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Garkinos muses how some clothes and accessories sell the moment they come in the door, while others, including a custom-made Versace suitcase that was made for Prince and even has his initials and a purple lining inside, don't
-- though eventually there's the right buyer for everything. (It took almost two years to find the now very proud owner of the Prince piece.) Stella McCartney, Rochas, Alexander McQueen and Vuitton seem to be labels they can't hold on to, while Marc Jacobs, beloved by the industry and handbag shoppers around the world, can take a lot longer to sell. "Dukes of Melrose" (10:30 p.m. EDT) includes that sort of "voyeuristic experience into the world of couture clients," Silver explains. "We are in the business of storytelling," Garkinos adds, and where better to do that than TV? They definitely seem like natural showmen
-- outgoing, sometimes snarky, with fabulous wardrobes. Actually, though, they were at first turned off by the idea of a reality show. "We didn't want it to be a show that makes you dumber," says Silver, who went on a bit of a rant about entertainment that caters to the lowest common denominator. However, he and Garkinos believe they have enough credibility to be the kind of TV that can teach a broader audience to appreciate fashion as an art. How about the name of the show? "Melrose" is the famous shopping street where Decades is located, and "Dukes" came about because Silver is known as "the king of vintage" and Garkinos as "the king of consignment."
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