In Season 14 of Gold Rush, Parker Schnabel saw the need to start strip-mining as the winter closed in, but this week, the gold from a previous project was made into something beautiful. Notably, it seems to indicate that the Discovery Channel star is not down to his last penny. What did he do with the gold? Keep reading to find out more.
Parker Schnabel Had Some Gold That He Kept For Himself
In October last year, Gold Rush fans saw that Tony Beets looked likely to do extremely well with his gold haul. At the same time, the drama focused on how John’s grandson looked likely to lose everything. Most fans believed that he’d have some common sense and some business advice to not risk his last dollar. However, it made for good television. It’s not clear if the end product that was shared recently came from that year of mining,...
Parker Schnabel Had Some Gold That He Kept For Himself
In October last year, Gold Rush fans saw that Tony Beets looked likely to do extremely well with his gold haul. At the same time, the drama focused on how John’s grandson looked likely to lose everything. Most fans believed that he’d have some common sense and some business advice to not risk his last dollar. However, it made for good television. It’s not clear if the end product that was shared recently came from that year of mining,...
- 4/7/2024
- by James Michael
- TV Shows Ace
“It’s sort of like the new Gold Rush,” truTV’s president and head of programming Chris Linn tells TheWrap
The television industry is catching up with film and learning that pot sells in Hollywood. As more states join the legal marijuana movement and the drug becomes less taboo in the country, entertainment industry insiders say interest in weed-related storylines is at an all-time high.
Showtime series “Shameless,” for instance, which follows Chicago’s dysfunctional Gallagher family and stars William H. Macy and Emmy Rossum, will embark on a major weed arc later this year. The network is also responsible...
The television industry is catching up with film and learning that pot sells in Hollywood. As more states join the legal marijuana movement and the drug becomes less taboo in the country, entertainment industry insiders say interest in weed-related storylines is at an all-time high.
Showtime series “Shameless,” for instance, which follows Chicago’s dysfunctional Gallagher family and stars William H. Macy and Emmy Rossum, will embark on a major weed arc later this year. The network is also responsible...
- 1/23/2015
- by Itay Hod
- The Wrap
On Friday, March 7, after the first part of the "Gold Rush" Season 4 finale aired on Discovery Channel, fans worried about the health of legendary Alaskan miner John Schnabel, the beloved "grandpa" of 19-year-old miner Parker Schnabel, who's been working this season for equally legendary Canadian miner Tony Beets in the Klondike.
The elder Schnabel was undergoing treatment for a recurrence of cancer, and fans rushed to the Internet, concerned that something terrible had happened to the kindly 94-year-old, whose gentle manner, sage advice and obvious love for his grandson have endeared him to viewers' hearts.
But Parker assuaged fans' fears, tweeting, "My grandpa is way more of a bada** than I'll ever be."
And by the end of the episode, Schnabel and both grandsons -- Payson and Parker -- were back at Smith Creek, part of a family claim deeded to them jointly by Schnabel (according to him, 49 percent to each grandson,...
The elder Schnabel was undergoing treatment for a recurrence of cancer, and fans rushed to the Internet, concerned that something terrible had happened to the kindly 94-year-old, whose gentle manner, sage advice and obvious love for his grandson have endeared him to viewers' hearts.
But Parker assuaged fans' fears, tweeting, "My grandpa is way more of a bada** than I'll ever be."
And by the end of the episode, Schnabel and both grandsons -- Payson and Parker -- were back at Smith Creek, part of a family claim deeded to them jointly by Schnabel (according to him, 49 percent to each grandson,...
- 3/14/2014
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Zap2It - From Inside the Box
The quest for Southern Hemisphere riches ends -- at least for now -- on Friday, Aug. 30, with the finale of the summer series "Gold Rush: South America."
The spinoff of Discovery Channel's hit reality series "Gold Rush" premiered on Aug. 2 and continued its predecessor's habit of finding viewers, becoming the day's No. 1 cable show among adults ages 25-54 and men ages 25-54 and No. 2 in all of television among men 24-54 and men 18-49.
The regular "Gold Rush" series has its fourth season premiere in October.
In a TV universe where it's often difficult to get men to give up their video games and sports to actually sit down and watch reality or scripted television, "Gold Rush" has succeeded by following a motley bunch of gold miners seeking to make a fortune by finding the precious metal.
It also helps that the men do it by driving around huge earth-moving equipment.
The spinoff of Discovery Channel's hit reality series "Gold Rush" premiered on Aug. 2 and continued its predecessor's habit of finding viewers, becoming the day's No. 1 cable show among adults ages 25-54 and men ages 25-54 and No. 2 in all of television among men 24-54 and men 18-49.
The regular "Gold Rush" series has its fourth season premiere in October.
In a TV universe where it's often difficult to get men to give up their video games and sports to actually sit down and watch reality or scripted television, "Gold Rush" has succeeded by following a motley bunch of gold miners seeking to make a fortune by finding the precious metal.
It also helps that the men do it by driving around huge earth-moving equipment.
- 8/30/2013
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Zap2It - From Inside the Box
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