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Ken Goldin and his savvy team run the thrilling action, venturing inside a leading auction house specialising in rare collectibles.Ken Goldin and his savvy team run the thrilling action, venturing inside a leading auction house specialising in rare collectibles.Ken Goldin and his savvy team run the thrilling action, venturing inside a leading auction house specialising in rare collectibles.
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As Episode 1 of "King of Collectibles: The Goldin Touch" (2023 release; 6 episodes, ranging 27 to 41 min each) opens, we are at the "Goldin Auctions HQs, New Jersey" and it is "2 Days to Jackie Robinson Auction". And "Hobby Godfather" Ken Goldin and his team are feverishly preparing for the event. The auction's main item is a super-rare baseball jersey that Robinson wore in 1951. It is worth MILLIONS but the owner of the jersey sets a reserve of $10 million... At this point we are 10 minutes into Episode 1.
Couple of comments: the film makers were provided seemingly unfettered access to Goldin and his team as they track down rare memorabilia which they auction off (and for which Goldin gets a 20% commission). The vast majority of these items are sports-related although they do try and branch out to other stuff (for example, the original 1976 Apple I computer in mint condition). Peyton Manning is credited as an Executive Producer of this mini-series, and of course he makes the occasional obligatory appearance. I will admit that it's fun to watch this for a while, but then (towards the end of Episode 2) it starts to feel repetitive, indeed very repetitive. This is not to diminish the work done by Goldin an his team, all of whom look to be very professional and very good at what they are doing. It just doesn't make for longtime compelling viewing (for my, anyway). Indeed, this reminded me of the long-running exotic cars auction show on NBCSN, Mecum Auctions. Fun for a while, but just a while.
"King of Collectibles: The Goldin Touch" started streaming just recently on Netflix. If you are into collectibles, in particular the sports-related kinds, I'd readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusion.
Couple of comments: the film makers were provided seemingly unfettered access to Goldin and his team as they track down rare memorabilia which they auction off (and for which Goldin gets a 20% commission). The vast majority of these items are sports-related although they do try and branch out to other stuff (for example, the original 1976 Apple I computer in mint condition). Peyton Manning is credited as an Executive Producer of this mini-series, and of course he makes the occasional obligatory appearance. I will admit that it's fun to watch this for a while, but then (towards the end of Episode 2) it starts to feel repetitive, indeed very repetitive. This is not to diminish the work done by Goldin an his team, all of whom look to be very professional and very good at what they are doing. It just doesn't make for longtime compelling viewing (for my, anyway). Indeed, this reminded me of the long-running exotic cars auction show on NBCSN, Mecum Auctions. Fun for a while, but just a while.
"King of Collectibles: The Goldin Touch" started streaming just recently on Netflix. If you are into collectibles, in particular the sports-related kinds, I'd readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusion.
- paul-allaer
- May 2, 2023
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- El rey de los coleccionistas: Goldin Auctions
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What was the official certification given to King of Collectibles: The Goldin Touch (2023) in Australia?
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