The 1952 Woodill Wildfire beat both the Corvette and the Kaiser-Darrin to production.
The 1952 Woodill Wildfire beat both the Corvette and the Kaiser-Darrin to production.
Am I the only one who can’t bring themselves to care about what happens to Twitter? Who here hasn’t gone through half a dozen different platforms over the years as each one became the one place everyone was on, and then everyone moved onto the new hotness? If Musk is really determined to make Twitter the new Livejourna…
How many people feel like that at any store of any kind?
Tailfins. It is the 21st Century, after all, and cars should look the part.
If you don’t want to trust someone else’s word for it, two people with cell phones, a stick, and a free afternoon can test the roundness of the earth for themselves any time they want.
Sounds like everything is happening right on schedule
Just because something is the obvious choice, that doesn’t necessarily make it the wrong one.
And they’d be right. The T put America, and the world int he driver’s seat, and all the subsequent “people’s cars” are just refinements on Ford’s original idea.
Probably, but still amazing that something nearly a century old performs as well as it does, The engine was still 50 years ahead of anything that came out of any other American carmaker.
Probably, but still amazing that something nearly a century old performs as well as it does, The engine was still 50 years ahead of anything that came out of any other American carmaker.
You should be proud.
The Firebird III is still the definitive dream car for me.
And of course, the obligatory response from people trying way too hard to show they aren’t one of the common masses
It’s O, S, C, A, R,...
The introduction of the Gorn bothered me at first, but I’m okay with it. If you really need an in show explanation on why everything doesn’t match with the original show, you can always blame it on the Temporal Cold War from Enterprise.
The 1963-67 Corvette Stingray, but it applies just as well to other GM products of the time like the ‘63-’65 Buick Riviera, and the 1966 Toronado. Just a few references to 1930's design, like the boattail and fender blisters on the Stingray, incorporated into a contemporary design, instead of trying to make an…
Yes, the fundamental difference with Sisko was that he made some personally uncomfortable decisions in pursuit of a greater good. If there is a constant theme in Star Trek up to now, it’s that the easy thing is not necessarily the best thing. It’s been about asking difficult questions, and suppressing our baser…
Yeah, what’s wrong with calling a phone “the Ameche” like they did in the old days?
I’m getting vibes of some ‘80s anime like Akira, and Megazone 23. I have absolutely no problem with this.
Now, I love my old Trek, and I love the ‘60s aesthetic they’re trying to recreate, but does anyone else think they went a little hard on trying to recreate a vintage sitcom? At times, it felt like it wanted to turn into an episode of Bewitched.