I love old camera gear, but if I see a store overflowing like this I don't even bother walking in, because you know that the prices are going to be completely unrealistic.
@@anaraluca1181 if you’re going to have to do an entire anti-hoarding therapy session you probably might as well just buy what you want at the inflated price and get out of there, or just get it from eBay.
I always put hoarders on in the office at lunch time. I get the evil eye because everyone loses their appetite to eat! I love this show especially when people are able to accept the help and keep up the commitment. God bless ya'll!
I feel so sorry for Trish. She seemed like she really wanted to salvage their relationship and try to kinda start over while she was going through what was obviously a hard time in her life (I helped take care of my dad the past 1.5 years with my mom because he has Alzheimers) It would've been devastating to me if my husband had chosen something else over me during that.
Me too! The store being cleaned wasn't as important as cleaning the house out in order to bring his wife back home to save his marriage! I'm sad this one ended this way.
As a camera collector myself, I hate to see any photographic thrown out. I'm glad to see he's gotten everything in order and would like to see if he has an online store to shop from.
Over the years I remember an electronics store in my city that was very popular, but was definitely a hoarder's paradise. The store went up in flames a few years ago and they didn't rebuild. Before that there was a restaurant supply store that was a cluttery hoard as well, and eventually it too went up in flames and was destroyed. It was rebuilt and has been neat and tidy ever since.
The thing that frustrates me is that it always has to be done in a couple of days, which forces the hoarder to go from 0 to 100 in 1 second. Why could they not have a maybe pile and then when he gets in to the swing of things of letting go of things, than get back to the maybe pile. Letting go is hard and it takes time to get in to letting things go. It becomes easier once you have let go of some things. I understand they need to be helped over the first thresh hold, but this bugs me every time I see it. Having said that, the help for these hoarders is a blessing.
I agree but I think you're looking at this from the perspective of a non-hoarder. Mentally well people can have "maybes" that they revisit with a clear head. For people with hoarding disorder "maybe" automatically means keep. They need the pressure otherwise the decision simply won't be made. And the idea "of getting into the swing of it" doesn't really work, because in their mind every object has equal (and very high value). Instead, a clean slate is shown to be far more effective (in coordination with aftercare) at tackling the disorder. Plus, if the guy's business and form of income is going under, how much time does he really have? If law enforcement came in (which they would) they'd trash EVERYTHING anyway
@@iia5559 Yes I think you are right Isobel. I myself have never been taught to get rid of things, having two parents who were born just before WW2. They could not throw things away. i am now pushing myself to get rid of things but it is really hard. Once I get in to the swing of things it becomes easier, so that is where I am coming from.
It also frustrates me, like, why can't they have, say, 2 more days? For the majority of these hoarders, they begin to cooperate on the final day. I don't know if it is because of the rush, or because they see all the people helping, that they finally realize they need to get rid of stuff and begin to dump it more willingly.
@@secret3957 My grandparents lived through two world wars, plus the Depression. Mum was born in 1921, so the Depression hit when she was about 8 or so. Then a few months after she and my dad got married, WWII hit. My family had pack-ratery down to a science! Daddy used to say Mum could squeeze a nickel until the buffalo s--t and the Indian had a headache. (You have to be of a Certain Age to remember Buffalo nickels.)
The thing about cameras is that the customers always want better quality photos. Ron's shop sells the opposite to that. He should have a shop for like Hollywood props that need to be used in movies depicting the past.
I know! I have noticed that the sense of urgency during these clean outs means that some thrift stores and Goodwills probably end up with some very expensive treasures.
This always happens when actionism happens. The dumber the more they like to act. No knowledge about nothing but they need to act, to do. Like mixing in other peoples lives. (Being dumb they failed with their own lives, so they seek reward in "helping" others.) I am not even sure he got robbed, but he sure got damaged. Simply for the dumbs not capable to mind their own business and let him live his life as he wants.
I hated to see all that vintage camera gear going in trash. I would have taken lots of that equipment. Send it my way. He just loves photography poor guy
I know. I worked in a place a lot like this a few years ago and it was headed this way (it’s closed now for different reasons), but it was an absolute treasure trove. I organized a lot of it while I worked there and I wish I still had access to some of the stuff I would find poking through the back rooms and shelves and storage areas.
