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    And the electric shaver is "designed to last one thousand hairs."

    I'm sure we're the only people in North America who actually give a shit, much less have heard of Ssangyong.

    @Peter S.: Frankly, that's the least of his worries.

    @TENGRAM: I see what you did there.

    I'll buy 'em. I have 4 dollars, 73 cents, and one Albanian lek. Aero-X, here I come!

    @nick2ny: Well...duh. In terms of style and coolness, old Ferraris > new Ferraris any day of the week*.

    Pretty cliche. I didn't know he was a non-car guy, but is he a non-writer too? I wonder if Stephan Wilkinson was ridiculed this badly as well, but at least he ended up writing a great book about it. (I suggest you guys all pick it up too, at the very least reading about another man's Project Car Hell should discourage

    That's just surreal, I have no idea what the context of that in the movie was. Has anybody here actually seen the entire thing?

    My mom used to take me down to the parking lot of our apartment complex and point out the makes of all the cars.

    And from its loins, an indie post-rock band was born.

    You know...GM had the opportunity to recreate a new segment here that's been left untapped for 30 years, and give us a car that would merge niches more effectively than yet another effing crossover.

    @Number_Six: Well, I won half a COTD once, if that makes you feel any better. I still think they gave me this star because they dropped one off the back of the truck and it somehow landed in my lap.

    @pauljones: There's only one solution then: price the Solstice at $10,000. You can have a 3-cylinder Hyundai Accent, or THIS!

    @Jon: I'm with you on that. In fact, why not include the Firebird too? I don't see the comparisons between the Solstice and the Camaro. Hell, remember when every car company had at least two sports cars in their lineup, one aimed at cheapskates and one top-dog flagship? Nissan had the 240SX and 300ZX. Mitsubishi had

    @timtoolman: What's wrong with that? Better than them rebadging another crossover or SUV and try to be a "full-line" company.

    I haven't had the joy of driving a car equipped with snow tires, but our family's AWD Legacy with Yokohama performance tires does pretty well.

    78 years old and he's in a bright red Nissan hatchback? That man has no shame.

    "Kitchen-Dick" sounds like medical slang for something really, really painful.