zibodiz1
Zibodiz
zibodiz1

Xiao was not injured in the crash, nor has she been charged for the incident.

over 50% fat? I find it hard to believe anything else fast food could be much worse. In a hamburger, most of the fat cooks away leaving only the meat behind, but in fried foods, the fat sticks around, which is why they use so much of it in the nuggets.

Google is trying to take the first pedal, too.

Wyoming rates so highly on the list for two reasons: Fuel is cheaper here on average than most states, however most people here drive a lot of distance to get anywhere, and there's a significantly higher per-capita of trucks burning more fuel that in most states.

I don't get it. Am I the only guy who steers his car for hours using nothing but his left knee? I literally spend most (80%+) of my highway time with my knee steadying the wheel. I'll usually have at least one hand on the wheel as well, but my knee is a lot steadier, and as long as the curve is gradual enough

All the interstate highways in Wyoming, Montana, Colorado, Nebraska, and South Dakota are 75, unless they're going through a mountain pass, dense city, or something else with elevated risks. I couldn't say about other places, but in my chunk of the USA, 75 is the norm.

All the interstate highways in Wyoming, Montana, Colorado, Nebraska, and South Dakota are 75, unless they're going through a mountain pass, dense city, or something else with elevated risks. I couldn't say about other places, but in my chunk of the USA, 75 is the norm.

All the interstate highways in Wyoming, Montana, Colorado, Nebraska, and South Dakota are 75, unless they're going through a mountain pass, dense city, or something else with elevated risks. I couldn't say about other places, but in my chunk of the USA, 75 is the norm.

All the interstate highways in Wyoming, Montana, Colorado, Nebraska, and South Dakota are 75, unless they're going through a mountain pass, dense city, or something else with elevated risks. I couldn't say about other places, but in my chunk of the USA, 75 is the norm.

I don't know about most places, but in Wyoming, the law stipulates a 55mph limit (down from 60 in 2011) on all unmarked dirt roads. To ensure everyone knows that, they put it on all driving tests.

From my experience driving there, most of the people in that area already think there is a 140K speed limit.

I was wondering the same thing. They're kinda cool for all the wrong reasons, though.

Probably the only 4-door ute ever sold in the USA. That's gotta give it a few bonus cool points.

And this gets at the heart of this stupid 'silly law' meme. Rarely are the laws taken directly. It makes sense to have the sale of human organs outlawed. If this infographic simply stated that the sale of human organs were illegal, it wouldn't be 'funny', and nobody would read it; so instead they feel the need to

There's little more about the M3 that you can say that hasn't already been said. It's been called the greatest car of all time, a German masterwork, and one time I heard a guy say it was overrated but I'm not sure he knew what he was talking about. And when you can get an M3 in a racing version, that's even better. So

On a rainy evening in early October in Manhattan’s trendy Chelsea neighborhood, more than 300 journalists, car dealers, and members of New York’s high society crowded around a tiny stage as Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter Ruby Amanfu warmed up the room with soulful tunes about life and love. “Thank you so much,”

A 4-seat convertible from Mazda? I'd buy the heck out of that.

I've got the grandfather of your car ('98 Escort Wagon), and I concur. Mazda wagons are supposed to be boring cars, but they're actually a lot of fun. I just wish they'd somehow made a convertible version... but then I guess it'd just be a big Miata.

The image stabilization on that video makes the car look like it's dancing or something. A little surreal.