@dmckoltrane: They're Casspirs, built in South Africa and still in service today. 12 soldiers, V-shaped hull for deflecting mines, and the Marines looked at it pretty closely when building the MRAP.
@dmckoltrane: They're Casspirs, built in South Africa and still in service today. 12 soldiers, V-shaped hull for deflecting mines, and the Marines looked at it pretty closely when building the MRAP.
@geargutz:
@zeet: Possibly the best DVD disc design of all time.
@Brian: Speaking of stereotypes, I never knew the "L's and R's" thing to be true until my father took me to an engineering conference in Osaka and the guest speaker's first words are "herro, and wercome..."
@Brian: I heard that one as a Jew joke, which seems to fit the stereotype better, frankly.
@Scandinavian Flick: Possibly the only appropriate use of Curlz MT in the entire universe.
Maybe he felt the thumbtack in his seat. Also, I wouldn't expect the NY Post to have any sort of "cultural sensitivity" or anything.
@RamblinReck89: Mine's fine, it's just everybody else's that's funny-looking.
I got a gypsy cab once at last year's New York Auto Show. Had to ditch another gypsy cabbie to find an ATM; left the poor guy standing by the north entrance of the Javitz Center. I like to think he's still there.
@Roberto G.: What, no Vermont plate?
What's next for Toyota? Their Highlanders suddenly explode whenever they drive past orphanages or puppy shelters?
@DerEin: Yes, I've seen Bro Rape and loved it. I'm also in a fraternity (brah) and plan on learning how to 'board this season. So sometimes I even scare myself.
Who?
Separated at birth?
I see snowboarders are still living up to the stereotype. Yeah, brah!
@GreenN_Gold: I'm surprised they didn't mount an additional set of headlights on those gargantuan Goofy ears that pass for bus mirrors over there.
"Sinky," eh? Let's hope they don't test it in Germany.
Sam, if you were gonna write this without posting the "Night Drive" ad, I was going to question your sanity...it's one of my favorite advertisements from recent memory. And the eerie narrator is none other than Richard Burton, which lends even more of a timeless appeal to it.
Lamborgotti Fasterossa.