Footballer in credible car shocker.
Discussion
Well, yes, it is a 'credible' car, but he has it by accident.
A proper car person would have bought it because it was a 1967 Shelby Mustang GT500KR Cobrajet 428, and knew a good thing when they saw it.
However, given this car's colour scheme, I reckon he was watching Gone In 60 Seconds, which he believes to be an original film and not a remake of the HB Halicki original, of which he knows nothing, saw 'Eleanor', and thought 'dat car iz wikid'. After illegibly texting his team-mates, he goes down to his local car dealer and arranges for one to be made, which was probably sold to him at several times the price it was worth, thus driving up prices of Mustangs for the rest of us.
Then he finds the original stove-enameled Torq-Thrust alloys far too understated, tasteful and functional for the football car park, and ruins the ride and handling with a set of bling alloys designed for a Hummer.
Had he turned up in a standard Wimbledon White GT350 with Torq-Thrusts, Thrush side-pipes, Hurst floor-shifter with pistol-grip, Shelby twin blue stripes, perspex rear three-quarter windows and heavy-duty anti-roll bars, that would mark him out as a true car enthusiast. Much as I'd like to think this car says the same, all it says to me is that he's seen a popular disengage-brain ITV2 favourite film.
A proper car person would have bought it because it was a 1967 Shelby Mustang GT500KR Cobrajet 428, and knew a good thing when they saw it.
However, given this car's colour scheme, I reckon he was watching Gone In 60 Seconds, which he believes to be an original film and not a remake of the HB Halicki original, of which he knows nothing, saw 'Eleanor', and thought 'dat car iz wikid'. After illegibly texting his team-mates, he goes down to his local car dealer and arranges for one to be made, which was probably sold to him at several times the price it was worth, thus driving up prices of Mustangs for the rest of us.
Then he finds the original stove-enameled Torq-Thrust alloys far too understated, tasteful and functional for the football car park, and ruins the ride and handling with a set of bling alloys designed for a Hummer.
Had he turned up in a standard Wimbledon White GT350 with Torq-Thrusts, Thrush side-pipes, Hurst floor-shifter with pistol-grip, Shelby twin blue stripes, perspex rear three-quarter windows and heavy-duty anti-roll bars, that would mark him out as a true car enthusiast. Much as I'd like to think this car says the same, all it says to me is that he's seen a popular disengage-brain ITV2 favourite film.
Twincam16 said:
Well, yes, it is a 'credible' car, but he has it by accident.
A proper car person would have bought it because it was a 1967 Shelby Mustang GT500KR Cobrajet 428, and knew a good thing when they saw it.
However, given this car's colour scheme, I reckon he was watching Gone In 60 Seconds, which he believes to be an original film and not a remake of the HB Halicki original, of which he knows nothing, saw 'Eleanor', and thought 'dat car iz wikid'. After illegibly texting his team-mates, he goes down to his local car dealer and arranges for one to be made, which was probably sold to him at several times the price it was worth, thus driving up prices of Mustangs for the rest of us.
Then he finds the original stove-enameled Torq-Thrust alloys far too understated, tasteful and functional for the football car park, and ruins the ride and handling with a set of bling alloys designed for a Hummer.
Had he turned up in a standard Wimbledon White GT350 with Torq-Thrusts, Thrush side-pipes, Hurst floor-shifter with pistol-grip, Shelby twin blue stripes, perspex rear three-quarter windows and heavy-duty anti-roll bars, that would mark him out as a true car enthusiast. Much as I'd like to think this car says the same, all it says to me is that he's seen a popular disengage-brain ITV2 favourite film.
What a load of tosh.A proper car person would have bought it because it was a 1967 Shelby Mustang GT500KR Cobrajet 428, and knew a good thing when they saw it.
However, given this car's colour scheme, I reckon he was watching Gone In 60 Seconds, which he believes to be an original film and not a remake of the HB Halicki original, of which he knows nothing, saw 'Eleanor', and thought 'dat car iz wikid'. After illegibly texting his team-mates, he goes down to his local car dealer and arranges for one to be made, which was probably sold to him at several times the price it was worth, thus driving up prices of Mustangs for the rest of us.
Then he finds the original stove-enameled Torq-Thrust alloys far too understated, tasteful and functional for the football car park, and ruins the ride and handling with a set of bling alloys designed for a Hummer.
