A new survey of more than 2,000 Americans by British license plate trading firm click4reg.co.uk found that, given their pick of cartoon vehicles, 57 percent would take George Jetson's flying car for a ...
Cartoon cars are great, because they don’t let insignificant things like physics and law enforcement stop them. The greatest cartoon cars can do things that would be impossible in the real world. We’d ...
“The Jetsons” had a brief run as a prime-time cartoon in 1962-63, but the futuristic family’s flying car made a lasting impression, rating No. 1 as the favorite cartoon car for American adults. A ...
This charming little 1956 cartoon commissioned by the Automobile Manufacturers Association is interesting because it seems to have, at least according to some sources, lead to the development of the ...
Normally, I wouldn't want to bring up something of this gravity during the holidays, but I have to take a firm stand on an issue that's been bothering me for a long while. I've sat by long enough and ...
Sometimes life imitates art that imitates life. Porsche has built a one-of-a-kind 911 inspired by Sally from the animated film "Cars." The Sally Special is based on the 911 GTS and finished in a ...
Edoardo Bianchi started out as a single-product company, making bicycles in Milan, before it produced its first automobile in 1899. Seven years later, the company was renamed Fabbrica Automobili e ...
The car world is full of some really awful stereotypes and catch phrases. We often hear that X or Y model is "the car for you", "has been designed specifically for the young demographic" and "packs ...
For Japanese fans, plastering cartoon pictures all over their vehicles is just another way of paying homage to their favourite characters AFP Yosuke Takahata doesn't care what people think of his ...
Felix the Cat reigned over the silver screen years before he found his way to a Figueroa Street car dealership. Created in 1919 by artist Otto Messmer, the animated cartoon character even predated ...
For him and other owners around Japan, plastering cartoon pictures all over their vehicles is just another way of paying homage to their two-dimensional true loves. "Itasha" means "cringeworthy car", ...