American Pickers (2010–…): Season 1, Episode 12 - Leland's Cafe - full transcript

This time on American Pickers... While visiting a reluctant seller with an incredible collection, Mike falls for two very rare bicycles. Can he keep a poker face and strike a deal? And, when they get a return invitation from Leland, the guys show up with a very special gift.

MIKE: We can get thrown off
somebody's property right away.

I mean, they can get
insulted that we're trying

to buy this stuff.

MIKE: Oh yeah,
it's a high wheeler!

MIKE: At that moment,
I had to have it.

MIKE: Would you ever
consider selling this?

We got an open invitation to
come back to Leland's house.

MIKE: You got the warmest
seat in the house, Leland.

How you doing buddy?

FRANK: This guy's eighty
eight years old and he's

sharp as a tack.



FRANK: You know, I
seen something downstairs,

there was a little
camelback trunk.

Would a hundred dollars buy it?

LELAND: No.

MIKE: I'm Mike Wolfe.

FRANK: And I'm Frank Fritz.

MIKE: And we're pickers.

FRANK: We travel the back
roads of America looking

for rusty gold.

We're looking for amazing
things buried in people's

garages and barns.

MIKE: What most people see
as junk, we see as dollar signs.

FRANK: We'll buy anything if
we think we can make a buck on it.

MIKE: Each item we pick
has a history all its own



and the people we meet, well
they're a breed all their own.

We make a living telling
the history of America

one piece at a time.

[♪]

DANIELLE: Mike, Frank!

FRANK: What?

MIKE: What do we got?

DANIELLE: This dude
right here. John Davison.

I chatted with him a little bit.

It sounds like he's got
some cool stuff. Bike signs.

But he's gruff, which I think
you guys will appreciate.

And he's not sure he's
ready to sell yet, but

he's thinking about
it, which is cool.

DANIELLE: Getting those
boys in the door with John

was not easy.

It took a lot of phone calls.

If they can go and get
their foot in the door,

I really think that John
will do really well with them.

MIKE: Basically what
we're gonna do is plug this

address into the GPS and
pray to the picking Gods

that this is gonna be
something worthwhile for us.

DANIELLE: Bye!

DANIELLE: I have anxiety.
Like I'll lose sleep over

whether or not a pick is
going to work out for them.

[♪]

MIKE: The cool thing about
Danielle is, I'll tell you what,

she's pretty ruthless
on not giving up on stuff.

FRANK: This guy might
just be letting us in just to

get rid of her.

[laughter]

[♪]

MIKE: Looking good already dude.

FRANK: I know, he's got the
buildup back there and stuff.

MIKE: Let's get
something good here.

JOHN: Hello!

FRANK: Hey, my name's Frank.

JOHN: Hi, John Davison.

MIKE: Hi, I'm Mike. You
spoke to Danielle on the phone?

MIKE: When I first saw
John, he looked kind of

rough and tough.

JOHN: Let me get a jacket.

MIKE: Okay, cool.

FRANK: He seemed a
little standoffish, right to the

point person.

MIKE: Danielle said that
you had some old bicycles

and some old cars and stuff...

MIKE: This guy's been a
collector for a long time.

He's going to have some
smoking stuff in here.

JOHN: Here's some of the stuff.

FRANK: Oh, cool.

MIKE: What year is that car?

JOHN: Nineteen fifteen Overland.

[♪]

MIKE: Wow.

JOHN: That twenty three
dodge I bought in nineteen

fifty one for fifty three
dollars and drove it home.

MIKE: You've had that
car since nineteen fifty one?

JOHN: That's my first old car.

FRANK: Was fifty dollars
a good price back then?

JOHN: Yeah, I guess
it was a decent price.

FRANK: Decent price?

MIKE: Cool, look at
all this stuff he's got

hanging from the rafters.

FRANK: I know, I see that.
JOHN: Too much stuff here.

MIKE: We like to hear
that. He said, too much stuff.

FRANK: Too much stuff? Yeah.

JOHN: Want to come up now?

FRANK: Yeah, sure.

MIKE: God, there's so
much to look at up here.

Oil cans Frankie.

FRANK: I see, you
got oil cans over here.

FRANK: What I'm going
to try to do is I'm going to

try to get some kind of
money going so he knows

that we're serious buyers.

FRANK: That is an
O'Neil's Velvet Motor Oil.

FRANK: I really
wanted that oil can.

It was made to fit in the
running board of a car.

FRANK: What would
something like this run, John?