It's not unusual for people to believe their stuff is worth more than it actually is. Take a look at Facebook marketplace ads versus the resellers on eBay.
eBay used to be a place you could make a little money, but now not only is it basically a big department store, it’s a hassle for things like vintage camera equipment. There are so many other people with the same idea selling similar items that there isn’t much return on the time you have to put into it.
It is a shame what has happened to the collectible market. Virtually everything has taken a nosedive in price, sometimes over 90%. I can pick up an 8 person china set for under $30.00, that 20 years ago would have sold for well over $500.00.
Sites like eBay are both a blessing and a curse. They make more stuff available on the market, which tends to drive the prices down, but they also _create_ a market for things which didn't used to be collectible by making them easy to acquire. I smoke pipes, and buying estate pipes has become a chore thanks to "collectors" who snap them up to resell them for a profit or put them on a shelf to gather dust. I actually want to use them for their intended purpose, but I have to compete with people who don't value the pipe itself, only how much money it's worth.
Whatever cameras and stuff he couldn’t fit into the store worth of value should go online to sell them. Hopefully nothing that can be sold got thrown out. That would be a waste.
The one time I say anything other than just dump it all is the camera guy. It doesn't matter if the Kodak Brownie is half rotted and will never work, and you can't give them away. But every bit there is a piece of history. You might say your 15 smashed coffee pots in the yard have a similar value, but I disagree.
I personally know a few people who owned Camera stores and how the world that has gone digital has taken away their livelihoods. There are still people ( my daughter ) who loves her cameras and still buys and developes FILM but it seems a whole genre is gone
I have to say I could sort his hoarding problem very fast. All those cameras would be at my house. We don't have vintage camera stores in my country. I'd buy that place out.
Choosing stuff over relationships, as his ex wife said. It all comes down to that. When the knife hits bottom, they will always choose not parting with the stuff.
They should not have made him feel pressured to sell his stuff for cheap. They should have helped him open an online shop instead. They should just have organized it and put some in his house. I think only the trash should have been thrown. If his house were too full for his collectibles then they could have thrown the trash and put a space for it. I don't like being wasteful just because it's so full. I would like to see the hoarders make a profit of the still sellable items/stuff just saying...
Well girl, ofcourse he choosed his stuff over you. Those aged better. You became old and ugly, those things become collectable treasures. Besides, they offerd him more joy than you, suit yourself.
Stay up to date on all of A&E's premieres at aetv.com/schedule.
Bring back Live PD you spineless cowards
I love old camera gear, but if I see a store overflowing like this I don't even bother walking in, because you know that the prices are going to be completely unrealistic.
"An educated consumer is our best customer." -Sy Syms
Depends how you bond with the owner. If you are the arrogant type ("because you know" blabla) than you for sure will not gain his simpathy.
@@anaraluca1181 if you’re going to have to do an entire anti-hoarding therapy session you probably might as well just buy what you want at the inflated price and get out of there, or just get it from eBay.
I always put hoarders on in the office at lunch time. I get the evil eye because everyone loses their appetite to eat!
I love this show especially when people are able to accept the help and keep up the commitment. God bless ya'll!
😂😛😂
shane you're not making it to heaven LMFAO
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
I feel so sorry for Trish. She seemed like she really wanted to salvage their relationship and try to kinda start over while she was going through what was obviously a hard time in her life (I helped take care of my dad the past 1.5 years with my mom because he has Alzheimers) It would've been devastating to me if my husband had chosen something else over me during that.
Y'all should have included whether or not he got his house cleared or not and his wife come back? I really wanted to know that.
Me too! The store being cleaned wasn't as important as cleaning the house out in order to bring his wife back home to save his marriage! I'm sad this one ended this way.
His wife never came back. She moved back to Tennessee. I think Ron had a secret relationship and so did her ex wife Trish
@@CONNORJARRETT Thanks!!
Why do you think he wanted her back?
As a camera collector myself, I hate to see any photographic thrown out. I'm glad to see he's gotten everything in order and would like to see if he has an online store to shop from.
Unfortunately he passed away last
month and it seems like his store is no more. Not sure what became of his stuff or the store’s inventory
man's washing his dishes in the bathroom like a broke Sims character
Over the years I remember an electronics store in my city that was very popular, but was definitely a hoarder's paradise. The store went up in flames a few years ago and they didn't rebuild. Before that there was a restaurant supply store that was a cluttery hoard as well, and eventually it too went up in flames and was destroyed. It was rebuilt and has been neat and tidy ever since.
Snakes in your place of business, that's a fantastic way of keeping away customers.
