Boomer here. Yeah, I was born while this car was in the showroom. My dad had the two-door fastback version. Same color. But he didn't have a Magnetic Mary on the metal speaker grill. He kept it for over ten years, and logged over 100,000 miles. And yeah, it would do 70 with the 3-speed auto. Every day. It'll do 90 with 93 octane, a wide open road, and nerves of steel. Slap the snow tires on in about a month from now and turn off the radio because you won't be able to hear it over the tire sing until next April. And speaking of the radio... find one with the original radio. Maybe you have one from the Falcon. See those little triangles in a circle on the radio dial? There's two of them. Those are for a long forgotten emergency broadcasting system called CONELRAD. The symbols told you where to tune your radio in the event of a nuclear attack by the Soviets. Now imagine you're about 3 years-old riding in Dad's Galaxie 500, and you see these symbols on the radio dial, and you ask him what they're for. And he tells you. That's my historical context. But I also remember Mom's car, a Cadillac Coup d' Ville. And I remember the friction between my mom and Dad's mom because Granma didn't like the Cadillac because "only mobsters drive a Cadillac." That was Granma's historical context. You're driving history. And that's a good thing. But dude, get the power steering.
I hope he finds a Coup DeVille to review. Oh baby!
@MalikCarr4 жыл бұрын
"only mobsters drive a Cadillac" - because of the always generously-sized trunk, right? For keeping... stuff... in, the sort of stuff you might not want witnesses to see.
@dave36574 жыл бұрын
Same here, I was born when this car was in the showroom. We never had one, dad had a 1960 Olds 88. But in 1999 I bought a 63-1/2 Ford Galaxie 500XL made the same month when I was born. It was a fun car, had it a couple of years till I ran into someone wanting to restore it.
@visionop84 жыл бұрын
You grew up with some pretty nice cars. thanks for the info, the CONELRAD thing is probably something I never would have known about.
@saccharinesilk4 жыл бұрын
Here's my hot take: If the past doesn't exist for us to take the good things about it and learn from the bad, what is the point of history? We can have malt shops AND civil rights, we can have corsets (which if you actually wear them as intended are totally rad and way better bust support than bras) AND workers rights, we can have beautiful baroque palaces AND democracy
@woooweee4 жыл бұрын
That's the thing, people were warned about democracy long ago. "The American Republic will endure until the day Congress discovers that it can bribe the public with the public's money.'" ― Alexis de Tocqueville "Masculine republics give way to feminine democracies, and feminine democracies give way to tyranny. " ― Aristotle
@kristoffersparegodt4204 жыл бұрын
@@republicoftexas5992. I'm convinced he liked his own comment
@kristoffersparegodt4204 жыл бұрын
@@woooweee. LoL who cares what Aristotle thought. The countries with the highest standards of living are all full democracies
@VexChoccyMilk4 жыл бұрын
@@kristoffersparegodt420 Oh well then as long as the standard of living is better, we should pay 100% in taxes because the government knows best what to do with our money.
@kristoffersparegodt4204 жыл бұрын
@@VexChoccyMilk. I disagree with your assessment
@firebird1884 жыл бұрын
RCR: _Talking about contextual guilt on a Ford Galaxy_ VW beetle owners: Oh boy...
@evan126974 жыл бұрын
VW Thing owners: [shuffles away]
@SlavicCelery4 жыл бұрын
@@evan12697 VHAT? WE HAVE PRIDE IN ZE CARS! *cough cough* I mean... Is that capt America over there? *Runs away*
@Camarohill24 жыл бұрын
Hatsune Miku created Volkswagen.
@GarrickStaples4 жыл бұрын
As a VW guy myself, I struggle with this. My '59 Cabriolet is a joy to drive, work on, and look at. I'm uncomfortable about all the Nazi-looking cars at the VW meets. I don't want to disown history, but I think too many are revelling in this ugly part of the VW history.
@r5obiwan4 жыл бұрын
My dream car is a 1949 bug. About as close the the Nazi beetle you can get without buying a war era beetle
@TV-8-3014 жыл бұрын
"RCR inspired me to pursue a new career." -"Cool, are you going to go into auto engineering?" "No, philosophy."
@radioguy16204 жыл бұрын
Good comment ,You will probably find that lots of trades people are philosophes on an amateur level or better, A quick review of all the comments is good proof of that .
@TV-8-3014 жыл бұрын
@@radioguy1620 Makes sense, considering the book "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance"
@hulkhatepunybanner4 жыл бұрын
@Mx. TV-8-301 *A lot less math to learn.*
@reece84922 жыл бұрын
Literally the amount of points he has brought up from my psych and sociology course is ridiculous
@grizzly34342 жыл бұрын
@@TV-8-301 I've got a bicycle manual by a similar name. Great and handy book
@ngelosevs32014 жыл бұрын
I came here just to check out this winga dinga car and came out more learned in the concept of Transcendentalism and what the social media’s cancel culture has shaped itself to be.
@danielseelye60054 жыл бұрын
That's RCR for ya.
@karu61114 жыл бұрын
@@danielseelye6005 the perfect mix of cars, fart noises and social, economic, cultural, and/or philosophical rhetoric... I live for this kind of weird content.
@danielseelye60054 жыл бұрын
@@karu6111 *mY gAlAxIe Is BeSt GaLaXiE bEcAuSe GoLd EnGiNe Is BeSt EnGiNe!*
@Myaufroto14 жыл бұрын
This sentence is one giant RCR pun, description, and tribute all in one.
@adamreimus4 жыл бұрын
Ugh, The Goldwater sticker is terrible
@eeejokesno4 жыл бұрын
I drove a '47 Willys CJ2A in high school. This girl in my grade drove a '67 or so Galaxie 4 door, the one with the headlights stacked one on top of the other, instead of side-by-side. It was an absolutely beautiful car. This girl had a friend that I thought was cute. Well, one day, I ended up in my jeep with some friends right behind the Galaxie, the friend inside it, on main street in our little town during the high school lunch rush. My 16 year old brain thought that the most surefire way to impress this girl was to tailgate as close as I could. Well, 4 wheel manual drum brakes don't stop too well, even compared to a Galaxie, and its (the Galaxie's) rear bumper ended up stuck on top of my jeep's front bumper. This happened on main street, right in front of a shop, and with the help of a handyman jack, we were unhooked. Neither girl was impressed, but fortunately neither car was damaged. I got a $60 ticket for following too close. The Galaxie owner's mom worked at city hall, and a few weeks later, I got to pay my ticket to her. (edit) This happened in the late 90s.
