King of the Hill - The Complete Sixth Season

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Our Price: $14.05
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Average Customer Rating:     
Manufacturer: 20th Century Fox Starring: King of the Hill Directed By: Mike Judge
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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Binding: DVD EAN: 0024543240464 Format: Animated Label: 20th Century Fox Manufacturer: 20th Century Fox Number Of Items: 3 Publisher: 20th Century Fox Region Code: 1 Release Date: 2006-05-02 Running Time: 494 Studio: 20th Century Fox Theatrical Release Date: 1997-01-12
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Excellent Comment: I received this product in perfect shape. I received it way ahead of the scheduled delivery time. I would consider buying from them again as well as recommending them to others.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Where is Season Seven????!!!! Comment: Please, please, please bring us Season Seven. I hope someone in power reads this and gets Season Seven coming! Thank you.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Where's Season 7? Comment: How many more years do we have to wait until Season 7 comes out on DVD? I would give S6 Five Stars, but the LOOOOOOOOOOOONG wait for S7 forces me to only put out One Star.
Customer Rating:      Summary: My husband loves it! Comment: I have to admit I don't watch this, but my husband loved it for his birthday present. And I love hearing him laugh.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Yep. Uh-huh. Tell you what... Comment: Not a lot of mystery here - if you are looking at buying this - then you have probably seen it on TV! If you like it on TV, you will like it even more on DVD - no commercials.
I just dig this show. Some episodes, in my opinion, are suitable for showimg at church - as a sermon. I think you could actually sing some praise songs, show an episode (I am talking about certain ones now, not just any of them), and say a closing prayer.
A couple of this nature come to mind -
1, When Hank goes to anger management and meets a guy who tells him anger is fine, look at God, he got angry and killed all sorts of people in the Old Testament. Then, when getting angry later on, the guy drops dead of a stress heart attack of some sort. There are some great teaching points in that episode - and it is funny!!
2, When Bobby starts hanging out with the Christian Heavy Metal band and Hank doesnt approve. There is a great scene when Hank and the dad of the Rocker dude come face to face. Though he has all sorts of tattoos and looks like a rough guy, they get along. The guy shows his kid his tattoo of the 10 commandments on his back and reminds him that children should respect their parents, and that if Hank doesnt want Bobby worshiping the same way, that is okay. Hank says something to the effect of, "I didnt think we would get along". But they did. This is the Body of Christ. Some wear suits to church, others wear flip flops and baseball caps.
So, yeah, the "Church of the Hills."
God Bless
Craig
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Editorial Reviews:
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King of the Hill's sixth season, one of the best of this underappreciated animated series, is anything but "the same-old same-old" (Hank's euphemism for regularly scheduled Tuesday-night sex with his wife, Peggy). Fun-loving son Bobby (Pamela Adlon) and "nerd" neighbor Connie (Lauren Tom) break up (albeit amicably). "Renaissance woman" Peggy (Kathy Najimy) stirs up rebellion at the local Renaissance Faire. Luanne (Brittany Murphy) becomes the unwitting member of a cult. Conspiracy theorist Dale (Johnny Hardwick) discovers his father working in a gay rodeo. Through it all, Hank Hill (series creator Mike Judge) struggles to hold on to his core beliefs. It's not easy. "My wife lies to me, my beer company betrays me, Americans are giving Mexicans diarrhea," he complains in "Beer and Loathing." "What the hell's going on here?" But not to worry. We can count on Hank, one of TV's few good men, not to waver. In the episode "Joust Like a Woman," a season benchmark, he is a vigilant father. "No tights, tassels, or skirts on the boy," he directs Luanne as he puts her in charge of the Renaissance Faire spending money, adding, to Bobby's disappointment, "Oh, and no bells." And he is a devoted husband, accepting "King Philip's" (regally voiced by Alan Rickman) jousting challenge to defend Peggy's honor. "No chump in a velvet costume is ever kickin' my ass," Hank declares. There's no two ways about it, as one Asian character looking for a token Caucasian observes in "A Man Without a Country Club." Hank is "super-white." In "Bobby Goes Nuts," another classic episode (and the sixth season is loaded with them), Hank beams after Bobby beats up a bully at school, thanks, he believes, to "good old American YMCA know-how." He is therefore shocked when he discovers that Bobby's been attending a self-defense class for women, and kicking his victims "below the belt" (while screaming, "Let go of my purse"). No matter how his sensibilities are offended, Hank manages to keep an open mind and heart. When aspiring comedian Bobby sells a joke to Branson's own Yakov Smirnoff in "The Bluegrass Is Always Greener," Hank is compelled to admit, "That is a good joke; it's Branson good." And this sixth season is great; it's King of the Hill great! --Donald Liebenson
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