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  • 1942 Flickback DVD: Birthday Gift or Anniversary Gift
  • Amazon

    From $9.89 (3rd Party New)

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Copyright © 2016 PriceZombie, LLC.

Buy from Amazon $9.89$9.69 $9.80 $9.60 Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May 2016 $9.89, Sep 25 - Oct 1$9.69, Oct 3 - Jan 25$9.89, Jan 27 - Apr 20 33,584253,739 312,500 208,333 104,167 0 Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May 2016

Price Details

3rd Party New

Latest $9.89 Apr 20, '16
Highest $9.89 Jan 27, '16
Lowest $9.69 Oct 3, '15
Average $9.89 (30d avg)
$9.88 (90d avg)
$9.78 (180d avg)
$9.78 (Lifetime average)
Added Sep 25, 2015

Sales Rank

30 day average: 192,349
90 day average: 171,592

Product Description

Flickback DVD Greeting Cards are designed as the perfect way to mark any birthday, anniversary or reunion. The colorful card is filled with stories and pictures about the people, places and events that made the year special. The DVD presents the year's most entertaining video highlights including 'People in the News,' 'Politics & World Events,' 'Fashion & Entertainment,' and 'Sports.' You can add your own personal message in the space provided. An envelope is included for mailing, which requires only regular postage for to ship within the United States.

The Forties was a decade dominated by World War II. Nazi Germany advanced on most of the European continent, and the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor spurned the United States to join in the global conflict. Following the death of Franklin D. Roosevelt, President Harry Truman put an end to the war with the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, while the long road to recovery had already begun in Europe. Mahatma Gandhi became a face for peaceful protest amidst global decolonization, and Jackie Robinson became a face for integration as the first African-American Major League Baseball player. Everyone supported the war, with many Hollywood entertainers, most famously Bob Hope, volunteering with the newly-formed USO to help boost troop morale. Big Band leader Glenn Miller was too old to be drafted, but volunteered to lead an Army band. And while films like Charlie Chaplin's The Great Dictator made light of the war, others such as How Green Was My Valley and The Best Years of Our Lives echoed the thoughts of a world that by the end of a decade was still in recovery and looking to move forward.

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