Star Wars Artists In most cases, what do UFOs usually turn out to be?
Aunt Marge in her Hyundai?
Little Kittens that have hijacked a go kart?
Space Dust?
Wandering hillbillies?
Trapeze artists practicing for the next big show?
A Reincarnated Bob Marley on his new harley?
Twins with too much doublemint gum?
Filming of yet another Star Wars movie?
When George Lucas wanted to transform his screenplay for Star Wars into a film, he turned to the concept artist Ralph McQuarrie. These action figure sets take McQuarrie's original concept designs and sculpt them into a unique group of action figures that are both comfortingly familiar - and surprisingly different...
The classic all time best selling Suckadelic figure is back in a new edition for 2011. This 3 3/4" resin figure is on a silk screened card back. Each handmade piece is assembled and "splattered" by the Sucklord himself...
The Boba Fett Artist Portfolio consists of 11 images (12 x 17) taken from the original crew gift drawn by Joe Johnston for the Empire Strikes Back and given to select members of the pre-production staff in March of 1978...
Get dancing with your Playstation 3! Dancing is a fundamental mode of expression that may have preceded speaking language. What do you mean you can't dance? Get Up And Dance is the ultimate dancing game for everyone to play, whether you are the star performer or prefer to stay out of the limelight as a backing dancer, Get Up And Dance is for you...
Yoostar is the revolutionary new entertainment system that lets YOO star in scenes from movies, TV shows and NBA games -- and share those scenes with family, friends and everyone. The Yoostar Entertainment System gives you everything you need to turn your home into a movie studio -- studio-grade web cam, portable green screen and stand, wireless remote, Yoostar software for your PC (Mac version coming soon), plus 12 movie scenes and 2 bonus scenes to start.
Rugged, powerful gang epic from Taylor Hackford ("An Officer and a Gentleman") detailing the lives of two Hispanic brothers and their half-Anglo cousin as they struggle for survival in the violence-filled barrios of East L...
Andy Griffith plays a Southern singer catapulted to fame, with dehumanizing effects, in this early look at "television celebrity" from director Elia Kazan. Patricia Neal, Walter Matthau and Lee Remick co-star; screenplay by Budd Schulberg...
Join everyone's favorite red monster for a fun filled story featuring some of the most popular Elmo segments ever! Elmo meets a robot on Sesame Street who is losing his power. The robot is a "Memorybot", and he needs "memories" to power up again...
Those '67 Blues is an enlightening action novel of U.S. naval aviators aboard an aircraft carrier on Yankee Station during the Vietnam War. Sortie rates and aircraft losses trended strongly upward through the autumn months of 1967...
Feel the force of the pencil, get creative and bring "Star Wars" to life on the page. Follow the expert tips, tracings, fold out pages and stencils and draw body shapes which pack a punch (or a lightsabre), inspiring action poses, spectacular vehicles, out-of-this-world clothes and futuristic equipment...
Well, you've stumped me on one; but here goes for the rest.
1. 33 years — the longest recorded strike in history.
2. Jane was portrayed by the luscious, Maureen O'Sullivan.
3. I believe that would be against Ralph Bakshi (who also gave us the first X-Rated cartoon, "Fritz the Cat).
4. You got me here… The "Howard House" was built in 1850 and lasted till 1904, and then a new hotel called "The New Howard Hotel was built in 1906. So I'm just going to guess that it was Elevators.
5. Wonderfully entitled "The Wicked Bible." Also referred to by the inimitable Ben Jonson as "The Adulterer's Bible"
6. The preposterously named, Dr. Dionysus Lardener. (I've actually thought about this quote many times, particularly while "lead-footing" it on the Autobahn. It always brings a smile to my face).
7. Captain John W. Trimmer.
8. No, it's myth. In fact most birds have atrocious senses of smell. However, if you unduly disturb the nest, the returning mother may regard the nest site as unsafe and abandon it along with the eggs and hatchlings. This is undoubtedly how the myth got started.
9. The Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. In fact, Hitler was twice rejected, in 1907 and again in 1908. I've always wondered how history might have been different if the Academy had accepted him.
10. At the time, a "Macaroni" was someone obsessed with looking good. Later the term "Fop" or "Dandy" would take it's place. Yankee Doodle undoubtedly though himself quite "rakish" with his stylish feather. An 18th century "Up Yours" statement, no doubt.
