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  • RICK: What do we got here?

  • I have brought you in something that you may want

  • to take home and use tonight.

  • A bar of soap from 1896.

  • RICK: Yellow Kid Soap.

  • That is funny.

  • And, uh, yeah, it definitely looks aged.

  • It's seen its better days.

  • [laughs]

  • MAN: I came in the pound shop today

  • to sell my Yellow Kid soap.

  • It was an early comic strip character.

  • He wore a yellow nightgown with different saying on it.

  • And it was real politically geared at the time.

  • If I sold the bar of soap today, I'd

  • probably make sure my daughter has a very nice birthday.

  • It's really, really neat and different.

  • It was, like, the first comic strip to really use,

  • like, the bubbles that come up.

  • But everything he said was written on his shirt.

  • It was really weird.

  • The reason they called him Yellow Kid,

  • he was always wearing a yellow nightshirt.

  • His actual name was Mickey Dugan.

  • He was a little boy that lived in the slums of New York.

  • And it was pretty common for kids

  • to be bald back then in the slums,

  • because that's how you took care of lice.

  • The neatest thing about the comic strip

  • is, that's where the term "yellow journalism" came from.

  • MAN: I did not know that.

  • I forget the name of the newspapers,

  • but it was Pulitzer's paper and William

  • Randolph Hearst's newspaper.

  • And they were massively competing against each other

  • for viewership.

  • Originally, the Yellow Kid appears in Pulitzer's paper.

  • But since it was so popular, Hearst poached the comic's

  • creator for his own paper.

  • So Pulitzer got a new illustrator

  • and he started publishing Yellow Kid.

  • Next thing you know, you had two competing Yellow Kids.

  • So the public started calling the papers

  • Yellow Kid newspapers.

  • Those two main competing newspapers--

  • I mean, they would straight up lie about stuff just

  • to get the viewership.

  • So eventually, sensationalized news stories became

  • known as yellow journalism.

  • MAN: Interesting.

  • RICK: So you wanted to sell it.

  • I'm here to sell it today.

  • How much did you want for it?

  • I'm asking $750 for it.

  • RICK: [sighs] How did you come up with the price 750?

  • I saw it, like, in a price guide, I think,

  • that was about 10 years old.

  • RICK: [sighs] I mean, my big problem is,

  • no one knows about this, OK?

  • I'll tell you what.

  • I'll give you $150 for it.

  • You might see a book that gives you a price in it.

  • That means nothing if you can't find anybody to pay that price.

  • We need to come up a little bit.

  • $200, it's yours. RICK: No.

  • I'll give you 175.

  • No one else is going to buy it.

  • No one else knows what it is.

  • I'm being a nice guy.

  • You could wait another five or six years,

  • find someone else that knows what it is.

  • 175. MAN: All right.

  • Sweet. We got a deal.

  • Um, come up front and we'll do some paperwork.

  • OK.

  • It's not as much as what I was hoping to get today.

  • But I'm going to take this $175 and be bathing in $1 bills.

RICK: What do we got here?

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