Fiona Bruce guides viewers through some of the most memorable moments from 31 years of the Antiques Roadshow. Experts and former host Hugh Scully recount the tales behind some of the most valuable finds the show has ever seen, from rediscovered masterpieces to the first million-pound object, while pictures man Rupert Maas travels north to defend a remark he made about Shropshire ankles.
Antique dealers are so eccentric lol
lukem118 1 week ago
Does anyone know what show / episode starts at 9:40??
Brambleiah 1 month ago
@achoiusa America is quite similar in terms of those who collect these types of things (in my opinion/what I've seen as an American), but obviously not exclusively wealthy white people. The American show "Pawn Stars" gives a taste of what most American collectors are interested in.
celticonduct7 1 month ago
they all had thick ankles
aaroncalgary 1 month ago
i really loved this show !!! greetings from Mexico!!!
avatarprimus 7 months ago
@beninmelb thats because black people lack intelligence
67675656565655656565 7 months ago
THICK ANKLES RULE I LOVE THEM
samilliw1 7 months ago
@beninmelb You are SO right!! And it is just as white in the United States. It has to do with privilege. Rich white people inherit valuables, etc.
nadi1010 8 months ago
Steiff!OMG i have six of them!OW!I WANT THE OLD ONE!!!:DDDDD
Simsker 10 months ago
I mentioned the media's part in the shopshire ankles in the last video, but it looks like the people of shopshire took it as it was instead of pretending to be offended which was pretty cool. It made me really happy. :)
B0omtown 11 months ago