Ken Duke Merchandise

Merchandise for Ken Duke. Please leave a comment on the Fan Forum.
Duke Blue Devils Comforter (Ken)
Duke Blue Devils Comforter (Ken) . Check out these solid color Jersey Mesh Comforters. Each Item Comes In Team Color With Center Screen Printed Graphics. Made Of 100% jersey mesh (just like the players wear). Twin 66" Wide X 86" Long ....Or click on th
Duke Blue Devils Coordinating Full Bedskirt for the Locker Room or Sidelines Collection by Kentex
  • Matching bedskirt for the NCAA Duke Blue Devils jersey mesh comforter.
  • 100% polyester jersey mesh with 14" drop on all sizes
  • Platform is made of 70/30 poly cotton.
  • Full - 76Ó x 54Ó
  • Machine washable.

Please note this item will take 3 to 4 weeks for delivery.

To browse Duke Blue Devils Sidelines Collection products

Duke Blue Devils Coordinating Full Bedskirt from "The Locker Room Collection" by Kentex
  • Matching bedskirt for the Duke Blue Devils jersey mesh comforter.
  • 100% polyester jersey mesh with 14" drop on all sizes
  • Platform is made of 70/30 poly cotton.
  • Full - 76Ó x 54Ó
  • Machine washable.

Please note this item will take 3 to 4 weeks for delivery.

