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Hee Haw DVD Collection


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The Hee Haw Collection DVD

The Hee Haw DVD Collection: Get ready to laugh 'til it hurts! The Hee Haw Collection on DVD from Time-Life features the best of the classic hit TV show HEE HAW. Relive classic episodes featuring Buck Owens, Roy Clark, Grandpa Jones, Minnie Pearl, Junior Samples and the citizens of Kornfield Kounty. Plus, see musical performances from Country Music legends like Johnny Cash, Loretta Lynn and Merle Haggard. The 13-volume Super Set includes all 12 regular volumes plus the HEE HAW Premiere Episode just as it was first seen in 1969! You can also order the 7-volume set which includes the first six volumes plus the Premiere Episode.

Hee Haw DVD Collection

Comparison of prices at major online discount stores



Store Format Availability Price Link



TimeLife.com 7-Volume Set - DVD In Stock With Coupon
$107.96
$119.96
BUY
Use Coupon Code AFSALE at TimeLife.com to get an extra 10% off!
(Your final cost is only $107.96 - that's just $15.42 each!)



TimeLife.com 13-Volume Super Set - DVD In Stock With Coupon
$169.93
$199.92
BUY
Use Coupon Code AFSUN at TimeLife.com to get 15% off a $120 order.
(Your final cost is only $169.93 - that's just $13.07 each!)






You may also order some volumes separately.



WalMart.com Premier Episode - DVD In Stock $9.36 BUY



Amazon.com Premier Episode - DVD In Stock $8.99 BUY






WalMart.com Volume 2 - DVD In Stock $9.36 BUY



Amazon.com Volume 2 - DVD In Stock $12.99 BUY






WalMart.com Volume 3 - DVD In Stock $9.36 BUY



Amazon.com Volume 3 - DVD In Stock $12.99 BUY






WalMart.com Volume 4 - DVD In Stock $9.36 BUY



Amazon.com Volume 4 - DVD In Stock $12.99 BUY






WalMart.com Volume 5 - DVD In Stock $9.36 BUY



Amazon.com Volume 5 - DVD In Stock $12.99 BUY









The Hee Haw Collection DVD or VHS Video descriptions



Amazon
"Hee Haw" a mixture of music and comedy skits was a staple of syndicated television for more than 20 years; originally, the show had aired on CBS, but was canceled in 1971 because the network thought it was "too rural." A majority of each week's "Hee Haw" shows included a series of skits, blackouts and corny jokes; however, the meat of series came from its music. Each week, two or three country music stars guested usually one or two of the guests being well-established, the others newer and up-and-coming stars as well as bluegrass, country gospel and other acts, singers and musicians popular with country audiences. During the final segment of each show, the Hee Haw Gospel Quartet (through the mid-1980s, usually co-hosts Owens and Clark, along with Kenny Price and Grandpa Jones) performed a gospel song. The shows were taped only a few weeks out of the year, usually weeks (and sometimes, months) in advance; that meant some of the short-lived "newer" acts had already lost their star power by the time the show they were featured in had aired. By the early 1990s, the show started to abandon its rural, barnyard set in favor of a nightclub setting, though popular "rural" settings were still used; that, plus the show's booking of newer pop-oriented country acts alienated more than a few longtime viewers, who believed "Hee Haw" should have maintained its traditional country focus. During the 1992-1993 season, Clark hosted a series which featured clips from classic "Hee Haw" shows, along with new footage.

TimeLife.com
For 28 years co-hosts Buck Owens and Roy Clark and the cast of comedians and musicians welcomed the biggest stars in country music to perform and help deliver the down home one-liners. These original episodes will keep you in stitches for years to come.

WalMart
Pickin' and grinnin', singin' and spinnin' tall tales and corny jokes, the citizens of Kornfield Kounty landed on television in 1969 with the arrival of "Hee Haw" as a summer replacement series for "The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour." Each week co-hosts Buck Owens and Roy Clark and the cast of comedians and musicians would welcome the biggest stars in country music to perform their songs and help deliver the one-liners. Conceived as a rural alternative to "Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In," "Hee Haw" ranked in the top 20 nationwide when CBS dropped the show in 1971 in an attempt to "de-countrify" the network's programming. It was quickly picked up and became the longest-running weekly syndicated original series in television history. The last "new" episode aired in 1992. Looks like the non-network executives had the last hee-haw.