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Dan Band Live
List Price: $14.98
Sale Price: $9.61
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All products are BRAND NEW and factory sealed. Fast shipping and 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed.
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Phenomenon
List Price: $14.98
Sale Price: $1.97
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LL handles the mic confidently, almost too confidently, on Phenomenon, his seventh album. Whether he's going on about a messed-up father-figure, working on the ladies ("Nobody Can Freak You," "Phenomenon"), or "making a rhyme with every syllable of your name" ("4,3,2,1"), you can't help but feel like he's just selling you something. LL has built himself up considerably from the skinny punk rocking the bells in '85 to a true celebrity phenomenon, but somewhere on that journey he lost his soul. Strangely, the best tracks on the album employ guest vocalists like Busta Rhymes (on "Starsky & Hutch"), Cannibus and Method Man (both on "4,3,2,1"), where the guests unintentionally feel like the voices of ghosts, reminding LL of what it was like when rap music sold the beats and lyrics, instead of breakfast cereal and khakis. --Todd Levin
Def Jam, 539186-2, 10 Track
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Starsky & Hutch
List Price: $17.98
Sale Price: $11.30
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The accompanying film recreates the original vibe of the '70s television show so brilliantly it's no wonder the producers decided to stick with the real thing for the soundtrack to Ben Stiller and Owen Wilson's hilarious remake of Starsky & Hutch. So no embarrassing contributions from Sugar Ray or OutKast (Anyone remember the unfortunate "Land of a Million Drums" from the Scooby Doo movie?), but a great if slightly used roller-disco soundtrack courtesy of the Jackson Five ("Dancing Machine") and KC & The Sunshine Band ("That's The Way I Like It"), balanced out by some marshmallow pop like Starland Vocal Band's "Afternoon Delight" and earnest country rock by Johnny Cash ("Folsom Prison Blues") and Waylon Jennings ("I'm a Ramblin' Man"). This is what the radio used to sound like before the robots took over. --Aidin Vaziri
TVT Soundtrax, TV 6700-2, 2004 15 Track
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![Starsky & Hutch [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/514R24BCCDL._SL160_.jpg) |
Starsky & Hutch [VHS]
List Price: $58.97
Sale Price: $1.48
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Ben Stiller and Owen Wilson--dark, wiry, and tense meets blond, lanky, and loose--make a solid comic team (and previously appeared together in Zoolander), but the funniest man in Starsky and Hutch is Vince Vaughn. Vaughn dives into his role as a sleazy drug dealer (who nonetheless buys a pony for his daughter's bat mitzvah) with the offhand zest that he brings to almost every role (from Swingers to Old School) and effortlessly steals every scene he's in. Vaughn has concocted a new and undetectable kind of cocaine, and only two cops who aren't afraid to break the rules--our titular pair--can catch him. But the plot isn't the point; mocking-yet-loving jabs at the '70s, including the homoerotic overtones of Starsky and Hutch's partnership, are what this movie is about. The satire is surprisingly mild but entertaining nonetheless, particularly when Vaughn or Snoop Dogg (as informant Huggy Bear) hold the screen. --Bret Fetzer
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Beavis and Butt-Head Do America (10th Anniversary Special Collector's Edition)
List Price: $12.99
Sale Price: $6.33
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When their beloved television is stolen ("This sucks more than anything that has sucked before!"), Beavis and Butt-head get up off their couch and set out on a wild cross-country quest from Las Vegas to the White House to find it--and maybe finally "score" with a woman while they're at it--in the metal-loving MTV cartoon cretins' hit debut feature. Voices by creator Mike Judge, Robert Stack, Cloris Leachman, and an unbilled Demi Moore and Bruce Willis. 80 min. Widescreen (Enhanced); Soundtracks: English Dolby Digital 5.1, Dolby Digital stereo Surround; Subtitles: English; audio commentary; "making of" documentary; featurettes; TV spots; bonus shorts "12 Days of Beavis," "Celebrity Shorts"; more.
