stevebrandonott
Steve Brandon
stevebrandonott

Most interesting green car I've ever photographed? A Bricklin SV-1.

Using absolutely no other metric than how often I see different examples of the same car around Ottawa, the capital of Canada but not exactly a capital city for supercar-spotting, I'd probably say the Lamborghini Diablo (a car I like perfectly fine).

If I had the money, I'd totally go for a used 550 Maranello, especially in steel blue or silver. Relatively cheap for a Ferrari Grand Tourer and I think it's one of the most elegant and handsome Ferraris made since the 1960s.

If I remember correctly, the ICHIGO MASHIMARO taxicabs were actually part of an official tourism campaign by the city of Hamamatsu in Shizuoka prefecture, where ICHIGO MASHIMARO/STRAWBERRY MARSHMALLOW is actually set.

The question of the always-on connection is one that causes some gamers’ blood to boil. Gamers will want, and learn to love, the good parts of consoles being more connected to our digital lives than was possible with the machines launched eight years ago.

Now playing

Lowrider by Jaleco for the PS2. Classic cars with hydraulics with absolutely no actual driving, just "dancing".

The first person I saw talking about the COEXIST sticker wasn't a right winger, it was actually Conan O'Brien's sidekick Andy Richter on Twitter, which surprised me a bit because Andy's a huge Hollywood liberal.

I had the exact same idea, except I was going to aim a little lower and start a Kickstarter for me to get a used Ferrari 550 Maranello, preferably in steel blue or silver. They can be had for ~$80K (though my Kickstarter would also be used for gas money, maintenance, and, of course, insurance). Unfortunately,

I bet she's paranoid schizophrenic. Just a hunch. She has the eyes (though, then again, people usually look paranoid schizophrenic in mugshots).

I gotta wonder if part of the resurgence in popularity of the E30 M3 is because Mattel recently started putting it out in Hot Wheels form.

I still play the PS2 as much as I play my XBox 360. The Dreamcast/XBox/Playstation 2/Gamecube generation of consoles are when the "3D" graphics caught up to what I'd always imagined videogames would look like "in the future" when I was a teenager in the late 1980s and early 1990s, and the graphics in racing games on

It's all moot because it's highly unlikely I'll be getting a Playstation 4 anytime in the next few years (I still don't have a Playstation 3), but, while I like what I've seen graphics-wise from DriveClub, I'd only be interested in buying the game if it has a substantial offline mode. I'm an unsolcial throwback who is

I'm just hoping the new GRID game has Ferrari this time. Whether or not one thinks Ferrari is overrated is besides the point; I feel playing a track racing game without Ferrari is like playing a rally game without, say, Subaru. I've enjoyed many racing games that lack Ferrari for licensing reasons, but they always

I have practically every game I've ever owned since the Sega Master System era (and the Vic-20 before that, even if it doesn't count as a "console"). I don't have anything all that valuable, but some of the Playstation 1 JRPGs I own at least are worth pretty much what I spent on them back in the day (not that I have

GoDaddy is the 4chan /b/ of advertising. They should just end all their commercials with trollface asking "umad?".

I only mentioned upgrades because you mentioned upgrades in your opening post. If you don't want to upgrade, that FORD MUSTANG game is probably up your alley, though I doubt it's much of a simulator.

It's in TORCS, "The Open Racing Car Simulator", though it's not a commercial game so it probably doesn't count.

Also playable in the tough as nails TEST DRIVE: FERRARI RACING LEGENDS.

METROPOLIS STREET RACER, the precursor to PROJECT GOTHAM RACING on the Sega Dreamcast, had a 1999 Mustang MkIV.

I used to work carts in a supermarket parking lot. On hot summer days, 7-Up was my go-to drink. I find it tastes "sharper" than Sprite. I'm a Pepsi, Coke Zero, and Fanta cream soda guy at home, but, outdoors, I prefer lemon-lime soda. I also really miss the flavoured 7-Ups that Pepsico sold up here in Canada in the