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  • I'm Kim Bhasin, luxury reporter at Bloomberg.

  • Here to invite you to the most exclusive

  • realms of luxury retail.

  • (upbeat music)

  • This is invitation Only.

  • (playful music)

  • Today I'm in the Upper East Side.

  • It's the poshest neighborhood in Manhattan.

  • Four out of five fancy dogs agree.

  • (dog panting)

  • Who loves wealthy neighborhoods?

  • You do!

  • Yes you do!

  • Yes you do!

  • Here, you'll find some of the most opulent

  • homes in the world.

  • Look at these places!

  • (playful music)

  • Now, if you have a fancy home,

  • you need to fill it with cool and weird stuff.

  • And there's no better place for that than here,

  • at the Upper East Side's Creel & Gow.

  • (techno music)

  • (knocking)

  • Kim, welcome.

  • Jamie, what's up?

  • Hey, welcome to Creel & Gow.

  • What is this store, how would you describe it to

  • someone who knows nothing about it?

  • Especially in the beginning, I'd describe it to people

  • as a cabinet of curiosities.

  • A place where people can find gifts or things for

  • their home, which are one of a kind and we've sourced

  • around the world and brought back here tho New York.

  • We have taxidermy, that's usually the thing that people

  • are not used to seeing here in New York City.

  • We have minerals, primal art, we have craftsman

  • that are making things for us in Morocco

  • and in Egypt, and even here in the United States.

  • This is a, probably, 20 to 30 million

  • year old turtle shell.

  • Turtle shell fossil?

  • Fossil, mounted.

  • These are these coconuts which were carved in

  • the Caribbean in the 19th century by

  • French prisoners of war.

  • These are Chinese theater headdresses,

  • so they're from Chinese operas.

  • And they range in date from the early 20th century

  • to mid-20th century.

  • This is the famous Park Avenue pot plant.

  • It's metal, so you can't smoke it, but...

  • I guess you could, if you like shave it up.

  • It would be painful.

  • No, it would be kind of tough to do that.

  • Yeah, don't do that.

  • Don't do that at all.

  • (soft music)

  • Before I opened the store, I spent a huge portion

  • of my years traveling and finding things

  • and now I'm finding it here for the store.

  • Where does that interest come from?

  • I've had a passion for travel since I was a kid.

  • My family's from Long Island.

  • My grandmother and my great uncle were

  • the owners of Gardiner's Island, which is out

  • on the end of Long Island.

  • It's been in my family for, I don't know,

  • 400 years, or something.

  • When I was 15, my parents sent me to Kenya for 3 months

  • and the last part of the trip we were in Nairobi

  • and I didn't realize that to them, blue jeans,

  • Levi's jeans were the gold standard.

  • It was amazing to them.

  • So I just went into the markets and traded my jeans

  • for baskets and things that were made by locals.

  • To me, that stuff was amazing and to them

  • they wanted my blue jeans, which I knew I could go back

  • to New York and get another pair.

  • And ever since then I've had this passion for travel.

  • I was doing this for myself up until right before

  • I opened this door and now I'm doing it for the stores.

  • So it's just kind of part of my life.

  • It's traveling and finding things.

  • (sirens)

  • And police cars.

  • Police cars.

  • And ambulances.

  • (laughter)

  • Don't arrest me!

  • (laughter)

  • (calm music)

  • So tell me about the business model here at Creel & Gow.

  • I'm not really following any traditional business model,

  • I have to say.

  • When I opened this, a lot of my friends who have

  • businesses on Madison Avenue and other places,

  • they're like "you're crazy, to be opening a

  • curiosity shop in New York."

  • But I thought well, I'm doing something completely

  • different than everybody else, and it's something

  • I really wanted to do.

  • We have plans to open, eventually, a store in Harris,

  • and then the idea was to maybe open out in San Francisco

  • at some point, too.

  • (upbeat music)

  • Is this store profitable?

  • Yeah, we make money, yeah.

  • Weirdly.

  • (laughter)

  • We're not Apple. But yes we are.

  • I think what we have is something you really

  • kind of have to come and see what's here.

  • I hear this almost every single day here,

  • "wow, this is like a museum, this is incredible."

  • It's an experience, they like that.

  • They like having an experience.

  • And this is not work to me, this is just fun.

I'm Kim Bhasin, luxury reporter at Bloomberg.

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A2 初級

紐約市最怪異的奢侈品店內景。 (Inside the Weirdest Luxury Shop in New York City)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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