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Drawing#198: Monster Energy Logo

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Logo Monsters Items of Interest


Green Bay Packers Crystal Freezer Mug - Monster SizeGreen Bay Packers Crystal Freezer Mug - Monster Size

The latest, greatest and coldest! Made by Duck House Sports.


SYSTEM OF A DOWN MONSTERS MAGNETSYSTEM OF A DOWN MONSTERS MAGNET

MONSTERS - FOR REFRIGERATORS LOCKERS AND MOST METAL SURFACES -APPROXIMATLEY 2 X 3 INCHES


A.N.T. FarmA.N.T. Farm

A.N.T. Farm stars China Anne McClain, who plays Chyna Parks, an 11-year old musical prodigy. Chyna sings and plays every single instrument and is the latest addition to the Advanced Natural Talents (A.N.T.) Program - a program for talented and gifted kids to skip middle school and go right to high school. The series depicts the new fish-out-of-water Chyna Parks and her fellow A.N.T.s. in the sometimes daunting world of high school - three years earlier than expected.


Wow! Wow! Wubbzy!: Wubbzy's Big MovieWow! Wow! Wubbzy!: Wubbzy's Big Movie

Wubbzy and his friends Widgit and Walden love to have fun, try new things, and help others. And in their first movie, the gang realizes just how important friendship can be. Wubbzy, Walden, and Widgit are getting ready to have their annual picture taken, but Wubbzy just can't seem to stay clean. Whether it's the lure of playing in a mud puddle, helping a woman retrieve her lost parrot, or a flaw in one of Widgit's inventions, Wubbzy seems destined to get dirty before picture time. Will Wubbzy and his friends ever manage to get their picture taken? Once the picture dilemma is resolved, Wubbzy trips, hits his head, and gets a bad case of "knockety noggin." The doctor suggests that Widgit and Walden describe some past experiences to help Wubbzy regain his memory and the pair embarks on a retelling of past adventures that's really a stringing together of previously seen episodes. It's very disappointing that this "new" movie is largely a conglomeration of previously seen episodes. Nevertheless, it's entertaining fun for children ages 3 to 7 with wholesome messages about friendship, helping others, and believing in oneself. --Tami Horiuchi

Stills from Wow! Wow! Wubbzy!: Wubbzy's Big Movie (Click for larger image)









Beyond Wow! Wow! Wubbzy!: Wubbzy's Big Movie
Wow! Wow! Wubbzy!: A Tale of Tails

Wow! Wow! Wubbzy!: Pirate Treasure

The Wow! Wow! Wubbzy! Store




U2 - Vertigo 2005 - Live From ChicagoU2 - Vertigo 2005 - Live From Chicago

When he isn't rubbing shoulders with the likes of Kofi Annan and George W. Bush, the activist Bono has a side project he likes to call "U2." U2: Vertigo - Live From Chicago captures the band on two nights during their tour to support How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb. Once known for taking the most technologically extravagant shows on the road, the boys from Dublin have settled into a comfortable role of rock elder statesmen, placing emphasis on the anthems and weepers of their considerable body of work rather than gigantic lemons that descend from the rafters. Always a band that reflects the zeitgeist, this concert film finds them at their earnest best, with comparatively stripped-down stage production and superbly recorded sound. To call U2's more rocking songs "anthems" borders on understatement, and it is their anthems that ring most exuberantly in Chicago's United Center. Bono understandably looks heavier and wearier than in days past, perhaps due to the weight of the world he has hoisted onto his shoulders. While the icon roams the circular stage around the Metallica-style "snakepit," The Edge, drummer Larry Mullen Jr., and bassist Adam Clayton pin the songs to the floorboards and take them to the heavens. How can these guys not play fantastically together? Standouts include hits both classic and newly minted, among them "Beautiful Day," "New Year's Day," "Pride (In the Name of Love)," and "Sunday Bloody Sunday." Late in the concert Bono makes his appeal to the leaders of the world to end extreme poverty, invoking the imagination of a country that put a man on the moon. Ingeniously, he asks the crowd to take out their cell phones and text-message an account that operates as a petition to end world hunger. With the stadium aglow in LED screens, the band smoothly glides into "One." Elsewhere, Bono invokes religion, donning a headband decorated with Islamic, Jewish, and Christian symbols, assuming the appearance of a grizzled No Nukes protester circa 1975. (Perhaps this is a new persona akin to The Fly?) Kidding aside, these may be days in which we need the uplift and passion of U2 more than the 1990s, when they dressed up as the Village People and occasionally performed at K-Mart. Not suitable for those who don't wish to save the world. --Ryan Boudinot


Pretty Much Dead AlreadyPretty Much Dead Already




The Munsters: The Complete SeriesThe Munsters: The Complete Series

Season One
It has its own stormy weather and fire-breathing housepet named Spot, but the mansion at 1313 Mockingbird Heights is otherwise like any other American sitcom home. This is the address of the Munsters, the family that for two seasons, 1964-66, found a permanent place in pop culture--if not "monster" success. Developed by Leave It to Beaver team Joe Connelly and Bob Mosher, the series was a standard sitcom (complete with the same awful canned laughter), except that the Ward Cleaver character was a reanimated corpse.