To browse Duke Blue Devils Sidelines Collection products

The Island
After supplying something known as "additional music" to many films since the late 1990s, Steve Jablonsky seems to have become the go-to composer for director-producer Michael Bay. Jablonsky's score for Bay's sci-fi thriller The Island shows the influence of its producer, Hans Zimmer. "The Island Awaits You" sets up the mood, which is oddly muted for a movie directed by explosion-master Bay. Even a track titled "Mass Vehicular Carnage" is merely ominously low-key, oddly sounding like something by dank trip-hopper Tricky. Elsewhere, the electronic number "Starkweather" successfully creates a feeling of oppressive tension before integrating elements of the main theme. Unfortunately, in his effort to avoid big ka-booms, Jablonsky can be overly subdued; while nothing is jarring, nothing makes much of an impression either. Actually, there is one jarring thing on this CD, and it's the Prom Kings' nu metal/funk hybrid "Blow," tacked on at the end like an afterthought. --Elisabeth Vincentelli
Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events
The characters of Daniel Handler's popular children's book series spring to life in this playfully macabre screen adaptation from director Brad Silberling. Contemporary scoring master Thomas Newman may launch the musical proceedings with the brief, Disney-esque flourish of "The Bad Beginning," but the sound of a needle being brusquely dragged across that record brings us to the composer's true intent: a teasing romp through occasionally dark, rhythmically charged musical corners. Employing his patent take on post-modern impressionism to a greater degree than he did in Finding Nemo, Newman gives a decidedly contemporary spin to the oft-cliched concept of children's music. His score is a an inviting fusion of his tense, ever-inventive, ensemble studio concoctions and a Euro-Goth sensibility inspired by the film's visual sense. Alternately bright and brooding, with a surprise at nearly every turn (not the least of which is "Loverly Spring," a full reprise of the score's creepily saccharine opening song), Newman's score is yet another tribute to his restless, seemingly boundless creativity. --Jerry McCulley
Baseball: A Film By Ken Burns - Original Soundtrack Recording
Hailed as perhaps the greatest filmed document in the history of the sport, Ken Burns's epic series chronicled more than a century's worth of baseball lore. The producers paid nearly as much attention to the audio as the stunning visuals, but this soundtrack is slightly uneven. Baseball errs on the side of good taste a bit too often, what with contributions from Bruce Hornsby, Carly Simon, and Natalie Cole peppered amid classics by the likes of Duke Ellington and Count Basie. The well-chosen historical material--including calls spanning five full decades--should interest die-hard fans, though. --David Sprague
The Thorn Birds - The Complete Miniseries
The second most-watched miniseries (after Roots) of all time, The Thorn Birds was originally broadcast in 1983 and captivated viewers with its story of a lifelong conflict between the spirit and the flesh. Adapted from the bestselling novel by Colleen McCullough, the production stars Richard Chamberlain as a Catholic priest named Ralph de Bricassart, whose life in Australia between 1920 and 1962 is one long torment as he pines for his lover, Meggie Carson (Rachel Ward), while seeking advancement in his clergyman career. The passion and the guilt make for compelling drama, but a stellar cast of supporting players adds muscle to the proceedings: Barbara Stanwyck (who won an Emmy for her work as Meggie's tough grandmother), Jean Simmons, Richard Kiley, Christopher Plummer, Bryan Brown, and Mare Winningham. Chamberlain, who was something of the king of the miniseries form at the time, is very good in the lead, as is the often-underrated Ward. Their affair is indeed irresistible to watch, which proves to be true, too, of the story's thick weave of church politics, forbidden desire, social change over decades, and family secrets. --Tom Keogh
Groundhog Day
Bill Murray does warmth in his most consistently effective post-Stripes comedy, a romantic fantasy about a wacky weatherman forced to relive one strange day over and over again, until he gets it right. Snowed in during a road-trip expedition to watch the famous groundhog encounter his shadow, Murray falls into a time warp that is never explained but pays off so richly that it doesn't need to be. The elaborate loop-the-loop plot structure cooked up by screenwriter Danny Rubin is crystal-clear every step of the way, but it's Murray's world-class reactive timing that makes the jokes explode, and we end up looking forward to each new variation. He squeezes all the available juice out of every scene. Without forcing the issue, he makes us understand why this fly-away personality responds so intensely to the radiant sanity of the TV producer played by Andie MacDowell. The blissfully clueless Chris Elliott (Cabin Boy) is Murray's nudnik cameraman. --David Chute
Silent Partner (1978)
Miles Cullen is by all appearances a mild-mannered bank clerk - until he double-crosses a bank robber by the stealing the thieves takings. Now Miles is up against a psychotic killer who doesn't only want his money back - he wants revenge. This terrifying thriller boasts a soothing score by Oscar Peterson.
The Thorn Birds
The second most-watched miniseries (after Roots) of all time, The Thorn Birds was originally broadcast in 1983 and captivated viewers with its story of a lifelong conflict between the spirit and the flesh. Adapted from the bestselling novel by Colleen McCullough, the production stars Richard Chamberlain as a Catholic priest named Ralph de Bricassart, whose life in Australia between 1920 and 1962 is one long torment as he pines for his lover, Meggie Cleary (Rachel Ward), while seeking advancement in his clergyman career. The passion and the guilt make for compelling drama, but a stellar cast of supporting players adds muscle to the proceedings: Barbara Stanwyck (who won an Emmy for her work as Meggie's tough aunt), Jean Simmons, Richard Kiley, Christopher Plummer, Bryan Brown, and Mare Winningham. Chamberlain, who was something of the king of the miniseries form at the time, is very good in the lead, as is the often-underrated Ward. Their affair is indeed irresistible to watch, which proves to be true, too, of the story's thick weave of church politics, forbidden desire, social change over decades, and family secrets. --Tom Keogh
Saturday Night Live - The Best of Eddie Murphy (Bonus Edition)
Perhaps one of the greatest lights ever to shine on late-night television, Eddie Murphy has gone on to well-deserved international superstardom. Check out his earliest television work on Saturday Night Live: The Best of Eddie Murphy, a collection of his greatest roles, from Gumby to Stevie Wonder to Buckwheat. Of course, some would argue that his best role was as himself, and there is plenty of evidence for that--many of the skits feature Murphy au naturel and the opening sequence is taken from his monologue when he returned to the show triumphantly after leaving for Hollywood. Exploring the world around him and finding laughs everywhere, Murphy can take a simple idea (such as the "James Brown Hot Tub Party") and run wild with it, leaving the audience hysterically begging for more. You don't have to be a fan to enjoy this collection, but odds are you'll be one by the time you're finished. --Rob Lightner
The Silent Partner
The Silent Partner stars Miles Cullen (Elliott Gould) as a teller who gets wind of master criminal Harry Reikle's (Christopher Plummer) scheme to rob his bank. Cullen providently squirrels away $50000 in a safety deposit box before Reikle strikes. After the robbery the papers report the amount of the bank's loss. Reikle realizes that there's fifty thousand extra bucks floating around that he hasn't gotten his hands on. The soft-spoken but sadistic Reikle puts the screws on Cullen to fork over the dough...but Cullen has lost the deposit box key.System Requirements:Runtime: 103 minsFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: ACTION/ADVENTURE/THRILLERS Rating: R UPC: 012236211716 Manufacturer No: 21171
X-men Professor X Action Figure From Marvel Comics
Professor X Action Figure. The leader of the X-men. Chair has secret control panels and figure has moveable arms.
X-men Omega Red Action Figure
Poseable Action Figure from the Uncanny X-men. Omega red has "whipping tendril weapons and includes an official Marvel Universe Trading Card.
X-Men Ch'od Action Figure Chod From Marvel Comics
From Marvel Comics' XMen series - Ch'od with "Double arm curling action". Includes Official Marvel Universe Trading Card.
2006 Topps Turkey Red Baseball Cards Complete Base Set (275 Different Cards) Including Nolan Ryan, Kenji Johjima Rookie, Ryan Zimmerman, Prince Fielder, Justin Verlander, Stan Musial, Carl Yastrzemski, Albert Pujols, David Wright, Chien-Ming Wang, Ken Griffey Jr., Duke Snider, and more rookies, current stars, and Hall of Famers - What a gorgeous MINT set of cards!!
How Do You Know He's Real?: Celebrity Reflections on True Life Experiences with God
Between the covers of this book are testimonies from Christian role models from the worlds of film, sports, and music. The stories are real and powerful, and are presented in a way that believers and seekers alike will find compelling.
Lynching in the West: 18501935 (A John Hope Franklin Center Book)
Accounts of lynching in the United States have primarily focused on violence against African Americans in the South. Ken Gonzales-Day reveals racially motivated lynching as a more widespread practice. His research uncovered 350 instances of lynching that occurred in the state of California between 1850 and 1935. The majority were perpetrated against Latinos, Native Americans, and Asian Americans; more Latinos were lynched in California than were persons of any other race or ethnicity.

