Cruise ship art auctions — run almost exclusively by Park West Gallery across NCL, Carnival, Royal Caribbean, and others — are a sophisticated consumer trap that combines free-flowing champagne, deliberately bad WiFi, high-pressure auctioneers, and a rigged appraisal system to sell mass-produced prints to vacationers at wildly inflated prices. The “appraisals” passengers receive are circular nonsense: Park West values your art based on what Park West charges for it, not what it’s worth on the open market — a distinction that has cost individual buyers tens and in some cases hundreds of thousands of dollars when they got home and found out their “investment-grade” Dalí was selling on eBay for pocket change. The cruise lines aren’t innocent bystanders either — they pocket 10% to 40% of every sale, lending their brand credibility to an operation that has racked up at least 21 lawsuits, a $500,000 federal jury verdict against it, and a Disney firing, while quietly settling with burned buyers under confidentiality agreements that keep the warnings from reaching the next boatload of passengers. The champagne is free because you are the product.