@daftnord49574 жыл бұрын
But did you end up married happily ever after
@eeejokesno4 жыл бұрын
@@daftnord4957 We sure didn't
@Mr-Trox3 жыл бұрын
Damn, I wish my Mom had let me drive a 50 year old car to school and back when I was in high school. I would have killed to be able to say I drove something that old.
@cesariojpn4 жыл бұрын
The official car of the owner of KUNKELMAN CHEVROLET telling the old lady it's worth $1000 trade in value in 2020 when it's worth $20000.
@dexterhochstetler37274 жыл бұрын
"That beast is 50 years old, wouldn't you rather have a nice Cascada?"
@jaket2k9274 жыл бұрын
I remember a Cash4Clunkers dealer getting some news after he told a little old lady her late husband's rare ass muscle car for a Prius. He told her to keep it or he would buy it at fair market. He also bashed Cash4Clunkers by keeping said "clunkers" as long as they were actually valuable, low mileage, fictional. He had a few 70s muscle cars, sports cars, special edition and collectors. He was staunchly anti-cash4clunkers.
@BigWheel.4 жыл бұрын
I remember trading in my 1980 buick lesabre to the local chevrolet dealer, salesman got naked coved himself in oil and then started humping my leg before he punched me in the stomach took the keys and drove off, I was 8 years old.
@nathanlewis56824 жыл бұрын
Same for those Turn in your guns for money at the police station. Some old lady brings in her deceased husband's ww2 take home trophy gun he took from a captured nazi officer. The police knows very well what the gun is valued at around $2000. They offer her a piddling $100 gift card for the gun.
@boerharms22094 жыл бұрын
@@nathanlewis5682 guns that are turned in at the police in my country just get destroyed
@mickmondeo4 жыл бұрын
When I hop into my Japanese car, I don’t think about Pearl Harbour or Japanese prison camps.
@devilbub87093 жыл бұрын
Or unit 731, or the fact the person who ran camp 731 after the war become highly decorated in Japanese medicine
@opticalecho1192 жыл бұрын
REMBER PERL HORBER GOBBLESS
@photonforce08 Жыл бұрын
when i hop in my big stinky fat car i dont think of ur mom
@alice_in_pains9 ай бұрын
@@opticalecho119GOOD TO FINS ANURHER HOSS OUT THER, GOBLESS sent from my Samsung Galaxy S1
@ericwoy413225 күн бұрын
Bamboo
@RFagricontracting4 жыл бұрын
And people raced hard top versions of these in British touring car racing during the 60’s I WAUNT IT
@yeshwantdasari20754 жыл бұрын
seeing pictures of Galaxies tilting more than the Titanic through corners with tiny Mini Coopers hot on their tails was a truly site to behold
@RFagricontracting4 жыл бұрын
Yeshwant Dasari if you’re lucky enough you can go to the right places and see it now! An event in the uk called the good wood revival hosts classic racing once every year, they have classic touring car races over the weekend it’s brilliant Hopefully going in person after this COVID stuff is finished
@eyeamstrongest4 жыл бұрын
@@yeshwantdasari2075 lmao i just found the image
@bruhbbawallace4 жыл бұрын
Dan Gurney bitch slapped the entire NASCAR Grand National series 5 times in the 1960s at Riverside while driving one of these
@yeshwantdasari20754 жыл бұрын
@@RFagricontracting was planning on going this year but hey COVID. might go next year however
@bigvood4 жыл бұрын
"It's all CGI on De Niro and Pesci" You, sir, are a master of words
@PaulBaker854 жыл бұрын
"Cancel culture is mostly an excuse for people to avoid having to engage with context in a way that makes them uncomfortable." Beautifully worded statement right there.
@DaveBob964 жыл бұрын
It's really liberating to hear a critique of it that isn't just "CANCEL CULTURE BAD FROZEN PEACHES"
@ussliberty1094 жыл бұрын
Sprinkle in a bit of tripping on one's sense of power to make amoral corporations, universities, and sports teams bend to your whim by projecting that you're a majority and not just a handful of professional busybodies on a site that normal people don't even use. We want more representation for minorities, but also remove all minorities from food packaging. It's about how high you can make someone jump.
@whenwhen22844 жыл бұрын
@@JS-hw8ve It is completely wrong, cancel culture is just a way for people to be like "oh everything needs to go my way and my way only"
@trashrabbit694 жыл бұрын
And not-so-surprisingly enough, much of the usage of "cancel culture" as a term ALSO has become to remove underlying contexts that could give a justification for consequence. The RNC screams "cancel culture" at things as to abstract the situation from any other environments that it existed in. A near perfect encapsulation of the theory of Transcendentalism. "It isn't racist, because I feel like it, and I said so."
@iHaveTheDocuments4 жыл бұрын
Cancle culture is about power and control. It's about dealing out punishment for manufactured outrage. It's a cancer.
@deanv.97994 жыл бұрын
I gotta say that Goldwater bumper sticker just chilling there is just the perfect visual representation of Mr. R’s internal debate.
@letsfailfet5wrt4sef4 жыл бұрын
As a European, THIS is the coolest car the US made. I really want one.
@mientone4 жыл бұрын
+1
@brianmiller10774 жыл бұрын
Later 60's Galaxies had even nicer lines in my humble opinion.
@calebnation77974 жыл бұрын
My dad’s first car was a 2 door 64 galaxie
@Bo-bb7kv4 жыл бұрын
You think that's cool look up the 73 cougar xr7. It was the pinnacle of american excess
@deanchur4 жыл бұрын
1961 Lincoln Continental for me
@amateur3verything4 жыл бұрын
You pulled a Neon Genesis Evangelion on us. Started off as a fun entertaining video to watch but takes a dark turn midway and leaves the audience second guessing their own mindsets and mentalities. Well played as always, Mr. Regular. Well played
@dorsk844 жыл бұрын
My god that episode was a total mind frell.
@andrewstewart14644 жыл бұрын
The PT cruiser episode does that pretty good as well. Start simple and light, then pull back to the darker big picture.
@SecretSauceyjuice4 жыл бұрын
By about 2/3 of the way through I was like holy shit we're doin this!
@andrewstewart14644 жыл бұрын
@Jan Brady Ah, shut the fuck up Jan.
@dputnam4194 жыл бұрын
@Jan Brady just stop the video at 8:11 or so and you’re fine.
