Another great place to shop for Hazzard General products is Amazon. They have more than just books!
 |
Dukes of Hazzard Collector's Edition: The Legacy and My Son, Bo Hogg
Sale Price: $8.90
|
|
|
Bo and Luke attempt to help Uncle Jesse and a former lover who has come to Hazzard to collect $5,000 from Boss Hogg in "The Legacy." Then, when Bo strikes his head and is given amnesia, Boss convinces the boy that he's his son, and he sets about corrupting him in "My Son, Bo Hogg."
|
 |
Dukes of Hazzard Collector's Edition: Coltrane Vs. Duke and The Great Bank Robbery
Sale Price: $9.93
|
|
|
In "Coltrane vs. Duke", Boss Hogg hopes to snatch the Dukes' land so that he can resell the property to someone who wants to build a brewery there. To do so, he hatches a plan that brings Bo and Luke to court in a phony accident claim that will suck them dry of the money they need to pay county taxes and, therefore, forfeit their land. As if this isn't enough, in "The Great Bank Robbery", Hogg manipulates the situation so that retiring bank employee Clarence Stovall loses his $30,000 pension. In retribution, Stovall steals exactly that amount and plans to leave town, until the Dukes convince him to allow them to try and make things right.
|
 |
Dukes of Hazzard Collector's Edition: Sadie Hogg Day and Goodbye, General Lee
Sale Price: $24.95
|
|
|
"Sadie Hogg Day" chronicles the one day a year in Hazzard when women run the county. Realizing he's about to get caught for embezzling $142,000 from the bank, Boss Hogg uses the holiday to implicate Daisy, Bo and Luke in the theft of the cash, and it is up to the trio to prove their innocence. Next, in "Goodbye, General Lee," Boss uses hypnotism to force Luke into giving up the General Lee so that his own vehicle can win an important - and financially lucrative - county race derby.
|
 |
Dukes of Hazzard General Lee 1969 Dodge charger car Wall Graphic-Decal-Decor 36"
Sale Price: $39.90
|
|
|
The General lee, 1969 Dodge charger wall graphic from the Dukes of Hazzard. This Graphic measures 36" at the longest point & looks great on any wall. These graphics are printed in HD on thick high grade low tack vinyl.
60 day warranty if item is defective, will replace 1 time with same kind for free. 30 day return policy, if item is unused and in original condition, once returned, we will give refund for graphic only no shipping minus 20% amazon restocking fee.
|
 |
Dukes of Hazzard Party Invitations
Sale Price: $5.95
|
|
|
It's Party Time...Dukes of Hazzard Style! Set of 8 invitations and envelopes. The front of the invitation features the Hazzard 01 and reads, "Yeeee Haaaw!!!" The back includes all of the information you need for every party: For, Date, Time, Place, and RSVP.
? 4.25" x 5.5"
|
 |
Midland WR100 Weather Radio
List Price: $49.99
Sale Price: $24.90
|
|
|
Stay up to date on all the latest weather, hazard, and civil emergency information with the Midland WR-100B monitor. Capable of receiving seven National Oceanic & Atmospheric Association (NOAA) channels--each of which receives emergency advisories on tornadoes, floods, severe thunderstorms, civil danger warnings, and more--the WR-100B is a must for people who live in high-risk weather areas, such as the Southeast or Midwest. Plus, the seven NOAA channels offer coverage for roughly 93 percent of the U.S., so most people are well covered regardless of where they live. Another valuable function is the monitor's Specific Area Message Encoding (SAME) reception. SAME allows users to program the radio to sound an alert only when weather and other emergencies threaten a selected county or counties. The technology eliminates all alerts from other areas, so users won't have to perk up their ears each time the alert sounds only to find the emergency is actually 100 miles up the highway. In addition, the WR-100B's memory system accepts up to 25 counties, so you can monitor a broad swatch of counties at once or restrict it to one. Should an alert occur, users have a choice of three warning systems: a 90 dB siren, a voice alert, or a flashing red LED light. The siren is the best option for people with larger homes or who aren't always near the monitor, while the latter two options work well for smaller homes. Additional features include a clock with an alarm and a snooze button, an emergency power backup that keeps your radio working during power outages or outdoor use, and external antenna and alert jacks. The WR-100B, which works with three AA batteries (not included), measures 5.12 by 2 by 6.25 inches (W x H x D) and is backed by a one-year warranty. What's in the Box WR-100B monitor, power adapter, user's manual.
