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A sock folding epiphany!

 
 
Reply Fri 26 Nov, 2010 08:30 pm
I love watching TV but because I live with two boys I don't often get control of the remote.... unless I'm matching socks.

We have a lot of socks because I hate washing and matching up socks. I will wash an entire load of socks and then have to spend about an hour matching the damn things up. I watch TV while I'm doing this odious chore.

So today neither "Cash Cab" nor "Jeopardy" was on while I was folding socks so I watched this thing called "Hoarders".

"Hoarders" is cool! They send a psychologist and an organization expert to help out a person who can't throw stuff away -- these people accumulate a TON of stuff. Seriously, they send dump trucks to haul stuff away while the person panics. Way strange TV.

The last time I channel flipped I ended up with this show called "American Pickers". These guys traveled around in this van and stopped at houses that looked like they were full of junk and bought stuff.

Wouldn't it be great if there was a show called "America's Hoarder Pickers" where everyone showed up and bought junk and cleared away what was left? I think the hoarders would feel a lot better about losing their stuff in the picker guys were paying cold hard cash for the stuff.

How symbiotic would that be?

I would totally watch that show instead of "Cash Cab".

What would you most like to watch when you're folding socks: "Cash Cab", "Jeopardy" or "American Hoarder Pickers"?

Or maybe you can come up with a better TV mash-up.... hmmmmmm?

Thanks!
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Type: Question • Score: 10 • Views: 1,676 • Replies: 26
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CalamityJane
 
  1  
Reply Fri 26 Nov, 2010 08:55 pm
Sock folding isn't a real issue here in our climate, but I've gotten into watching
those pawn shop episodes and I also like the repo guys, cops and all the other
"bad guy" stories.

So it would be funny to see the repo guys show up at the pawn shop...
0 Replies
 
tsarstepan
 
  1  
Reply Fri 26 Nov, 2010 09:05 pm
@boomerang,
Cash Cab obviously RULES!! And not because it's a NYC thing.

Ben Bailey is a great host and the questions are the perfect level of difficulty so the show never is too frustrating or stuffy like Jeopardy.
0 Replies
 
boomerang
 
  1  
Reply Fri 26 Nov, 2010 09:39 pm
"Pawn Stars" ROCKS!

We TIVO that show because we all love it.

I would love to see those guys on a long "Cash Cab" ride!

I haven't seen the repo guys but that sounds like a great mash-up.

There's a new show starting called "Auction Kings" that would be another great entry.
tsarstepan
 
  1  
Reply Fri 26 Nov, 2010 09:47 pm
@boomerang,
I suppose the next reality programing to hit the airwaves will be Dumpster Diving.... Embarrassed
boomerang
 
  1  
Reply Fri 26 Nov, 2010 09:54 pm
@tsarstepan,
That's what "Hoarders" is!

Swimpy
 
  1  
Reply Mon 29 Nov, 2010 05:15 pm
@boomerang,
I love American Pickers. http://www.history.com/shows/american-pickers

The best part for me, of course is that the two guys that are the American Pickers are Iowans. They have a shop in Le Claire which is just north of the Quad Cities. I could drive there in about an hour. I haven't done it yet, but I'm mighty tempted.
engineer
 
  1  
Reply Mon 29 Nov, 2010 05:21 pm
@boomerang,
boomerang wrote:

"Hoarders" is cool! They send a psychologist and an organization expert to help out a person who can't throw stuff away -- these people accumulate a TON of stuff. Seriously, they send dump trucks to haul stuff away while the person panics. Way strange TV.

I remember listening to a radio show interviewing hoarding experts and they said the absolute last thing you want to do when treating a hoarder is to move in and take away their stuff. It produces a ferocious mental backlash, makes them more defensive and results in worse hoarding. The idea was to slowly convince them to toss stuff on their own. I haven't seen the show, but if it is as you describe, I'm stunned people would we find a mentally ill person and stomp on their psychosis for our viewing pleasure.
boomerang
 
  1  
Reply Mon 29 Nov, 2010 09:05 pm
@engineer,
You're probably right.

All I know is that this man had $500,000 worth of fines and he was being evicted from his home for failure to clean it up. This was his only chance to stay there.

He had a lot of engines and car parts -- the kind of stuff that the American Picker guys love -- an it was all being thrown away.

I thought it was cool that he was getting free help to stay in his home and thought that it would be cooler if he could actually make some money from his stuff to help with the debt.

I imagine that they have a right to say "no thanks" so I'm not sure anyone is "stomping on their psychosis".

