders that keep you coming
back for more Storage Wars and its can't-look-away formula. Barry
is "the Collector," a flamboyant, charming, sixtyish gentleman
with style and personality galore. He's not so much interested in
striking it rich as finding something crazy or unique. Barry is a
funny, likable guy who also tends to be a soothing, comic
mediator when things get heated. Dave is "the Mogul," an
aggressive, b, serious entrepreneur who is all in for the
money, not the sport. Dave has the annoying catch phrase
("Yuuuup!") and is easily antagonized, especially when his
ongoing feud with Darrell flares into an angry exchange. Darrell
is "the Gambler," a big burly bear of a blue-collar workingman
who's always looking for the big score. He particularly enjoys
getting Dave's goat and will frequently engage in a bidding war
either man might escalate only to give the other guy a reason to
start steaming. Jarrod and Brandi own a small shop and are always
looking to keep their shelves stocked with tchotchkes and
collectibles that aren't just scrap or throwaway Goodwill-type
household goods. Always involved in some sort of dispute, each
one thinks that they're the one in charge. It's clear they're a
loving, devoted couple and that the sniping is pretty much an
act, with Jarrod as the crazy and Brandi as the voice of reason.
This Volume Three two-disc set contains 16 episodes from season
two and is as good a place as any to dive into the oddly
compelling blend of performance art and ty reality TV that is
Storage Wars. --Ted Fry