JOHN: Well I really
don't care to sell it.

But what they're worth?

I don't know, you
probably know more.

FRANK: Not for sale?

JOHN: No, I like the cans.

FRANK: We got to
ask though, you know?

JOHN: Sure, if
that's your thing.

FRANK: We've been
down this road before.

People want to sell, but
they're just not quite ready.

MIKE: Is this something
that you'd consider selling?

JOHN: No.

MIKE: Is any of
that stuff for sale?

JOHN: No.

MIKE: That was
a pretty quick no.

Is that something you'd sell?

JOHN: No, I don't
see a reason why.

FRANK: Don't see a reason
why you'd have to get rid

of this?

MIKE: So I walk back,
in the very back of attic of

the barn and I see that
bicycle sitting there with

wood rims on it.

FRANK: Look at this one.

MIKE: Yeah, what's
up with that one?

MIKE: I could tell that it
was something that was

high quality by the
way the seat was made,

the whole bike, the
way it was constructed.

MIKE: What's it
say on the front?

FRANK: Oh...

MIKE: Victor.

MIKE: Victor bicycles
actually established the

first frame that all
bicycles use today.

The diamond frames
are extremely rare.

They're hard to find.

They're like the Cadillac of
turn-of-the-century bicycles.

[♪]

FRANK: Mike, is this ride-able?

MIKE: It looks like
it would be ride-able.

Have you ridden this?

JOHN: Yeah - there's
just a different feel to it

than the modern bikes.

MIKE: But what's cool
about this bike too is

it's got the coaster pegs on it.

FRANK: That's where you
put your feet up, way up high?

MIKE: Is this something
that you'd consider selling?

JOHN: Yeah. I'd sell it.

MIKE: What would
you have for that?

JOHN: Oh, a couple thousand.

You asked.

MIKE: When John didn't
want to sell something,

he'd put some
crazy number on it.

We're going to have
to break the ice here.

MIKE: What about
eight hundred bucks.

Would eight
hundred bucks buy it?

JOHN: No, not at all.

MIKE: We can get thrown off
somebody's property right away.

I mean they can get
insulted that we're trying

to buy this stuff, so you
know, you got to back off

a little bit and listen
to what they're saying.

JOHN: I still get my three
square meals a day so

I'm really not...

FRANK: You're not
that desperate yet, right?

MIKE: I could see it in
his eye, he wasn't even

thinking about it.

JOHN: Gotta get a big casket
so I can take it all with me.

MIKE: Look at some
of those motors.

FRANK: Oh yeah, some
more build up down here.

MIKE: This is an
incredible collection.

This is cool.

FRANK: When we got into
John's basement, his place

looks like a total
museum, you know?

JOHN: Let me show you
something you've never seen before.

A radio.

MIKE: Haven't seen that
one before, have you?

FRANK: No, that's early.

MIKE: That's pretty cool.

FRANK: Look at all the
license plates from Wisconsin.

MIKE: Oh yeah.

JOHN: That one's a
Rambler, nineteen five.

MIKE: Wow. Do you have any
motorcycle catalogues in here?

Oh yeah, there you go.

Harley Enthusiast, twenty nine.

FRANK: That's the thing
that comes with all collectors.

People like to talk
about their collections.

JOHN: Six hundred bucks,
this is ninteen fourteen.

FRANK: Wow.

MIKE: That's a cigar cutter,
see you push the button.

JOHN: Clock work.

FRANK: He showed us
things that he actually pulled

out of the dump when
he was 8 years old.

JOHN: Well Saturday
morning my mother told me

to take a load down to the dump.

Of course you'd take a
load down to the dump and

bring a half a load back.

FRANK: Right. That
was sixty nine years ago.

Stuff he's still got.

JOHN: That's a fan
you'd take to church.

You wouldn't have to
have the fan moving.

MIKE: That's pretty
damn cool man.

Oh yeah, look at that.

His eyes roll back.

MIKE: He was having fun
after a while because he

saw, when he was showing
us stuff, our eyes were

lighting up.

MIKE: Oh wow,
look at these Frank!

JOHN: They're light bulbs
that you can see the filaments.

MIKE: What else do
you got to show us?

JOHN: Buddy L outdoor rail road.

FRANK: Oh heck yeah.

Your mom and dad had
to have a lot of money back

in the day to be able to
buy you something like that.

MIKE: Is that from the thirties?

JOHN: No, late twenties.

MIKE: Would you sell that?

JOHN: I don't
think I can sell it, no.

