Lifestyle Series Info & Airtimes
 
Episode #127
This episode will be a single, fully-packaged program comprised of episodes, with separate appraisals and new host stand-ups. The owner of a Beatles album cover – appraised for $12,000 – tells Clay Reynolds what happened after ROADSHOW left town; appraiser J. Michael Flanigan shows how to shop at Massachusetts' Brimfield Fair; expert David Lackey shares secrets of detecting ceramics damage; Clay gets tips on antique stove restoration; and appraiser Rudy Franchi reveals why his hunt for a movie poster. Clay catches up with the owner of an oil painting by artist Birger Sandzen, appraised in 2002, for $30,000 to $50,000 – and discovers its connection to the Birger Sandzen Gallery inLindsborg, KS. Appraiser David Lackey opens his Houston, TX, home for a tour, and Clay chats with Allan Katz about the market for American folk art trade signs. Arlie Sulka offers a story of a White House Tiffany screen, commissioned in 1882, was dismantled – perhaps destroyed – in 1904, at the behest of Teddy Roosevelt. Some contend that parts of the screen may still exist.
 
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CC - Closed Caption
HD - High Definition
16:9 - Anamorphic Widescreen
LTR - Letterbox
DVI - Descriptive Video Information for the visually impaired