How much of the price can be attributed to "Steve Jobs coveted after this lamp"?
Obviously celebrity endorsements is nothing new, but "coveting" seems new to me. Imagine if it's Trump, Musk or your favorite dickhead celebrity coveting after the object, would you say "eww" or would you pay more to say "I own something that dickhead covets."?
This headline sounds like "this specific (one-of-a-kind?) item that Steve Jobs owned/wanted to own" when the article is really about "this lamp that is the same design as one Steve Jobs owned"
So not the "someone paid $4million for an (specific) item with a celebrity connection" that I thought it was.
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[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 25.0 ms ] threadObviously celebrity endorsements is nothing new, but "coveting" seems new to me. Imagine if it's Trump, Musk or your favorite dickhead celebrity coveting after the object, would you say "eww" or would you pay more to say "I own something that dickhead covets."?
So not the "someone paid $4million for an (specific) item with a celebrity connection" that I thought it was.
Questions that come to mind:
Was Steve Jobs rich in 1982?
In 1982, was the cost of a "real" Tiffany lamp within the reach of someone at Jobs's 1982 wealth/income level?
What are the chances that the item Jobs owned was a knockoff or a mass-produced item?
I imagine that Steve Jobs was the kind of person who would buy a $5000 lamp even if he was only making $20,000 a year.