1. It hasn’t been Gawker since 2016.
1. It hasn’t been Gawker since 2016.
More than that, I’m delighted. In Fridley Minnesota in 2010, a loud pipes shop opened about 600 feet from my house. It drew bikers from miles around. All hours of the spring summer and fall, they’d open the throttle on the 60 MPH highway adjacent to the store and half a black from my house. You couldn’t sit outside…
KANEDAAAAA!!!!!!
TETSUOOO!!!!
Harley-Davidson’s Slow Decline Is Getting Hard To Watch
American auto manufacturing mentality: If it doesn’t just barely outlast the warranty period they won’t need to buy a new car
it’s not the speed that kills you, it’s the sudden stop
I love my kids and my dog unconditionally.
Great a bunch of hairless pissed off passengers
The Seville STS and Cadillac CTS share the redundant shame of redundancy.
Coupe d EV-ille
Actually thanks for this (a bit long-winded) story. Not sure what boomers or r/thathappened references have to do with it, I’ll just assume the usual Jalopnik commentariat assholes are bored and lashing out. Anyways I live in Montreal, which has shit weather half the year. I’ve been thinking more and more about an…
Nah. I’ll belittle Bentley and Bugatti for that token gesture (I hope they can take it!). This is literally the environmental equivalent of a billionaire throwing a quarter at a homeless guy, while stealing his bag of bottles.
Now I’m envisioning a reboot of Oregon Trail, but reimagined for the Climate Apocalypse.
The Model Y doesn’t exist
I like it too. It represents the dystopian future we’re heading towards brought to us by gas guzzling trucks this vehicle tries not to resemble. Good riddance to 50s nostalgia (Dodge Ram I’m looking at you). Flamethrowers, underground tunnels, rockets to mars and now bulletproof trucks. School shootings, mass…
I want the truck to have gigantic baby arms, but noooooooooo. Futuristic, my ass. Give me disturbing, anatomically functional baby arms attached to the truck doors.
There’s a good argument to be made that two different standards, one of which moves the needle on pollution and efficiency and the other of which is regressive is better than a single national standard that’s worse than what we already have.
No, it’s not overrated at all. If you park on the street like most city-dwellers, or you live in a condo or apartment complex with no chargers (like most all of them today), you’re going to have to charge somewhere else.
I saw one the other day and it’s just as nice looking as it is in photos. The designers over at Kia/Hyundai have tapped into what I’ve been saying for a while now, there’s a ton of room for interesting and modern design that doesn’t involve insane geometry. Designers have been pushing the limits of CAD and…