@johnathankain80334 жыл бұрын
Separating the art from the artist makes every bit of sense. The car is not a self-portrait of the company or the people who designed it. Just as the Original VW Beetle is not evil, was produced for decades and is enjoyed, so can the Galaxy.
@cubedomatic4 жыл бұрын
People can criticize anything. If you want to take a critics statement into account, it would be best to know the critic, know the body of work, and, know their biases. At the end it's up to you to represent yourself and the car in your own light. The art will speak for itself with out needing the artist signing the canvas and will be appreciated even if they didn't know who made it. It ultimately comes down to 2 things, enjoy it and don't be a douchebag.
@cathat96224 жыл бұрын
'enjoyed'
@rfmerrill4 жыл бұрын
Well, when the artist is still alive and financially benefiting from their art, it's a bit more complicated.
@cubedomatic4 жыл бұрын
@@rfmerrill if you buy from the artist directly then yes. If bought second hand then no.
@startrekmike4 жыл бұрын
@@rfmerrill It can potentially be more complicated but it really does depend on the intent behind the art and what is actually, factually present in the work. For example. Orson Scott Card can pretty easily be called a "problematic" or "gross" person in modern parlance. He has a lot of really awful ideas and more importantly. He tend to not be shy about those ideas in public. I don't really like the man and have no real respect for him as a person. With that in mind, is Ender's Game a problem as a individual work? Does his personality, socio-political opinion, and general religious outlook come through in the pages of that book without a fairly absurd amount of mental gymnastics? Orson Scott Card is still alive and still makes money from Ender's Game but you would be hard pressed to demonstrate that the book itself is a reflection of his beliefs or is trying to spread or further his beliefs. Someone who has no idea about the man can read the book and never get a hint of his personal view. If the work doesn't spread the problematic or "gross" elements of his personality at all, is it really a problem? Is it something that should get taken out of libraries or even "cancelled"?
@privatehand4 жыл бұрын
A 4-door version of this was my first car. Almost got a girl pregnant in it. No one told me about the need for oil changes. I just kept dumping more oil in, and it needed lots of oil, until the oil pump suffered a coronary one fine 1973 morning. It went under the hammer of the local auto auction, lifters ticking their desperate Morse code of "Please don't turn me into washing machines". I miss that car but it would have eventually killed me as I had all the common sense of a chihuhua back then.
@dogge9297 ай бұрын
1973... The year my Galaxie was made. My engine blew the freeze plugs, so I dropped in a 300 6. It's a beautiful, comfy car.
@mtheory854 жыл бұрын
In 50 years, people will look back on our era as one riddled with sociopathy and greed, just as we see the problems of the 1960s. It doesn't mean that what we make and what we accomplish is any less noteworthy.
@GlamStacheessnostalgialounge4 жыл бұрын
I mean in the long run our era is just a stepping stone in technology. Nothing from today will be remembered and cherished in 50 years because there won't be anything left. Who's going to enjoy people's virtual collections of video games, songs or movies? The online services hosting that will be long gone; phones? Modern smartphones are so badly made they just become paper weights within 10 years; Cars are the same, nobody will bother with modern ICE cars, they're too complex and not worth the effort to keep running in the world of electric and/or hydrogen cars, while the sheer simplicity of old cars like this Galaxy will continue to keep people interested in them, as well as everything else from previous eras.
@nitehawk864 жыл бұрын
One benefit of today is we an look at it as an era riddled with sociopathy and greed *right now.* I don't know if its internet and social media and more personal communication instead of the cooperate shove-down-your-throat media of past ages... but it gives me hope that we *can* change. But maybe that is just the euphoria of just having watched an RCR video talking.
@MalikCarr4 жыл бұрын
One of the biggest failings of the contemporary activist class, being as poxed with postmodernism as they are, is that far too many have bought into the intellectual poison that they're the first breed of genuinely good people, and everyone who came before them or who isn't sufficiently on board with the current agenda was somehow a morally repugnant person. If you dressed up what you said with more academic language to get through the ideological miasma I suspect you might actually get through to some of these people about how farcical much of what they're agitating about is. Of course, you'd also be asking for a bikelock to the head too, but that's just how it is.
@captaincrunch83334 жыл бұрын
Exactly, mtheory85.
@h2oaddict614 жыл бұрын
@@GlamStacheessnostalgialounge Do you think cd's can stand up to 50 years of use? Modern electronicts are far better than anything made in the past, the biggest problem our modern cellphones have are the bloody batteries. You know... The same things that will turn cars into souless consumer products, ready to be replaced every time a new model is released, devoid of any personality just like nearly every electric car out there. They will all drive the same way... And btw, don't say ICE cars in front of a petrolhead if you don't want to be perceived as a psychopath.
@agrippa12344 жыл бұрын
Retired History/Literature teacher. One of the most enjoyable units I taught to HS honors classes was Transcendentalism (in the mid 1980's); Thoreau, some short stories/articles from the '60's and some very substantial discussions based on Historical characters who thrived in "the wild" and drew their philosophies from the natural world around them/the natural friction between the draw of the natural world and the seductions of civilized society.....a car site and genuine sustenance from it, thanks....
@ryanforrest1684 жыл бұрын
The engine is painted GOLD because it’s 1963 and we’re still on the gold standard because Metal=Money
@matmartin28664 жыл бұрын
I can't fight the urge to be a killjoy and day 1933. My apologies
@thronritter62954 жыл бұрын
The abolishment of the gold standard was the beginning of the end for the USA
@daftnord49574 жыл бұрын
Nice. 1964 quarters turned into nickel rather than mostly silver
@notgray883 жыл бұрын
FUCK PRESIDENT NIXON
@consoleconceptshd63713 жыл бұрын
@@thronritter6295 You’re just plain stupid.
@mfree802864 жыл бұрын
Side note: Henry Ford had been dead and buried for 16 years when this car was produced... Henry Ford II was no saint but he was definitely not his grandfather.
@catinthehat51402 жыл бұрын
I think he was just mentioning examples related to the car industry instead of ones directly related to this car
@chadscott91384 жыл бұрын
The era when this car was manufactured is just a single moment in time. The real story here is the journey it’s gone through to make it to the present. That’s what should be appreciated and celebrated. Think of this car in context of 1978, 1987, 1999, and every other era that seems so different from now. It’s seen them all and thrived (or at least survived) when many of its peers did not.
