I’d pay good money just to see the “crazy/homeless guy at the gas station in pajama pants” scene.
I’d pay good money just to see the “crazy/homeless guy at the gas station in pajama pants” scene.
In all seriousness, I’ll toss this one out on behalf of Elizabeth.
I always thought the story of the Pontiac GTO was a beauty.
It amazes me what based-on-facts stories get turned into movies. The story of the intermittent windshield wiper motor...are you kidding me? That flick got the green light? (Yes.)
Stories on what kind of cheating goes on in F1 (Thinking about stolen secrets - Ferrari / Alonso, Flavio and Piquet JR, etc).
The story of a Jeep aficionado who travels from Michigan to Washington to rescue a derelict Jeep FC that all others had given up hope of ever seeing run again.
The story of the Whittington Brothers could make a good movie. Smuggling drugs on the back straight of Road Atlanta to pay for GT Porsches. I think they won Le Mans once, and it’d be cool to see how they got started and how it all fell apart.
The story surrounding “Unsafe at Any Speed”. After publishing the book, Nader was supposed to testify before congress. GM hired private investigators to follow him to dig up dirt to smear him with, like that he was a homosexual or deviant.
I always thought this would make a great movie!
Amen on the transmission dipsticks!
It does depend on your definition of ‘comfort’ though. The most uncomfortable non-worn seats I’ve experienced were in the most American of American cars I’ve ever driven; a brand new rental spec Chevy Impala (9th gen), in 2016. They had zero hold and zero support. They were merely soft. My wife and I both got…
I just replaced one through warranty on a rav 4. Warranty price was just under 2k, retail was around 4k.
Push button ignition is IMHO, one of the best things to ever happen to cars.
Replaceable head units. Can’t wait to find out what it costs to replace one of these integrated iPads like screens attached to your dash that has every function routed through it.
Agree! My very first thought was “low-obstruction sightlines”! I drive down the street looking at the tiny little rear windows in these SUV’s and CUV’s, and the single windshield wiper is possibly 9" long. This sums up how much manufacturers expect you to look behind you when changing lanes.
Good sightlines with limited to no blind spots.
Basic Car keys. Get rid of the start button now so prevalent in cars since you need the key-fob anyway within proximity to start the car.
Comfortable seats. I know, crash standards and all that blah blah blah, but there hasn’t been a comfy, plush car seat since they stopped making the Town Car.
I have a couple of things that immediately came to mind.