Cheers. And please, let me know the answer to # 4. I'm curious… Thanks.
My friend Will is a pretty smart guy – and a sharp dresser, too!
10) Back then, macaroni was only eaten by the richest people in America. Poor people ate potatoes and bread, but rich people could afford such exotic fare. By extension, anything that smacked of rich people and their elitism was called "Macaroni."
When Yankee Doodle came to town, he saw that he was poorly dressed, wearing a knit cap instead of a proper hat, so to improve it, he stuck a feather in it, and then called it 'macaroni' in order to make fun of rich people and their airs.
Well, you've stumped me on one; but here goes for the rest.
1. 33 years — the longest recorded strike in history.
2. Jane was portrayed by the luscious, Maureen O'Sullivan.
3. I believe that would be against Ralph Bakshi (who also gave us the first X-Rated cartoon, "Fritz the Cat).
4. You got me here… The "Howard House" was built in 1850 and lasted till 1904, and then a new hotel called "The New Howard Hotel was built in 1906. So I'm just going to guess that it was Elevators.
5. Wonderfully entitled "The Wicked Bible." Also referred to by the inimitable Ben Jonson as "The Adulterer's Bible"
6. The preposterously named, Dr. Dionysus Lardener. (I've actually thought about this quote many times, particularly while "lead-footing" it on the Autobahn. It always brings a smile to my face).
7. Captain John W. Trimmer.
8. No, it's myth. In fact most birds have atrocious senses of smell. However, if you unduly disturb the nest, the returning mother may regard the nest site as unsafe and abandon it along with the eggs and hatchlings. This is undoubtedly how the myth got started.
9. The Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. In fact, Hitler was twice rejected, in 1907 and again in 1908. I've always wondered how history might have been different if the Academy had accepted him.
10. At the time, a "Macaroni" was someone obsessed with looking good. Later the term "Fop" or "Dandy" would take it's place. Yankee Doodle undoubtedly though himself quite "rakish" with his stylish feather. An 18th century "Up Yours" statement, no doubt.
Cheers. And please, let me know the answer to # 4. I'm curious… Thanks.
Well, you've stumped me on one; but here goes for the rest.
1. 33 years — the longest recorded strike in history.
2. Jane was portrayed by the luscious, Maureen O'Sullivan.
3. I believe that would be against Ralph Bakshi (who also gave us the first X-Rated cartoon, "Fritz the Cat).
4. You got me here… The "Howard House" was built in 1850 and lasted till 1904, and then a new hotel called "The New Howard Hotel was built in 1906. So I'm just going to guess that it was Elevators.
5. Wonderfully entitled "The Wicked Bible." Also referred to by the inimitable Ben Jonson as "The Adulterer's Bible"
6. The preposterously named, Dr. Dionysus Lardener. (I've actually thought about this quote many times, particularly while "lead-footing" it on the Autobahn. It always brings a smile to my face).
7. Captain John W. Trimmer.
8. No, it's myth. In fact most birds have atrocious senses of smell. However, if you unduly disturb the nest, the returning mother may regard the nest site as unsafe and abandon it along with the eggs and hatchlings. This is undoubtedly how the myth got started.
9. The Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. In fact, Hitler was twice rejected, in 1907 and again in 1908. I've always wondered how history might have been different if the Academy had accepted him.
10. At the time, a "Macaroni" was someone obsessed with looking good. Later the term "Fop" or "Dandy" would take it's place. Yankee Doodle undoubtedly though himself quite "rakish" with his stylish feather. An 18th century "Up Yours" statement, no doubt.
Cheers. And please, let me know the answer to # 4. I'm curious… Thanks.
Well, you've stumped me on one; but here goes for the rest.
1. 33 years — the longest recorded strike in history.
2. Jane was portrayed by the luscious, Maureen O'Sullivan.
3. I believe that would be against Ralph Bakshi (who also gave us the first X-Rated cartoon, "Fritz the Cat).
4. You got me here… The "Howard House" was built in 1850 and lasted till 1904, and then a new hotel called "The New Howard Hotel was built in 1906. So I'm just going to guess that it was Elevators.
5. Wonderfully entitled "The Wicked Bible." Also referred to by the inimitable Ben Jonson as "The Adulterer's Bible"
6. The preposterously named, Dr. Dionysus Lardener. (I've actually thought about this quote many times, particularly while "lead-footing" it on the Autobahn. It always brings a smile to my face).