@julianc63744 жыл бұрын
This is it. I have a 1976 Datsun and I can't say I've ever _really_ thought about the era it came from but I've thought a million times about the stories it must have to tell
@carsmusicandclothing70664 жыл бұрын
I think the same way about my '87 S Class
@Zecrid.4 жыл бұрын
Yes yes yes, more literary theory and history with RCR. I may not 100% "get" everything that you serve to us but I love hearing your passion for your art.
@LouisSubearth4 жыл бұрын
On the transcendentalism bit, you can enjoy the car despite its era. The Galaxie, and by extension, any car from any era while a byproduct of the trends and values of the decades they came from, are devoid of opinions of the ideas that brought them to life because they're inanimate and unable to make statements on the matter. It's like the VW Beetle and Bus during the counterculture. We all know the Beetle started as Hitler's idea for a People's Car, yet it was able to transcend from its Nazi roots and become a symbol of hippie culture as much as peace signs and tie dye clothes were.
@MrBlueBurd04514 жыл бұрын
I'd go a step further and say that daring to enjoy an old car made by people who held ideas we no longer agree with is a means of redeeming the past. To accept that while it was not perfect, there were and are still things worth saving and preserving and cherishing from that time, regardless of their potential context. Rejecting everything from 'the before' because you disagree with the morality of then removes context from 'the now' and 'the to-be'. It erases the notion of the past wholesale. Something that was, but no longer is. That alone has value, because it creates a difference between 'the before' and 'the now'. 'the now' would not be a time of progress without something to progress from.
@Mikeyridesit4 жыл бұрын
I think this might be the most accurate way to describe most objects from the past. The car wasn't created soley to further an idea, even the VW Beetle wasn't designed to further the nazi cause directly. It was just supposed to be a good car for the people. The Galaxie 500 was created to be something beautiful. Even if the ideas of the time dictated somehow that beauty.
@deanchur4 жыл бұрын
The Auto Union Type C and Streamliner were also built in 1930's Germany and are regarded as masterpieces
@vtr01044 жыл бұрын
It's mostly the labeling that's become so commonplace nowadays. that makes people even question stuff like this. A car was a car, whether to its owner it became mere transportation or if was attributed deeper meaning was entirely up to them. It did not mean that the object itself referred those values. You can value intrinsic properties of it, such as its reliability or the fact that it's endured decades of weather and usage to make it here. With each owner, it becomes something else and gains a new story (I sometimes wish cars COULD tell stories of the places they've been to or seen...). You can enjoy it for what it granted you (freedom of movement inside, great visibility) in exchange for assuming you'd be responsible enough to not get into an accident. Too many cars nowadays grant a license of recklessness and idiocy by virtue of presenting drivers with the automotive equivalent of Get Out of Death Free cards, removing the accountability one must normally be aware of when operating any vehicle capable of over 35 MPH. It's like Japanese imports being either chopped up to bits to become drift machines or ending up with an owner that just wants to preserve them for daily use. Or even the Galaxie itself, which was drag raced and oval raced, while also being many families' primary transport.
@DTD1108654 жыл бұрын
@@Mikeyridesit The Galaxie 500 was an offshoot of the then full-size Fairlane 500, and seemed to be a reflection of America's desire to go into space. Sure, Henry Ford was an anti-Semite and Nazi sympathizer, but let's not forget that Chaney, Goodman, and Schwerner also drove a Ford station wagon.
@superdestrier91604 жыл бұрын
That was the deepest winga dinga I've ever felt. Americanized me to my core.
@obits34 жыл бұрын
We stand on the shoulders of those who came before us. When we see our predecessors and say “we’re better than them,” it should not be to assert moral superiority. We should think of our moral progress like technical progress. Does technical progress mean that we get rid of all prior technology? No! You keep the good that already exists and move forward. Only idiots throw out the baby with the bath water. We can appreciate the beautiful parts of the 1960’s without making light of the troubles. We can appreciate the beauty of southern architecture without downplaying slavery. We can appreciate royal stuff without worrying too much about the many atrocities of kings and queens. Heck, we can appreciate the autobahn and still say Hitler was an evil person overall. In every generation, there will be a mixture of good and bad, ugly and beautiful. To say that an entire segment of history must be thrown away is the height of arrogance. Do not be ashamed of our past. We are as we are today because of that past. Instead, learn from the past failures and successes so we don’t repeat the bad and we get more of the good.
@ChiralSpirals4 жыл бұрын
👏👏👏
@COYGunners4 жыл бұрын
This is perhaps the best comment I’ve ever seen on internet. Kudos, sir.
@_heartunderblade24514 жыл бұрын
If by “southern architecture” you mean statues of confederates... note most of those were put up during the civil rights era as a threat to blacks to stop fighting for freedom. They are only in existence to continue oppressive thought. Alot of them were generally cheaply made too, so its not like we are really holding up this magnificent artwork either.
@LaPapaMollido4 жыл бұрын
@@_heartunderblade2451 I believe they're referring to Southern antebellum architecture. It's an absolutely beautiful design movement from the early and mid 19th century, but it was very much associated with wealthier slave owners in the south as they were usually the only people who could afford to have such a lavish estate built.
@BlueWingedTiger4 жыл бұрын
Wow, that was an amazing read, thank you so much!
@DTD1108654 жыл бұрын
"Because the Cadillac that's sittin' in the back It isn't me Oh, no, no, no it isn't me I'm more at home in my Galaxie." --Blind Melon, 1995
@5roundsrapid2634 жыл бұрын
I was thinking of this song. It came out just after Shannon Hoon overdosed... 🙁
@PHRCpvh4 жыл бұрын
Best Blind Melon song
@McCantJustin4 жыл бұрын
My day be so fine Then BOOM... Death of Pontiac.
@BigWheel.4 жыл бұрын
Too soon
@tylerwiedenfeld26264 жыл бұрын
Rest In Peace. Every GTO, WS6, GXP, GTP, GT, SSEI, and Superduty.
@large_crab4 жыл бұрын
twitter
@2RNR24 жыл бұрын
Almost been a decade ...
@briansmith83614 жыл бұрын
Some of my favorite GM products were Pontiacs. I can understand letting Saturn and Oldsmobile go, but killing Pontiac was a travesty.
