The early 2000's were really the zenith of modern video games. Seeing that makes me want to dig out my old thinkpad and listen to Brooke Burke while I take my tarted up Celica for a spin in the hills.
The early 2000's were really the zenith of modern video games. Seeing that makes me want to dig out my old thinkpad and listen to Brooke Burke while I take my tarted up Celica for a spin in the hills.
The Tacoma and the rav4 needed to be scions as well...
The Navy: “It might be an F-35C from Patient”
The A-12 was even more purposeful and otherworldly looking.
Blame the American left for abandoning their once-unwavering support for western society and the fruits of mankind’s ambitions, and instead trying to do everything in their power to tear it all down.
In a fairer, better world, Mazda would have been filled with the desire to go after the Aristo, and would have given us a 20b-engined 929 wearing Eunos badges in order to satisfy that desire.
Try telling that to the shills at Gawker media though.
Fucking hell this truck looks fantastic, almost like something out of Prometheus
Oh, I’m sure that we could probably fly C-130's up and down the DMZ and they’d still be freaking out up there in the hermit kingdom.
If you’re going for spectacle, the B-1B has it in spades over the BUFF (and I like the BUFF!), and today, it’s a more versatile and effective platform, with a much lower per-hour operational cost, to boot.
Great, a B-52.
I recently left the magical world SAAB ownership after getting tempted to “the dark side” by an S60 T6 R-Design, in the limited edition red, no less.
Reese’s can do nothing wrong. It’s the only mass-produced American chocolate product that can truly stand toe to toe with the Europeans.
Came here to correct, but you beat me too it.
I’m with you 1000% and then some!
Oh, I’m sure that Elmo’s mainstream marketability played a role as well, but I think that was partially a result of their earlier programming choices. He wasn’t the first character with major marketing ssuccess, as a kid of the late 80’s, I remember Big Bird, Kermit, Cookie Monster, and Ernie and Bert were also…
I grew up in Boston, and was pretty close via family to some of the folks running WGBH, which has always kind of been the brain trust for all PBS programming in general. So I feel qualified to give a little background on how and why Elmo ruined Sesame Street.
The struggle is real.