robertfoster
robertfoster
robertfoster

This wreaks of a sponsored post, mostly because I have had a similar product set up in my house for years.

Oh God. For a second I saw the date 9-3-12 and thought it had been pushed back to September.

From there we have to figure out, ‘What are all the individual missions going to be? And who are the important characters in this?' Then we'll divvy that up to the different people on the team," Walters continues. It's like, ‘Writer X, you're going to have these five missions, and you're responsible for this major

First generation G35.

"This was purely good luck as one cannot steer the car while air-born."

Spyker forever.

I'm not too crazy about how the belt lines makes the car look like it's leaning forward. The Fiesta does that as well.

Yeah, but Jalopnik had a post a little while ago about how the guy asked forgiveness and wanted to be accepted back into the community. Evidently, he re-painted his car and basically went a whole other route with it.

Is that the pedobear Miata after the guy reworked the entire car? Could just be the wheel angle, but that paint looks awfully familiar.

That's a pretty awesome picture; is it fan art?

Kind of sort of related, but I had a professor this past semester who spent 35 years in the CIA and taught a class on the history of strategic intelligence. He said Nathan Hale was a pretty lousy spy.

It's not a new car, but about seven years ago my dad got my mom a 1996 BMW 318is for Christmas. She had been driving Suburbans for something like twenty years and my dad felt she deserved something quite a bit smaller and sportier.

I still say the first generation Q45t is one of the best big sedans ever built.

Seven hyphens in one paragraph is too many.

I've had this question for awhile and I'm hoping one of y'all can answer it:

Generally I agree, but he's pretty fantastic in Hugo.

That's probably closer to the truth; it's been a several months since I was there.

One of my favorite bits of trivia I learned from the Mercedes headquarters in Stuttgart is that the three-pointed star stands for land, sea and air, which Mercedes produced vehicles for. I can't remember of this was post-WWI or WWII, but Mercedes was forced to abandon production of sea and air vehicles as part of a

The link to the 1600 pixel version just takes you back to the story page.