zacarious
zacarious
zacarious

@alfasud: Nice. We used to call my friends subaru justy the same thing.

I always had success with this particular combo at the Jericho drive-in outside of Albany. The truck was actually a white GMC Sierra extended cab, the sofa looked pretty much the same, and me well, much much thinner.

This is not the first Ford concept car that looks like an Audi, anyone remember the concept car that proceed the Ford 500 - the Prodigy?

@guruscotty: I was just thinking the same thing. Great little concept car.

@ampedpack: I have no shame in missing the Celica. The all trac (GT-Four) was a thoroughly entertaining car - a poor man's Audi Quattro.

and everyone will get hot Brazilian au pairs to take care of their little monsters, and their wives wont mind, and there will be cupcakes, and no more cancer, and the Indians will win the world series

if your looking for the giant man eating vagina ... make a left a Mos Eisley and keep driving till you see the last jawa ... you'll know you're at the right spot by the smell

Manual Transmission.

Remember when I was young and so were you and the road was filled with Japanese sports cars and that was all we knew. Toyota you were the first, so was I, we drove for fun and and you never accelerated alone, remember when.

@JayBrizzle: That's also how I learned to drive a boat.

Welcome to Down in Zane's Room, where we admire old matchbox and hot wheels cars found in Zane's old boxes of toys - formally in the bedroom of the country house where toy's were never thrown out, ever: Wallkill, New York.

@Canuck Chinaman: Saw the Edward Burtynsky show at the Brooklyn Museum back in 2006. Incredible stuff.

Saul Goodman always recommends that his clients use the current generation mitsubishi gallant for all nefarious actives ... impossible to describe beyond "dude was driving a car."

Toyota HiGHlander ... Ba Da Da.

Nice summary. One image to add.

For people who like to drive and have no children or need a 2nd "fun" car: the MX-5. It's the best true motoring experience for the money. Nothing even comes close. Old or new, they are great to drive, great to own, and great on the wallet.

As a past multiple-Reatta owner and lover (once you go 80s touchscreen you never go back) I am going to have to pass the pipe on this one. This looks like a classic high millage Reatta beater, which equals trouble.