
Totem Poles (music adult themed)
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12 Pairs of 80′s Shutter Shade Sunglasses – Party Favors $4.79 Have a blast from the past at your next summer party. This set of 12 “Shutter Shade” style sunglasses make awesome party favors for your next 80s party. Assorted colors of purple, blue, pink and green. Fun for adults and children alike !… |
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Animal Kettle Teakettles Introducing adorable and eye-catching enamel teakettle. Pick your favorit teakettle today and even enjoy your kitchen-life!! Teakettle available in Duck, Pig, Elephant, Ladybug, Whale, Giraffe, Panda, and Strawberry. Since each tea kettle comes in a nice color box, so it is perfect for a gift, too!! Made of enamel on steel (both inside and outside of teakettle) and a handle, spout, and lid kno… |
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Mickey Mouse Jumbo Airwalker Party Balloon $8.95 This jumbo sized mylar is amazing. Attach the included wieghts to the bottom of his feet and he hovers close to the floor…. |
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Halloween Hits $8.10 Leave it to Rhino Records to come up with the best party music for Halloween rave-ups. In contrast to New Wave Halloween, this set of 10 tunes is aimed squarely at the family listening environment. “Monster Mash,” sung by Bobby Pickett and the Crypt-Kickers, is a hoot decades after its origin. And Screamin’ Jay Hawkins’s “I Put a Spell on You” is aptly eerie, if not a tad funny in this setting–co… |
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Halloween Hootenanny $5.42 You just need one look at Rob Zombie to know that the guy knows a thing or two about Halloween. He really proves his mettle–and his metal, for that matter–on this loud, garish, downright fun collection of rip-roaring devil’s music. There’s actually very little to be afraid of, to tell the truth–unless, that is, you have a phobia about the kind of goofy good times laid down by Zombie and pals li… |
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Happy Baby: Beatles for Babies $9.96 … |
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Beverly Hills Bordello: Girl Friends (Unrated) [VHS] $14.98 … |
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Short Shorts [VHS] $1.68 … |
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Siren [VHS] $19.95 … |
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The Notebook (Limited Edition Gift Set) $11.38 When you consider that old-fashioned tearjerkers are an endangered species in Hollywood, a movie like The Notebook can be embraced without apology. Yes, it’s syrupy sweet and clogged with clichés, and one can only marvel at the irony of Nick Cassavetes directing a weeper that his late father John–whose own films were devoid of saccharine sentiment–would have sneered at. Still, this touchingly i… |