@BarterBales4 жыл бұрын
I think as generations of people continue they are less likely to connect an old car with negative connotations of the past. Cars like the galaxy are so wonderful because they can foster a great time with a group of people, best to focus on the fun. Great Video 👌
@htweelz4 жыл бұрын
Great video and speaking of driving a car during a time of history. My wife and I bought our 2001 Mustang GT convertible in October 2001 a month after 9/11. We bought it because life isn't guaranteed and wanted to have a fun car. Still have that car and still think of why we bought it every time we drive it.
@daftnord49574 жыл бұрын
That's pretty intense
@lolshark99b494 жыл бұрын
Every time they go to Pittsburgh I’m like “hey, they’re in Pittsburgh”
@bansheemania16924 жыл бұрын
Ya gotta admit... When that Hood Opened, it Looks like the Briefcase on Pulp Fiction...and in 75 my dad had a 500 4dr.
@bbutchart634 жыл бұрын
I am the proud owner for 33 years of a 63-1/2 Galaxie 500 HT. 390 4BBL Automatic, PW and PB. It is an absolute beautiful cruiser. Drives and rides just as nice as todays cars and also as reliable. I've put about 45,000 miles on it and mostly trouble free. Yes a couple of minor glitches, but was able to keep going until I got home. Also had one brand new in 1963, 352 2bbl, 3 on the tree, no ps or pb, Yet for a heavy car I could parallel park with one finger on the wheel. Great cars if you look after them as with any car, they all need care.
@MrGman6364 жыл бұрын
I own a few classic cars and I'm no older than 25. The best way to view cars of this age are as outliers of TODAY's society; a beautiful exception to the modern CUV rule. While everyone else is holed up in their angry, modern transportation devices, the car and by extension you are the reminder that life can be made fun if a person aims to integrate beauty and quirkiness into their lives rather than settle for the modern norm, a beauty that can be unpretentiously captured by a classic car. Onlookers will only be happy to see such an aesthetic vehicle in public rather than connect it to a time that was less than wholesome.
@TheNacropolice4 жыл бұрын
I never understand why it is hard for some to be able to separate the artists from the art. For example, I've seen some of Hitler's art work online; it is not bad, has a charm to it. I know who painted it, I know what he did, but I can still appreciate the artwork itself for what it is: art. Context as you said is always important, and we must always keep that in mind. As times change, it is appropriate for us to reexamine what we value and celebrate within our modern context and how their old views line up with ours. However, throwing out everything from the past because it does not live up to our ideals is asinine, because the logical end conclusion of that train of thought is that we should stop creating anything. Nothing will ever live up to the more "enlightened" ideals of future generations, ergo we should stop creating and cancel our whole culture because of that realization.
@keeneboy77004 жыл бұрын
I have no issue with Jeffrey Tambor, Kevin Spacey, or Roseanne Barr never working in Hollywood again. That's fine. Far less talented people get away with far less. This doesn't mean I'm going to burn DVD copies of American Beauty, Arrested Development, or the first 7 seasons of Roseanne in effigy. I might join in a burning of Pay It Forward, The Ropers, and the 9th season of Roseanne...but I felt that way before cancel culture existed.
@thetechlibrarian4 жыл бұрын
I caught that part too
@EvelOttos4 жыл бұрын
"T-minus whenever it feels right, Galaxy 500. Planets align. A king is born."
@viggolaurell4 жыл бұрын
I knew someone would reference it haha. Jupiter cyclops winks at me, yeah, he knows who's drivin'
@Fryerstarter4 жыл бұрын
@@TheExtraterrestrialPedestrian Oh yeah!!!!!
@bostano4 жыл бұрын
Hit neutral in the tail of a comet Let the vortex pull my weight
@bones-fe3gy4 жыл бұрын
Hey kid, are you going my way?
@stoneylonesome40622 жыл бұрын
“Chrome mags, a million drags, it never lags… six-hundred-sixty-six miles-per-hour!”
@galactor1234 жыл бұрын
I kinda love how the person who owned this car essentially segue'd you into your own point by putting a Barry Goldwater bumper sticker on the back of it. If you want a tl;dr version of your entire video I think, to those that know who Goldwater is at least, you could just take a picture of the Galaxie 500 peeling away with THAT sticker on the back.
@LoneWolf2k44 жыл бұрын
Having been in conflict with culture as of late. This is the most intelligent and articulate breakdown that I have listened to. Who knew an automobile could be that kind of catalyst?
@cirrustate86744 жыл бұрын
Automobiles, especially of that era, are as much art as any painting or piece of music, and like any other art, are products of, and commentary on, the culture of their time.
@vinnatolispaghettiboi76604 жыл бұрын
You can really tell in certian episodes that he was a teacher and this is ome of those episodes where his inner teacher comes out full stop
@ccollins_244 жыл бұрын
RCR Pioneering the car video essay. Regular is such a misnomer is almost every way and that’s what makes these guys so special. I enjoy watching almost every video but this one spoke to me on a whole new level. Keep it up RCR much love from Jersey!
@DeliciousPastries4 жыл бұрын
Check out their PT cruiser one if you enjoyed this
@sydneycbr64664 жыл бұрын
I know right? Transcendentalism and “death of the author” apropos a car, incredible.
@nitehawk864 жыл бұрын
This is more old-school RCR. Much like TopGear is not really about cars, just blokes having fun; RCR is not about cars but philosophy and history and a touch of nostaliga for times we have never seen and like the rosy-glasses version of the '60s, probably never existed. Just like the Westfalia review, this is RCR at its best.
@ccollins_244 жыл бұрын
@@nitehawk86 Agreed. Without a doubt, Mr. Regular is the best English teacher I've ever had.
@neonbass7154 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the video. Thank you even more for educating me. Since the Neon SRT video you’ve been my light house in car culture... always showing me the way.
@mikoajjaros35704 жыл бұрын
It's easier to get rid of the context when you think about it this way - buying a Galaxie doesn't earn the old ford any money, it's not like buying nestles water where you can't disconnect their policies from the product. They don't make the galaxies anymore.
@evan126974 жыл бұрын
Great point
@markmiller32794 жыл бұрын
And there wasn't anything that terrible about Ford by the 1960s. They were just a big corporation like any other. Henry Ford and his repellent beliefs had been buried years earlier.
@kaitlyn__L4 жыл бұрын
@@markmiller3279 wasn't his grandson in charge at the time? Not that that necessarily means anything about the granddaddy's beliefs.
@typhonfox22364 жыл бұрын
The Ford Galaxie, the official representative car of "Ah yes! Saturdays are made for Dads! And Dad's car."
