Magazine Old
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![]() Feb 1935 BEE KEEPING BEE CULTURE MAGAZINE Old Photos $4.85 Time Remaining: 8d 4h 54m Buy It Now for only: $4.85 |
![]() July 1934 BEE KEEPING BEE CULTURE MAGAZINE Very old $4.85 Time Remaining: 15d 10h 47m Buy It Now for only: $4.85 |
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ThermoWorks The Original Cooking Thermometer/Timer
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DescriptionThe TW362B has a robust design and a slide switch so the unit can be powered off. The well-loved simplicity means you won't need to find the instructions each time you set an alarm. The stylish housing folds the display up for counter use or flat for less obtrusive magnetic mounting to an appliance door. This is a huge kitchen favorite in commercial and home kitchens as well as industrial and lab use. Buy several for the kitchen, the BBQ, the RV, the vacation home or as gifts for friends. Features
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Big Top Cupcake Silicone Bakeware
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DescriptionAs seen on TV. 2 piece mold set made of flexible, non-stick silicone. Bake giant cupcakes! 25x bigger cupcake! Package Includes: cupcake top; cupcake bottom. Bonus! Easy-fill insert and idea book. Use the easy-fill insert to add your favorite filling! Ice cream; pudding; gelatin; fruit; candy; whipped cream. Made of flexible non-stick silicone. Dishwasher safe. Add any filling. Mix and match - make a vanilla top with a chocolate bottom! Perfect for any occasion. The ultimate party activity! Made in China. Features
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Dr. Sears Nibble Tray, Yellow/Green, 12 Months
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DescriptionDr. Sears Nibble Tray - Yellow/Green - 12 MonthsDr. Sears nibble tray from zak designs promotes Dr. sears philosophy of shaping young tastes. Nibbling on fresh, healthy mini-meals helps children (and parents) learn that they don't have to stuff themselves to be satisfied. Children learn that by working with their natural digestive system, they are happier, healthier, and smarter.Features include: •Signature Dr. sears item suggesting grazing, snacking on a variety of foods throughout the day•Detachable 3 section dipping tray with EZ freeze base keeps dip cold, dipping in tasty dips is a fun and easy way to mask foods, all BPA free•Translucent snap-on lids for both "pineapple" tray and "leaf" dip section•Textured food characters molded in the item show parents what kinds of healthy foods to place in the tray and where•Free nutritional insert included - provides dr. sears bio, philosophy, product purpose, nutritional tips, recipe ideas, and web support Features
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Ken Brown's Old English Calligraphy
Sale Price: $19.95 |
DescriptionStep-By-Step Video Instructions for Calligraphy. From the publishers of Crafts Magazine. 1987. 57 minutes. |
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Wild Wild Wrestling: Outrageous Matches from the '50s, '60s, '70s, and '80s [VHS]
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DescriptionA weird trip back in time takes you to the nights when fans of professional wrestlers yelled their lungs out in support of Gorgeous George, Haystacks Calhoun, and Andre the Giant. Wrestling fans of today, who spend as much time trying to follow the soap opera story lines as watching the matches, may at first find some of the classic matches on this tape to be fairly bland. In the old days there were no fancy pyrotechnics, the costumes were seldom more than a pair of trunks and some boots, and the action was usually filmed (and televised) in glorious black and white. But while wrestlers in the old days wore less glitter, the early grapplers knew how to use gimmicks to draw a crowd. The greatest showman of them all, Gorgeous George, whose flowing locks and snobby demeanor couldn't mask his dirty tactics, is seen during his prime in the 1950s. A punishing match from the not-so-distant past shows a young Randy Savage getting mauled within a steel cage by Jerry Lawler. And to satisfy the "something to offend everyone" quota, there is even a bizarre match from the 1970s between two female little people, one of whom is dressed as Pocahontas. --Robert J. McNamara |
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The T.A.M.I. Show Collector's Edition
