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Christianity TodayNovember (Web-only) 1999

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Books & Culture Corner: Everything Old Is on TV
Antiques Roadshow asks, 'What do you want to know today?'



Accustomed as we are to instant gratification, Americans will only stand in a really long line for one of two reasons. Some lines are necessary, like those leading to the counter at the DMV or crawling through customs at the airport. Others lead to something so exciting it's worth the wait, like a roller coaster, a traveling art exhibit or a 12-hour sale. Barring either of those conditions, lines in this country tend to match the attention spans and tempers of the people in them and stay relatively short.

So I was surprised when I arrived in downtown Des Moines, Iowa, on a Saturday morning last summer. I had trekked six hours from home the night before with one goal in mind: to participate in a taping session for Antiques Roadshow. I knew the event would be popular the show is PBS's highest-rated prime time program, after all, and I had read on the show's Web site that 6,000 free tickets would be handed out to optimistic antique-toters. Even so, I figured there was no reason to head downtown right at 7:30, when ticket distribution began. "It's not like there's going to be a line around the block," I reasoned.

When I arrived at 8:00, there wasn't just a line around the block. The line wound around every block in downtown Des Moines, breaking here and there for major roads and intersections. Well over 6,000 people were waiting to get into the convention center where the taping would take place. Some had come from as far away as Florida and Hawaii. Of the hopefuls, 2,000 had picked up their tickets the day before. The rest of us had to just join the queue and hope we'd make it in.

In case you're not familiar with the show, here's how it works: A team of antiques appraisers sets up in an arena somewhere in the United States. Members ...




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