@operator912102 жыл бұрын
The Galaxie dad also helped their neighbors build a fence, repair the plumbing and so on. didn't matter if they were better or worse than him. He accepted you as you were and everyone loved thar about him. Modern suburbia needs a new Galaxie dad
@PowerMountie4 жыл бұрын
"But things ain't so bad 'Cause I've got a Galaxie 500 "
@SavkexDD4 жыл бұрын
you lieeee
@CoxFamSite4 жыл бұрын
The Reverend! Did NOT expect to see this reference.
@PowerMountie4 жыл бұрын
@@SavkexDD lol you are right. 2020 has been a shit show and I have a focus st not a Galaxie.
@Ravenankh4 жыл бұрын
I’m in my own Galaxie... 1973.
@SavkexDD4 жыл бұрын
@@PowerMountie Nissan Micra K11 2001 xD
@souletrain80414 жыл бұрын
My families summer cruiser is a red 64’ Galaxie XL with a drop top and a 390 paired to a C4 console shift. I can’t help but smile like an 8 year old whenever I drive it, and everyone smiles and waves at you when they see it. It’s not fast, it doesn’t handle (no power steering), but man does this car eat up the pavement like John Pinette at a Chinese buffet. Like Mr. Regular once said, this is a car that doesn’t accelerate, it advances. It’s in no hurry to go anywhere. It is excess to the max for 1960’s Ford and I love every single inch of it despite its many shortcomings. The whole car is designed to 100% bring attention to the driver. This is a car that changes the image of any person that drives it, it’s a persona on wheels. It’s for driving on a warm summer night with a pocketful of money for gas (10mpg w/premium is a small price to pay). It’s a car for purely living in the moment, in your own world, where nothing else exists but you, that car, and however much road lay ahead of you.
@mosaic62254 жыл бұрын
I feel like if the Beetle can transcend being made by Nazis and be such a loved car, I think the Galaxie can too.
@rattlehead9994 жыл бұрын
That's why you care about the product itself and not the company and people who make the product.
@kaitlyn__L4 жыл бұрын
Nice icon Mosaic : D
@jasonhook38843 жыл бұрын
It can transcend being a Nazi product all it wants, no amount of masters-level English philosophy editorializing will ever help it transcend being a shitty car.
@Ashfielder4 жыл бұрын
These things used to race Mini Coopers here in the UK back in the ‘60s. They still do in some historic competitions. It is an incredible sight to behold.
@jasongraham34884 жыл бұрын
Chose a Mr. Regular character voice to read this. "I want the convertable, and I want soft seats, and I want enough room for the twins and I don't want the "little lady" to ask to borrow it. We have the Fairlane and it has the power steering."
@kpark8k4 жыл бұрын
Beautiful writing, earnest emotion, this is why I've followed this channel for over 5 years.
@DaveBob964 жыл бұрын
Gary "U.S." Bonds? Holy shit you absolute man of culture.
@thegeoffphillips4 жыл бұрын
Wow. Best RCR writing in some time, and that's saying something. The way you two bring context to the moments that produced these cars is incredible. Great job!
@MultiRokusho4 жыл бұрын
The kind of car ford is scared to make again but they will listen to some idiot who thinks slapping a mustang badge on a suv is a good idea.
@charlieanddadreviewsandcha22434 жыл бұрын
It’s a sad time.
@MultiRokusho4 жыл бұрын
Boom King76 yeah. At least the bronco looks okay.
@charlieanddadreviewsandcha22434 жыл бұрын
@@MultiRokusho It’s way better than what Chevrolet considers a Blazer. Abomination.
@86twin4 жыл бұрын
On the business end, why make this car(or even the Crown Vic) when their biggest seller is the F-150?
@MultiRokusho4 жыл бұрын
86twin it’s kind of like how colt has the 1911 in a trillion different configurations and they more or less forget about every other iconic gun they have made until recently. However any re issues cost four times what a used original is worth. I know cars and guns are different markets but the same kind of philosophy seems to inhabit both companies.
@UbuntuSuperUser4 жыл бұрын
What I got from this: Pittsburgh drivers on Friday at 3pm got no chill and that pedal is pressed down as far as possible.
@MrRandomcommentguy4 жыл бұрын
I don't feel the slightest guilt for the injustice of a period of time I wasn't alive in. The end.
@jaredbryant82973 жыл бұрын
simplicity is the greatest complexity, well said.
@anticlaus50554 жыл бұрын
This episode is beautiful. Well played, gentlemen. I absolutely love your brains. I am not a car fanatic but your slick way with words and humor keep me and many other non-car people coming back. Keep up the excellent work. - jrdn in pdx
@VikJo4 жыл бұрын
This is one of the best videos you have ever made!
@starsfromheaven73827 ай бұрын
My parents had a Falcon station wagon and blue Galaxy 500. My sister smashed up the back one day. My dad smashed up the front not long afterward. He still drove it for a while all smashed up until he got a Buick Special.
@javenradt13144 жыл бұрын
My old pops races at our local track, Wanneroo. I've always heard about how big american cars can be, but minus a few imported utes, really had no idea until I saw this thing irl. My god just the sound of a big 427 v8, the size of the rear tyres on this thing, the supreme SIZE of it compared to the little cortinas and escorts around it. King of the road on the street and on the racetrack. Amazing to watch.
@learnmyname1234 жыл бұрын
Philosophy, motor vehicles, and humor that could make Diogenes blush. You really are the whole package Mr. Regular.
@frikyouall4 жыл бұрын
Feh. Artsy people. "I drive this because its mettle and its history, and all the character flaws of the person who designed it are mine, as well, so it represents ME." Is not something the average person is thinking. With anything. Most of the time, it's just "This car looks cool, so I'ma grab it up, maybe work on it a bit, and drive it." I bought a 1975 El Camino Classic because I fell in love with the pale banana-yellow and dull chocolate two-tone coloring, goofy headlights, and sheer size of the truck in order to haul stuff around. Any history of the creator and faults found within are faults of their own personalities and of their own time. It doesn't represent me. I do. Just like every Ford Focus owner is a kid wearing a snapback cap and smoking a vape, a college woman driving a cheaper car to upgrade later, an old man driving his dog around on a Sunday, a family member coming from a few states away to celebrate Thanksgiving, or a businessman whose main business is conducted over a Facetime app, everyone who owns a car represents themselves. I had thought this was common understanding, but it seems increasingly rare nowadays. Judging people by what they own, what they wear, or what you hear about them is small-brain. Judging them instead by the experience you have with them is big-brain. So don't let those things worry you so much. They're not important. Do what you enjoy, and live a happier, simpler life. Or don't. Honestly, whatever makes you happiest. This is just what I've found.
