'Fifty Shades of Grey' <b>Pics</b>! Anastasia Gets a <b>Car</b> | ExtraTV.com |
- 'Fifty Shades of Grey' <b>Pics</b>! Anastasia Gets a <b>Car</b> | ExtraTV.com
- In <b>Pictures</b>: The Automotive Technology We Saw At CES 2014 - On <b>...</b>
- Charlie Beesley's <b>car pictures</b>, part 4 On the Road | Hemmings Daily
'Fifty Shades of Grey' <b>Pics</b>! Anastasia Gets a <b>Car</b> | ExtraTV.com Posted: 17 Jan 2014 11:57 AM PST Actors Jamie Dornan and Dakota Johnson filmed a memorable scene from "Fifty Shades of Grey," in which the sexy Christian Grey gives Anastasia Steele a new car. Fame/Flynet Pictures Fans of the E.L James' erotic books will be thrilled when they see the fabulously wealthy Christian presents the innocent college grad with a red Audi because he believes her old VW bug "Wanda" is unsafe. Anastasia appropriately names the luxurious ride "The Submissive Special." [photo: Fame/Flynet Pictures] Rita Ora (Christian's sister, Mia), Eloise Mumford (Anastasia's best friend, Kate), Luke Grimes (Christian's brother, Elliot), Victor Rasuk (Anastasia's close friend, José) and Jennifer Ehle (Anastasia's mother, Carla) also star in the steamy adaptation. "Fifty Shades of Grey" is due to hit theaters on February 2015. |
In <b>Pictures</b>: The Automotive Technology We Saw At CES 2014 - On <b>...</b> Posted: 17 Jan 2014 12:00 AM PST Last year, Chris Angelini and I decided to spice up our trip to CES a little, making it more exciting. Instead of Chris driving to Vegas by himself and me hopping on a direct flight to Vegas, I flew into Los Angeles to pick up a press car and then drove to Bakersfield. Chris hopped in and we made our way to Sin City together. I wrote about our vehicle of choice in 2013 Nissan GT-R Black Edition: The Gran Turismo Car. We wanted something more comfortable and luxurious this year. It's a pretty long drive, after all. Style and comfort were necessities. So, we gave our friends at Bentley a call to see if we could borrow a Continental GT V8 for the week-long excursion. Along the way, I even picked up our new editor-in-chief, Fritz Nelson. Armed with 500 hp, double-pane windows, and all-wheel drive, we set off to Vegas. It was a great way to start a show that featured more automotive technology than years past. Naturally, I spent a lot of time in the Las Vegas Convention Center's North Hall with companies like QNX, Qualcomm, and Nvidia. Join us as we explore the latest automotive technologies that caught our attention during CES 2014. |
Charlie Beesley's <b>car pictures</b>, part 4 On the Road | Hemmings Daily Posted: 18 Dec 2013 05:00 AM PST
Before the motorcar became a reality, most Americans never ventured more than a few miles from home. In 1890, a farmer who lived, say, eight miles from town faced a four-hour round trip by horse and buggy. That changed with the Ford Model T. Most farmers who could afford to buy Model Ts did, and the car totally altered their lives. They could now drive to town in half an hour. The Model T also freed people to travel just for the fun of it – to go places they'd heard of, dreamt about and never would have been able to visit in the days before Henry Ford offered them an affordable automobile. The romance of the road came to be what Woody Guthrie affectionately called "hard travelin'." The theme of this chapter of Charlie Beesley's car pictures is "On the Road." I don't mean to sound like a PR flak for Ford, but the days of Americans hitting the road pretty much started with the Model T. And due to the T's universality (and the advent of the Kodak Brownie camera – ed.), more people took pictures of themselves going places in their Lizzies than people who owned other makes of cars. The numbers favored the T from about 1913 through the first years of the Great Depression. More Americans drove Ts, thus more people took pictures of themselves with their Ts, thus Charlie ended up with more pictures showing the T during that hard-travelin' era. The T not only put America on wheels, but it was reliable and tough enough to slog through mud and bounce over the unpaved roads of that day. When the T did break down, most owners could fix it on the spot – another advantage it had over other automobiles. Even so, the age of motor travel started a few years before the Model T became popular, and Charlie's collection includes examples of that era, too. Then, in the 1930s, as the T began to fade and highways got better, Americans took to the road in even greater numbers. Tourists were still traveling around Europe mostly by train, but here in the United States, the car dominated. Tourism became an industry. Motorists were encouraged to travel. Gas stations handed out free maps. Motor courts popped up along major routes. Roadside restaurants catered to families on wheels, and the public's investment in national parks began to pay off. Gas was cheap, and people jumped into the family tourer for any number of reasons. One of those reasons during the Depression was to move to places that held out hope of work. Thus began the great migration from Oklahoma and other central states to the job-friendlier climes of California and the West Coast. But most of Charlie's pictures aren't of on-the-road Okies, because Okies couldn't afford cameras. These are mostly photos of tourists having a good time, seeing new places and expanding their horizons as Americans had never been able to do before.
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