Imagine a future where a cracked windshield costs $4000 to replace!
Imagine a future where a cracked windshield costs $4000 to replace!
There’s only one of them. It doesn’t come in any other anything.
It’s above $150K with 3 days to go. It’s pristine nearly as-new condition represents too much of its value for it to see a lot of use, except for someone with both enough money and the mindset to not care about preserving its mint status.
Any chance Cherry Jones is interested in giving 23 million people a lift?
^this is 11/10 good car journalism
your suspension setting was too stiff
I did, actually! I could lift one end of it pretty easily.
Pulled out? I see what you did there.
To quote myself from another post three seconds ago: “I mean, we’ve gone from slowly accepting autos/DCT around here, of which I don’t agree with, to now saying SUV handling is good enough?”
Oh wow, congratulations. Since you can’t have a cookie, have a chunk of jerky on me.
I once edited Heat to remove all the scenes that had the guys with their girlfriends/wives. Got it to a tight 115 minutes or so.
What I find bewildering is the level apathy people have towards these breaches of privacy. Facebook’s betrayal of public trust is complete and absolute. And no one cares.
Of course. Same management.
“Why not try a bigger lens? Optical zoom? Other things that real photographers would notice and not phone nerds?”
“We did not sign up to develop weapons, and we demand a say in how our work is used.
As you stated the new car is a “nicer” car. My question is though, WHY? Why does every car have to get nicer? Why cant companies just continue to offer a car for what it is? Why do they keep trying to have a car grow with the audience it is currently hot with? All that does is necessitate a NEW base model to come in…
They abused our trust and sold it to the highest bidder. The fine should be devastating to the organization. I don’t think it should survive. No business should ever aim to collect,redistribute, and target the personal details of people like this again.
I’m afraid so. For the same reason you’d still read “but it’s not that fuel-efficient” in a Chevy Suburban review or “it’s fast” in a Porsche 911 review. It’s not meant to just be a dig on EVs, but it is kind of an important part of the experience.
“I want chicken nuggets and a beer”