An artist and writer, Gonzales-Day began this study by photographing lynching sites in order to document the absences and empty spaces that are emblematic of the forgotten history of lynching in the West. Drawing on newspaper articles, periodicals, court records, historical photographs, and souvenir postcards, he attempted to reconstruct the circumstances surrounding the lynchings that had occurred in the spaces he was photographing. The result is an unprecedented textual and visual record of a largely unacknowledged manifestation of racial violence in the United States. Including sixteen color illustrations, Lynching in the West juxtaposes Gonzales-Day’s evocative contemporary photographs of lynching sites with dozens of historical images.

Gonzales-Day examines California’s history of lynching in relation to the spectrum of extra-legal vigilantism common during the nineteenth century—from vigilante committees to lynch mobs—and in relation to race-based theories of criminality. He explores the role of visual culture as well, reflecting on lynching as spectacle and the development of lynching photography. Seeking to explain why the history of lynching in the West has been obscured until now, Gonzales-Day points to popular misconceptions of frontier justice as race-neutral and to the role of the anti-lynching movement in shaping the historical record of lynching in the United States.

James Robertson Justice: What's the Bleeding Time?: A Biography
This work includes a foreword by the Duke of Edinburgh. This biography of James Roberston Justice celebrates the secret life and glittering career of one of British cinema's finest and most recognisable screen personalities. With his unforgettable presence and his trademark bulk, whiskers, and fierce bark, James Robertson Justice made a treasure chest of classic British movies. He is best remembered as the bombastic Sir Lancelot Spratt in "Doctor in the House" (1954), but also starred in many wonderful films, both comedies and drama, often portrayed as a domineering (if frequently soft-centred) ogre. His on-screen temper tantrums often resembled those of a gigantic, irate toddler. This book unravels for the first time, through detailed research and original interviews with those close to him, the myriad complexities of one of Britain's finest actors. This book is fully illustrated with many rare photos. A must buy for fans of classic British films.Throughout the fifties and sixties he built a career on scene stealing performances in comedies and action thrillers. A bittersweet fling with Hollywood even landed him the enigmatic role of Vashtar, architect of the Great Pyramid, in Howard Hawks' historical epic "Land of the Pharaohs" (1955). However, for his many fans, Justice's true metier remained farce. A pivotal role in the creation of his recognisable screen persona was the punctilious, 'thrash happy' Dr. Grimstone in "Vice Versa" (1948). It was from this seed of a condescending Victorian headmaster that a succession of characters flourished, epitomised by Lord Scrumptious in "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang" (1968). Woe betide anyone who attracted his beetle-browed displeasure. From Dirk Bogarde, through Stanley Baxter and Dick Van Dyke, JRJ was the towering authority figure par excellence, releasing a hilarious barrage of vitriolic slap downs and insults.His recurring role as fathers to beautiful ingenues, such as Sir Beverly Grant in "Father Came Too!" (1963) and Charles Chingford in Ken Annakin's "The Fast Lady" (1962), offered older cinema goers a reassuring bulwark against the (would be) excesses of the 'permissive society'. James Robertson Justice was a 'brilliant raconteur, indifferent to money' - part Walter Mitty, part Sir John Falstaff. There is no actor we can think of with a life story that screams so loudly for a biography. This is the definitive story of one of Britain's greatest actors.
Find a Player

Duke Blue Devils Comforter (Ken)
Duke Blue Devils Comforter (Ken)
Duke Blue Devils Coordinating Full Bedskirt for the Locker Room or Sidelines Collection by Kentex
Duke Blue Devils Coordinating Full Bedskirt for the Locker Room or Sidelines Collection by Kentex
Duke Blue Devils Coordinating Full Bedskirt from
Duke Blue Devils Coordinating Full Bedskirt from "The Locker Room Collection" by Kentex
Privacy Policy Terms of Service