Mike Judge, the creator and voice of MTV's insouciant Beavis and Butt-head characters, made his feature film directorial debut with this full-length B&B misadventure, which finds the boys going on a cross-country adventure after their all-important television set is stolen. Fans of the now-defunct TV show will obviously enjoy this film the most, though almost anyone with a passing awareness of the characters will find something to chuckle about. (The funniest recurring gag finds beleaguered B&B neighbor Tom Anderson constantly sabotaged by the guys while on vacation.) Celebrity voices are fun to pick out, particularly that of David Letterman, who rather appropriately plays Butt-head's long-lost father. --Tom Keogh
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Starsky & Hutch - The Complete First Season
List Price: $19.99
Sale Price: $13.48
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In the rough-and-tumble, wildly entertaining world of Starsky & Hutch, impatient cops--anxious to join a foot race in pursuit of a villain--throw themselves out of moving vehicles and roll to a bruising stop. Undercover detectives Dave Starsky (Paul Michael Glaser) and Ken "Hutch" Hutchinson (David Soul), hardly imbued with the powers of Spider-Man, routinely scale walls, hop from rooftop to rooftop, and fling themselves down steep hillsides to stop bad guys from doing what bad guys do. Two years before Hill Street Blues redefined the cop genre as a mesh of overlapping storylines and workaday frustrations, Aaron Spelling's Starsky & Hutch capped a five-year run (1975-1979) portraying LA's finest as madly heroic creatures of reckless determination and physicality. The Complete First Season reminds us how startlingly brutal this primetime series could be while maintaining a delightful, often incongruous, self-deprecating humor. From the series pilot on, partners and best pals Starsky and Hutch work a fine line between predator and prey, relentlessly pursuing suspects while also snared by crime chieftains or short-sighted superiors. In "The Fix," Hutch's secret romance with the former girlfriend of a mafia boss (Robert Loggia) results in the lawman's kidnapping and forced addiction to heroin. Similarly, in "A Coffin for Starsky," a mad chemist injects the wisecracking cop with a slow-acting but lethal poison. "Jo-Jo," written by Michael Mann, finds our guys at loggerheads with federal officers over a dumb deal the G-Men make with a serial rapist. The 23 episodes in this set are all fun, if sometimes shocking, viewing. Expect each character to take as much abuse as he dishes out. Still, the comic sight of Starsky and Hutch (in "Death Notice") trying to conduct business amidst busy strippers is well worth the surrounding violence. --Tom Keogh
All 23 episodes from season one--including "Savage Sunday," "The Fix," "Kill Huggy Bear," "The Omaha Tiger," and "The Bounty Hunter"--are included in a five-disc set. 20 hrs. total. Standard; Soundtracks: English, Spanish; interviews; featurettes; "making of" documentary; TV spots. **23 episodes on 5 discs. 20 hrs.**
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Starsky & Hutch (Widescreen Edition)
List Price: $12.97
Sale Price: $1.50
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In Starsky & Hutch the origins of the charismatic crime-fighting duo David Starsky and Ken "Hutch" Hutchinson are explored when these undercover Bay City detectives are partnered for their very first assignment. Ben Stiller plays the tightly wound Detective David Starsky who is thrown together with Owen Wilson's easygoing Detective Ken Hutchinson on a high-stakes case. Platinum-selling rapper and actor Snoop Dogg plays their savvy street informant Huggy Bear. Vince Vaughn also joins the cast as Reese Feldman a smooth-talking entrepreneur with an eye towards the future.Running Time: 100 min.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: COMEDY UPC: 085392840328 Manufacturer No: 28403
Ben Stiller and Owen Wilson--dark, wiry, and tense meets blond, lanky, and loose--make a solid comic team (and previously appeared together in Zoolander), but the funniest man in Starsky and Hutch is Vince Vaughn. Vaughn dives into his role as a sleazy drug dealer (who nonetheless buys a pony for his daughter's bat mitzvah) with the offhand zest that he brings to almost every role (from Swingers to Old School) and effortlessly steals every scene he's in. Vaughn has concocted a new and undetectable kind of cocaine, and only two cops who aren't afraid to break the rules--our titular pair--can catch him. But the plot isn't the point; mocking-yet-loving jabs at the '70s, including the homoerotic overtones of Starsky and Hutch's partnership, are what this movie is about. The satire is surprisingly mild but entertaining nonetheless, particularly when Vaughn or Snoop Dogg (as informant Huggy Bear) hold the screen. --Bret Fetzer
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1969 Dodge Charger "General Lee" diecast model car Dukes of Hazzard 1:18 scale die cast by Ertl
Sale Price: $38.98
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Beautifully crafted 1969 Dodge Charger "General Lee" diecast model car Dukes of Hazzard 1:18 scale die cast by Ertl. This is a very highly detailed 1969 Dodge Charger "General Lee" diecast model car Dukes of Hazzard 1:18 scale die cast by Ertl. Every details are well put together. Great collectible or gift piece. 1969 Dodge Charger "General Lee" diecast model car Dukes of Hazzard 1:18 scale die cast by Ertl is one of the best showcase model for any auto enthusiasts.
