Every time you consider buying a car, I would hope, but maybe that’s just me?
Every time you consider buying a car, I would hope, but maybe that’s just me?
I kinda feel like if you factor in the cost of ownership over the next 10 years between an aging Audi and an aging Toyota, the value here starts to make a bit more sense.
If you look closely, you can see the same thing happen further ahead at the start of the video, although it doesn’t seem to hit anyone. The driver with the dashcam is just driving through the remains of someone else’s roof-snow when the second one hits his windshield.
Car product placement is always awkward, but the Shang Chi vehicle referenced above is the most cringe-inducing in recent memory.
Tucker Carlson has his top men writing him a segment about how this is an evil plot by the Left to force him to drink at least 50% of his coffee before he can become physically aroused by the picture of the Starbucks mermaid.
Technically that pictured display is only illegible if you can’t read French upside-down.
Sadly, I don’t think these ads feel as crazy and out-of-place as they should, considering that we’re currently in an arms race of increasingly bulky vehicles.
I just hope one of VinFast’s first models is called the VinFurious.
I can’t vouch for this specific brand, but I do have a Gold’s Gym version of the same basic style and in my experience the portability of it is a huge factor in how often it gets used.
I can’t vouch for this specific brand, but I do have a Gold’s Gym version of the same basic style and in my…
I just want to express my appreciation that Torch can pop in here with basically just one paragraph and an extra sentence that only really tell us what he can’t tell us, and yet still be entertaining.
Ballaban’s face in that picture is probably close to the face I was making through the entirety of that Tesla-bro’s “monorail test” video a couple months ago, and my own life wasn’t even in danger. It was me fearing for the life of somebody I’d never met, as he inexplicably seemed super excited about his car’s drunk…
Sure, I guess “Godless” and “Lupin” are right up there, too. “Queen’s Gambit,” maybe? You could make a solid argument for any of those being the best show on Netflix, but personal preferences probably come into play somewhat. Either way, the fact that “Arcane” is in the discussion is pretty wild.
True, you won’t get many accolades directly, aside from ones for having certain numbers of cars in your garage, or the milestones for total distance driven, etc...
This is one of those rare cases where a headline sounds like clickbait but is, in fact, an understatement. Weirdly, the show is so good that attempts to describe it to others inevitably sound like hyperbole.
I know for many people this falls under the purview of “different people enjoy games in different ways,” but it is a bit of a downer for anyone trying to legitimately climb the in-game “Hall of Fame,” that can be found at the festival.
And the fact that people have been paying for rare digital items for literal decades before NFTs were invented proves that people have wanted this technology basically since the modern era of gaming began.
I bet it would be even wilder if you could wave a magic wand and see how many of those “true believers” on Twitter are actual people, versus just one or two users with a ton of different fake accounts, trying their hardest to make it look like NFTs are hotter than they actually are engaging with “each other”…
This is a good point, and something that anyone who has ever sent an email or a text that came across completely different to how it was intended should be able to relate to.
That is the right reason.
No, it isn’t like Xeroxing the Mona Lisa, because Xeroxing doesn’t create an exact duplicate.