Dad Herman (Fred Gwynne) was a Frankenstein's monster, mom Lily (Yvonne DeCarlo) and Grandpa (Al Lewis) were vampires, and son Eddie (Butch Patrick) a little wolf-boy. Munster niece Marilyn was inexplicably normal, which prompted much worry from the other members of the family (she was played in early episodes by Beverly Owen, who left to get married, and then by Pat Priest). The plots revolve around typically tortured sitcom situations: Herman must lose weight to fit into his old Army uniform, Herman has insomnia, Herman takes dance lessons from a crooked instructor. (As that list would suggest, 6'5" Fred Gwynne's wonderfully agile slapstick and Borscht Belt comedy made him the center of the show.) What distinguished The Munsters from Father Knows Best was the Universal horror-movie lineage and the ghoulish one-liners (the latter growing a bit tedious after a while). The three-disc DVD has all 38 first-season episodes in excellent transfers, a 15-minute pilot with different actors as Lily and Eddie, and no extras or commentaries. High points include "Hot Rod Herman," which features the tricked-out Munster Koach and Drag-u-la (boss wagons both), and "Eddie's Nickname," the one where Grandpa gives Eddie a potion that causes the boy's beard to grow (a weirdly memorable image, if you're a kid). The show was either pure kiddie farce or a radical comment on the absurdly unreal world of sitcoms. Either way, if you grew up with them as an alternate TV family, you can't help but have warm feelings for the Munsters, as clammy as they are. --Robert Horton

Season Two
The second and final season of The Munsters seamlessly carries on the sardonic picture of family life painted in the monster-comedy's first year. Family head Herman Munster (Fred Gwynne) continues to vacillate between thick-headedness and intellectual posturing. His wife, Lily (Yvonne DeCarol), has her feet on the ground, even if her daughter-of-Dracula looks skew her idea of beauty and grace. Grandpa (Al Lewis), the irascible vampire, spends his time concocting mad inventions and criticizing Herman. Young Eddie (Butch Patrick) goes to school and acts like any other kid except, well, he isn't. And lovely Marilyn (Pat Priest) is still stuck with low self-esteem, convinced by her Uncle Herman, Aunt Lily and Grandpa that she's an unattractive woman who scares away potential suitors. In the opening episode, "Herman's Child Psychology," Herman disastrously attempts to convince Eddie not to run away from home by acting as if his son's behavior is no big deal. The very funny "Herman, the Master Spy" finds the big man taken aboard a Russian submarine, where the undersea comrades assume he must be some sort of strange fish. "A Man for Marilyn" concerns Grandpa's ridiculous effort to turn a frog into a handsome boyfriend for Marilyn, an experiment he assumes must have worked when a good-looking guy turns up at the Munster home. (The fellow is there because he assumes Marilyn is being held against her will by monsters.) "Big Heap Herman" is a particularly silly but enjoyable story about an Indian tribe that has been awaiting the arrival of a god who looks, of course, like Herman.

Along with seasons one and two on The Munsters: The Complete Series are a couple of post-TV series, theatrical movies of differing quality. In Munster, Go Home, Herman discovers he's the new lord of Munster Hall in England. Crossing the Atlantic with his family to claim his inheritance, Herman is met with hostility by the would-be heirs (played by Terry-Thomas and Hermione Gingold) and a plot to eliminate him from a car race. While the film takes something away from The Munsters by placing them in foreign territory, Munster, Go Home is still a lot of fun. Less so is the cheap-looking The Munsters' Revenge, a 1981 potboiler in which Herman and Grandpa are charged with crimes committed by robot monsters from a wax museum. Hard to watch and kind of greasy-looking, Revenge is instantly forgettable, even with Sid Caesar's participation. --Tom Keogh


Monster High Liquid Sticker Sheet (1) Party SuppliesMonster High Liquid Sticker Sheet (1) Party Supplies

Includes (1) sheet of (8) assorted Monster High Liquid Stickers.


Social Distortion - Lil Monster Refillable LighterSocial Distortion - Lil Monster Refillable Lighter

Skelli along with the title to Social Distortion's 1983 release "Mommy's Little Monster" is featured on this black lighter. Flip-top style and refillable for years of use.


16 Pack - Monster Assault Energy Drink - 16oz.16 Pack - Monster Assault Energy Drink - 16oz.

At Monster we're not for 'the War', against 'the War', or any war for that matter. We put the 'camo' pattern on our new Monster Assault can because we think it looks cool. We'll leave politics to the politicians and just keep doing what we do best - make the meanest energy supplements on the planet! Grab a Monster Assault and viva la revolution!



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