Had he turned up in a standard Wimbledon White GT350 with Torq-Thrusts, Thrush side-pipes, Hurst floor-shifter with pistol-grip, Shelby twin blue stripes, perspex rear three-quarter windows and heavy-duty anti-roll bars, that would mark him out as a true car enthusiast. Much as I'd like to think this car says the same, all it says to me is that he's seen a popular disengage-brain ITV2 favourite film.
Twincam16 said:
Well, yes, it is a 'credible' car, but he has it by accident.
A proper car person would have bought it because it was a 1967 Shelby Mustang GT500KR Cobrajet 428, and knew a good thing when they saw it.
However, given this car's colour scheme, I reckon he was watching Gone In 60 Seconds, which he believes to be an original film and not a remake of the HB Halicki original, of which he knows nothing, saw 'Eleanor', and thought 'dat car iz wikid'. After illegibly texting his team-mates, he goes down to his local car dealer and arranges for one to be made, which was probably sold to him at several times the price it was worth, thus driving up prices of Mustangs for the rest of us.
Then he finds the original stove-enameled Torq-Thrust alloys far too understated, tasteful and functional for the football car park, and ruins the ride and handling with a set of bling alloys designed for a Hummer.
Had he turned up in a standard Wimbledon White GT350 with Torq-Thrusts, Thrush side-pipes, Hurst floor-shifter with pistol-grip, Shelby twin blue stripes, perspex rear three-quarter windows and heavy-duty anti-roll bars, that would mark him out as a true car enthusiast. Much as I'd like to think this car says the same, all it says to me is that he's seen a popular disengage-brain ITV2 favourite film.
Obviously hit a raw nerve with you.A proper car person would have bought it because it was a 1967 Shelby Mustang GT500KR Cobrajet 428, and knew a good thing when they saw it.
However, given this car's colour scheme, I reckon he was watching Gone In 60 Seconds, which he believes to be an original film and not a remake of the HB Halicki original, of which he knows nothing, saw 'Eleanor', and thought 'dat car iz wikid'. After illegibly texting his team-mates, he goes down to his local car dealer and arranges for one to be made, which was probably sold to him at several times the price it was worth, thus driving up prices of Mustangs for the rest of us.
Then he finds the original stove-enameled Torq-Thrust alloys far too understated, tasteful and functional for the football car park, and ruins the ride and handling with a set of bling alloys designed for a Hummer.
Had he turned up in a standard Wimbledon White GT350 with Torq-Thrusts, Thrush side-pipes, Hurst floor-shifter with pistol-grip, Shelby twin blue stripes, perspex rear three-quarter windows and heavy-duty anti-roll bars, that would mark him out as a true car enthusiast. Much as I'd like to think this car says the same, all it says to me is that he's seen a popular disengage-brain ITV2 favourite film.
Luke. said:
Twincam16 said:
Well, yes, it is a 'credible' car, but he has it by accident.
A proper car person would have bought it because it was a 1967 Shelby Mustang GT500KR Cobrajet 428, and knew a good thing when they saw it.
However, given this car's colour scheme, I reckon he was watching Gone In 60 Seconds, which he believes to be an original film and not a remake of the HB Halicki original, of which he knows nothing, saw 'Eleanor', and thought 'dat car iz wikid'. After illegibly texting his team-mates, he goes down to his local car dealer and arranges for one to be made, which was probably sold to him at several times the price it was worth, thus driving up prices of Mustangs for the rest of us.
Then he finds the original stove-enameled Torq-Thrust alloys far too understated, tasteful and functional for the football car park, and ruins the ride and handling with a set of bling alloys designed for a Hummer.
Had he turned up in a standard Wimbledon White GT350 with Torq-Thrusts, Thrush side-pipes, Hurst floor-shifter with pistol-grip, Shelby twin blue stripes, perspex rear three-quarter windows and heavy-duty anti-roll bars, that would mark him out as a true car enthusiast. Much as I'd like to think this car says the same, all it says to me is that he's seen a popular disengage-brain ITV2 favourite film.
What a load of tosh.A proper car person would have bought it because it was a 1967 Shelby Mustang GT500KR Cobrajet 428, and knew a good thing when they saw it.