@bri77uk14 жыл бұрын
One of your best films to date. Made me really think, and not just about how cool a Galaxie is.
@TheBurningDonut4 жыл бұрын
That's kinda how I feel about Disney right now, with their "Forced Diversity" when a movie is sold in America then all that diversity is edited out when they sell it in China and when they support the Chinese government literally burning their people, or the old times of constant racism and Disney's "Dislike" of the jews... Can I still enjoy a well animated story involving talking animals and silly songs? Being a cartoonist If I boycotted the company I would literally have to give up half of what makes my identity, but.... Maybe I just pop on The Aristocats and allow myself to be happy for a brief period of time.... Who knows, but this silly review of a classic car kinda caught my feelings pretty well.
@gnarshread4 жыл бұрын
I'm sitting here in my 1963 ranch, drinking coffee, I realize that I'll be thinking about this video all day. I bought the place because it's completely untouched since new. I'm the second owner. Its up to me to push this brick block of nostalgia towards a better future. We joke about the doors that block off the kitchen but it's obvious that the original home owner didn't want to acknowledge the helps existence. I am enjoying the fruits of the previous generations but I should not look at the past with rose tinted glasses or ignore the not so great side of the past. This was a damn good watch. Thank you RCR.
@taco_lad28494 жыл бұрын
The Ford Galaxie: When suburbia was a good thing.
@rhekman4 жыл бұрын
My dad had a 63 Galaxie as a high school car in the 70s. Then when I was growing up, a 73 pickup with the 390 engine. His FE started life as a 360 truck engine, but crank swapped to make it a 390. With a Holley 4 barrel, I can attest, it truly was "diesel levels of torque". A marvelous vehicle to learn to drive stick, just put it in gear, let out the clutch and it would just lug you out of whatever hole you had found yourself in. God I miss that truck.
@KBTfilms4 жыл бұрын
Honestly this is one of the top three videos youve made. Well done friend. Best lines were "I think Cancel Culture is mostly an excuse for people to avoid having to engage with context" and "Bad actions committed in bad taste don't automatically equate with actions committed in bad faith."
@bologna14004 жыл бұрын
As always, mr regular, just a beautifully worded exploration into the context of the car. I once thought I was the only one who felt uneasy at vintage car meets, given each car's provenance. Please teach us more.
@matthew36684 жыл бұрын
I see Nick is getting comfortable with a bit of rap. Keep flowin' buddy
@dancearoundtheworld53604 жыл бұрын
he gettin ready for the 64 impala review
@DawgFather14 жыл бұрын
How many times have I questioned my own existence while sipping bourbon while I watch a car review? at least once because of this video. Thank you Mr. Regular, you’re a true inspiration.
@forrest61324 жыл бұрын
I think you should start a spin-off channel, where you cover various literature topics as Mr. Regular, called "Regular English Lessons". Watching this makes me want to take one of your classes.
@darksu69474 жыл бұрын
I like it when Mr. Regular tickles my brain. Feels good!
@GotterdammerungX4 жыл бұрын
This is a good example of what makes this channel great, I learned so much that had nothing (or EVERYTHING lol) at all to do with the car. I love it!
@thenoodledrop4 жыл бұрын
I’m always taken back when he references a town I live nearby. Then again he’s probably the most Pennsylvanian man who’s ever lived.
@LemonHolidayProd4 жыл бұрын
Hi Mr. Regular! This video is fantastic, and I always love coming to a car review and leaving with a lesson in transcendentalism! I just acquired my own 1969 Galaxie 500 convertible with a 390/ auto combo. It's a car I have been lusting after for the last 8 years, when I first met it, and it has been as though fate demanded that I own this particular car. I hope someday you will have the chance to review it, so I can tell you the rest of the story. Maybe once I get it a bit more done. Have a great day!
@Condorito3804 жыл бұрын
This week on "Mr. Regular uses the yardstick of the 90s-2000s to measure cars of the 60s-70s"...
@evan126974 жыл бұрын
It's almost like that's the bulk Mr Regulars early everyday car existence. Generations do be marching through time
@vitocorleone37244 жыл бұрын
I love how this channel is about cars while being about more than just the cars. It's damn near a perfect balance. Bravo, and I say (type) that sincerely!
@GixxerRider19914 жыл бұрын
When I was in college I had a geography professor who was from Kenya. When we got around to talking about colonialism, his perspective was pretty shocking to me, and it's one I had never considered: he said that although there were atrocities committed by the British, and although colonialism obviously wasn't a good thing overall, there were some good things that came from it for his people (e.g. modern sanitation, roads, schools, etc.). I think we should have a similar mentality when it comes to considering the relative value of things that were products of terrible people and/or terrible times, because at the end of the day, what does it profit society to deprive itself of a car, or a song, or a film, or whatever it may be because of the sins of their creators? The messy, inglorious truth of living in this world is that beautiful things don't always come from beautiful places, and if we go down the road of banning anything made by someone who at one point did or said something we find objectionable; if we are truly honest in this line of reasoning and don't just go after the pantomime villains but instead nit pick every little thing every artist ever said or did, eventually there will be no art left worth enjoying.
@Return_to_Roots4 жыл бұрын
Regular car reviews is absolutely wonderful for his nuanced takes.
@_dmfd4 жыл бұрын
The owner kept cutting so many people off lmao. Bet he totals this car eventually.. by hitting an Aveo or some $2K shit
@custardbaby43 жыл бұрын
Reminds me of that article that's like "$180,000 Aston Martin killed by $200 pink car"
@brockjennings4 жыл бұрын
I came for the Galaxy and left with many questions that transcends a mere automobile to ponder. Thank you, Mr. Regular.
@kitchen52034 жыл бұрын
Man I would give anything to roll around Pittsburgh in a piece of classic American Iron. Playing the period correct music
@RobCamp-rmc_04 жыл бұрын
Brad Kitchen Steel. It’s Pittsburgh, for christ’s sake.
