sgstandard--disqus
SG Standard
sgstandard--disqus

Most of the clothes are going for comparatively low prices, which makes sense when you consider that there's no real way to know what would fit.

Ugggggggh I was gonna bid on the chopsticks but someone just upped the bid from $110 to $200. DON'T YOU PEOPLE EVEN KNOW HOW TO AUCTION?

I never would have guessed Dean Spreck's remote control paint bomb car would be up to $900, but here we are.

Americans love food more than anything, including America.

Yeah, some of the outfits would work at cons, some could conceivably be worn as actual clothing, and some would probably need to be conversation pieces.

Yeah, frame it and display it I guess. Like people do with autographed baseballs and such.

I would have liked Shirley's apron, but $400 is too much.

I would have guessed the pen would have gone for more. Not that I would have paid it, but still. That's a key item from one of the best episodes!

We've also got a bidding war for Chang's "I'll allow it" sombrero.

I think every time a new bid comes in it resets to one minute. That way popular items get more time to go higher.

4 and 6 are where I'm gonna try and grab something.

Gas leak year = bargain basement prices!

Somebody really wants Troy's letterman's jacket.

We really should have pooled our money to do a Traveling Pants butt flag.

It's kinda fun watching bids skyrocket in the last minute.

I haven't seen anything about shipping costs and I did some poking around. I guess that's something we find out after purchasing, which kinda stinks.

Perfect.

$200 is my limit also. I'll give a couple things a shot but I'm sure prices will skyrocket in the next few hours.

We're in the last few hours of the Community prop auction. There are still some reasonable deals out there.

The finale didn't stick the landing from a plot perspective, but it absolutely stuck the landing from a character/emotional perspective. I don't think another piece of pop culture has made me cry that hard, except for maybe Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Lindelof and Cuse's mantra was always "it's about the