Also Björk is way hotter than this "singer" (in quotes because being a Eurovision contestant does not a singer make). Hell, way back when I was just barely a teenager, her voice alone was enough to give me a special feeling...
Also Björk is way hotter than this "singer" (in quotes because being a Eurovision contestant does not a singer make). Hell, way back when I was just barely a teenager, her voice alone was enough to give me a special feeling...
"The drug dogs are always right."
Apparently. What I don't get is that, as far as I can tell, Rainbow Dash was not personally affected by any of this (either the accident on I-10 or the accident he witnessed while on vacation), yet has assigned blame in both cases in the least logical way possible.
Sounds like the guy who "hydroplaned" into the ditch was the real idiot. If he was driving that fast that he hydroplaned *after slowing down*, then he was driving too fast for the conditions (i.e., amount of water on the road and lack of visibility). Why blame the guy driving with his hazard lights on?
Not horses, but just google "horse-drawn vehicle license plate."
What you said.
I understand your motivation in trying that beer. You know going in that there is virtually no chance that it will be palatable, let alone *good*, but you do it anyway. Because you have to know. You have to know if it is as bad as it sounds, and if so, how did it ever make it on the shelf.
After seeing the Quasar-Unipower, all I can say is that Nissan has no business calling its mini MPV a "Cube."
"Volkswagen is one of the very first companies to take such a drastic step to force workers toward a better work-life balance." Yeah, as others were also quick to point out, you got it the wrong way around. It should have read, "Volkswagen is one of the very first companies that has been forced to take such a…
Saab aspired to be in BMW territory in the '80s, but as Tonyola wrote, they priced themselves out of reach of most of their longstanding core customers. Not that it is hard to understand their motivation. BMW's 320i, for reasons that may have baffled the parent company itself, opened the floodgates for the automaker…
Glad I'm not the only one who gets annoyed by this.
I'm thinking about buying myself an '89 Eagle Premier for Christmas. Does that count?
I, too, stongly prefer manual transmissions, but I will say that there are some times, usually when I'm stuck in horrendous traffic jams, that I do get tired of "clutch out, clutch in" every second or two, repeated thousands of times during a single commute.
I agree with you. Seriously. Sticking up for Nader is a rare thing on this or any other car-enthusiast site. I know that it's pretty much a requirement that to be a "real" car guy (or gal) in America, you're supposed to hate Ralph Nader. Kind of like if you're going to be a "real" Texan, you'd sure as hell better…
Yeah, well I suppose the Rangie has more places for fluids to flow back from (swivel joints, front diff, engine (all over), transfer case), so that the net effect was just coverage everywhere.
Fair enough, but check these out:
Much of the commentariat may have picked it up from watching Top Gear, but there are others of us on here who are/have spoken to/know Britons who are not Clarkson who use the word "maths" to describe mathematics. It has been in common usage there long before Top Gear was even a twinkle in the Beeb's eye.
4th Gear: Jalopnik Exclusive!!!! New evidence suggests that a Vermont man who bought a Saab 9-5 on December 19 and then crashed it six hours later, had a motive to intentionally crash the Swedish albatross!!! A Jalopnik tipster tells us that, while driving home in his new Saab, the man heard a radio report indicating…
I don't know about you, but one day's worth of oil usually lasts months (if not years) on the British cars I've owned (of course, I said "on" not "in"). For instance, I know the manual for my old Rangie recommended regular applications of Waxoyl to the chassis, but I never understood why. The combination of all the…
Don't you mean, "torques steer much???"