Hardcore Pawn

When your name is Les Gold, your fate is pretty much sealed.

Hardcore Pawn
When your name is Les Gold, your fate is pretty much sealed

I have a guilty pleasure. It’s called Pawn Stars, and I watch it religiously on the History Channel.

So when truTV came out with a new series starring seedy-looking American Jewelry and Loan in Detroit, Michigan, naturally I was tempted.

Staying true to the thieving stigmas of the industry it celebrates, the concept behind Hardcore Pawn is an indirect rip-off — right down to its raunchy pun title.

But mine wasn’t the only curiosity sparked. The show’s Aug. 16 premiere scored truTV’s highest-rated series debut, ever.

Good ideas are never safe from the vortex of Hollywood recycling. Take the drama surrounding Kate Gosselin’s brood, for example:

Just when you thought the “lots-o-kids!” story model was getting old, the Duggars and their 38th child show up on another cover of People with an epiphanous declaration like, “We want more!” Even though it’s a copy in infantile stages (five episodes deep), it’s hard to tell what Hardcore Pawn’s chances are of being a total flop — or a surprising overnight phenomenon. (Never underestimate the antics of weirdos. Look at Jersey Shore.)

Both shows air the same time each week, but I’m thinking there’s enough wiggle room for peaceful coexistence. This is why:

1. Different locations: American Jewelry and Loan (Hardcore Pawn) is located in Detroit. Gold & Silver Pawn Shop (Pawn Stars) is located in Las Vegas. We’re talking two entirely different breeds of seedy.

2. Different patriarchs: Pawn Stars’ Rick Harrison is the beefy bodyguard type who deluges viewers with quips and historically amusing minutiae. Hardcore Pawn’s Les Gold (seriously, with a name like that, how is his profession not fate?) is greasy-looking and gets sidetracked more easily — but it’s fun to watch him haggle and put ornery customers in their place.

3. Different goods: Pawn Stars gets rare, high-end stuff, like treasure from the Taj Mahal or a theater playbill from the night Abraham Lincoln was assassinated. Hardcore Pawn’s scene is edgier and cruder, but the outlandishness of merchandise and people who meander into the store is leagues nuttier, like 350 pairs of “unused” Victoria’s Secret underwear, an alligator, a stripper pole, prosthetic limbs, cursed relics, a donkey and God knows what else doesn’t make the air.

I wasn’t expecting it, but Hardcore Pawn is sort of addicting. Especially after seeing a woman pawn a pony — inside the store — successfully.

Hardcore Pawn (Mondays, 10 pm, truTV)


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Blair Tellers

Blair Tellers is a freelance writer and a former Inlander intern.