idratherbedriving
I'd Rather Be Driving
idratherbedriving
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It is a waste of a perfectly good XB Falcon and it is too shitty to go on the holy mountain like its brethren.

I may have said this before, but it’s even more true now:

You should try reading about it.

Kept my tour group waiting so I could snag this pic of a Cygnet in Paris. I keep forgetting that these things exist.

It’s certainly the most expensive car I’ve seen street parked. Not sure about the cool part though.

I gotta say I’m diggin’ the new body kits. The low cowl reminds me of CART cars, and ditching the rear wheel pods definitely makes the car look better.

Thank god for the subtitles. Otherwise, I wouldn’t have know what he was saying.

Hair stylists in Italy must be rolling in cash if she can drop a hundred large to settle a bet.

because ricky ticki tavi can’t multitask. It’s the only way to get him.

This is my sign on I-80/90 headed west from the OH border, just after the toll booths.

Off-Road Electric Supercar.

Hum, I always wondered why there we so many ∀INɹOℲI˥∀Ɔ cars in the rockies.

Always use an Oxford comma, unless you can use a Shatner comma.

That’s some extreme fanboying right there. Not even Apple fanboys write “it’s okay if they kill me, Apple roolz” letters.

In the year of our Lord, 1990, back when I was 16, my friend Bill had a bitchin Oldsmobile Cutlass Calais, and because he had such an amazing car (he was the only one with car and license so you did NOT say one damn word about the Cutlass), he drove whenever we were all together. (was it GM old guy blue? You bet your

SO it was an early Saturday morning I rolled out of the local Canadian Tire with some fresh Mickey Thompsons on my old 74 Ventura. I was pretty proud of that old car. Being young and full off coffee I rolled her in to a small puddle of water and proceeded to impress myself with an awesome brake stand.

Here are some corrections: 1. ‘They’ refers to a plural. ‘Every BMW’ is singular, as is ‘hidden feature’. 2. You split your infinitive. Your adverb should go outside of the infinitive, e.g. to be chomping at the bit constantly. 3. While ‘chomping at the bit’ is in general use, the correct phrase is ‘champing at the

Pass the eyebleach, and let us never speak of this again.