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DescriptionFilmed in 1964 at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium, this is arguably the very best rock-concert movie ever made, packed start to finish with nearly two hours of absolutely essential performances by an unprecedented group of American and British rock, pop, soul, and Motown legends. Dig this lineup: Marvin Gaye, the Supremes (look for Teri Garr as one of the dancers during "Where Did Our Love Go?"), Chuck Berry, Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, Gerry and the Pacemakers, Leslie Gore, Jan and Dean, a phenomenal James Brown and the Flames, followed (!) by the Rolling Stones rising to the occasion after Brown's legendary performance (Keith Richards has said that performing after Brown was perhaps the biggest mistake the band ever made). Never released on home video, The T.A.M.I. Show was the holy grail of rock-concert movies. Those who have had to make do with substandard and incomplete bootlegs will agree that it was worth the wait for this collector's edition that restores the long-lost Beach Boys set (listen to director Steve Binder's audio commentary for the story behind its removal). --Donald Liebenson Mint condition cover and disc of musical performances from 1964 by The Beach Boys, Jan & Dean, The Supremes, Lesly Gore, The Rolling Stones and more. (Region 1 US & Canada) Features
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Sesame Street: Old School - Volume One (1969-1974)
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DescriptionWhen the Children's Theater Workshop's Sesame Street first aired on television in 1969, it was a revolutionary new show aimed specifically at preschool children--an audience previously untargeted by television programming. Exhaustively-researched and tested on real audiences of preschoolers, this "experiment in kid programming" aimed to teach preschoolers the alphabet, numbers, body parts, rhyming, and basic reasoning skills while thoroughly entertaining them. Through the use of humor, the amazing puppetry of Frank Oz and Jim Henson, animation, the incredibly catchy music of Joe Raposo and Jeffrey Moss, and a fast-action pace borrowed from the television commercial format, Sesame Street was, and still is, more successful at educating and entertaining children than anyone initially imagined. What's more, the lessons learned by generations of preschoolers went far beyond simple school-readiness skills to include values like acceptance, cooperation, and inclusiveness because the urban Sesame Street was a place populated by people and monsters young viewers could identify with, where anything could happen, and where every ethnicity, generation, and species co-existed and interacted harmoniously. Sesame Street: Old School Volume 1 1969-1974 offers a sampling of the first five seasons of Sesame Street and includes the first episode of each season in its entirety as well as a large selection of classic segments from each season highlighting some of the most memorable sketches ("Bein' Green," "Rubber Duckie," "Whistle a Happy Tune," and Super-Grover in "Telephone Booth"), favorite human characters like Bob and Mr. Hooper, and guest appearances by celebrities like Bill Cosby, Lena Horne, Jackie Robinson, Carol Burnett, and Jesse Jackson. Adult viewers will be transported back in time as they witness Bert's frustration with his ever-noisy roommate Ernie, chuckle at the antics of Grover and his demanding customer in Grover's Restaurant, and wonder if Snuffleupagus will ever show himself to someone besides Big Bird. Other well-remembered moments include pinball number count, the baker who inevitably tumbles down the stairway with a handful of cream pies, the ever-munching Cookie Monster, "Here is Your Life" segments, Bert "Doin' the Pigeon," and the inevitably grumpy Oscar the Grouch. Post-Elmo preschoolers and their parents will laugh, learn, grow, and connect with one another as they share this classic compilation of Sesame Street moments. Bonus features include the original sales pitch reel (introduced by Joan Ganz Cooney and hosted by Kermit the Frog and Rowlf the Dog) and a thick booklet rich with history, trivia, and a pullout activity section for children. (Ages 2 and older) --Tami Horiuchi Five complete episodes from the series's first five years are included in a three-disc set. Features appearances by James Earl Jones, Jesse Jackson, Johnny Cash, and Jackie Robinson, plus such fondly remembered segments as "Rubber Duckie" and "C Is for Cookie." 7 1/3 hrs. total. Standard; Soundtrack: English Dolby Digital stereo; bonus episodes; more. **5 episodes on 3 discs. 7 1/3 hrs.** Features
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The Hunger
