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James and Mary Shuttleworth with one of.. - 3x2 inch Fridge Magnet - large magnetic button - Magnet
Sale Price: $4.99
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Rectangular wrap-around refrigerator magnet and a glossy mylar cover.Large 2x3 inch rectangle fridge magnet or 'buttons' as they are sometimes known in the USA.Crop shown is automated for display purposes only. All magnets are hand finished and the best most appropriate crop will always be selected to best show the full image. Therefore, actual product may vary slightly from crop shown - this can include borders or slight cropping in order to best place the image within the fixed size.
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Sound Magazine
List Price: $6.99
Sale Price: $2.69
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All products are BRAND NEW and factory sealed. Fast shipping and 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed.
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![Partridge Family 1: C'Mon Get Happy [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51XBT1QCBKL._SL160_.jpg) |
Partridge Family 1: C'Mon Get Happy [VHS]
List Price: $9.95
Sale Price: $2.69
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This sitcom anthology introduces viewers to the wacky world of the Partridge Family, the best-loved band of 1970s television. Widowed mom Shirley (Shirley Jones) agrees to quit her bank job and join her five musical kids in the show pilot "What? And Get Out of Show Business?" The band's optimistic harmony and catchy, bubble-gum spirit is introduced to Hollywood (and television viewers around the world) by none other than Johnny Cash. Although a bit rough around the edges, this first episode introduces teen idol Keith (David Cassidy), socially conscious Laurie (Susan Dey), and their manipulative preteen brother Danny (Danny Bonaduce), the capitalist mastermind who brings their garage recordings to reluctant record executive Reuben Kincaid (Dave Madden). Cute kids Chris (Jeremy Gelbwaks) and Tracy (Suzanne Crough) round out the history-making ensemble.Future stars often passed through The Partridge Family, as witnessed in "Old Scrapmouth," an episode featuring a young Mark Hamill as Laurie's would-be suitor. Her love life, and a national TV spot for the band, is thrown into mayhem by a dentist's pronouncement that she needs braces. Rounding out the video is the show's final episode, "Anchors Aweigh." The suburban singing family seem slightly more mature, and quite a bit shaggier. George Chakiris (West Side Story's Bernardo) drops anchor and sweeps Shirley off her feet as a returning naval hero. But what Keith and Laurie try to bring together, can Danny tear asunder? The episode features Keith strutting out the funky number "Rollercoaster," and healthy helpings of poignant, poppy Partridge splendor. --Grant Balfour
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![Partridge Family: 6 Partridges & 3 Angels [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/5173MVTFS0L._SL160_.jpg) |
Partridge Family: 6 Partridges & 3 Angels [VHS]
List Price: $9.95
Sale Price: $5.89
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This sitcom collection features a double dose of 1970s TV fun--with three episodes featuring the Partridge family singers acting alongside the sexy stars of Charlie's Angels. In "The Sound of Money," a cagey con artist (played by M*A*S*H's Colonel Potter, Harry Morgan) tries suing the family for bumping his Studebaker. Conniving Danny and Mr. Kincaid enlist blonde goddess Farrah Fawcett to help trap him, while the rest of the family take a different tack and decide to kill the con with kindness. Voluptuous Jaclyn Smith throws a curve at the suspicious siblings in "When Mother Gets Married." Desperate for a date, single mom Shirley has to fight off the demons of middle age and the depredations of her offspring when an old friend comes to town. Even freethinking Laurie's well-meaning advice does little more than contribute to the madcap romantic chaos! Finally, cute and cuddly Keith faces "Double Trouble" when he lands two dates to the same beach party. The true object of his affections, a fickle Cheryl Ladd (credited as Cheryl Stoppelmoor), has a panicky Keith mastering his romantic moves, which of course backfire hilariously. Fans of the free-love-and-fun-music decade are sure to be delighted. --Grant Balfour
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![Amazing Animals: Animal Mothers [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/717ECT5PFRL._SL160_.gif) |
Amazing Animals: Animal Mothers [VHS]
List Price: $9.95
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Mothers will want to encourage repeat viewing of this tape which enthusiastically validates the maternal role in nature. When Henry, the series's reptilian guide, ventures his opinion that mothering involves some easy cuddling and not a lot more, the narrator begs to differ. Child viewers are then taken on a whirlwind tour of motherhood that has mama bats giving birth upside down, mother puffins risking death with each of the 10 feedings her offspring require a day, and supermom lionesses juggling the cubs and hunting down dinner, only to be chased off by Dad who eats his fill before Mom and the kids get a serving. If that isn't enough, a better-educated and recalcitrant Henry gives his Golden Gecko award to a revolting-looking toad who lays a multitude of eggs on her own back and whose skin swells and grows to cover them while they incubate. Even after they hatch, the babies live in these oozing pustules until they're mature enough to venture forth into the world. It's a gross, but not-inappropriate analogy that should have young viewers joining Henry when he tell his mom, "I love you." --Kimberly Heinrichs
Broadcast nationally on The Disney Channel, Amazing Animals has quickly won children's hearts around the nation. Featuring the lovable Henry the Lizard as the inquisitive object of the narrator's clever questions and insights, each is a riot of humor, live-action footage, animation and information. Children cannot help but have fun as they learn. #1 rated non-Disney program on The Disney Channel(tm) "Fun facts, folklore and animal behavior are rolled into one gorgeous-and entertaining-science lesson."-Publishers Weekly Disney Channel ratings increased 31% for the Amazing Animals broadcast time slot! Amazing Animals: Armored Animals reached #38 on Billboard's Video Retail Charts.