I would visit just to see the animals 😊
The thing that frustrates me is that it always has to be done in a couple of days, which forces the hoarder to go from 0 to 100 in 1 second. Why could they not have a maybe pile and then when he gets in to the swing of things of letting go of things, than get back to the maybe pile. Letting go is hard and it takes time to get in to letting things go. It becomes easier once you have let go of some things. I understand they need to be helped over the first thresh hold, but this bugs me every time I see it. Having said that, the help for these hoarders is a blessing.
I agree but I think you're looking at this from the perspective of a non-hoarder. Mentally well people can have "maybes" that they revisit with a clear head. For people with hoarding disorder "maybe" automatically means keep. They need the pressure otherwise the decision simply won't be made. And the idea "of getting into the swing of it" doesn't really work, because in their mind every object has equal (and very high value). Instead, a clean slate is shown to be far more effective (in coordination with aftercare) at tackling the disorder.
Plus, if the guy's business and form of income is going under, how much time does he really have? If law enforcement came in (which they would) they'd trash EVERYTHING anyway
@@iia5559 Yes I think you are right Isobel. I myself have never been taught to get rid of things, having two parents who were born just before WW2. They could not throw things away. i am now pushing myself to get rid of things but it is really hard. Once I get in to the swing of things it becomes easier, so that is where I am coming from.
It also frustrates me, like, why can't they have, say, 2 more days? For the majority of these hoarders, they begin to cooperate on the final day. I don't know if it is because of the rush, or because they see all the people helping, that they finally realize they need to get rid of stuff and begin to dump it more willingly.
@@secret3957 My grandparents lived through two world wars, plus the Depression. Mum was born in 1921, so the Depression hit when she was about 8 or so. Then a few months after she and my dad got married, WWII hit. My family had pack-ratery down to a science! Daddy used to say Mum could squeeze a nickel until the buffalo s--t and the Indian had a headache. (You have to be of a Certain Age to remember Buffalo nickels.)
The thing about cameras is that the customers always want better quality photos. Ron's shop sells the opposite to that. He should have a shop for like Hollywood props that need to be used in movies depicting the past.
That Cassidy camera alone was worth around $300.00 in that condition, poor Ron got robbed I'm sure!!
I know! I have noticed that the sense of urgency during these clean outs means that some thrift stores and Goodwills probably end up with some very expensive treasures.
This always happens when actionism happens. The dumber the more they like to act. No knowledge about nothing but they need to act, to do. Like mixing in other peoples lives. (Being dumb they failed with their own lives, so they seek reward in "helping" others.)
I am not even sure he got robbed, but he sure got damaged. Simply for the dumbs not capable to mind their own business and let him live his life as he wants.
Ummm???... What about his House... His Poor Wife Needs a Home without his Hoard too!!??🤔😞
Who is stopping her to get herself a house?
@@anaraluca1181 that is her/their house - she wants to go home
His wife is so beautiful
Approximatively like an old shoe. Bet she even smells like one.
Wow, photographer like me would love to help cleaning the shop 😍
Yeah, I would like an older Canon EOS (film) body with the EF lens mount.
He does NOT deserve the animals should be charged with cruelty
I hated to see all that vintage camera gear going in trash. I would have taken lots of that equipment. Send it my way. He just loves photography poor guy
I know. I worked in a place a lot like this a few years ago and it was headed this way (it’s closed now for different reasons), but it was an absolute treasure trove. I organized a lot of it while I worked there and I wish I still had access to some of the stuff I would find poking through the back rooms and shelves and storage areas.
Those poor animals, I hope they're being taken care of properly
Their tanks are too small 😕
Hoaders should not be allowed to have pets. It's not fair for them!
My wife and I have a rule.
If it hasn’t been seen, worn or touched in six months it’s trash.
With that rule I would lose all my summer clothes and shoes in February and all my winter clothes and shoes in October...
@@Asa...S Precisely! With the exception of heavy winter coats/sweaters.
You mean your wife has this rule. For your things.
RIP my friend.
It's not unusual for people to believe their stuff is worth more than it actually is. Take a look at Facebook marketplace ads versus the resellers on eBay.
It is disappointing that he did not know the value of the items he was selling.
What about ebay?
Wat about it?
@@donaldbeetlestone5900 he means like sell those cameras on ebay
eBay used to be a place you could make a little money, but now not only is it basically a big department store, it’s a hassle for things like vintage camera equipment. There are so many other people with the same idea selling similar items that there isn’t much return on the time you have to put into it.
