misterchoppers
mr.choppers
misterchoppers

Sure, but aren’t there always? I am just sick of my friends arguing when they actually agree - it’s like no one learned anything from the collapse of the Second Spanish Republic.

I saw an orange Strada five-door in Denver, circa 1997. It looked like it was out on its very last drive and I’ve never seen one stateside since.

“...like Elizabeth Warren and/or Bernie Sanders. And, yes, it’s possible to support more than one candidate at this stage of the political process.

I meant in terms of global competitiveness at the time. Thirties’ US cars were world-leading and creative, an edge that was quickly lost in the fifties.

Vauxhall 205 GTi anyone? Oh, wait, that’s been a possibility for a while already.

Heard on the radio that the partial Chinese ownership of PSA could make trouble in merging with Chrysler.

Wow, the Greenwich, CT Volkswagen dealership at 4:22 still looks the same today.

I feel that the 1930s and 1940s were peak-US cars. Inventive, creative, world-leading. You name it. I get the feeling that the manufacturers thought that the way to succeed was to build what people actually needed.

Hah, nice “circle”. Where do hatchbacks fit into this?

My wife (admittedly a mathematophobe) did not know what interest was until last year. NY public schools...

Available, yes, but the party was over long earlier. In the 70's, coupes dominated.

Same here. FedEx is unable to gain access to our building (ie, ringing bell). Meanwhile, the UPS guy where I worked a year ago saw me on the street and asked me where I am these days - he knew to the month when I had switched jobs.

Neutral: A Minica Dangan ZZ, but in the Lettuce bodyshell with two doors on the passenger side.

I saw a 1991 Mirage the other day and wasted ten minutes photographing and admiring it. So yes.

Can’t see the picture, could you fax it to me?

Not an altoghether horrible idea. Definitely better than the notion of ‘making a new 3000GT’.

Bwahahah! By the time the 2nd gen Eclipse came around, the sporty coupé party was already long over.

Looks a lot like those little puffed shrimp things you might find in an Asian restaurant.

He’s saying you’d be better off without the Costco piece. I don’t agree with his unspoken sentiment that we should be enjoying what HE makes, but there is all kinds of more interesting, satisfying, and fun things that could go in your dining room.

Is the Marvel stuff popular? “Popular” can mean different things: Art by the people is still art, but crap churned out by big money to keep people stupid is not necessarily so.