movieguy72
movieguy72
movieguy72

There has been a swarm of second-hand Maserati Ghiblis in my area, and they all seem to be driven by someone more interested in their phone than piloting the 4000+ lbs of steel and glass an 20mph above the limit.  I almost got sideswiped by one Sunday afternoon as the driver flew from the on-ramp across three lanes of

It is already sold by Nissan

Vingroup has businesses all over Vietnam. You might buy groceries at VinMart and clothing at VinPlaza.

This entire list is bullshit, and is basically an argument for “event the worst Toyota’s continue to be pretty good cars”.

If you’re going to create a list of “bad” cars, tell us why they’re objectively bad. This list doesn’t do this. Most of the descriptions are just variations of “Ew, I don’t like this.”

I love that someone out there thinks that “Corolla” is a “legendary name” that can be ruined by making an SUV version. Corollas are appliances now. No one but you cares that your AE86 has the same name as a crossover.

That’s because it is full of errors and make no sense. Among them, the Vibe was a Pontiac. The Matrix was built in Canada. The California plant was not a Toyota plant. It was the illegitimate child of the GM Toyota affair. The Vibe was, except for the 5 speed whose output bearing would fail, the best cars GM ever

Quite a lot of cars in the list do not deserve to be in it.

Based on the business model, things I’d imagine it does:

It’s so they can confirm that rental cars are in fact driven like they’re stolen.

This is the only reasonable thing to do.

Does the car still drive? If yes then just throw it in the garbage.

I got something similar for my MIL’s car when she got Progressive car insurance. Supposedly it can tell if you are a “good driver” and lower your rate accordingly. It beeps at you once, twice or three times to indicate bad driving habits. By my estimation it gauges your driving through one method. How hard you stop.

The yellow splitter covers are especially funny, since they are basically “shipping bumpers” to keep the splitter from getting scratched at the corners in transit. At some point some dealers forgot to take them off, then people started thinking they were cool, even knowing what they are.

Is it the car version of

It only became big because people shady crypto bros were actually making tons of money on it. moving money from suckers’ wallets into their own.

The sooner NFTs go the way of Beanie Baby mania the better. When the idea first dropped as using a block chain to assign provenance to a digital artifact it made some sense but when it devolved into shitty ape cartoons it became nonsense. I’m a little surprised they couldn’t find a sucker to bid on it but perhaps

“- Crypto is increasingly looking like a Ponzi scheme run by douchebags.”

I think we can chalk this up to three major factors:

The good thing about this is that it helps me to know which vehicles to avoid.

Wait, a subscription to start from the fob? WTF?
I get if it was app based, in addition to the fob, but this is just weird.