mikeburnlab
MikeBurnlab
mikeburnlab

My livery would be a total wrap in 3M Scotchlite reflective material.

The dream of the 90s is alive in Chicago

We can only hope that Galen Erso is the chief engineer.

I love the children’s book version.

Our galaxy does have a heart... a heart so dark that no light escapes it.

If it is Hondo, brace yourselves for all the clickbait outrage and controversy over not casting a Weequay actor.

When the first comment on the comment of the day is an even better comment than the comment of the day, do the magnetic poles switch?

When the first comment on the comment of the day is an even better comment than the comment of the day, do the magnetic poles switch?

Apply six inches of body colored tape down the middle of the grille, and make most of your neighbors believe that you spent twice as much on a 6-series Gran Coupe (while trolling those who know that the 6-series Gran Coupe is a thing.)

Filed to: Honest Autoblog Articles

+1 for “astronomical prices.”

Kill it with fire!

Oh, you have the “M Sport” package? Tell me, does it include delicious cannelloni inserts and “luxury steering”? I thought not.

With Chrysler’s rich history of wacky and specific special edition names, “Challenger GT” seems ambiguous at best for this snow beast. How about “Challenger Migoi the Merciless”, “Challenger Arctic Apocalypse”, or “Challenger Dyatlov Pass Incident”?

If we’re lucky, when we die, we realize for a brief moment that everything we cared about - real or fake - didn’t matter at all. And we feel stupid for wasting so much energy worrying about it. And the universe continues on, unaware of and indifferent to our desperate follies.

*To which he replies, “Noooooo!!!”

Pretty sure that is the Emperor, walking down a couple steps (not kneeling) to say, “Bath time’s over, Ani.”

The actual window is such a cool shape... why the fake wrap-around canopy?

The idea of staying true to what the future looked and felt like in the era of the original story is a wonderful trend. The recent film adaption of J. G. Ballard’s High-Rise is immeasurably more fascinating because it’s set in a future seen from 1975.

This sounds like a good idea, but do we really want our cars’ A.I.s to be as quick-thinking and batshit crazy as WRC drivers? It’s like accelerated development for four-wheeled supervillains who possess godlike situational awareness, and just want to watch the world burn.