Another great place to shop for Pee Wee products is Amazon. They have more than just books!
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Pee Wee Herman Celebrity Mugshot Koozie
Sale Price: $5.99
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Have a drink with your friends, and keep it cold with this drink koozie. Design features a photo of PeeWee Herman's mugshot, from his arrest in 1991. Forward shot is on one side, profile is on the other. Koozie has sewn seams and slotted bottom, and fits both cans and bottles, but folds flat for compact drawer storage. Great gift for any Pee Wee fan!
Copyright Insomniac Arts
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Set of 5 PEE-WEE HERMAN 1.25" MAGNETS Pee Wee
Sale Price: $4.99
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These magnets are manufactured from the highest quality materials... made of a hard metal base, thick mylar, strong magnet and true to life vibrant colors. Put them on your refrigerator, locker, file cabinet or any metal object you can think of! Magnets are great party favors for your next gathering and also make great prizes/giveaways. They are wonderful gifts for everyone!
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Boys Town
List Price: $9.98
Sale Price: $5.00
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Spencer Tracy garnered his second consecutive Academy Award for his portrayal of Father Flanagan, founder of the famed home for delinquent and underprivileged youth, in this classic MGM melodrama. Mickey Rooney shines as one of the father's more recalcitrant charges; with Henry Hull, Bobs Watson. 93 min. Standard; Soundtrack: English Dolby Digital mono; Subtitles: English, French, Spanish; featurettes; radio show excerpt; theatrical trailers. Also includes the bonus feature "Men of Boys Town" (1941).
Spencer Tracy won an Oscar for his portrayal of Father Flanagan, who opens Boys Town and dedicates himself to helping juvenile delinquents go straight. Mickey Rooney plays one of the tougher kids, figuring out early on that Flanagan is nobody's fool. Warmhearted and inspiring, the film's inevitable sentimentality is nicely cut by Tracy's performance and a smart script by Eleanore Griffin and Dore Schary (who also won Oscars). A good film for all ages, directed by Norman Taurog (Adventures of Tom Sawyer). --Tom Keogh
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A Night at Birdland, Vol. 1
List Price: $8.94
Sale Price: $4.16
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All products are BRAND NEW and factory sealed. Fast shipping and 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed.
For all intents and purposes, the style of jazz known as hard bop came of age at this February 1954 live date from the famous New York club. By adding vibrant elements of blues, funk, soul, and gospel to the technically challenging and highly cerebral bebop form, hard bop became the dominant jazz style and to this day represents what is typically referred to as mainstream jazz. The lineup here resembles the '27 Yankees of the genre: trumpeter Clifford Brown was quickly becoming the red-hot alternative to Miles Davis's cool stylings (his work on the ballad "Once in a While" is worth the price of admission alone); pianist Horace Silver's driving, urgent sound epitomized the funky hard-bop aesthetic; alto Lou Donaldson and bassist Curly Russell had already graced countless essential recordings between them. From this seed grew three of the greatest hard-bop outfits in history: Blakey's Jazz Messengers, Silver's Quintet, and the Clifford Brown-Max Roach Quintet. This short-lived ensemble might have them all licked. For a complete snapshot of the Birdland event, pick up A Night at Birdland, Volume 2, easily on par with Birdland, Volume 1 for sheer artistry. --Marc Greilsamer
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Lufkin Handy Pocket Tape, 1/4" x 6'
List Price: $8.20
Sale Price: $4.49
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Flexible blade with bold graduations on yellow background for quick accurate readings. Pocket sized for office or home. High-strength case with power retraction operation. A16 BLADE STYLE: Black markings one side only. Consecutive inches to 1/16ths bottom edge, first 12" to 1/32nds; 16" centers designated by diamond; every 12th inch in red.
