smalleyxb122
smalleyxb122
smalleyxb122

This car will forever live rent-free in my head as the car driven by (a very young) Heather Graham’s character “Mercedes Lane” (yup) in the 1988 Corey’s Haim and Feldman movie License to Drive. Everything about it just screams “gaggle of high school girls out cruisin’ in the 80's” to me.

I’m not sure I agree. Pininfarina are (historically) masters of their craft, but the byproduct of being a third-party design house is that often their designs lose the spirit of the brand. The OG XJ220 is so Jaguar from the flowing lines to, yes, the excessive overhangs and length (and even the Rover 200 taillights!)

The problem is that folks love to conflate biological sex and gender all the time. What is “gender”? It’s a social term, coined by humans, for humans, to refer to the identity that someone chooses to express. Which isn’t 1:1 tied to biological sex.

First off, I don’t agree with this being universally labeled as a slur. But the specific example of Esses in a vacuum seems hard to refute as harassment.

Counterpoint: People visit historic graveyards all the time all over the world. You can do so while still being perfectly respectful.

Millions. The word is MILLIONS.

I think this sentence is supposed to have a “not” in it;

Buying car parts you don’t need? Consider running an opportunity cost analysis first. You’ll find that the $280 you spent on cheap car parts that sit on the shelf could have been used for a date and gotten you laid.

167 horsepower, the EV6 Light gets 232 miles of range.”

The leaf has worked for many with far less range...  I would argue most household with two adults have two cars (at least those who consider buying a new car) so it could work for them

I would say the Aston Martin DB9. Despite being almost 20 years old, it still looks like a brand new car. Modern designs aren’t as cool as this. And ignoring classic cars like the E-Type for example, it’s just one of the best designs ever conceived.

Whatever empathy depressed people deserve who attempt suicide, they get none of it when they try to take others with them. 

The Impreza is a pretty solid value, especially if you live somewhere with snow. You can get the sedan for less than $20k msrp, or you can goup by about a grand and get the wagon.

Holy shit - do you people even read what you’re responding to before hitting ‘publish’? Or do you just rage comment in some sort of unthinking Pavlovian response?

To accuse someone of sympathizing with nazi because they don't check other people's tattoos is idiotic. I normally don't pay much attention to anyones tattoos that I meet, just not that interesting to me. 

I guess my point is that it’s easy to spot on TV, and when images are frozen. I don’t think it’s necessarily as easy in real life. And lots of people have tattoos, I honestly don’t look at most of them in any way that’s more than a passing glance. I probably wouldn’t have seen the ‘SS’ symbols if I had a short

I guess I fall into the weird group, according to some of the comments, with you that I don’t notice tattoo’s. Tattoos are so common now and so many people have them around me that they are nothing special, not even worth a passing glance. I sold my old boat last weekend and I know the guy had sleeves but I couldn’t

Hell, I didn’t even remember the guy had tattoos. Did I even notice it when I was watching? I guess the people putting these episodes together should be paying attention to this kind of thing, but it surprises me none that a number of people would have missed it. Especially if they’re young and haven’t experienced any

This whole argument is really weird, y’all. It’s not normal human behavior to scrutinize someone’s tattoos when you first meet them, and it’s not a massive leap to think that you might have met someone with something awful tattooed on them that you just didn’t catch. It’s also not the hosts’ jobs to scrutinize these

There’s a huge difference between noticing a massive, colorful work of art on a persons back - that’s being actively shown off (and rightly so), and picking out nazi symbolism in a mass of grey-scale tattoo work on the inside of a persons arm.