The answer to the question, “What’s the least amount of window we can give a car before we have to reclassify it as a shipping container?"
The answer to the question, “What’s the least amount of window we can give a car before we have to reclassify it as a shipping container?"
Reliant, not Renault - autocorrect has betrayed you.
And thanks to its place in classic BBC sitcom Only Fools And Horses, every British person will agree with you, but will have to fight you nevertheless.
The industry watched “Death Proof”, and left the cinema brimming with ideas.
Follow-up: What driver behaviour do you believe should earn instant ejection from the ranks of “good” drivers? For me, it’s not doing even the “briefly lift your fingers up from the steering wheel” gesture to indicate giving way to, acknowledging, or thanking another road user.
True. My friend has two lovable but stupid and enormous rottweilers here in Britain. His method of choosing his last car was:
Has there ever been a face better suited to opening a door, panic-shrieking at what’s on the other side, and slamming it shut?
Yes, Capt. Malloy Browncoat.
It makes me want to go rewatch Sant Clarita Diet, in which he was delightful.
I’m just going to stick my fingers in my ears and go “lalala, Towering Inferno, lalala, Capricorn One, lalala, Naked Gun”
It’s that why he made his company an anagram of MEAT?
What about Kareem Abdul-Jabbar?
As much as he was infuriated by her, I also wanted to punch the world every time he called the car a “Jagu-wire”.
Even back in a 1980 study, around 90% of surveyed US drivers (though it was a pretty small sample size) considered themselves to be above-average.
The Mad Mod and Jason Todd would also like a word.
Don’t forget Sgt Nick Fury.
Except after Grodd.
To this day, I still maintain it should have beaten Titanic for the Visual Effects Oscar.
In his defence, I massively enjoyed the movie right up until just before the lack of an end, then left the cinema with a scowl on my face, swearing under my breath like Muttley.
It seems he wildly misinterpreted that scene in “Barbie”.
A lot of those - I don’t want to call them “reviews” - seem to imply that this is a middle third, rather than the second half, of the story. After the last wave of movies that infuriatingly cliffhung us - Spider-Verse, Mission Impossible, Dune (part one in tiny letters) - is the future of films? An asymptotic eternity …