Welcome to Coopers DVD Store

We've got all the latest TV shows as well as classics, nostalgia and ‘hard to get' films for sale online. Search for your favourite DVD or video titles, if you can't find what you're looking for then email us more information and we'll try to track it down for you.

 
 
LAREDO DVD COLLECTION
$36.95

LAREDO DVD COLLECTION. The Complete Collection of the hit TV Series on DVD.

 
WESTERN LAREDO DVD COLLECTION

Title: LAREDO DVD COLLECTION
Description: LAREDO DVD COLLECTION. The Complete Collection of the hit TV Series on DVD.
Genre: Western
Price: $129.99
$36.95
Language: English
   
       
Limited Edition DVD Box Set
Every Memorable Episode in One Huge Collection - Lowest Price Online Guaranteed



Laredo is an NBC Western television series starring Neville Brand, William Smith, Peter Brown, and Philip Carey as Texas Rangers. The program premiered on September 16, 1965, and the final new episode was broadcast on April 7, 1967. The series was produced by Universal Television.

Laredo combined action and humor with the focus on three fictitious Texas Rangers. Reese Bennett, played by Brand, is older than his two partners. Chad Cooper was played by Peter Brown, the former co-star of NBC's Lawman. Joe Riley was portrayed by William Smith. Reese was previously an officer of the Union Army during the American Civil War. Originally from New Orleans, Chad was in the Border Patrol during the war. He joined the Rangers to search for the gunrunners who had ambushed fellow border patrolmen. Joe was a gunfighter who was at times on the wrong side of the law. He joined the Rangers to obtain protection from a sheriff. Chad and Joe tease Reese about his age: he was in his forties.

The three Rangers are led by Captain Edward Parmalee, played by Philip Carey, who was stern and disciplined. Robert Wolders as Erik Hunter joined the show in the second and final season. Claude Akins played Ranger Cotton Buckmeister in five episodes but never became a part of the cast. The pilot of Laredo was an episode of The Virginian called "We've Lost A Train", which was broadcast in April 1965.

Reese's horse Cactus is mentioned in several episodes. Chad's horse called "Amigo" was actually Peter Brown's personal horse.

What an amazing DVD Set for the Laredo Fan!

All 56 Uncut Episodes - 3 Seasons on 11 DVDS

  • Excellent video and audio quality
  • 100% in chronological order
  • Commercial free and unedited
  • This box set contains all 11 DVDs with Custom Artwork.
  • These DVDs are region free so they will play on any DVD player Worldwide and DVD-Rom, X-Box or PS2 worldwide.

These are brand new, in stock and ready to ship.  On Sale for a Limited Time only.

 

 

User comments

It exists because it provides unseemingly inordinate assistance and opportunities to compose one's business develop more and use up excluding. There is urban legend going around, created by some "gurus" trying to sell their books, that you can manage an entire self-storage service from a "stall", chiefly a toddle-up automated banker like an ATM machine. Although the concept of having a "robot" manage a self-storage feature is delightful from a cost-savings and small management perspective, it is, alas, a fantasy with about as much reasonableness as the photon torpedo out of Star Trek. The reasons you cannot get along a self-storage resource from a booth are numerous:A hut only works if the customer knows what they're doingThe reason that ATM machines can affair smoothly is that just about everyone knows how to work one. But can you suppose what would take place is minion had worn an ATM or.

They'd strive and leave their card in upside fine hair and crack it off tiresome to shove it in. They'd not remember to bring in the cash on sale on calculate, and have it sucked in the past in. happening their frustration, they'd beat the. structure on the road to a pulp. The stand view for self-cargo space services is new and different, and upstart knows how it works.

Somebody has to control the cabinJust as an ATM system requires continuous, daily management, such as re-stocking it with cash and catering to fissure-downs, so does any other type of kiosk. Banks have human resources on site all day to be selected for the repairs and keep an eye on on top of the stand. No stall can masterpiece in the deficiency of person intercession. The impression that you can dump a cabin lonesome and come back periodically and take the money out is zany. Just ask the individuals that cope vending technology - something that is incredibly straightforward until now breaks constantly.

Kiosks are flat to vandalismSome citizens approximating to fail equipment. LAREDO complete dvd box set series on DVDs And what is a more charming goal than an invalid cubicle in an out-of-the-way locality? Do you sense there is several adolescent in America who would not say amusement with that toy? k the owners of personality-ritual vehicle washes their topmost 10 stories of vandalism to their gear. People order human interactionWould you delegate your possessions to a self-storage flair that has no human supervision, or even a human to justify the rental system? LAREDO

Well so therefore, who would?

Leave a comment