I've heard a few stories about animal hoarders up here and I think taking away all of their animals to save the poor things from certain sickness and starvation is the right thing to do. If that means stomping on someone's psychosis I guess I'm okay with that.
boomerang
 
  1  
Reply Mon 29 Nov, 2010 09:13 pm
@Swimpy,
Ohhh. I wanna go with you. We can take a bottle of wine and hang out with Danielle!
Swimpy
 
  1  
Reply Mon 29 Nov, 2010 09:37 pm
@boomerang,
I'm a little scared of Danielle.
sozobe
 
  1  
Reply Tue 30 Nov, 2010 07:15 am
@boomerang,
I haven't seen this latest rash of shows but "Clean Sweep" had a good formula, I thought -- they would first do a purge of the house, then have a garage sale. The people would often make a fair amount of money off of the garage sale, sometimes quite a respectable amount of money.

That seems better to me than just throwing everything away.
sozobe
 
  1  
Reply Tue 30 Nov, 2010 07:24 am
@sozobe,
Explanation of how "Clean Sweep" worked:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clean_Sweep

I liked the "keep," "sell," and "toss" piles.

Overall it was a good show, I didn't love it but I enjoyed it. I'm surprised it only lasted two years. Maybe the homeowners weren't traumatized enough by the process for good TV? There were definitely some pathologies on display tho.
0 Replies
 
boomerang
 
  1  
Reply Tue 30 Nov, 2010 10:48 am
Look what showed up in this guys garage:

Quote:
A retired electrician in southern France who once worked for painter Pablo Picasso says he has hundreds of previously unknown works by the artist — a treasure trove of 271 pieces said to be worth about $80 million.

Pierre Le Guennec and his wife for years squirreled away the staggering cache — which is believed to be authentic, but whose origin is unclear — in their garage on the French Riviera, said Picasso Administration lawyer Jean-Jacques Neuer.

The works, dating from 1900 to 1932, include lithographs, portraits, watercolors and sketches — plus nine Cubist collages said to be worth euro40 million alone, according to French daily Liberation, which reported the discovery Monday.

Le Guennec, 71, says Picasso gave him the works as gifts. The electrician installed burglar alarm systems at Picasso's numerous houses in France during the three years before the artist died in 1973.

Claude Picasso was astounded. He couldn't believe his eyes.

Two months ago, Le Guennec attempted to get the canvasses authenticated by Picasso's son. But Claude Picasso dismissed Le Guennec's explanation of how the works came into his possession. The younger Picasso said his father would never have given so many pieces to a single person.

Shortly after that meeting, Neuer filed suit on behalf of Picasso's heirs for alleged illegal receipt of the works, and police investigators are looking into how Le Guennec and his wife came by the pictures.

Claude Picasso, quoted in Liberation, noted that his father was known for his generosity — but that he always dedicated, dated and signed his gifts, as he knew that some recipients might try to sell the works one day.

"To give away such a large quantity, that's unheard of. It doesn't hold water," Claude Picasso was quoted as saying in Liberation. "This was part of his life."

To some, the emergence of the works by the 20th century's most renowned artist is akin to opening a time capsule, or a discovery on par with the recent publication of Mark Twain's 100-year-dormant autobiography.

"Claude Picasso was astounded. He couldn't believe his eyes," Neuer said. "Just about everybody has felt that way ... when you have 271 Picasso works that were never seen, never inventoried, that's just unprecedented."

New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art says Picasso produced more than 20,000 works of art during his long career. Hundreds have been listed as missing — a number so large in part because he was so prolific.

0 Replies
 
boomerang
 
  1  
Reply Tue 30 Nov, 2010 10:49 am
@sozobe,
That sounds like an interesting show.

I've been going through stuff and getting rid of things. It's amazing how much you can forget you have.
0 Replies
 
boomerang
 
  1  
Reply Tue 30 Nov, 2010 10:51 am
@Swimpy,
Quote:
I'm a little scared of Danielle


Ha!

She surely does not take any s--t.
0 Replies
 
DrewDad
 
  1  
Reply Tue 30 Nov, 2010 11:10 am
@boomerang,
boomerang wrote:
A sock folding epiphany!

Dammit! I thought you'd come with a way to speed up sock sorting.
boomerang
 
  1  
Reply Tue 30 Nov, 2010 11:13 am
@DrewDad,
I wish!
DrewDad
 
  1  
Reply Tue 30 Nov, 2010 11:16 am
@boomerang,
Actually, you can take a sharpie and place sequential numbers on the heels.

Place the socks in numerical order. Voila!

(Actually, the arch works a little better, as my socks tend to wear out at the heel first.)
Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Tue 30 Nov, 2010 11:16 am
Tie 'em together before you throw them in the washing machine.

I can't watch the hoarders program . . . those people scare me. A few months ago there was a house fire in Toronto, and the homeowner was fined because the fire marshall stated that the fire started in the piles of books and papers which were choking the house.
 

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