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Flight of the Navigator
List Price: $14.99
Sale Price: $5.69
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Features include: •MPAA Rating: PG•Format: DVD•Runtime: 90 minutes
Disney's 1986 Flight of the Navigator combines a strong ensemble cast and classic '80s soundtrack with dazzling special effects for a high-flying sci-fi adventure. While searching for his little brother in the woods, 12-year-old David Freeman (Joey Cramer) falls down a ravine and is knocked unconscious. After what seems like minutes, he returns home, only to discover that eight years have passed since he was declared missing and presumed dead. Even more mystifying is that David hasn't aged, nor can he account for the time lapse. Meanwhile, NASA officials stumble upon a futuristic spacecraft and are determined to assess what David knows about it by locking him in a top-secret lab for scanning and testing. His only chance of escape is in the spacecraft manned by Max, a wisecracking robot. Cramer gives an earnest performance, which overcomes an imperfect script, while enough one-liners and imaginative animation will keep families engaged. Watch for Sarah Jessica Parker in one of her first film appearances. Rated PG for language. (Ages 6 and older) --Lynn Gibson
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Pee-Wee's Big Adventure
List Price: $5.97
Sale Price: $3.20
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Features include: •MPAA Rating: PG•Format: DVD•Runtime: 90 minutes
Former animator Tim Burton (Beetlejuice, Edward Scissorhands, Ed Wood, Batman, Mars Attacks!) made his feature directorial debut with this delightful comedy, coscripted by the late Phil Hartman (who also appears briefly as a reporter). Wisely, they keep the story simple so as to concentrate on the characters: Pee-wee's most prized possession, his shiny new bicycle, is stolen, and he sets off on an obsessive cross-country journey, determined to recover it. Pee-wee's awkward and childish attempts to be cool and mature ("I meant to do that!!") are hysterical, as when he tells his girlfriend (Elizabeth Daly): "There's things about me you don't know, Dottie. Things you wouldn't understand. Things you couldn't understand. Things you shouldn't understand.... I'm a loner, Dottie. A rebel." Look for Saturday Night Live vet Jan Hooks in a hilarious bit as a tour guide at the Alamo. And beware of Large Marge! --Jim Emerson
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Amazon.Com
Here are some more information for Pee Wee:

Pee Wee And The Magical Compost Heap is the first story in a series of three children's books based on the character Pee Wee Worman, which was made possible through a grant from the Ontario Ministry of the Environment. It is illustrated with pencil sketches by Alia Toor of musical notes, sunflowers, children, compost piles, worms and other critters found in a compost pile, tiny lady bugs, plant parts and winding vines grace each page as readers follow the story.
The story opens with a cute and enjoyable song written by Joan Gilmour called The Compost Song that uses the universally applicable melody for the tune "The Hokey Pokey". In this story, Nancy has lost her favorite ring and her brother Scott is helping her look for it in the garden. Luckily their friends Mathieu and Naseem come out to help in the task. Suddenly, a magical butterfly changes all the children into the size of bugs and they explore the compost pile. There, they meet P.W. Worman, a friendly red wiggler who is proud to show them his home. When they realize that it is time to go home, they climb to the top of the compost pile where they find Nancy's ring. This theme is reminiscent of The Magical School Bus TV series in that the children shrink and go through educational adventures.
Environmentalists will be thrilled to know that though the book retails at only $3.95 (Canadian), 10% of the proceeds will be donated to the Recycling Council of Ontario's composting projects. The author goes a step further by ensuring the paper it was printed on had at least 10% recycled content and used all vegetable inks.
Pee Wee And The Magical Compost Heap is a bargain for frugal minded educators, parents and caregivers. The 6-page glossary at the end of the book provides ample information for class and home school projects.
Larraine Roulston, the author of this series of worm compost books for children, has been involved with Recycling Council of Ontario for a number of years and wrote a newspaper column for 15 years called 'Recycler's Report'. Her series has inspired the Recycling Council of Ontario to provide a 30 minute P.W. Worman puppet show that is performed at schools, libraries and environmental fairs.