It is a shame what has happened to the collectible market. Virtually everything has taken a nosedive in price, sometimes over 90%. I can pick up an 8 person china set for under $30.00, that 20 years ago would have sold for well over $500.00.
It might be _worth_ that amount, but nobody is going to pay that much for it. Value and market price aren't the same thing.
I think all collectibles are worth little . Unless they are rare.
Sites like eBay are both a blessing and a curse. They make more stuff available on the market, which tends to drive the prices down, but they also _create_ a market for things which didn't used to be collectible by making them easy to acquire. I smoke pipes, and buying estate pipes has become a chore thanks to "collectors" who snap them up to resell them for a profit or put them on a shelf to gather dust. I actually want to use them for their intended purpose, but I have to compete with people who don't value the pipe itself, only how much money it's worth.
@@AidenRKrone things are only worth what someone is willing to pay ....the worth of anything is determined by how much someone is willing to pay
I have no doubt his female "friend" is the reason why he chose to stay and let his wife leave without him.
Whatever cameras and stuff he couldn’t fit into the store worth of value should go online to sell them. Hopefully nothing that can be sold got thrown out. That would be a waste.
They mentioned donating and recycling. I imagine a lot of the stuff wasn't in working condition, and what was working was given to a charity shop
The one time I say anything other than just dump it all is the camera guy. It doesn't matter if the Kodak Brownie is half rotted and will never work, and you can't give them away. But every bit there is a piece of history.
You might say your 15 smashed coffee pots in the yard have a similar value, but I disagree.
I personally know a few people who owned Camera stores and how the world that has gone digital has taken away their livelihoods. There are still people ( my daughter ) who loves her cameras and still buys and developes FILM but it seems a whole genre is gone
I have to say I could sort his hoarding problem very fast. All those cameras would be at my house. We don't have vintage camera stores in my country. I'd buy that place out.
Choosing stuff over relationships, as his ex wife said. It all comes down to that. When the knife hits bottom, they will always choose not parting with the stuff.
Ain't That Swell:)
1:30 PM | 1//26//2021
Well you have to go through every slide and every negative he might have a photo of the second shooter on the grassy knoll in that pile some place
Somethings off about robs hair and facial hair lol
The hair on his head is dyed, his facial hair isn't.
They should not have made him feel pressured to sell his stuff for cheap. They should have helped him open an online shop instead. They should just have organized it and put some in his house. I think only the trash should have been thrown. If his house were too full for his collectibles then they could have thrown the trash and put a space for it. I don't like being wasteful just because it's so full. I would like to see the hoarders make a profit of the still sellable items/stuff just saying...
Hi
Did the man throw out the garbage from his house?
Why couldn’t we get a episode of this ? Grrr.
It’s on Hulu
Wow i wonder if Ron has all kinds of tape recorders ... I mean Talkboy tape recorder
A lot of those old cameras are worth a lot of money, so are old PC's
This was Different Being A work place one
Seas 8 ep 12 isn’t on the A&E app
I bet he re-hoarded
All repeats why?
Ron sort of reminds me of John Astin
So much better keep it tidy.
yeah but what about his house and wife !!????
So what about his house?
Good video
Yeah!
1:30 PM | 1//26//2021
Am I the only person who would have liked to go throw his discards? Still missing my 120 and I'm sure he had several lying around.
I saw this one years AGO😣😣😣😭😭😭
Waiting
Stfu jayzell
Couldn’t be me
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Gamer moment ????!??!?
Come on enough of the reruns!!!
Why did I read that as trump dump trucks 😂
Because your a liberal 😂
Omg I thought it was just me!!!🤦♀️🤣
1:35 Renee can be a Man's name
Me: No
It's René and it's a French name.
" Certified PROFESSIONAL Organizer " What a joke of a title.
Hoarding is GREED. Greed- just call it what it is and it results from a SPIRITUAL problem
It’s a heritable mental disorder that’s triggered by trauma. It’s not a moral failing.
Cameras. How 20th century.
B
2nd comment please respond
Ok I’m here
I was second comment 😂😭
Hello 😊
@@amywarren3508 hi
Y women come with to choose me over ur buisness
Well girl, ofcourse he choosed his stuff over you. Those aged better. You became old and ugly, those things become collectable treasures. Besides, they offerd him more joy than you, suit yourself.