MIKE: I mean,
reality set in basically,

we're surrounded
by this incredible stuff.

Now it's like, can
we buy any of it?

MIKE: Do a lot of people
have access to down here?

I mean, have you sold
a lot of things or no?

JOHN: No, I'm not really
into selling that much.

[Inaudible].

MIKE: I hear you.
FRANK: I hear you.

JOHN: You know what
that G and J is, don't you?

MIKE: G and J was actually
Gormley and Jeffrey which

later became American Motors.

Really cool
transportation piece.

MIKE: What would you
have to have for that?

JOHN: A couple thousand.
A couple thousand.

MIKE: I think that's his
price he tells when he

doesn't want to sell nothing.

JOHN: This is what
they call bipolar.

MIKE: Okay. Now what's an
electric motor like that go for?

JOHN: Couple grand.

FRANK: You see, back in
my mind, I'm thinking here's

his electric motor area,
here's his oiler area, and

then he had some areas that
weren't, you know, organized.

If we can find stuff here,
that he doesn't care a lot

about, we're going to be in.

FRANK: Hey John, what
about these Royal Blue signs?

Is that a local place?

JOHN: No.

FRANK: You know, porcelain
signs are very collectible.

FRANK: Would that be
something you'd consider selling?

JOHN: Yeah, it's possible.

FRANK: Okay.

FRANK: Right then I had
found something I didn't

think was as dear to his heart.

It's a three piece sign.

JOHN: Three hundred
for the whole thing.

FRANK: Three hundred,
so a hundred a piece.

How's two and a half?

JOHN: Yeah, I'll
let it go for that.

FRANK: Deal.

MIKE: Good job Frankie.

FRANK: I broke the ice.

FRANK: Right there, I
knew we were in business.

FRANK: How about your
little fencer sign up here?

What would you take for it?

JOHN: Seventy five.

FRANK: Okay. John, what
about these cigar boxes?

JOHN: Twenty five for the pair.

FRANK: Okay, deal.

MIKE: Frankie was nickel
and diming him to death.

It was like ten bucks,
twenty bucks, thirty bucks.

MIKE: What's your wheel to?

All of a sudden I saw
the bicycle wheel for a

high wheeler and I
love high wheel bikes.

It's got a lot of original
nickel on the hub too.

JOHN: Yeah. That's for a Star.

[♪]

MIKE: So you've
got a Star bicycle?

JOHN: Yeah.

MIKE: Where's that at?

JOHN: Oh, it's in
the other room there.

MIKE: I'd love to see that.

MIKE: When John talked
about having the Star bicycle,

I got really excited.

[♪]

MIKE: Oh yeah,
it's a high wheeler!

MIKE: At that moment,
I had to have it.

I knew I was red hot. I
don't see stuff like that.

MIKE: The star bike I l MIKE: The
Star high wheel safety bike, when he

unveiled it out of the
back room, I was like, wow.

I mean I've only seen two
or three of those and I've

been collecting
bikes for a long time.

This is incredible.
It really is.

There's a leather strap
and this pulls the strap

to make it go forward.

MIKE: It's a reverse
roll of a high wheeler.

Usually you sit on top
of the big wheel and you

steer that big wheel.

What was happening was
people were going over the

handlebars with what
they called headers.

The Star Penny Farthing
was designed to not let

that happen.

You're steering
the little wheel.

So this was called
the safety high wheel.

MIKE: So the mechanism
itself is all here.

JOHN: The parts
inside are the grabbers.

MIKE: Yeah. What
shape are the gears in?

JOHN: These gears are good.

MIKE: Wow, this is killer.
I mean, you know what?

I've only ever
seen a few of these.

During the scrap drives
of world war two, and

everything that's happened
since the eighteen eighties,

for one of those to
still survive intact,

it's an amazing find.

MIKE: Would you ever
consider selling this?

MIKE: I didn't think that he
would sell it but I had to ask.

I was getting ready to
get kicked in the knees.

JOHN: Yeah, I'll sell it.

MIKE: Let me ask you this.

Why would you be willing
to part with this if you

haven't been willing to
part with anything else here?

JOHN: Well, I guess I just
got some stuff to think about.

Give somebody else
the opportunity to enjoy it.

MIKE: I was like, okay. Game
on here. I can buy something.

MIKE: What would you have
to have for something like this.

JOHN: Three thousand.

MIKE: Three thousand bucks.

MIKE: Basically I'm trying
to play it really cool on

this bike.

You know. I'm excited about
it, I don't want John to see

that, I don't want to
show all my cards.

