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  • CHUMLEE: Hey, how you doing?

  • All right.

  • What exactly do you have here?

  • It's a antique gas iron.

  • You put gas in here and it forces it down.

  • You light it, and then it heats up.

  • Well, let me grab a loaf of bread and the cheese.

  • Let's bust out some sandwiches.

  • You've never made a grilled cheese with an iron?

  • No, I haven't.

  • Dude, that's my hotel special.

  • SCOTT: I'm bringing in a self-heating gas iron.

  • It was kind of a gap between a sad iron

  • that you used on a stove and the electric iron

  • that we use today.

  • I'm hoping to get $100 for the iron

  • today because I want to buy a couple

  • of gifts for my daughters.

  • CHUMLEE: This iron's pretty cool, you know.

  • It doesn't look like much, but it actually

  • changed the way we iron.

  • So what would happen is this would heat up,

  • and it would hold a constant temperature,

  • and you'd be able to iron clothes nonstop until you had

  • to fill this back up with gas, compared to the old method

  • of setting the iron on the stove,

  • giving it a few minutes to heat up, ironing what you can

  • until it cools down, setting it back on the stove

  • for a couple of minutes.

  • And, you know, it may take 10 or 15 minutes

  • to iron a shirt that way.

  • Even though this doesn't look like it,

  • this was pretty revolutionary.

  • SCOTT: All right.

  • CHUMLEE: It's pretty cool to see an iron

  • from the turn of the century.

  • I guess even back then people wanted

  • to have wrinkle-free swag.

  • Luckily for me though, sweatpants

  • don't need to be ironed.

  • So what did you want to do with it?

  • I want to sell it.

  • OK, and how much are you looking to get for it?

  • $100

  • It's cool, but I mean, it's just a gas iron.

  • You know, it looks cool, and that's really all it is is it

  • looks cool.

  • You know, someone's going to buy this

  • to decorate in their house.

  • SCOTT: Well, it's good for a doorstop too, though.

  • If I spend $100 on a doorstop, I want diamonds on it.

  • I'll give you $30 for it, man.

  • $30?

  • How about $80?

  • Oh, I just--

  • yeah, I don't see $80 in it, man.

  • $35 is the most I can do.

  • $35?

  • Oh man.

  • Oh.

  • How about $36?

  • We can go $34.

  • Jeez.

  • OK, $35.

  • We've got a deal.

  • All right.

  • Grab your iron and come up here with me.

  • We'll write up the paperwork.

  • All right.

  • Well, with the $35 I can't quite buy

  • what I'd like for my daughters, but now I can get my daughters

  • a couple of dolls, anyway.

  • Check out this iron I bought.

  • The dude said it's a gasoline iron.

  • RICK: Gasoline iron?

  • Does it got a motor in it?

  • I don't know what he-- how he said it works.

  • COREY: Did he have magic beans too?

  • RICK: It's probably kerosene.

  • Gasoline would be bad.

  • It's explosive.

  • I mean, imagine being trapped on a desert island.

  • If you were deserted, that would come in handy.

  • You can iron your clothes and make a grilled-cheese sandwich

  • with it.

  • RICK: That's what you would bring to a desert island?

  • I'd get a small boat with, like, a cable hookup

  • and watch TV out there all day.

  • No one would bother me.

  • I'd bring a GPS and a satellite phone.

  • What would you bring?

  • I would bring a multitool and duct tape.

  • I could survive with that.

  • And what would you do with this duct tape?

  • Would you make duct-tape shoes?

  • Well, he'd probably use it to block

  • the sun from burning his head.

  • COREY: Duct-tape hats.

  • I dove into the water with some duct tape

  • and I caught me a fish.

  • RICK: Never mind.

  • Never mind.

CHUMLEE: Hey, how you doing?

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