Another “progressive” article. Gotta fill that Gizmodo Media quota.
Another “progressive” article. Gotta fill that Gizmodo Media quota.
The mom said she needed the wagon/suv to be reliable. If that’s the case the realistic option would be the non-V CTS wagon.
Quite a hell of oxymorons if I do say so myself. btw, the only editor who has sane/useful advice is Tom McParland with the Volvo V90.
What a twist!
edit: Father does obviously right thing to help his child.
Where’s the story here? I’m sure any responsible dad would sacrifice like this and more.
Great, but I’m looking at everyday practicality and low miles, while saving some money.
It would be a safe guess that the buyer would want something newer than what he already has, and with a family having some amenities like heated leather seats with infotainment for the family. So the WJ is automatically out of the…
Or get a 2008+ WK. Yes, they’re usually considered the worst Grand Cherokee but you at least get a Hemi.
Lol, Nobody has to spend $20,000 for an anonymous-looking car. Could easily buy something relatively recent for roughly $8,000-$12,000 and pocket the extra dough.
broken legs.
Finally, An BMW 5 Series article that doesn’t blindly pander to the E39. Didn’t think I’d ever see the day on Jalopnik.
There’s always the Jersey Shore...and rum ham.
No, it’s more than plausible.
The idea is that Uber is charging below their bottom line per trip to aggressively capture the market. In reality, the current rates in all areas (cost per mile especially) should actually be between $1.50-$2.00 minimum (excluding the booking fee). Also, mass volume is more of a problem…
You (and your readers) got it mostly wrong again, Tavarish.