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Serengeti Pilot 7160 Sunglasses Featuring Cable Temples
List Price: $210.00
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Sunglasses - Serengeti Pilot 7160 Sunglasses Featuring Cable Temples - Combining cutting edge optical technology with contemporary design, Serengeti sunglasses have long been the favorite choice for driving enthusiasts, aircraft pilots, celebrities (including "Grey's Anatomy's" Patrick Dempsey) & fashionistas. Our Serengti Pilots feature wire cable temples which wrap entirely around the ears for an extra-secure fit. Available in a Gun Metal color frame with spring hinges on the temples along with the Driver's Gradient lens which provides exceptional clarity and confidence in all light conditions (24% trasmittance lightend lens / 9% transmittance darkened lens). Plus, all of our Serengetis feature Photochromic lenses which contain molecules inside the the lenses that light and darken instinctively with the changing light and takes the stress of your eyes. Since this technology is engineered into the glass, it will never wear off or wear out!!! The lenses also feature Spectral Control which filters out specific colors within the visible light spectrum resulting in crisper color and clearer images, plus this also blocks the distracting blue light which causes blurring, that in turn, creates eye strain and eye fatigue.
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Cars That Started on TV
Every TV show has some type of signature that is known for. Seinfeld as the diner, Friends was centered around their apartment, but nothing beats a show that features a muscle car. You find yourself waiting for the scenes when they jump in and start tearing up the streets. The next thing you know you see the same cars driving around in your neighborhood because everyone wants to be like Mike.
The 1969 Dodge Charger for the Dukes of Hazzard was just such a vehicle. With the big old Confederate flag on the roof, generally was a fixture on our television for about six years. The Duke boys managed to out run the sheriff on many an occasion because no car could fly around like General Lee.
Herbie did not have nearly the punch of General Lee, but the 1963 Volkswagen Beetle sure did have some pretty good moves. The car was first featured on the small screen in the late 60s and early 70s and then finally became a star in 2005 when it hit the big screen. Herbie may not have been able to fly like General Lee, but the Porsche 356 engine was enough to get it around the track and take out a couple races.
The late 60s and early 70s produced some of the hottest muscle cars on the planet. Today's cars may have a little more horsepower, but very few of them can make an entrance like the cars of that era. Another monster to go from small screen to big is a 1974 Ford Gran Torino. Starsky and Hutch took down the bad guys in this bright red and white striped Ford that sported a 351 Cleveland and four barrel Holley carburetor. He lived for the trademark moment when Starsky would slide across the hood and then jump behind the wheel and snag a bad guys. The car may have been done a little injustice when it went to the big screen but it's still brought back the memories of one of the best muscle cars of the 70s.
The first time this band was featured in TV it was actually animated, but how can you ever possibly lead out Scooby Doo and the 1972 Bedford CF Mystery Machine. Sporting about 20 different colors splashed in various patterns, the van came to life in 2002 as Scooby Doo went Hollywood.
Not every vehicle was able to make the transition from TV to big screen as movies often adapt them to the current times that they were shot in. It's quite a shame as you would love to see some of those old 60s television shows have the same cars that they were originally shot with.
The one thing that has always amazed me is when a TV show has been turned into a movie and the first thing that comes out of the guy's mouth after the movie is over is that they just cannot believe that they didn't use the original car. Just another point of how obsessed we are with the cars that we see in television and movies.
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A music from the Starsky and Hutch movie?
Which R&B (hip-hop) song starts with police siren and was in the Starsky&Hutch movie. The performer's style seems like Destiny's Child or 211.
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Caught In The Act Although Octopussy initially puts herself between Bond and his mission it is a surprising alliance against the double crossing Kamal Kahn that bring these two together.
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