Pawn Stars: Season 16: Wilde Card #14
Wilde Card: Corey checks out a 1972 telegram that rejects Muhammad Ali from fighting in Alaska. A first edition copy of Oscar Wilde's The Happy Prince arrives in store. (S16, ep 14)
Wilde Card: Corey checks out a 1972 telegram that rejects Muhammad Ali from fighting in Alaska. A first edition copy of Oscar Wilde's The Happy Prince arrives in store. (S16, ep 14)
Shufflin And Hustlin: Rick checks out an early version of Rip Van Winkle. Plus, Corey and Chum's eyes light up when they find a candle shaped like Richard Nixon's head. (S15, ep 16)
Chumlee's Last Laugh: The Pawn Stars check out a huge Dukes of Hazzard toy collection. Later, can Chumlee make the others laugh as he tries his hand at stand-up comedy? (S14, ep 13)
Head Games: Rick hopes for the deal of his dreams when pendants from the first two Super Bowls come into the shop. He also checks out a pair of Igorot spears. (S13, ep 15)
Hole In One: The Pawn Stars set their sights on a musket made by cotton gin inventor Eli Whitney. They also come across a golf ball owned by President Lyndon B Johnson. (S8, ep 14)
Buyer Beware: Staff at the pawn shop ponder the value of a 1940s mandolin. They also come across a signed print of Abraham Lincoln. But can they trust its authenticity? (S7, ep 14)
Late Night Chum: The Pawn Stars cast their eyes over a Civil War cavalry jacket and a limited edition book signed by legendary cowboy Will Rogers. (S6, ep 14)
The guys come across items that belonged to the legendary Wyatt Earp and a 1984 Olympic medal. Meanwhile, a perfect pair of 1800s pistols sound alarm bells for Rick.
The guys unearth a collection of ancient Mazon Creek fossils, gamble on a blackjack table from the Stardust Casino and stumble on a Down and Dirty custom motorcycle frame.
Hell Week: The Old Man gets his hands on lost footage of President Franklin Roosevelt, Rick considers a cast iron 1800s' coffee grinder and Corey and Chumlee compete in an obstacle race.