“Never solve the mystery” is a terrible take on a mystery show.
“Never solve the mystery” is a terrible take on a mystery show.
The half-tank fillup is also known as the “Shaq maneuver”
Back in the day the TV commercials just pronounced it "legs". Probably pissing off the Mad Man who came up with the concept.
ILM
First sign of trouble for this arrives 3 minutes in when the musician husband cameo is clearly funnier than the nominal star.
Or maybe a custom-shop $1000 caliper rebuild ON A 20-YEAR OLD 1000 HP FRANKENPORSCHE is the most Jalop thing ever.
Which is fine, except you led with “these have to save my life, so I’m going deluxe”. It’s like expecting a racing stripe to add HP.
I just think you (by which I mean Bradley) are paying a lot — a LOT — for the color and decal, and letting the cachet of a “premium” service convince you that somehow this is functionally different/superior to any other decent rebuild.
Ironically, my interest is waning.
I need to bookmark this for future antidote usage any time I get the urge for a German project car. $1100 for a set of rebuilt calipers?
EVs don’t crank out waste heat the way ICEs do but I’m still not sure it’s a good idea to put what amounts to a thermal blanket on top of a powerplant that wasn’t designed for it.
Titled and Subtitled
I think I was expecting Frightened Rabbit
Please consider this a sincere question rather than a challenge, but: can you expound a bit on “notoriously fragile but necessary white SNL viewers”? Like, are there actually cases where actual viewers, of the actual show (as opposed to, say, single-issuers who read about a skit on social media and created a…
Most impressive: HE DID IT WITH A CAT IN THE ROOM
Shrunken But Intrepid is my new band name
My rule #1 is never buy any car with “rain guards” on the windows, as you will smell (and smell like) stale cigarette smoke every time you drive it. Forever
Ford’s choice of that font for the manual makes me question everything about their technology.
I’ve been reading car magazines since they were made of trees and only a few pages were in color, and this has always been the irony: writers reviewing cars they clearly can’t afford to own.
>I can’t quite put my finger on why nobody seems all that jazzed about GM’s all-electric Hummer EV.