However, given this car's colour scheme, I reckon he was watching Gone In 60 Seconds, which he believes to be an original film and not a remake of the HB Halicki original, of which he knows nothing, saw 'Eleanor', and thought 'dat car iz wikid'. After illegibly texting his team-mates, he goes down to his local car dealer and arranges for one to be made, which was probably sold to him at several times the price it was worth, thus driving up prices of Mustangs for the rest of us.
Then he finds the original stove-enameled Torq-Thrust alloys far too understated, tasteful and functional for the football car park, and ruins the ride and handling with a set of bling alloys designed for a Hummer.
Had he turned up in a standard Wimbledon White GT350 with Torq-Thrusts, Thrush side-pipes, Hurst floor-shifter with pistol-grip, Shelby twin blue stripes, perspex rear three-quarter windows and heavy-duty anti-roll bars, that would mark him out as a true car enthusiast. Much as I'd like to think this car says the same, all it says to me is that he's seen a popular disengage-brain ITV2 favourite film.
Twincam16 said:
Well, yes, it is a 'credible' car, but he has it by accident.
A proper car person would have bought it because it was a 1967 Shelby Mustang GT500KR Cobrajet 428, and knew a good thing when they saw it.
However, given this car's colour scheme, I reckon he was watching Gone In 60 Seconds, which he believes to be an original film and not a remake of the HB Halicki original, of which he knows nothing, saw 'Eleanor', and thought 'dat car iz wikid'. After illegibly texting his team-mates, he goes down to his local car dealer and arranges for one to be made, which was probably sold to him at several times the price it was worth, thus driving up prices of Mustangs for the rest of us.
Then he finds the original stove-enameled Torq-Thrust alloys far too understated, tasteful and functional for the football car park, and ruins the ride and handling with a set of bling alloys designed for a Hummer.
Had he turned up in a standard Wimbledon White GT350 with Torq-Thrusts, Thrush side-pipes, Hurst floor-shifter with pistol-grip, Shelby twin blue stripes, perspex rear three-quarter windows and heavy-duty anti-roll bars, that would mark him out as a true car enthusiast. Much as I'd like to think this car says the same, all it says to me is that he's seen a popular disengage-brain ITV2 favourite film.
That is getting on for the biggest load of bA proper car person would have bought it because it was a 1967 Shelby Mustang GT500KR Cobrajet 428, and knew a good thing when they saw it.
However, given this car's colour scheme, I reckon he was watching Gone In 60 Seconds, which he believes to be an original film and not a remake of the HB Halicki original, of which he knows nothing, saw 'Eleanor', and thought 'dat car iz wikid'. After illegibly texting his team-mates, he goes down to his local car dealer and arranges for one to be made, which was probably sold to him at several times the price it was worth, thus driving up prices of Mustangs for the rest of us.
Then he finds the original stove-enameled Torq-Thrust alloys far too understated, tasteful and functional for the football car park, and ruins the ride and handling with a set of bling alloys designed for a Hummer.
Had he turned up in a standard Wimbledon White GT350 with Torq-Thrusts, Thrush side-pipes, Hurst floor-shifter with pistol-grip, Shelby twin blue stripes, perspex rear three-quarter windows and heavy-duty anti-roll bars, that would mark him out as a true car enthusiast. Much as I'd like to think this car says the same, all it says to me is that he's seen a popular disengage-brain ITV2 favourite film.
ks I have read on here, and that is saying something. Why "after illegibly texting his team-mates", he is a highly intelligent articulate guy, fluent in about 4 languages.Monkeylegend said:
Twincam16 said:
Well, yes, it is a 'credible' car, but he has it by accident.
A proper car person would have bought it because it was a 1967 Shelby Mustang GT500KR Cobrajet 428, and knew a good thing when they saw it.
However, given this car's colour scheme, I reckon he was watching Gone In 60 Seconds, which he believes to be an original film and not a remake of the HB Halicki original, of which he knows nothing, saw 'Eleanor', and thought 'dat car iz wikid'. After illegibly texting his team-mates, he goes down to his local car dealer and arranges for one to be made, which was probably sold to him at several times the price it was worth, thus driving up prices of Mustangs for the rest of us.
Then he finds the original stove-enameled Torq-Thrust alloys far too understated, tasteful and functional for the football car park, and ruins the ride and handling with a set of bling alloys designed for a Hummer.