Be sure to visit Larraine's website: http://www.castlecompost.com
~ Lillian Brummet: co-author of the books Trash Talk and Purple Snowflake Marketing, author of Towards Understanding; host of the Conscious Discussions radio show (http://www.brummet.ca)
The Religion of Post Workout Nutrition Part 1
Pre- and post-workout nutrition is all the rage these days, and for good reason. For some, however, it's become more than a science-it's become their religion, or perhaps just a place to focus their OCD-like tendencies. Regardless, people have taken the topic of pre- and post-workout nutrition to a level that is not justified by the research, or at least not confirmed by the research that currently exists.
Readers should realize I may have my membership card to the Bodybuilding Nutrition Guru Society torn up and thrown at me for what I am about to share in this article...
As expected, supplement companies-and self-proclaimed 'net guru types-have used what does exist for research to convince everyone that that if they don't take in exactly 98.7 grams of carbohydrates and 37.2 grams of protein within 28 seconds after they leave the gym, their muscles will be attacked by every muscle-hating hormone they possess in their body by second 29; with the prior year of hard work in the gym totally wasted by second 30!
People are fixated on this particular topic like nothing else, and when you throw in the other possible ingredients that can be added to the post-workout drink, such as creatine, glutamine, and many others, it's taken to the level of psychosis!
Of course supplement companies have come out with their own "techno-functional ultra-repartitioning multi-dimensional"* post-workout drink formulas that are claimed to be the latest breakthrough. Besides the carbs and protein in these formulas, many of the additional compounds are either under dosed (ergo the 'label decoration' syndrome), have no particular justification for being in the formula in the first place, or both (ergo, the 'shot gun' approach)...but I digress.
Now I have to take at least some blame-or credit-for this predicament, depending on how you want to view it. I have written extensively about the importance of post-workout nutrition in all manner of articles, and give the topic extensive focus in my Bodybuilding Revealed e-book.
Unlike many of the supplement companies and 'net experts' out there, however, I never claimed you would shrivel up into Pee Wee Herman in a matter of minutes if you didn't get your ultra high-tech post-workout drink 29 seconds after your last set of squats. I have always taken a balanced view on the topic, by pointing out that food is still more important in the overall equation of muscle growth.
Thus, what I can say is that research-and common sense-tells us it's advantageous to get some fast-acting carbs and protein after a hard workout to optimize the time we put in the gym. From there, however, people have relied more on wishful thinking than science for their pre- and post-workout nutrition. People who have poor diets and poorly thought-out training routines, but focus on the latest magic pre- and post-workout elixirs are missing the point. Their approach is like trying to hold up a three-legged stool with one support leg and the other two missing.
General Considerations of Research vs. the "Real World"
As we all know, a great deal of research is performed that-although interesting-has very little "real world" application to bodybuilders and other athletes.
This is because scientists do everything in their power to study their chosen topic in isolation. In other words, they go to great lengths and trouble to control variables that will impact the outcomes of their studies. For example, in a study looking at the effects of a drug or supplement, a placebo group is matched to the "active" group. The scientists want to make sure the effect they get-or don't get-is due to the drug/supplement and not the placebo effect. Making the study double-blind is another way of attempting to prevent the bias of the scientists from influencing the study.
The point is that, when they attempt to isolate an effect of something being tested, scientists often end up with results that may not always be directly applicable to the "real world" of Joe Schmoe gym goer.
When study designs don't reflect "real world" conditions, they need to be taken with a grain of salt. Were the study participants fasted? What type of exercise did they perform? What effects did the researchers actually look at and how does that apply to the "real world" or athlete in question? Were the study participants new to the form of exercise being utilized in the study or were they experienced athletes? How many people were in the study? Who do the results apply to: endurance or strength athletes? Both? Neither?!
Those are just a few of the essential questions that have to be asked and answered before you can even begin to draw any useful "real world" conclusions from the studies that come out. Yet this doesn't stop people and supplement companies from jumping on the latest studies as the last word in nutrition and start making recommendations from them. They also tend to ignore the studies that contradict or fail to replicate the advice they are giving out. Let's look at some examples...