MIKE: Um, let me
think about this.

You're at three thousand on it.

It's a lot of cash. I love
the bike. It's awesome.

I mean, it's amazing.

MIKE: This is a lot of
cash we're talking about

here, so I wanted to talk
to my partner Frankie and

see what he thought of it.

FRANK: So I want to
know, at three, you'd have

another five into it to
make it operational?

MIKE: No. But here's the kicker.

I'm still thinking about that
other bike, the one in the barn.

Worst case scenario,
we're looking at four G's.

Is that cool with you?
That's what I'm saying.

I'm feeling this.

FRANK: I'm taking your
best judgment because

you're the bicycle guy.

If you don't buy it
today, guess what?

Next time you think about
buying it, it's not going

to be for sale.

MIKE: Here's what I'm
looking at. The Star bike I love.

You were at three thousand
- the Victor out in the barn,

if we bought both bikes,
would you do thirty eight on it?

That's for the two.

MIKE: If he said no,
basically I'm going home

with my tail between my legs.

MIKE: Three thousand
on the Star, eight hundred

bucks on the Victor.

FRANK: That's paying
full price for that one, and

eight hundred out
in the barn there.

MIKE: We're
collectors ourselves.

We love this stuff.
We're passionate about it.

We met someone else,
they're extremely passionate

about the item too, but you
all have to find that common

ground, and sometimes
we never do, but he still,

he's holding on to those
feelings, those emotions.

JOHN: Okay. Okay, okay.

MIKE: He's like, alright, okay.

FRANK: Alright. Woo!
See? It wasn't that hard.

JOHN: I better sit down.

FRANK: It's tough, isn't it?

MIKE: All of a sudden, the
oxygen and everything was

just sucked out of the room.

FRANK: I saw that.

JOHN: He felt good
about it and I felt good,

so that's a sign
of a good trade.

MIKE: This was better
than sliced bread.

This was a honey hole.

FRANK: This is the kind of
place that pickers dream of.

FRANK: Alright, get it up.

FRANK: I bought the three signs.

I don't see any reason
I couldn't get at least

six hundred.

[♪]

MIKE: I bought the wooden
wheel Victor bicycle for

eight hundred bucks, I
can easily get another

thousand bucks for it.

[♪]

FRANK: Got her? MIKE: Yeah.

MIKE: The Star high
wheel safety bike, we paid

three thousand bucks for,
I think it's a very good deal,

but I need to get it confirmed.

MIKE: Hey, thanks John.

MIKE: Today is one of
those days, one of those

little snapshots in
time that we're going to

remember this pick,
and it's going to keep our

batteries charged so we
can keep on doing this.

MIKE: Yeah! Danielle
hooked us up dude.

FRANK: She did
good! You know what?

I think stuff can be
bought there again.

Woo!

MIKE: When we come home
it's like the big catch for us.

[honking horn]

DANIELLE: Hey.

Please don't tell me it was bad.

FRANK: We scored.

MIKE: Mega scored!

DANIELLE: I like to see
them come home with big

smiles on their faces.

The boys are so freaking
cute when they're happy.

MIKE: The way this works
is it's a treadle system.

You could either peddle
it like this, or like this.

DANIELLE: Okay.

MIKE: Yeah. It's from
the eighteen eighties.

This is like eighteen
nineties, wood rim, it's a Victor.

DANIELLE: Super powers activate!

MIKE: Into the form of a picker!

MIKE: Alright,
here it is Davey boy.

FRANK: Here it is Dave.

MIKE: Check it out.

DAVE: Oh my!

MIKE: No matter how
excited we get, we need to

sometimes get an appraisal.

We've always used Dave
as a bicycle appraiser.

He's going to be able to tell
us exactly if we got a good buy.

DAVE: There's a lot of
high wheelers around, or

ordinaries, or whatever you
want to call them, the ones

with the small wheel in the
back, but this is more unique.

I always like the spade
handles too over the balls,

you know, the
mustache handlebars.

And it actually coasted like
a modern day bike, really.

MIKE: Well what do
you think it's worth man?

DAVE: I think it's one
of those things where it's

worth what anybody will
pay - especially a bicycle

collector that doesn't
have this piece.

FRANK: Right.

DAVE: I'd say in this
current state, four to

forty five hundred.

FRANK: Woo! Did we score
or what? Sit back and take it in.

[♪]

DAVE: If you did a hundred
point restoration on it,

it's more like seven, eight.