Had he turned up in a standard Wimbledon White GT350 with Torq-Thrusts, Thrush side-pipes, Hurst floor-shifter with pistol-grip, Shelby twin blue stripes, perspex rear three-quarter windows and heavy-duty anti-roll bars, that would mark him out as a true car enthusiast. Much as I'd like to think this car says the same, all it says to me is that he's seen a popular disengage-brain ITV2 favourite film.
Obviously hit a raw nerve with you.A proper car person would have bought it because it was a 1967 Shelby Mustang GT500KR Cobrajet 428, and knew a good thing when they saw it.
However, given this car's colour scheme, I reckon he was watching Gone In 60 Seconds, which he believes to be an original film and not a remake of the HB Halicki original, of which he knows nothing, saw 'Eleanor', and thought 'dat car iz wikid'. After illegibly texting his team-mates, he goes down to his local car dealer and arranges for one to be made, which was probably sold to him at several times the price it was worth, thus driving up prices of Mustangs for the rest of us.
Then he finds the original stove-enameled Torq-Thrust alloys far too understated, tasteful and functional for the football car park, and ruins the ride and handling with a set of bling alloys designed for a Hummer.
Had he turned up in a standard Wimbledon White GT350 with Torq-Thrusts, Thrush side-pipes, Hurst floor-shifter with pistol-grip, Shelby twin blue stripes, perspex rear three-quarter windows and heavy-duty anti-roll bars, that would mark him out as a true car enthusiast. Much as I'd like to think this car says the same, all it says to me is that he's seen a popular disengage-brain ITV2 favourite film.
Seriously, imagine if you couldn't get a Ford Capri for less than £25k and they all seemed to be being turned into 'Del Boy replicas' or 'Professionals Silver 3.0S lookalikes'. Capris aren't worth that much, neither are Mustangs, or most other muscle cars for that matter. That Mustang is just part of an industry that has gentrified and artificially pumped up the prices of cars that should be fundamentally blue-collar and accessible for all.
mercfunder said:
Twincam16 said:
Well, yes, it is a 'credible' car, but he has it by accident.
A proper car person would have bought it because it was a 1967 Shelby Mustang GT500KR Cobrajet 428, and knew a good thing when they saw it.
However, given this car's colour scheme, I reckon he was watching Gone In 60 Seconds, which he believes to be an original film and not a remake of the HB Halicki original, of which he knows nothing, saw 'Eleanor', and thought 'dat car iz wikid'. After illegibly texting his team-mates, he goes down to his local car dealer and arranges for one to be made, which was probably sold to him at several times the price it was worth, thus driving up prices of Mustangs for the rest of us.
Then he finds the original stove-enameled Torq-Thrust alloys far too understated, tasteful and functional for the football car park, and ruins the ride and handling with a set of bling alloys designed for a Hummer.
Had he turned up in a standard Wimbledon White GT350 with Torq-Thrusts, Thrush side-pipes, Hurst floor-shifter with pistol-grip, Shelby twin blue stripes, perspex rear three-quarter windows and heavy-duty anti-roll bars, that would mark him out as a true car enthusiast. Much as I'd like to think this car says the same, all it says to me is that he's seen a popular disengage-brain ITV2 favourite film.
That is getting on for the biggest load of bA proper car person would have bought it because it was a 1967 Shelby Mustang GT500KR Cobrajet 428, and knew a good thing when they saw it.
However, given this car's colour scheme, I reckon he was watching Gone In 60 Seconds, which he believes to be an original film and not a remake of the HB Halicki original, of which he knows nothing, saw 'Eleanor', and thought 'dat car iz wikid'. After illegibly texting his team-mates, he goes down to his local car dealer and arranges for one to be made, which was probably sold to him at several times the price it was worth, thus driving up prices of Mustangs for the rest of us.
Then he finds the original stove-enameled Torq-Thrust alloys far too understated, tasteful and functional for the football car park, and ruins the ride and handling with a set of bling alloys designed for a Hummer.
Had he turned up in a standard Wimbledon White GT350 with Torq-Thrusts, Thrush side-pipes, Hurst floor-shifter with pistol-grip, Shelby twin blue stripes, perspex rear three-quarter windows and heavy-duty anti-roll bars, that would mark him out as a true car enthusiast. Much as I'd like to think this car says the same, all it says to me is that he's seen a popular disengage-brain ITV2 favourite film.
ks I have read on here, and that is saying something. Why "after illegibly texting his team-mates", he is a highly intelligent articulate guy, fluent in about 4 languages.
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