Certified Child Labor and Sweatshop FreeĮvery license agreement we’ve signed with companies like Hasbro, Paramount, Mattel, etc. If you are buying from a company that has no problem stealing intellectual property shouldn’t that make you wonder what else they’ll have no problem with? Maybe it will be no problem with selling your personal information, or no problem with using cheaper but less safe materials, or no problem delivering you a product that is less than they claim. or at least want the creators to have funding to something new that you’ll love too! Know that you are Dealing with a Reputable Company enough to wear a shirt then you probably want more of that show, video game, movie, etc. If you love a show, video game, movie, etc. In the case of t-shirts that means that you can be sure that the paint on your t-shirt and the dyes in the material have been tested and are certified to be free from lead and other harmful chemicals. Information on when Elvis (and Presley) passed away is not available.OFFICIALLY LICENSED Why You Should Care Certified Safety for Yourself and Your Loved OnesĬompanies like Disney and Hasbro require that their licensees test their products for safety. George Harwell, who owned and handled Elvis, then housed him at his nursery in Davie. The title character kept her pet in a kiddie pool.Įlvis is buried at Flamingo Gardens in Davie, Florida, which hosted the "Gator World" attraction that was his home until the latter was closed in 1990. In an homage to the original Elvis, the children's series Clarissa Explains It All (which debuted in 1991) featured a baby alligator by the same name. It is speculated that the character was retired due to budget cuts as a result of Vice's declining ratings, or to increase the more serious tone of Seasons 3-5. His status after Crockett left the Metro-Dade Police in 1989 remains unknown. The show's producers also rented another, called Presley, from the owner.īy 1986 Elvis was only seen occasionally and by 1988 was not seen at all. Apparently the cast and crew were frightened of him at first but came to consider him a regular. It described the big reptile (then about 8 1/2 feet long and weighing 300 pounds) and his duties on the show. The Sun-Sentinel (a South Florida newspaper headquartered in Fort Lauderdale) ran a feature on Elvis in October 1985. Elvis also had a voracious appetite, eating whole fish, bags of dog food, or anything else just lying around. Though he was supposedly a "watch-gator", Elvis would often sleep on the job, letting bad guys onto his boat-though when awake he would scare interlopers such as Maxwell Dierks, nearly making "dork-meat" out of him when he tried to take Crockett's Daytona with his snarling and hissing. Elvis is known to have separation anxiety, at least in his early days, as he would go (unexpectedly) visit Crockett's marina neighbors, eating food, dumping his "leavings", and trashing their boats while Crockett was working, even taking a bite out of his Buddy Holly record collection once. A former mascot for Crockett's alma mater University of Florida Gators (retired after biting a free safety from the University of Georgia), Crockett took him in as the "resident drug-sniffer and watch gator" of his boat, the St. Elvis is the pet alligator of Metro-Dade Detective James "Sonny" Crockett.
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