Saturday, August 29, 2015

I Was Saddened When This Place Closed Up

The OC Food Scene, 20 Years Ago

The next change is more symbolic but equally telling: the closure of Garden Grove's legendary Belisles. I only went once but it changed the way I thought about food completely. I had an epic breakfast, a giant cast iron skillet brimming with hash browns, bacon, eggs, biscuits and gravy. Enough food, in fact, for 6 people instead of just myself and two of my equally big-eating friends.

The closing of Belisles was a bloodbath worthy of Custer's Last Stand, with the Garden Grove Redevelopment Agency bulldozing the old dame to build a hotel that never came to fruition. And now there is a fucking Joe's Crab Shack there.

(OCWeekly.com)

They See Me Rollin' - Honda Edition


(SpeedHunters.com)

Its All Relative


(CarThrottle.com)

This Made Me LOL


(CarThrottle.com)

I Could Live Without A Lot Of The Latest Car Features

Motorists actually don't like a lot of new in-car technology3

New J.D. Power Research Shows Which Features Go Unused

J.D. Power says 20 percent of car owners have never used 16 of 33 new technology features available in their vehicles. Common features that go untouched include in-vehicle concierge services, mobile routers, automatic parking, head-up displays, and built-in apps. Concierge services were the least popular, with 43 percent of respondents saying they've never used them.

In many cases, it's not only that motorists are letting the features go unused, it's that they're specifically unwanted. Twenty percent of respondents say there are 14 tech features they do not want in their next vehicles, and some of those rejected features may come as a surprise.

(AutoSpies.com)

They Make Some Decent Looking Race Cars

Peugeot 308 Racing Cup turns hot hatch into track machine


(AutoBlog.com)

Unexpected Change Is Always Worrisome

Automotive interior suppliers in total turmoil

Mergers and acquisitions are part of the natural ebb and flow of the automotive business. But this year it's almost as if someone threw a switch. Starting this spring there was an explosive flurry of M&A involving the biggest interior suppliers.

First, Johnson Controls Incorporated, the largest automotive interiors supplier in the world, announced it was selling its interiors business to Yanfeng, a Chinese supplier not well known outside of China. Overnight, Yanfeng became the largest interior supplier in the world.

Hot on the heels of that announcement, Magna, another dominant player in the business, announced it was selling its interiors business to a small, regional Spanish company called Grupo Antolin. All of a sudden Grupo Antolin, a privately held company unfamiliar to most people in the industry, doubled in size.

Shortly afterward Faurecia, the supplier company owned by Peugeot which mostly makes interiors, formed a joint venture with the Chinese automaker Dongfeng. It's unusual for an automaker to form a joint venture with an in-house supplier from another automaker, unless it's the prelude to a technology transfer or a complete sale.

The underlying cause of this shift should leave the industry uneasy. JCI did not pull any punches, declaring it's getting out of the automotive business because the profit margins are some of the lowest in the world of industry and commerce. Instead, JCI wants to invest in businesses with much better margins such as real estate management and industrial refrigerators. It's not a good sign for the automotive industry when one of its biggest, most important suppliers says, "Screw it, let's go somewhere else."

(AutoBlog.com)

Did You Know - Arby's Edition

11 Things You Didn't Know About Arby's

3. Vermont and Rhode Island are the only states without an Arby’s
  • One strip club and no Arby’s? How on earth was Vermont not last on this list?
5. Ohio has the most Arby’s locations in America
  • 268 of 'em, to be exact. Which makes sense, since Arby’s was founded in Boardman, Ohio. While the original location still stands today, the company is now based in Sandy Springs, Georgia.
Complete list (Thrillist.com)

I Wonder If This Works


(CarThrottle.com)