andrewdavidmn
redwagon
andrewdavidmn

Now I get it.  Thanks.

We used to refer to these things as a “land yacht” or a “boat”.

currently my new background photo

with LED lighting being practically lifetime, there’s no reason to put it in a particularly accessible location anymore. This should be where the turn signals are on all vehicles, and added bonus if you glanced in your rear view mirror you might even notice that you’ve been driving with the blinker on.

Not exactly the most attractive looking car. Sort of reminds me of a potato.

1000 to 1, in favor.

What are the odds that just knowing the city where David lives, I could find his house within 60 minutes simply by driving around and asking people if they know where there is a house that looks like a Jeep Cherokee junkyard? 

reminds me of a Chevy Monza

Isn’t it nice when you can look at the headline and already know who wrote it without looking at the by-line?

At this point Chevy should just bring back the front of the old Kodiak.

What shocks me is just how tall modern pickups have become. That is utterly ridiculous.

Its a website who’s name is a portmanteau of “jalopy” and “beatnik”, vehicles like this have been part of its ontology from the beginning. 

I remember when Jalopnik wasn’t so much of a beater community.

I’m trying to figure out why he didn’t bend the plywood to match the rear window and trunk width. The extra foot would make it feel substantially bigger.

NP NP NP NP NP NP NP NP

Methtastic.

As long as they aren’t using cubic corgis as measurement. That could get weird.

A lot of them already use “carryon bags” as a unit of measure, which is weird.

The WSJ article does name specific stores, but my goal has always been to inform buyers of shady practices not name dealers. Because some stores that aren't on "the list" may try this move, so it's more important for me to arm the consumer with knowledge no matter where they shop.