Most Bought Souls

Chuck Norris
George Bush
Arnold Schwarzenegger
Tupac Shakur
Barack Obama
Hillary Clinton

Prices:

We do not charge anything for the souls we collect. All Souls are FREE!!!!!!

Shipping & Handling

It is very difficult and dangerous to handle souls. We must handle them with extreme care. Due to our liability insurance we must wear special protective equipment. Thus, it is necessary to charge $4.66 for handling of partial soul purchases.

All Shipping is $2.00 (Nation-Wide)

HANDLING PRICES ARE DIFFERENT IF YOU WANT TO RECEIVE COMPLETE OWNERSHIP OF THE SOUL

(The item cost will display as $.01 however this money is part of the shipping! This payment is just for the shopping cart to operate correctly! THE ITEM IS FREE OF CHARGE, WE DO NOT CHARGE ANY MONEY FOR THE SOUL ITSELF WE ONLY CHARGE FOR THE SHIPPING AND HANDLING)

 

Ted Koppel

Reference: Click Here

BUY SOUL: $ FREE $


Edward James "Ted" Koppel (born February 8, 1940) is an American journalist, best known as the former anchorman for the American Broadcasting Company's Nightline.

Koppel began his broadcasting career at WMCA Radio in New York. In June 1963, he joined ABC Radio News as a correspondent for its daily Flair Reports program. He moved to television in 1966 when reporting on the Vietnam War. In time, he distinguished himself as a foreign correspondent for ABC. Eventually, he became more widely known as the long-time lead anchorman for Nightline, a position he held when the program began on March 24, 1980. Koppel gave up that position on November 22, 2005.

Following Nightline Koppel has taken on a number of roles which span various formats of news media:

  • He was named managing editor of the Discovery Channel, where he will host and produce news programs covering major global topics and events;
  • He signed up as an opposite editorial-contributing columnist, effective January 29, 2006, for The New York Times [1];
  • Starting in June 2006, he has provided commentary to Morning Edition, All Things Considered, and Day to Day on National Public Radio, joining NPR's other two Senior News Analysts, Cokie Roberts and Daniel Schorr [2]; as such, he participated in the annual NPR Fourth of July reading of the Declaration of Independence in 2007.

Reference: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ted_Koppel