@nitehawk864 жыл бұрын
@@RobCamp-rmc_0 But it is also "Iron City", or to pronounce it correctly, "Urn City"
@RobCamp-rmc_04 жыл бұрын
@@nitehawk86 true, but it’ll always be the Still City to me ...I only lived there a couple of years, the hell do I know
@nitehawk864 жыл бұрын
@@RobCamp-rmc_0 Our biggest export is people, now. :(
@RobCamp-rmc_04 жыл бұрын
@@nitehawk86 it’s the rust belt, I’m all too aware. If it’s any consolation, I prefer Pittsburgh to Cleveland big time and I feel a lot of nostalgia for the city. If I wasn’t settled down in a good school district for my daughter, I’d happily come back.
@zlinedavid3 жыл бұрын
“Actions committed in bad taste are not the same as actions committed in bad faith.” Succinct, complete and brilliant. I wish more people thought this way.
@blackb00jum4 жыл бұрын
The reviews that turn into literary musings about college-level philosophical concepts should be immortalized in lucite-protected optical media so that long after society collapses, some distant, future society of bipedal, lemur-descendant hominids can dust off our forgotten archives and agree with unanimous melancholy that at least some of us tried.
@aspalovin3 жыл бұрын
My dad had one of these. First new car!.. hardtop Thank you. he will love to see this
@TDUShelby4 жыл бұрын
[Paraphrase]: "Cancel culture is the result of people not wanting to deal with context." [Paraphrase]: "Selection for Societal Sanity. [...] Our job is not to create content, but to create context." This is what the some game from 19 PISSING YEARS AGO warned us about, and some random car review basically brought up, much to my anxiety! Oh, yeah. Rad car, bro.
@tylerbookwood40024 жыл бұрын
GW!
@shred18944 жыл бұрын
Have you read Orwell's 1984? You should if you haven't already. It will shock you how so much of American politics of the last decade or so mirrors the content of that book.
@TDUShelby4 жыл бұрын
@@shred1894 I know a fair bit of it, but I've never read it. I think I've actually got it, somewhere. Thing is, I've heard it said that Orwell got it wrong in one regard: It's not governments that took us over the edge.
@Trance884 жыл бұрын
Mr. Regular is such an enlightened dude. I can't wait to meet him some day. I rode in a '67 Galaxie around a parking lot a few years ago. Its like riding on your grandma's couch.
@SAMPLETEXT2854 жыл бұрын
The official car of coach dad noises This is why i like Mondays
@derricklogan20584 жыл бұрын
Your memories will ALWAYS transcend time because you will ALWAYS have your experience of learning and living your memories of fond beauty 💖 that makes YOUR LIFE worth living!
@ThePursuitofHappiness19884 жыл бұрын
I’ll be damned if this isn’t the most thought-provoking ramble I’ve heard from Mr Regular to date. Damn. Where’s my pen?
@erikrothfusscorpseair4 жыл бұрын
I absolutely love when ya'll get into philosphy in the reviews.
@MrJjg123ish4 жыл бұрын
I'm a simple Catholic man. I see the Blessed Mother on the Dash of a Galaxie 500, I say a Hail Mary and click "👍".
@teamkingburrous75374 жыл бұрын
The writing for this video is better than any movie I’ve seen in the last ten years. Probably any movie ever. Love the commentary.
@joelharris30734 жыл бұрын
I’ve always wondered: why the wrist bandanna?
@graumail4 жыл бұрын
Joel Harris Conversation piece? For example i have stickers in the door frames of my car where you can’t see them, because the car wash i go to they dry the door jambs afterwards and they ALWAYS mention the stickers. It’s a pattern interrupt for a boring job, and every time, the person smiles. Maybe he enjoys people asking about the wrist bandana. Maybe that hand is cold.
@MrMistermoges4 жыл бұрын
i just assumed he uses a bandana as a mask and keeps it there when he's not wearing it
@joelharris30734 жыл бұрын
@@graumail I’m thinking probably the mask thing
@alansimpson48454 жыл бұрын
Your review of Nicholas' 1963 Galaxie 500 in my opinion is some of your finest work. Thank you Mr. Regular and Roman. Bravo!
@alastairward27744 жыл бұрын
Again, to live where this was "regular". What would have been it's European equivalent?
@CuoreSportivo4 жыл бұрын
alfa romeo spider imho
@sahemali22044 жыл бұрын
Mercedes-Benz 190 sl
@mihneacireasa46134 жыл бұрын
Probably something that Americans would depict as a kei car
@Max-jt8gq4 жыл бұрын
I'd say Opel Admiral
@yeshwantdasari20754 жыл бұрын
Definitely something like a Merecedes Benz 190 or 280 SL
@heinrichgoebbers22344 жыл бұрын
This video essay is exactly why I have subscribed to this channel. Love your work, keep it up guys
@WookieDrives4 жыл бұрын
Dodge Swinger 1973, Galaxy 5-0-0, All the way stars' green, gotta go. Dodge Swinger 1973, top down, chassis low, Panel dim, light drive, Jesus on the dashboard. T-minus whenever it feels right, Galaxy 5-0-0. Planets align, a king is born. Whenever it feels right Whenever it feels right Whenever it feels right Whenever it feels right
@signlsirchir21564 жыл бұрын
I would love to see a Galaxie without the song toy on the dash.
@abandonedanthracite58524 жыл бұрын
I searched comments far and wide just to see if anyone else got the clutch reference. 🤘
@WookieDrives4 жыл бұрын
@@abandonedanthracite5852 gotta represent
@robertwbingo4 жыл бұрын
I had one of these. Bought it from a neighbor in the summer of '67. It had the 289, Cruise-O-Matic, power steering, AM radio in "living mono", and a heater that would belch fire on cold winter mornings. It was just a great-looking car. It only weighed a little over 3,600 pounds, so the little 289 didn't have any trouble rolling that gorgeous car around at freeway speeds. I loved that car, but alas, it rusted out from under me. Broke my heart, too. I wish I could have that car back.
@Destroyah50004 жыл бұрын
"Ah, yes! Saturdays are made for DADS... and Dad's car!"
@damson_jmonay42069 Жыл бұрын
Oh man. Love the car, love the review, and the historical context/conflict as always. You are a Connoisseur of the Vibe and I look at history and historical consumer products in a very similar way. I dream to own a '64 Galaxie in this color one day, and have for at least 10 years. BUT, I have lived here in Pittsburgh for over 5 years and plan to stay for much longer. These shots with this car in this city make me feel a certain way. Well done!
@jacklausch35174 жыл бұрын
You look like a million bucks driving that beauty
@benbecker69534 жыл бұрын
Really liked this video. This exact subject is something I’ve thought about a lot, as someone who loves these old boats. Very cool.