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Cats: The Musical (Commemorative Edition)
List Price: $19.98
Sale Price: $12.47
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Wake up that sleeping kitty, because the beloved Broadway musical is on home video! Andrew Lloyd Webber's Tony-winning adaptation of T.S. Eliot's "Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats" follows a band of strutting, singing felines who turn their junkyard home into a dazzling stage for such memorable tunes as "Jellicle Cats," "Memory" and more. Recorded live at London's Adelphi Theatre, the stunning stage production stars Ken Page, Elaine Paige and John Mills. 121 min. Widescreen; Soundtracks: English Dolby Digital 5.1, Dolby Digital Surround; "making of" featurette.
This pop-cultural phenomenon has been performed on stage for more than 50 million patrons in 26 countries for almost 18 years, churning more than $2 billion in ticket sales. Now that Cats has finally made it to the small screen, attention must be paid not just by fans of this critic-proof show, but also by those entertainment mavens who have somehow avoided Cats until now. The video version has been restaged but, alas, not really reconceived for its new medium. The video cast, assembled from London, Amsterdam, and New York productions, is competent. Ken Page as Old Deuteronomy, Jacob Brent as Mr. Mistoffelees, and Elaine Paige--the original London Grizabella, the Glamour Cat well past her prime--are a great deal more than that. Paige has toned down her theatrical belting of her big number, "Memory," and allowed the faded ruin of her character's soul to prevail in close-up. For all the "covers" of her signature song, Paige's version remains definitive. The video is, by definition, more intimate, not always a good thing: costumes are even more Halloweeny in garish close-up, the cats less cuddly without that all-important interaction, the stage's appropriately midnight lighting transmuted to a Las Vegas neon. And the chorus of cats in production numbers is even clunkier and more amorphous in two- and three-shots. The one complete newcomer to the cast is the 90-year-old icon among English actors John Mills, a delight as Gus the Theatrical Cat. Sir John and his character show the youngsters how it's done in close-up, largely behind the eyes, abetted by a heart-tugging delivery of his one song. Yet virtually all of the songs are lip-synched, further robbing the video Cats of its onstage seeming spontaneity. It's clearer than ever that Lloyd Webber's music is mostly twaddle, with the important exception of "Memory," which instantly and rightly became one of the genuine theater standards not dependent on context, in the vein of Stephen Sondheim's "Send in the Clowns." On the plus side, most of the Cats characters and lyrics, from T.S. Eliot's 14-poem Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats, are far better defined and understood from the video version. --Robert Windeler
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The Partridge Family - The Complete First Season
List Price: $19.99
Sale Price: $8.74
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All 25 episodes from the debut season--including "What? And Get Out of Show Business?," "See Here, Private Partridge," "Old Scrapmouth," "Soul Club," and "Not with My Sister, You Don't"--are collected in a three-disc set. 11 hrs. total. Standard; Soundtrack: English; audio commentary; bonus CD. **25 episodes on 3 discs. 11 hrs.**
Like a groovy Family von Trapp, The Partridge Family arrived in 1970 with matching velvet outfits and wholesomeness bursting from every pore. Watching it now, you expect little more than kitsch--but the show, though certainly a sitcom representation of the world, is curiously fresh and appealing. This sheer likeability comes partly from the cast--Shirley Jones (The Music Man) looks foxy in miniskirts while still being the cool mom everyone wishes they had; teen idol David Cassidy is unexpectedly engaging as an actor (his charisma is all the more apparent when another teen idol, Bobby Sherman, makes a wooden appearance); and Danny Bonaduce's child-star rise sprang not from cuteness but his genuine comic timing. It doesn't hurt that many of the troubles the characters faced--swelled heads, rivalry, groupies (!)--were undoubtedly problems the actors were facing as their show became a hit. Sure, there are utterly ridiculous episodes, such as when Danny is tutoring a mob boss's girlfriend about the stock market and the gangster, not knowing Danny is only 10 years old, gets jealous--but most episodes feature ordinary show business conflicts or straightforward family issues, like how the kids cope when their mother starts dating or how teenager Laurie (Susan Dey, who later went on to L.A. Law) feels ugly when she gets braces. This simplicity, combined with some classic vaudeville-style humor, proves surprisingly durable. Plus, the list of guest stars ranges from Ray Bolger (best known as the Scarecrow in The Wizard of Oz) to a young Richard Pryor, as well as other soon-to-be-famous folk like Charlie's Angels' Farrah Fawcett and Jaclyn Smith and a pre-Star Wars Mark Hamill. The first season collection includes a bonus CD with four of the Partridge Family's actual radio hits; their sound, a fusion of the Monkees and the Mamas and the Papas, is pure pop sugar (created by a host of Brill Building songwriters like Neil Sedaka). If the Mondrian-inspired paint job on the Partridge Family bus gives you childhood flashbacks, you'll happily regress when you watch this box set. --Bret Fetzer
