awesomeaustinv
awesomeaustinv @ https://opposite-lock.com/
awesomeaustinv

It’s probably hers, how many others could there possibly be?

HOLY CRAP, THIS JUNKYARD IS ONLY A SHORT DRIVE AWAY FROM WHERE I LIVE! I’ve driven past that place loads of times! I never would’ve guessed something like that was hiding there... It’s definitely not the only interesting car around here, though. There’s a guy in in the area who owns a Willys Knight that’s one of only

Come on, be honest. You picked up that TV because you started a business and you’re trying to save money during quarantine struggles! I’ve already seen it. Don’t try to hide it. When were you planning on revealing it to us? Is it taillight themed? Does this building contain a secret meeting place where your contacts

My dad’s cars have all mostly fallen into the “mildly interesting” spectrum. My mom is the one who should’ve kept her first car (a 1964 Chevy Impala SS that was my grandma’s baby), but I think the car my dad misses the most (and the first car I remember him having) was a 1990something Honda Accord. I remember it had

Wow... I wish your dad had kept it! That would be a fascinating piece of automotive history if it had survived to today. Did he take any pictures with it by chance?

A ‘65 Thunderbird, eh? I have a ‘66. I bought it as my first car and, despite its occasional age-related problems, I love it. Your father had good taste :)

“The father, the son, and the honey roast”

Well, for one... A few years ago I went with my whole dad’s side of the family to Disneyworld and there’s a German restaurant in Epcot called the Beer Garten. The inside of the restaurant consists of a big perfectly-lit black dome, beautifully-decorated facades, and a few other things that make you feel like you’re

The windmill requiring no sunroof may seem illogical, but it isn’t so. You see, if you were to drive under the windmill blades with the sunroof open and party people standing with their upper half out of the sunroof, there would be danger of decapitation via windmill. Therefore, for maximum safety, it is essential to

Actually, the laws are different for vans and trucks. That’s how lots of Kei trucks get imported to America before they’re 25 years old. IIRC, you can’t drive them on the highway, but most other roads are fair game. So this could conceivably be sold in/imported to America.

Here’s one that survived such an attack, only partially eaten:

I badly want an excuse to ride a Small Pudding or War Panther....

I’m just glad it doesn’t have a ridiculously huge grille because brand.

Changli Freeman, huh? Well, it’s official, you have to name it Morgan now. That’s the rules.

No, it was just a weird analogy, I swear!

I know, right? I haven’t been able to see them as anything else since I first noticed it...

I always have and always will say that the Toyota Yaris looks like an angry, snarling gopher/chipmunk/hamster/thing.

Whoosh... You have a strange sense of humor, I like that.

You must be thinking of the Isetta. IIRC, only 14 Januses (Janusi?) were imported to the U.S. and and of that only a few of them were sold. If you saw dozens on the road, you must’ve been in the only town where they were sold and everyone who bought one was driving them at the same time, lol.