The Fast vs. Slow Protein Craze..
The use of fasted subjects in nutrition studies illustrates how researchers can end up with results that may not apply well to the real world. As the name implies, the study subjects are a group of people who have not eaten for an extended period of time. In many cases, they haven't eaten for 8 - 10 hours or more, which of course does not reflect how the average person eats, at let alone how the average athlete eats-especially bodybuilders looking to add muscle mass.
Enter stage right, the "fast vs. slow" protein craze. The study that got this craze rolling was called "Slow and fast dietary proteins differently modulate postprandial protein accretion" and was responsible for causing a resurgence of interest in casein. The basic premise of this much-touted study was that the speed of absorption of dietary amino acids (from ingested proteins) varies according to the type of dietary protein a person eats.
The researchers wanted to see if the type of protein eaten would affect postprandial (e.g., after a meal) protein synthesis, breakdown, and deposition. To test the hypothesis, they fed casein (CAS) and whey protein (WP) to a group of healthy adults, a single meal of casein (CAS) or whey WP following an overnight fast (10 h). Using this specific study design, they found:
•WP induced a dramatic but short increase of plasma amino acids.
•CAS induced a prolonged plateau of a moderate increase in amino acids (hyperaminoacidemia)
•Whole body protein breakdown was inhibited by 34% after CAS ingestion but not after WP ingestion.
•Postprandial protein synthesis was stimulated by 68% with the WP meal and to a lesser extent (+31%) with the CAS meal.
The basic non-science summary is: the study found that CAS was good at preventing protein breakdown (proteolysis), but was not so good for increasing protein synthesis. WP had basically the opposite effects: it increased protein synthesis but didn't prevent protein breakdown. The problem is that they were using fasted subjects for a single meal. ***
Keep that in mind as we move along here...
So far so good right? So what can we conclude from this study and how useful are the results? Like so many studies, the results were interesting-and of little use to people in the real world. Do these results hold up under more "real world" conditions where people are eating every few hours and/or mixing the proteins with other macronutrients (i.e., carbs and fats)? The answer is probably not, which is exactly what the researchers found when they attempted to mimic a more realistic eating pattern of multiple meals and or the addition of other macronutrients. The follow up study was called "The digestion rate of protein is an independent regulating factor of postprandial protein retention." Four groups of five to six healthy young men received:
• a single meal of slowly digested casein (CAS).
• a single meal of free amino acids mimicking the composition of casein (AA).
• a single meal of rapidly digested whey proteins (WP).
• repeated meals of whey proteins (RPT-WP) mimicking slow digestion rate of casein (i.e., reflecting how people really eat).
So what did they find? In a nut shell, giving people multiple doses of whey-which more closely mimics how people really eat--had basically the same effects as a single dose of casein, and mixing either with fats and proteins pretty much nullified any big differences between the two proteins.
Even that's not the end of the story, however, as multiple follow up studies done by the same group and others found these effects could also be different in older versus younger people and male versus female! How messed up is that?! So how much press did these follow up studies get? Little or none, as I recall.
Now, a later study did attempt to examine the actual net amino acid uptake after resistance training with whey vs. casein, and found both proteins had essentially the same effects on net muscle protein synthesis after exercise despite different patterns of blood amino acid responses.
Does that put to rest the issue or debate of one protein vs. the other post-workout? No, as there are yet more conflicting studies out there and my bet is still on whey as the superior post-workout protein, but it's important to realize the answer is far from established at this time.
End Part 1...
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When does Pee Wee hermans new set of movies start coming out?
when he stops playin with himself in the theaters and starts filming.
Pee Wee Ice pick up Silver at Provincials
Cranbrook's Brandon Ouillette tries to score in the Gold medal game against Campbell River. The Cranbrook Pee Wee Tier 2 Ice hockey team pick up silver at the B.C. Championships held in Penticton over Spring Break.
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