
From my perspective, this t-shirt describes what I’ll be doing to my satellite subscription at the end of the year. Screw you DirecTV—I’m sticking with Netflix, Hulu and the like.
Product Page ($10/Today Only)

From my perspective, this t-shirt describes what I’ll be doing to my satellite subscription at the end of the year. Screw you DirecTV—I’m sticking with Netflix, Hulu and the like.
Product Page ($10/Today Only)

Sage advice from Harry that Dexter lives by every day.
Product Page ($24 via Gamefreaks)
Although a great way to show your love for the medical drama House, let’s just hope you never find yourself unconscious in an ambulance wearing this thing, because an effort to take you to your hospital of choice could result in a long ride to nowhere.
Product Page: ($39.99 – $44.99)
They will be found on an island in the Bermuda Triangle—part of some extreme and ridiculously elaborate reality TV situation perpetrated by wannabe producer Charles Widmore after watching the movie The Truman Show. You heard it here first.
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While most have a cool animal or inanimate object on which to base their superhero persona, the second-tier superheroes had to settle on less glamorous names like : TV Man, Flowerpot Man, Toothbrush Man, Athletic Shoes Man, Flush Man & Strawberry Man to name a few. Now that they’re immortalized as necklaces, you can check out the full range of forgotten ones. Some of the best are pictured after the break.

When our favorite old shows are finally put out to pasture, so are the cars that made them famous. And so it is for the cars for The A-Team, Dukes of Hazzard, Knight Rider and the British show Only Fools and Horses.
Product Page (£24.00, about $39)
It’s not officially the “A-Team” or officially “Lego”, but you get the idea. Plus, it’s just in time for that potentially disastrous A-Team movie that’s coming out next year. I like Liam Neeson, but Hannibal? Doesn’t seem right.
Product Page (£25 or $41)
You may not find as many viewers for a TV show about a Greek sandwich as you would for one that includes Hayden Panettiere, but that also may be because the majority of Americans have never had a perfectly prepared gyro.
Product Page ($14)

Today’s video entertainment systems may have remote controls and a myriad of inputs, but there was a time when you had to flip a manual switch in order to get your Atari video game system connected. It may not be useful anymore, but it holds its own place in the video gaming Hall of Fame as a precursor to the conveniences of today.
Product Page ($15 up)
Ugh…so tight. 800 channels and there is nothing but sausage on—turn it off before I puke.
Product Page ($50 AUD or $38)