Midland is a world leader in wireless two-way and weather/hazard alert radios, with an extensive line of land mobile radios, CB, GMRS and FRS radios, MURS radios, weather-monitor alert radios, itinerant radios and a line of quality antennas and accessories.
|
 |
Dukes of Hazzard General Lee iPhone 4/4s Cell Case Black
Sale Price: $14.95
|
|
|
Brand New iPhone 4 Hard Cover Case. Compatible with AT&T / Verizon / Sprint iPhone 4/4S. Premium hard case is perfectly manufactured to fit and compliment the mold of your iPhone 4/4S. Provides protection and prevents scratches, chips and dirt from accumulating. Made of quality hard plastic. Light and durable. Quality pictures digitally printed onto the cover cases. Easy access to all buttons, controls and ports without removing the case. Keep it as a collection or to send it as a gift to your friends. It is an actual Case not a sticker or decal.
|
Amazon.Com
Here are some more information for Hazzard General:

Over time, the media has elevated the popularity of various vehicles by highlighting some of the fictional rides that have graced the pages of novels, the lyrics of songs, the 30-minute TV show, and the silver screen. Whether Fred and Wilma are peddling around in their signature rockmobile, James Bond gets away with his gadget cars or the Beach Boys bring life to the Little Deuce Coupe, it's sometimes hard to forget that many of these fictional cars really don't exist. Below are a few examples that have gained fame throughout the years.
Batmobile
In both the Batman television shows and movies, the superhero-on-the-go often hopped into a sleek, customized vehicle that provided protection for his Bruce Wayne alter ego. Equipped with heavy armor plating and a high performance engine, the evolution of the Batman series displayed increasing levels of gadgets. To reach increased speeds, the Batmobile sometimes offered rocket boosts, while additional weapons and a computerized assistance helped to keep villains at a distance.
KITT
The talking car that aided David Hasselhoff's character, Michael Knight, navigate through a sea of enemies and bad guys was a Pontiac Trans Am. The television series focused on a high-tech approach to entertain the audience. Numerous fans watched the show just to see what KITT would do or say next. The popularity of the show even helped to boost Pontiac car sales as the verbal wonder could drive without a passenger and even displayed its own set of entertaining stunts.
Christine
Stephen King has produced numerous novels that have become popular movies; the same is true with the 1958 Plymouth Fury that seemed to have a mind of its own. Christine was the name given to the car that appeared in the horror novel (with the same name) published in 1983. Driven by supernatural forces, the antique auto created havoc in both the novel and the movie.
Herbie
Several Disney movies and cartoons have focused on Herbie the Lovebug, which was a Volkswagon Beetle that made its first appearance in 1969. Just like Christine, the red, white, and blue striped car with a "53" on its side could also drive without assistance and had a reputation for acting on its own. Most of the time, the car was featured in some sort of racing competition.
General Lee
The television series and movie named the Dukes of Hazzard showed main characters, Bo and Luke Duke soaring through the air, causing mischief with their get-rich schemes. Their vehicle of choice was a colorful Dodge Charger that allowed the cousins to complete high jumps in almost every episode. The car is also known for its controversial Confederate flag decoration.
Visit our sites for California Used Cars & California Classifieds
A Guide to Nascar for Redneck Women
In order to understand the culture of the redneck man, it is necessary to understand the most Southern of sports: NASCAR. It's more than just cars driving in circles at high speed, punctuated by the occasional crash; it is an integral part of the modern South. In order to really understand both, you must know where NASCAR came from and why it exists.
History of NASCAR
NASCAR (the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing) really started back just before Prohibition, when hillbilly moonshiners up in the Appalachians found out that the revenuers' cars were fast enough to get the jump on them. Illegal stills started getting busted, and shine makers started going to jail. Instead of buckling, moonshiners moved their stills further back into the woods and down in the hollers, and they started using cars.