7. Captain John W. Trimmer.
8. No, it's myth. In fact most birds have atrocious senses of smell. However, if you unduly disturb the nest, the returning mother may regard the nest site as unsafe and abandon it along with the eggs and hatchlings. This is undoubtedly how the myth got started.
9. The Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. In fact, Hitler was twice rejected, in 1907 and again in 1908. I've always wondered how history might have been different if the Academy had accepted him.
10. At the time, a "Macaroni" was someone obsessed with looking good. Later the term "Fop" or "Dandy" would take it's place. Yankee Doodle undoubtedly though himself quite "rakish" with his stylish feather. An 18th century "Up Yours" statement, no doubt.
Cheers. And please, let me know the answer to # 4. I'm curious… Thanks.
My friend Will is a pretty smart guy – and a sharp dresser, too!
10) Back then, macaroni was only eaten by the richest people in America. Poor people ate potatoes and bread, but rich people could afford such exotic fare. By extension, anything that smacked of rich people and their elitism was called "Macaroni."
When Yankee Doodle came to town, he saw that he was poorly dressed, wearing a knit cap instead of a proper hat, so to improve it, he stuck a feather in it, and then called it 'macaroni' in order to make fun of rich people and their airs.
Well, you've stumped me on one; but here goes for the rest.
1. 33 years — the longest recorded strike in history.
2. Jane was portrayed by the luscious, Maureen O'Sullivan.
3. I believe that would be against Ralph Bakshi (who also gave us the first X-Rated cartoon, "Fritz the Cat).
4. You got me here… The "Howard House" was built in 1850 and lasted till 1904, and then a new hotel called "The New Howard Hotel was built in 1906. So I'm just going to guess that it was Elevators.
5. Wonderfully entitled "The Wicked Bible." Also referred to by the inimitable Ben Jonson as "The Adulterer's Bible"
6. The preposterously named, Dr. Dionysus Lardener. (I've actually thought about this quote many times, particularly while "lead-footing" it on the Autobahn. It always brings a smile to my face).
7. Captain John W. Trimmer.
8. No, it's myth. In fact most birds have atrocious senses of smell. However, if you unduly disturb the nest, the returning mother may regard the nest site as unsafe and abandon it along with the eggs and hatchlings. This is undoubtedly how the myth got started.
9. The Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. In fact, Hitler was twice rejected, in 1907 and again in 1908. I've always wondered how history might have been different if the Academy had accepted him.
10. At the time, a "Macaroni" was someone obsessed with looking good. Later the term "Fop" or "Dandy" would take it's place. Yankee Doodle undoubtedly though himself quite "rakish" with his stylish feather. An 18th century "Up Yours" statement, no doubt.
Cheers. And please, let me know the answer to # 4. I'm curious… Thanks.
Well, you've stumped me on one; but here goes for the rest.
1. 33 years — the longest recorded strike in history.
2. Jane was portrayed by the luscious, Maureen O'Sullivan.
3. I believe that would be against Ralph Bakshi (who also gave us the first X-Rated cartoon, "Fritz the Cat).
4. You got me here… The "Howard House" was built in 1850 and lasted till 1904, and then a new hotel called "The New Howard Hotel was built in 1906. So I'm just going to guess that it was Elevators.
5. Wonderfully entitled "The Wicked Bible." Also referred to by the inimitable Ben Jonson as "The Adulterer's Bible"
6. The preposterously named, Dr. Dionysus Lardener. (I've actually thought about this quote many times, particularly while "lead-footing" it on the Autobahn. It always brings a smile to my face).
7. Captain John W. Trimmer.
8. No, it's myth. In fact most birds have atrocious senses of smell. However, if you unduly disturb the nest, the returning mother may regard the nest site as unsafe and abandon it along with the eggs and hatchlings. This is undoubtedly how the myth got started.
9. The Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. In fact, Hitler was twice rejected, in 1907 and again in 1908. I've always wondered how history might have been different if the Academy had accepted him.
10. At the time, a "Macaroni" was someone obsessed with looking good. Later the term "Fop" or "Dandy" would take it's place. Yankee Doodle undoubtedly though himself quite "rakish" with his stylish feather. An 18th century "Up Yours" statement, no doubt.
Cheers. And please, let me know the answer to # 4. I'm curious… Thanks.