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DescriptionCatherine Deneuve and David Bowie are rich, beautiful, and oh-so chic as denizens of the night. Dressed in sleek outfits and stylish sunglasses, they haunt rock & roll clubs on the prowl for young blood, whom they bring home to their impossibly luxurious mansion for a late-night snack. Being a vampire never looked more sexy, but there's a price: Bowie starts to age so fast he wrinkles up in the waiting room of a doctor's (Susan Sarandon) office. The agelessly elegant Deneuve, evoking Delphine Seyrig's Countess Bathory from Daughters of Darkness, is perfectly cast as a millenniums-old bloodsucker who seeks a new mate in Sarandon and seduces her in a sunlight-bathed afternoon of smooth, silky sex. Tony Scott's (Ridley's brother) directorial debut, adapted from the Whitley Strieber novel, revises the vampire myth with Egyptian inflections and removes all references to garlic and crosses and wooden stakes--these bloodsuckers can even walk around in the daylight--but the ties between blood and sex are as strong as ever. Scott's background as an award-winning commercial director is evident in every richly textured frame and his densely interwoven editing, but the moody atmosphere comes at the expense of dramatic urgency. At times the film is so languid it becomes mired in its hazy, impeccably designed visual style. In its own way, The Hunger is the perfect vampire film for the '80s, all poise and attitude and surface beauty. Sarandon talks candidly about the film in the documentary The Celluloid Closet. --Sean Axmaker Catherine Deneuve and David Bowie star as ages-old vampires looking for new blood and companionship...and find it in the form of Susan Sarandon. Stylish, frightening chiller with some hot erotic moments, including a controversial love-making scene with Deneuve and Sarandon, from director Tony Scott. 96 min. Widescreen (Enhanced); Soundtracks: English Dolby Digital mono, French Dolby Digital mono; Subtitles: English, Spanish, French; theatrical trailer; audio commentary; photo gallery. |
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Girls, Guns and G-Strings: The Andy Sidaris Collection (12 Film Set)
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DescriptionAction auteur Andy Sedaris tribute opens with the seaside sizzler "Malibu Express" (1985), starring Darby Hinton, Sybil Danning. An island paradise goes to Hell, in "Hard Ticket to Hawaii" (1987). Ronn Moss, Dona Spier star. A spy and a squad of Playmates pull the "Picasso Trigger" (1988); Steve Bond, Hope Marie Carlton star. "Savage Beach" (1989) finds Speir and Carlton up to their breasts in trouble! With Teri Weigel. "Guns" (1990) shoots from Hawaii to Las Vegas. With Erik Estrada, Roberta Vasquez. It's Speir and Vasquez versus thug Pat Morita, in "Do or Die" (1991), with Estrada. Babes are "Hard Hunted" (1992) when foiling a dastardly heist. Tony Peck, Spier star. Suzi Simpson and Tai Collins hunt for "Enemy Gold" (1993). With Julie Strain. "The Dallas Connection" (1994) finds babes out to steal an anti-terrorist weapon. Strain, Mark Barriere star. Gals "Fit to Kill" (1993) recover a lost diamond. Spier, Vasquez star. Strain and Shae Marks take on the "Day of the Warrior" (1997), with Julie K. Smith. And Strain leads L.E.T.H.A.L. femmes on a "Return to Savage Beach" (1997). With Marks, Marcus "Buff" Bagwell. 18 1/2 hrs. total on three discs. Soundtrack: English Dolby Digital stereo. |
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The Great Race
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DescriptionKitchen sink comic salute to silent slapstick from Blake Edwards follows a pack of wacky racers, including stalwart hero Tony Curtis, dastardly villain Jack Lemmon, and femme fatale Natalie Wood, on a 22,000-mile road race from New York to Paris in 1908. Peter Falk, Keenan Wynn, Vivian Vance, Larry Storch and Ross Martin also star. 160 min. Widescreen (Enhanced); Soundtracks: English Dolby Digital 5.1, French; Subtitles: English, Chinese, French, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish, Thai; "making of" documentary; biographies; trailer. Director Blake Edwards, fresh from the success of the first two Pink Panther movies, indulged his love of classic slapstick comedy with this long free-for-all, which throws in everything but Laurel and Hardy's kitchen sink. The film reunites Some Like It Hot stars Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon, ably aided by a spunky Natalie Wood. The subject is a New-York-to-Paris auto race in the early years of the 20th century, pitting the Great Leslie (Curtis), a goody-goody dressed all in white--even his teeth sparkle--against the malevolent Professor Fate (Lemmon), whose coal-black heart is reflected in his handlebar mustache. He looks like a bill collector from a silent- movie melodrama. Lemmon does double duty, also playing the pampered, drunken king of a small European country, whose laugh sounds like the wail of a cat in heat. The film may be too long for its own good, and you really have to love Jack Lemmon to put up with his over-the-top performance, but it's side-splitting in spots. It's one of those movies, if seen in childhood, that stays in your mind for years afterward. Some of the bigger routines, such as a pie fight of epic proportions, don't work as well as the simple chemistry between the perpetually exasperated Professor Fate and his much-abused assistant, Max (a terrific Peter Falk). Push the button, Max. --Robert Horton Features
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