When Prohibition came into effect in 1920, moonshiners started looking beyond outwitting the tax-collecting revenuers and toward shipping 'shine to the cities for real profit. Gangsters - Pretty Boy Floyd, Baby Face Nelson, Capone - started making contact with these good ol' boys to see if they could get a steady supply of alcohol for their speakeasies and other businesses. And young men, usually the sons or nephews of established moonshiners, started working with stock cars to get the 'shine to town as fast as possible.
These, our redneck forefathers, modified the cars they ordered from magazines or purchased from fledgling dealers in towns to run faster, harder, on rough and smooth surfaces. They experimented with using 'shine as a fuel for a boost in speed, and invented many of the tricks used today in NASCAR. Junior Johnson, one of NASCAR's earliest legends, spent years running 'shine for his father using scampish tricks later mimicked by Burt Reynolds characters and the Dukes of Hazzard. He invented the famous bootleg turn, the 180-degree spinout sending you careening in the opposite direction, that is used in nearly every movie car chase today, and later as a NASCAR champ discovered how to "draft" another driver to increase his own speed and reduce fuel consumption.
NASCAR was officially born in 1948, a merging of this wild redneck tradition with the more upscale Grand Prix racing imported from Europe, in which mostly concept cars and special sports cars were raced. William France, a racing mechanic, had a notion that stock cars would draw crowds in America, and he incorporated NASCAR in Daytona, from which it quickly grew to the giant it is today.
Today's NASCAR, industrialized and streamlined and watered down for general consumption, is only a pale imitation of the free-for-all madness our bootlegging ancestors first drove.
NASCAR Rules
While the first NASCAR stock cars were completely unmodified stock cars, the same ones you'd buy off the lot, today's cars are modified according to strict safety and performance rules.
The rules in NASCAR are both simple and complex. Drivers in the top 43 of each race accumulate points according to a set system. Cups are awarded according to who has accumulated the most points in a set group of races. The Sprint Cup (usually just called the Cup, as it was previously the R.J. Reynolds and the Nextel Cup) is the big prize, and is awarded after a set of 36 races. Other smaller cups are awarded for other groups of races, and each major race has around $4 million total in prize money awarded for that race alone.
Points in the major races (but not all NASCAR races) are awarded not only to the race winner but to each lap leader. If you've led at least one lap, you automatically get five bonus points; if you lead the most laps, you get an extra five, for ten bonus points total. Points go to the driver who started the race (replacement drivers get nothing) and to the car owner. Races are generally prefaced either by qualifying trials or by heats, small races that get the crowd warmed up but don't count toward prizes. Starting order is determined by qualifying time.
The track, once started, is slowed down by yellow caution flags for fender benders, spills, etc.; if something catastrophic happens, the red flag will come down to stop the race until wreckage can be cleared. Green flag means everything is fine. And in most NASCAR races, you'll see drivers pull off for at least one pit stop; the pit crew works fast to fuel, check, condition, and change tires because the time in pit counts against your time on the track.
A NASCAR Date
So now you have that redneck sweetheart and you really want to impress him? Set up a date for one of the smaller NASCAR races, with barbecue and and chips for your refreshments. Beer is a must, and for that special touch, ask your liquor store for some 'shine, which should be drunk straight but in moderation. Dress any old way you want, park him on the couch, and let him explain all the finer points of the race to you while you both enjoy the race.
About the Author
You'll find lots of NASCAR fans at RedneckandSingle.com an online community of over 18,000 single rednecks seeking romance, friendship, adventure, hunting, camping and fishing partners, and NASCAR buddies. Visit http://www.redneckandsingle.com and find your own redneck NASCAR friend.
Is there a way to get the General Lee car on Grand Theft Auto IV or any previous Grand Theft Auto?
I was just searching for Dukes of Hazzard videos of the General Lee on youtube and saw a General Lee video of Grand Theft Auto San Adreas on youtube and I was wondering how you get the General Lee preferrably on Grand Theft Auto IV since I no longer have San Andreas. If not can you tell me how it got on San Andreas and I'll go get the game again. Thanks for your help.
http://youtube.com/watch?v=FB6mNtkyVro&feature=related
http://youtube.com/watch?v=L7ZnPd0NdZw&feature=related
You have to Download MODs because the General Lee isnt actually in the game.
Traffic fines would jump to pay for courts, police
A ticket for driving without a seat belt would triple to $75, under a bill that passed in a Senate committee today.
Thanks for visiting!