MIKE: You know what? I'd
like to get this thing running

just to see Frank
try to ride it.

DAVE: Frank's little stumps
wouldn't work on this thing.

FRANK: It probably wouldn't.

[phone rings]

DANIELLE: Antique
Archaeology, this is

Danielle, how can I help you?

MIKE: We got a really
special call today.

We got a call from Linda.

Linda is Leland's daughter.

LINDA: I was wondering
if Frank and Mike were to

come down for another
visit and Leland would

enjoy talking with
them again too.

[♪]

MIKE: We got an open invitation
to come to Leland's house.

Leland is one of those guys
that's like a national treasure.

I mean, the guy's a
world war two vet, he's got

amazing stories.

When we get asked to
come back, that's huge for us,

because then we actually
know that we did a good

job the first time.

MIKE: This place looks
different with two feet of snow.

He's going to love that sign.

MIKE: Right away, we
thought of the Leland sign

that we found in this
little town in Mississippi.

FRANK: Hey Phil,
this café sign up here...

PHIL: I'll sell it for a price.

FRANK: How about
a hundred dollars?

PHIL: You got
the sign. [laughter]

FRANK: So we're taking
the sign to Leland and I hope

he enjoys it.

MIKE: You Linda?

LINDA: Yeah, hi Mike.

MIKE: This is Frank.

LINDA: Hi Frank.

FRANK: There he is.

MIKE: You got the warmest
seat in the house Leland.

How you doing buddy?

Good to see you again.

You're the guy that
like has everything.

LELAND: Yeah.

MIKE: So it was
really hard for us to find

something cool. So...

FRANK: This is
what we got for you.

MIKE: What do you think?

We were thinking about
you when we bought this.

[laughs]

FRANK: I know you
don't have one of these.

MIKE: We thought when
you were in the kitchen in the

morning, you could
eat at the Leland Café.

FRANK: What do you think?

LELAND: That's something.

LINDA: As long as you're
here, there are all kinds

of things you can look at.

Would you like
to see the garage?

MIKE: We'd love to.

FRANK: I mean, the
garage is a brand new place.

The first time we were
there, we never got in the

garage so I was like, game on.

[♪]

MIKE: One of the cool
things about going to

Leland's house today is
his daughter's there and

I think she is at the
point right now where she

is working with him and is
like, you know what, Dad,

maybe we should let
some more of this stuff go.

Look at that.

Look at the colors
of this chair, Frankie.

FRANK: Oh, that's cool.

MIKE: What can you
tell me about this chair?

LINDA: That is very old.
That's from my grandmother.

FRANK: This comes out like this.

MIKE: No, this is the arm
as it folds up. Okay, wait.

FRANK: Wait a minute.

You got to be smarter
than the chair I guess.

Have you ever seen in an
antique shop, you break, you buy?

LINDA: That might
be a good policy.

[laughter]

MIKE: Look at the color in this.

FRANK: I love this.

MIKE: The paint, the
design of the fabric on

that piece was really cool.

MIKE: I'd make a seventy
five dollar offer on it if

that's something
that you'd sell.

LINDA: Oh dear. Well
let me think about it.

MIKE: Okay.

MIKE: Leland came out
and joined us just around the

same time that Frankie
pulled the door knobs out.

FRANK: Probably bought
those at an auction or something.

MIKE: They were beautiful.

MIKE: Are these door knobs
something that you'd sell?

LELAND: Yeah.

MIKE: A lot of
people love that stuff.

It's architectural pieces if
you're restoring a house.

MIKE: How about a
hundred and fifty bucks?

LELAND: Yeah.

MIKE: He's like, okay.

FRANK: He snapped.

MIKE: Alright, I'll take those.

Would it be possible
for us to look down in the

basement again?

LINDA: Yeah. Come on down.

FRANK: We're going
to the depths Mike.

MIKE: In the grand
scheme of things, what's the

overall plan for
a lot of this stuff?

LINDA: I don't know. What
can I do with these things?

I mean, it's just a
mixture of everything.

And when you came
along, we thought, oh wow,

if they like this.

FRANK: There can be
outlet for some of it, huh?

LINDA: Yeah.

MIKE: She's kind of
overwhelmed with all the

things that Leland has
acquired throughout his life.

MIKE: I say that you guys
could have one hell of a

yard sale with all this
stuff you have in here man.

MIKE: Yeah, Leland's is
one of those places that

no matter where you look
and how much you look,

you're always going to
see new exciting things,

but there's just
layers and layers of it.

MIKE: When the load gets
heavy, we have to pull together.

