The Lexus GX 460 is only the twelfth "don't buy" warning Consumer Reports has ever issued. What were the others? Well, let's just say it's not company you want to keep. From Automobile.
Showing posts with label Automobile Magazine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Automobile Magazine. Show all posts
4.16.2010
The Consumer Reports Kiss Of Death
3.23.2010
Chryslancia! The Plan Revealed
It worked for Saturn and Opel and Pontiac and Vauxhall...oh....wait.
Well, Fiat's got nothing else, so look for Chrysler and Lancia to share gene pools, but not sales markets.
From Automobile.
by
Michael Hagerty
Labels:
automobile,
Automobile Magazine,
automobilemag.com,
Chrylancia,
Chrysler,
Fiat,
Lancia,
Opel,
Pontiac,
Saturn,
Vauxhall


3.22.2010
2013 BMW 3-Series To Include Blind-Spot Special
If you're among those who find the recent outbreak of four-door fastbacks (BMW X6, Honda Accord Crosstour, Acura ZDX) disconcerting from an aesthetic and practical point of view, get set for a long ride.
by
Michael Hagerty
Labels:
3-series,
Accord,
Acura,
automobile,
Automobile Magazine,
BMW,
Crosstour,
Georg Kacher,
GT,
Honda,
X6,
ZDX


9.04.2009
David E. Davis, Jr: "I've never told this story in public before..."

Car and Driver's David E. Davis, Jr., guesting on Autoline After Hours, tells the story of his departure from Automobile, the magazine he founded in 1986 with Rupert Murdoch.
It involves allegations of treachery, which inspires DED, Jr. to dream of a piano falling from an airplane and onto former protege' (now Automobile Editor-In-Chief )Jean Jennings. Scroll in to 14:55 and let it roll for a minute until the host and other guests start squirming.
Also: Davis' story of his 1968 firing from C/D (about 10:30), and what inspired his 1985 resignation from his second tour at the magazine (11:43).
6.03.2009
P.J. O'Rourke Is A Great Writer. As A Re-Writer, Not So Much
P.J. O'Rourke is a former National Lampoon editor and writer who branched out into automotive journalism at Car And Driver (another example of why David E. Davis Jr. is the father of modern automotive journalism) in 1977, following NatLamp's publication of his hysterical (if vulgar, sexist and, in those days, borderline obscene) piece "How To Drive Fast On Drugs While Getting Your Wing-Wang Squeezed And Not Spill Your Drink".
Over the years, that particular gem has been reprinted in at least one of O'Rourke's books...but with a few of the words changed. Now, P.J. has put out a compilation of his car pieces for Car and Driver, Automobile and other magazines, Driving Like Crazy. And once again, he's editing himself. Jean Jennings mentions it gently in her column in the July Automobile.
O'Rourke himself cops to it in the book...arguing that he's now a better writer, so changing is improving. I disagree. P.J.'s pieces are better the first time (so much so that I think I'd like to read the first drafts).
Evidence of how good P.J. is when he's not overthinking it is found in this past Saturday's Wall Street Journal, where he gives us "The End of Our Love Affair With Cars". It's classic, yet mature P.J. Go read. Then hit your local used bookstore and see if you can find the original back issues of Car and Driver and Automobile to see P.J.'s work the way it was originally written.
5.31.2009
David E. Davis Jr. Rejoins Car And Driver

Car and Driver's new editor-in-chief Eddie Alterman is on issue number two of his tenure...and he's continuing to hit all the right notes.
At his invitation, David E. Davis, Jr., who held that office twice in the 60s, 70s and 80s (both tenures widely considered to be the golden years of C/D) has returned as a columnist.
Davis is the father of modern automotive journalism, a true giant whose talents and instincts not only propelled Car and Driver to the top while he was at the helm, but provided sufficient momentum to keep C/D there for the 23 years since his departure to launch Automobile. His most recent venture was the online magazine Winding Road.
If you took everything Davis ever wrote in his life and put it in one volume, I'd read it all (most of it for the second or third time) and then urge you to do the same.
Davis says he's rejoining Car and Driver because it is the one car magazine with the ingredients needed to succeed.
Alterman's second issue (July, 2009) is yet another big step forward in putting Car and Driver back in gear, from a thought-provoking editor's column, to continued refinements in content and artwork (including the cleanest-looking cover in years).
Last month's appearance by former editor-in-chief Csaba Csere, kicking off a series on Certified Pre-Owned vehicles, appears to have been a one-shot...Tony Swan writes installment number two (on Porsche 911's)
DED, Jr.'s first column is in there, too...a brilliant piece on former General Motors chief Rick Wagoner and what might soon be the former General Motors. Go buy a copy. Then subscribe. This is going to be very good...at a time when we car folks need it most.
Car and Driver May 1964 (Vol 9 No 11)
Automobile, December 1988, Vol. 3, No. 9.
by
Michael Hagerty
Labels:
automobile,
Automobile Magazine,
car and driver,
csaba csere,
david e. davis jr.,
eddie alterman,
General Motors,
Rick Wagoner,
tony swan,
winding road


Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)