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Is your Relationship With Cable Service Dysfunctional
Cable service has been with us for some time now and they were a welcome relief from the monotony of standard TV programming. When cable service made its appearance, standard TV programming had sunk so low, that soap operas were starting to play on prime time. The people that selected the programming that was being shown had begun to believe that the viewing public were as stupid and thick headed as they were.
Remember Dance Fever that was hosted by that fruit loop on crack Denny Ortarrio. If you weren’t around back then, it was bad. There were others too, like the Partridge Family and a few others that are well worth forgetting. So cable service was a welcome relief, when it came along but we missed the warning signs that the relationship might become dysfunctional.
Taking advantage of public utility easement rights to tear up our yards and streets, to run a cable network that was destined to become obsolete, was one big sign. Do you remember the political scandals that some of the cable companies created, when they bribed corrupt elected officials in their battles over programming service turf? That was another big warning sign.
So after all these years with cable it seems that things have become dysfunctional. Who in their right mind would pay a cable service company to come to their house to install their cables, when a satellite service provider like DirecTV will do it free of charge. Thirty years ago when cable companies charged people for their initial installation, when they knew they were going to be buying their overpriced product for the next three decades, they were simply taking advantage of their customers and gouging them.
Would you shop at a market that charged you rent on their shopping cart when you pushed it around their store filling it with their merchandise? Of course not! Yet this is just what the cable companies have been doing for years and years since the very beginning. DirecTV has been recognized by J.D. Power and associates for the last five years in a row for their exemplary record in the area of customer satisfaction for one basic reason.
That reason is that the folks at DirecTV treat their customers like they would like to be treated themselves. Great customer service is something that can’t be faked and either you have it or you don’t. Service outages that have always plagued cable service customers happen at a far lower rate with satellite service. Cable service provides force their hapless customers to fork over more money for digital programming if they want to have the higher quality of picture and sound that it brings.
If you don’t hand it over, then you get your programming from them in standard format which has been in use since the days of black and white TV. DirecTV broadcasts all their signals in digitized format and they wouldn’t dream of charging their viewing family for it. Maybe it is time to take a good look at what your cable service provider has been doing to you and while you are at it you might take a look at what the folks at DirecTV can do for you.
About the Author
Written by David Johnson. Find more information on a Satellite TV Deal as well as top Dish Network Offers
Who sings in the new 7-Up commercial? Sounds like David Cassidy from the old Partridge Family days.?
It's a commercial where there are fruit pickers in a field and they're "picking" cans of 7-Up and rinsing the dirt off cans of 7-Up.
How right you are! The song was adapted from a Partridge Family song called "Sunshine", written by Wes Farrell, Danny Janssen and Bobby Hart, who wrote the lyrics to most of the Partridge Family songs.
Men should decide on prostate cancer test
BIRMINGHAM, AL (WBRC) - Men who undergo prostate-cancer screening should discuss with a doctor the uncertainties, risks and benefits of the test before it is performed, says Edward Partridge, M.D., president-elect of the American Cancer Society National Board of Directors and director of the University of Alabama at Birmingham Comprehensive Cancer Center.
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