Oh.

LINDA: Oh, isn't that cute.

MIKE: I know,
that's what's so neat.

When we're looking
through here, there's so many

things that you
haven't seen either.

LINDA: That's right.

MIKE: Look at this Frankie.

This is a golden
ear of corn trophy.

Presented to Leland...

FRANK: Nineteen fifty three.

MIKE: Remember getting that?

LELAND: No.

MIKE: This is a nineteen
twenty one silver dollar.

There's some neat
stuff in here Leland.

Is that yours from
the war Leland?

LELAND: Look at that.

MIKE: His old medals and
things that he got from the war.

How many times did
you have to shine that?

Do you remember that?

MIKE: I handed that stuff
to him - I could see how

excited he was because
he hadn't seen that stuff in

such a long time.

FRANK: Leland, would
this be something you'd sell?

LELAND: Yeah.

FRANK: It's called a
pocket game, you can put

it in your pocket.

It's made in the
forties I would say.

It's a little magnetic game.

FRANK: How about ten dollars?

LELAND: Okay.

FRANK: Alrighty.

FRANK: The reason I bought
it was it says Mutt and Jeff on it.

Mutt and Jeff was a
little comic character.

It came out in 1903.

They syndicated all the
way up to nineteen eighty two.

MIKE: We're looking around
and Linda starts picking with us.

She was being
really accommodating.

MIKE: How about sixty dollars?

LINDA: That would be good.

MIKE: How about these two
pens? How about thirty dollars?

LINDA: Okay.

MIKE: Okay. I'll
do thirty on them.

LINDA: I'm okay with
selling things because

rather than having things
just stuck in the garage

or in the basement, I
would be very happy for

other people to be
able to enjoy them.

FRANK: So these would
be called camel back trunks.

You know, they're cool.

It's got the piece in here,
a lot of times the pieces

are missing and this is a
nice piece to have, you know?

LINDA: Leland, you'd have to
ask him how much because he

bought it, he'd probably
know how much he paid for it.

FRANK: Okay.

FRANK: You know, Linda
told me that the trunk was

up to Leland, if he wanted
to sell it or not, you know?

FRANK: There you
are Leland, we lost you.

You know, I seen something
downstairs, it was like a

little camelback trunk.

LELAND: Yeah?

FRANK: Would a
hundred dollars buy it?

LELAND: No.

FRANK: This guy is eighty
eight years old and he's

sharp as a tack.

FRANK: What were you thinking?

LELAND: Hundred and a half.

FRANK: Hundred and a half?

We'll do that for a
hundred and fifty.

LELAND: Okay.

FRANK: Alright, thank you.

MIKE: Leland, you know,
when we first got here and

I saw that really cool chair.

What are you thinking on
a price Leland if I offered

seventy five?

LELAND: A hundred.

MIKE: A hundred bucks?

LELAND: Yeah.

MIKE: I would do
a hundred bucks.

LELAND: Okay.

MIKE: I would do
a hundred dollars.

Let me ask you this Leland.

If you came across a
good deal, would you still be

buying stuff?

LELAND: Yeah.
I'd still be buying.

MIKE: I don't think it's
anything that ever leaves you.

Thank you very much.

FRANK: Thanks partner.
Thanks for your hospitality.

LINDA: Thank you so
much. Thanks for coming.

FRANK: Glad we got to see you.

LINDA: What a good time.

FRANK: That's
what it's all about.

[♪]

DANIELLE: Oh,
that's really pretty.

FRANK: I paid one hundred
and fifty dollars for the trunk.

I think maybe retail
value will be two fifty.

[♪]

DANIELLE: Oh, cool.

MIKE: Aren't they
beautiful though?

MIKE: I think
there is 15 in there.

They look nice up in the
light. They're easy to sell.

[♪]

MIKE: Do you have
any suggestions for this?

DANIELLE: Yeah. I think it
would be good if we actually

back lined it with canvas.

MIKE: I paid a hundred
dollars for the chair.

After she's done messing
around with it, I hope to

get two hundred out of it.

[♪]

MIKE: Hopefully someday,
I'll be Leland's age

enjoying this chair.

DANIELLE: That's only
a good five years away.

[♪]

DANIELLE: Mike and Frank
and I have a really unique

relationship.

I pretty much work
with my two big brothers.

DANIELLE: My butt's
too big of a target.

DANIELLE: I think in any
family dynamic like that,

you have to dish back.

DANIELLE: Mess with
the bull, you get the horns!