Cleveland won a world championship. CLEVELAND. Won a world championship.
An encounter like that can bruin your whole day.
That song plays over the epic final montage of nuclear explosions. One of the all-time great cinematic endings. You can watch it here:
Dude, the only thing less stealthy than an Abarth is an F-35 making a vertical takeoff.
Is attacker wearing jean shorts?
I’m not giving the production guys any slack here. They totally screwed that up. They have to know there are no timeouts and that a huge play will begin immediately. Instead they cut over to Bledsoe and completely miss one of the most shocking plays of the NBA season.
And the Germans to their credit have taken responsibility for what happened under Hitler. The Japanese, on the other hand, continue to struggle with their awful history in Manchuria between 1931 and 1945.
Fiat 500 Abarth. Bought my ‘13 Abarth new with leather interior for $19K. It’s been an absolute hoot.
THANK you. I just don’t get what Nolan is complaining about here. I don’t see NFL franchises rushing to pay media outlets so their brave, brave journalists can march out on the field to be honored during the anthem.
Why would this post this upset you? The article isn’t trying to make companies “stop making” smart cars. It’s describing a real issue that’s occurring as cars evolve into increasingly connected platforms.
I’ll just cut to the chase and say, this is why we should bring back the goddamn manual transmissions. OK, so I’m joking (kinda). But you get drivers invested in driving, and maybe they won’t be blundering into fatal accidents while texting.
I agree with you. I came into it skeptical, thinking gains in miles traveled would water down the rise and show the change to be not that severe. But in fact, it looks like deaths per mile have spiked (coincident with lower gas prices and record miles traveled, but still) and that there has to be an underlying reason…