When I tried to take a rear 3/4 shot, I noticed in the viewfinder the humungous amber turn signal lamps on the front fenders. Those projections must reduce the car's coefficient of drag by half.


CKY
Cars | Geopolitics | Travel | Food


I just took a short survey on Facebook to see which F1 driver I am. According to the program, I am Ayrton Senna because:
CKY
This morning, we drove by while running errands and noticed that it was open. Apparently, this is the second weekend that it has been open for breakfast. The menu is both traditional American (pancakes, waffles, eggs) and Mexican. I had the Oaxacan breakfast ($10). It had corn tortillas with black beans and queso fresco on top, a large-ish linguisa sausage, a small-ish portion of home fries, and two eggs. It was pretty damn tasty, and did not feel heavy or greasy.

The pseudo-suicide door configuration may have inspired later Saturn and Mazda models.



With the current economic downturn, the die cast car industry has ground to a virtual halt. I mean, who has $50 to spend on a useless 1/43 scale toy car? Minichamps, my favorite die cast manufacturer, is especially hurting. I've been waiting patiently for months now as it keeps delaying the debut of its Aston Martin Lagonda and 1967 Chevy Camaro. It appears that Minichamps is trying to save development costs and is just selling older models with new paint schemes.


This is a pretty bad-ass Porsche. First, it's missing its front bumpers, which gives it a race prepped look. Second, the body is less than perfect. There is noticeable bubbling underneath the paint in the front portion of the hood. This is a daily driver that refuses to be pampered like many trailer/garage queens.
Cheney will be in a wheelchair tomorrow at the inauguration because he supposedly hurt his back while moving some boxes. Bullshit. He is only doing so to elicit sympathy and diffuse calls for him to be tried for war crimes.
CKY
Here we have a great example of an unmolested American 300D. In California, and particularly in the Bay Area, many of these classics have been converted to run on biodiesel. 



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I was browsing an archaeology magazine when I came upon an article about Native Hawaiians who settled in Utah.
While waiting in the doctor's office, I came across an archaeology (!) magazine. In it was an ad for a 60 day overland journey in Land Rover Discoveries. It is run by a Canadian outfit and will run each person about 20,000 Euros.

Study No. 1: Jole in Calistoga. With Wappo Bar dying a slow and painful death, the Calistoga food scene needs a morale boost. Along comes Jole, which opened last summer. The menu pasted on the front window was tempting. For the first time, I realized how the font and design of the menu itself can attract, or dissuade, potential diners. Of course, its location is great. It is smack dab in the middle of downtown, next to the modern Mount View Hotel. Its mantra is "Farm to Table". To me, it invokes freshness and simplicity. What I ended up getting was overpriced and underwhelming.
Study No. 2: Mustards Grill in Napa. This place is blessed with an equally enviable location. It sits at the trailhead of Highway 29, Napa's own Route de Vins. But the people who own Mustards do not solely depend on its location; they work hard at making the food and service stand out.

I bought both at the die cast car shop in Napa. It's along Highway 29, just south of Bistro Don Giovanni. I try to drop by every time I'm up in the Wine Country.
I came upon this magnificent XJ6 in Oakland. I always confuse the Series 1 XJ with its Daimler Sovereign twin. The XJ6 was offered with a 2.8 liter or 4.2 liter six cylinder. This is truly an old school Jag.
To celebrate the Czech Republic's ascendency to the EU presidency, artist David Cerny was commissioned to create a piece of art which represents Europe. The controversial piece, called Entropa, makes fun of each EU member instead. In fact, to represent Great Britain's separateness from the rest of Europe, it is not even in the artwork.