About this product: The Kirby Shampoo Pre-treatment is for use on carpets as stain remover before shampooing your carpet. It is great to use in heavily soiled area, such as entryways, walkways, stairways, kitchen, and family rooms. The pre-treat contains heavy duty cleaning agents that quickly dissolve soil that can be easily and effectively removed by shampooing. The Pre-treat Shampoo can be used on all colorfast carpeting. Professional strength, just spray on and then blot the stain away with a clean with cloth. Use to get out the toughest stains such as blood, oil, pet stains, cosmetics, crayon, dirt, lipsticks, grass, grease, vomit, grime, most inks, mud, rust, saliva, soil, tobacco, and urine
About this product: This Digital Timer w/ Traffic Light Countdown by Polder Home Tools is called a traffic light timer because it has changing colored lights as the time elapses. The timer lights up green with one minute to go, changes to orange with 30 seconds left, then turns red with 10 seconds to go. It is easy to see because it has an inclined base for sitting on the counter and magnets on the back to mount to your refrigerator. Plus the numerals are extra large so you can easily see them. It will time up to 100 minutes including second increments.
This timer has lots of uses. It is particularly useful for children, because of the traffic light display and large numerals. Perfect for those toddler time-outs.
Batteries are included. One year warranty. <--> Size: 1.12H x 3.12 Diam inches <--> Color: 0
About this product: Considering that Traffic couldn't seem to stay intact for more than a few months at a time, the band's work seems even more remarkable. Recorded in the summer of 1968 and released later that fall, Traffic, the band's sophomore release, stands as the outfit's high-water mark and one of the great rock albums of its time. Clearly, Dave Mason and Steve Winwood had completely different visions for the band, both musically and socially. In fact, Mason had already left the band at the year's beginning, only to return a few short months later. Mason liked to work alone and favored rooted folk-tinged material; Winwood saw the band as a communal affair and leaned toward progressive jazz-influenced music. Of course, the synthesis of these two approaches is what makes Traffic such a terrific album. There's not a weak moment across these 10 songs (augmented on this reissue with three mono single mixes). By fusing bits of country and folk, wisps of psychedelia, and elements of jazz and soul, the album managed to both presage and summarize the ambitious developments of rock music during its most creative era. --Marc Greilsamer
About this product: Japanese Limited Edition Issue of the Former Traffic Guitarist's Solo Debut Album Classic from 1970 in a Deluxe, Miniaturized LP Sleeve Replica of the Original Vinyl Album Artwork. That Means that the Foldout is Exactly as the First Issue Was, with Mason's Head Die-cut on the Inner Portion. The Disc Itself features a Marble Design on the Label, Recalling the Original Marble Coloured Vinyl of the First Limited Edition LP. Just One of the Great Albums from the Early Part of the 70's to have Come from the Friends Nexus of Delaney and Bonnie Bramlett (Including Leon Russell and Eric Clapton).
About this product: Explicit Version. Self titled album of 24 tracks. Hip-hop forward-thinking with Deltron 3030 as they take one producer, one MC, and one DJ and throws them into the future. One track, 'Memory Loss' features Sean Lennon. Dan the Automator reinvents himself as the Cantankerous Captain Aptos and teams up with Deltron Zero (a.k.a. Hieroglyphics crew member Del tha Funky Homosapien) and Skiznod the Boy Wonder (bucky turntablist Kid Koala). Between the radio ads for future-funked, rap jams, and camouflaged cameos (by the likes of Prince Paul, a castrato Damon Albarn, MC Paul Barman and his Upper West Side doppelgnger Sean Lennon), the Deltron crew advise you to upgrade your brain to avoid getting sucked into the time virus.
About this product: Featuring a huge cast of characters, the ambitious and breathtaking Traffic is a tapestry of three separate stories woven together by a common theme: the war on drugs. In Ohio, there's the newly appointed government drug czar (Michael Douglas) who realizes after he's accepted the job that he may have gotten into a no-win situation. Not only that, his teenage daughter (Erika Christensen) is herself quietly developing a nasty addiction problem. In San Diego, a drug kingpin (Steven Bauer) is arrested on information provided by an informant (Miguel Ferrer) who was nabbed by two undercover detectives (Don Cheadle and Luis Guzmán). The kingpin's wife (Catherine Zeta-Jones), heretofore ignorant of where her husband's wealth comes from, gets a crash course in the drug business and its nasty side effects. And south of the border, a Mexican cop (Benicio Del Toro) finds himself caught between both his home country and the U.S., as corrupt government officials duke it out with the drug cartel for control of trafficking various drugs back and forth across the border.
Bold in scope, Traffic showcases Steven Soderbergh at the top of his game, directing a peerless ensemble cast in a gritty, multifaceted tale that will captivate you from beginning to end. Utilizing the no-frills techniques of the Dogme 95 school, Soderbergh enhances his hand-held filming with imaginative editing and film-stock manipulation that eerily captures the atmosphere of each location: a washed-out, grainy Mexico; a blue and chilly Ohio; and a sleek, sun-dappled San Diego. But Traffic is more than a film-school exercise. Soderbergh and screenwriter Stephen Gaghan (adapting the British TV miniseries Traffik to the U.S.) seamlessly weave the threads of each separate plotline into one solid tale, with the actions of one plot having quiet repercussions on the other two. And if you needed more proof that Soderbergh takes unparalleled care with his actors, practically all the members of this cast turn in their best work ever, the standout being an Oscar-worthy Del Toro as the conflicted moral conscience of the film. While no story is fully resolved in the film, you'll be haunted by these characters days after you've seen the film. By far one of the best movies of 2000. --Mark Englehart
About this product: This is a great movie with a great all-star cast about the perils of excessive traffic.It's a must see and should be on DVD at a more affordable price!!!!!!!11
About this product: Jacques Tati's final feature captures the wonderful absurdities of human behavior on the street and behind the wheel. Tati's comic creation Mr. Hulot returns to the screen as an absentminded inventor transporting his ultramodern camper to Amsterdam for an auto show. The route along the frenzied superhighway is paved with an amazing string of pantomime feats and sound gags, including one of the most balletic car crashes ever recorded. Tati's gift for visual comedy puts him in the company of masters Keaton and Chaplin, but Hulot--his bumbling, pipe-smoking alter ego--remains a beloved original.