You call it "conditioned by consumer culture", but I call it pragmatism. Cars are better faster, cleaner, safer and more powerful. Holding onto the past just because is ignoring the very real gains that those of us who are "conditioned" see
You call it "conditioned by consumer culture", but I call it pragmatism. Cars are better faster, cleaner, safer and more powerful. Holding onto the past just because is ignoring the very real gains that those of us who are "conditioned" see
Sure Lincoln, we totally believe that you sell the MKZ with a set of freaking Michelin Pilot Super Sports. Moving right along, nothing to see here.
8.) Car Of The Year Awards Are Rigged
Yep - there is a *huge* difference between tuning a car to get optimal performance under a set of conditions for a press test vs offering up a standard factory- optioned vehicle. In one case, you're basically rigging the test. The other you're showing what the car is truly capable of. The fact that most people won't…
I said this when the story broke and I'll say it now.
Sure Lincoln, we totally believe that you sell the MKZ with a set of freaking Michelin Pilot Super Sports. Moving right along, nothing to see here.
This was pitched as a "merger of equals" and it doesn't really seem to have turned out that way. More like Daimler just sucked all the blood out of Chrysler
Suggested By: BenAresenal, Photo Credit: Ford
ewwww
No, I REALLY want a new Singer 911. I'd also like Selma Hayek and Halle Berry together, in a ball pit, naked and wrestling in custard, sadly I can't afford that either.
The answer is apparently not always Miata.
"How an Imported Nissan Silvia Had a Man Facing 20 Years in Prison" is still more than interesting enough of a headline I think, and more honest than "nearly got."
Give the Ticket a bit more credit than that. The beauty of not ever being or having a chance at ever being in the future an NFL broadcasting sstation is that The Ticket features some pretty solid criticisms of the NFL and bigger sports media entities.
what the fuck was the pilot thinking