The Nike Air Max Zero
(NiceKicks.com)
Wednesday, June 1, 2016
There Were No Suprises In This Article
Undercover Tour Pro: LPGA Edition
A quick cut on cliques and mean girls
The Koreans are, clearly, the biggest presence. They always stay in the same houses and eat together and are always sharing things. A lot travel with their parents, and it can get crazy. Moms and dads hovering, giving their daughters candy when they make a birdie, accusations of hand signals from the gallery, like what club another girl hit on a par 3. They root for each other to win more than any other nationality. Some of it is corporate-conditioned, too. A club company, for example, has a one-month retreat every winter where its players practice all day and eat meals and spend virtually every waking second with one another.
The mean girls? They're all pretty, almost exclusively blonde, and usually diehard Republicans. These mean girls are nice to your face but then make a comment about you as soon as you leave. If you're not wearing the right designer brands, watch out. Very few women have clothing deals with fully scripted outfits, so only in our locker room will you ever hear, "Can you believe she paired that top with that skirt?"
(GolfDigest.com)
A quick cut on cliques and mean girls
The Koreans are, clearly, the biggest presence. They always stay in the same houses and eat together and are always sharing things. A lot travel with their parents, and it can get crazy. Moms and dads hovering, giving their daughters candy when they make a birdie, accusations of hand signals from the gallery, like what club another girl hit on a par 3. They root for each other to win more than any other nationality. Some of it is corporate-conditioned, too. A club company, for example, has a one-month retreat every winter where its players practice all day and eat meals and spend virtually every waking second with one another.
The mean girls? They're all pretty, almost exclusively blonde, and usually diehard Republicans. These mean girls are nice to your face but then make a comment about you as soon as you leave. If you're not wearing the right designer brands, watch out. Very few women have clothing deals with fully scripted outfits, so only in our locker room will you ever hear, "Can you believe she paired that top with that skirt?"
(GolfDigest.com)
I'd Play It For That Price, Even In The Desert Heat
A PGA Tour course for $40? Yep, if you’re OK playing in an oven
Great news for those who have wanted to play the Stadium Course at PGA West in La Quinta, Calif., but were dissuaded by green fees upwards of $200.
On Saturday afternoon, you can play the host course for the tour's CareerBuilder Challenge for $40, according to GolfNow.com. The price turned up on what the website calls “hottest deals.”
The operative word here, however unwittingly, is “hottest.”
The forecast for Saturday in La Quinta is for the temperature to hit 117 degrees.
(GolfDigest.com)
Great news for those who have wanted to play the Stadium Course at PGA West in La Quinta, Calif., but were dissuaded by green fees upwards of $200.
On Saturday afternoon, you can play the host course for the tour's CareerBuilder Challenge for $40, according to GolfNow.com. The price turned up on what the website calls “hottest deals.”
The operative word here, however unwittingly, is “hottest.”
The forecast for Saturday in La Quinta is for the temperature to hit 117 degrees.
(GolfDigest.com)
I Wouldn't Mind Owning Any Of These
Here Are Ten Cars You Loved As A Kid For Less Than $15,000
1. 1998 Acura Integra Type R
1. 1998 Acura Integra Type R
- This Acura Integra Type R is the affordable pocket rocket that you fawned over in school because you knew a friend of a friend who had one. But you weren’t jealous or anything. Nope. Not one bit.
- This Mazda RX-7 may just be the most beautiful Japanese car ever made, even if it does have the horrid rotary engine.
This List Is Ford Heavy
The 11 most expensive American cars ever
Forget Ferrari, We've Got A Batmobile
1. 1968 Ford GT40 Gulf/Mirage Lightweight Racing Car – $11,000,000
One of the most iconic racing cars of all time, wearing perhaps the most geekily celebrated racing livery of all time, driven by a slew of famous racers to winning result, and with near-perfect rarity and condition. That's the formula for an $11M-sale, folks.
This lovely blue and orange GT40 won its debut race at Spa in 1967, driven by Jacky Ickx and Dick Thompson. One of only two surviving lightweight GT40s from the orginal production run of three cars, it also happens to have "carbon fiber pioneer" on its impressive list of bona fides. As if having the likes of David Hobbs and Brian Redman as wheelmen weren't enough, this Gulf-spec wonder was also the true star of the film Le Mans. The value-adding factor of Steve McQueen is pretty remarkable, you'll have to admit.
That's a pretty satisfying capper to our list, then – a Hollywood-worthy GT40 with kudos from the King of Cool with an $11M sticker price. The top dog for now, we fully expect this list to be one in a state of flux as long as this new golden age for auction records steams forward. Save your pennies.
3. 1965 Shelby Daytona Cobra Coupe – $7,685,000
The Shelby Daytona Cobra Coupe was a purpose-built racecar, invented and deployed with the mission to take down Ferrari in GT road racing. In 1965, that's exactly what this stunning example did, time and time again. Chassis #CSX2602 raced at (ready for this?) Daytona, Sebring, Monza, Spa, the Nürburgring, Reims, Enna and Le Mans during that season, winning four of its eight races. The car crossed the finish line to score the points that won Shelby the 1965 World Manufacturers Championship. Bob Bondurant was one of the Cobra Coupe's winning pilots that season, and eventually bought the car, selling it just a few decades too early, in 1969.
Bob did okay though, even without that particular $7.685M-feather in his cap.
4. 1964 Ford GT40 Prototype – $7,000,000
One of the first GT40s built, car GT/104 was a lightweight version with a 4.7-liter V8 mounted amidships (more potent than the original-recipe 4.2L engine), and a Le Mans pedigree. This particular example was forced to retire from that 1964 endurance race, but it saw a podium finish at the 1965 Daytona Continental 2,000 Kilometers, where no less than Bob Bondurant and Ritchie Ginther piloted it to third place.
Boasting its original engine and gearbox in running form, this amazing piece of US racing history killed it a Mecum auction in Houston this year, racking up and incredible $7-million total sale price. The scary thing is that, at that rate, it's only the second-most expensive GT40 on this list.
5. 1966 Shelby Cobra 427 Super Snake – $5,500,000
At the halfway turn of our expensive American cars list, values start to really jump, with almost a million dollars separating the Batmobile from one stunning Shelby Cobra 427 – that feels right to us.
The ultra rare Super Snake competition models were stunningly powerful and difficult to tame. So much so that the 427 inspired Carroll Shelby-friend Bill Cosby to create the hilarious 200 MPH bit (kids, if you haven't heard the man's pre-Cosby Show-era standup, do yourselves a favor and buy the record).
Anyway . . . car CSX3015 was Shelby's personal vehicle for years, and offered more than enough provenance to sky-rocket up to $5.5M in a 2007 Barrett-Jackson action (a record-setting sum for an American-made car at the time.)
Complete list (AutoBlog.com)
Forget Ferrari, We've Got A Batmobile
1. 1968 Ford GT40 Gulf/Mirage Lightweight Racing Car – $11,000,000
One of the most iconic racing cars of all time, wearing perhaps the most geekily celebrated racing livery of all time, driven by a slew of famous racers to winning result, and with near-perfect rarity and condition. That's the formula for an $11M-sale, folks.
This lovely blue and orange GT40 won its debut race at Spa in 1967, driven by Jacky Ickx and Dick Thompson. One of only two surviving lightweight GT40s from the orginal production run of three cars, it also happens to have "carbon fiber pioneer" on its impressive list of bona fides. As if having the likes of David Hobbs and Brian Redman as wheelmen weren't enough, this Gulf-spec wonder was also the true star of the film Le Mans. The value-adding factor of Steve McQueen is pretty remarkable, you'll have to admit.
That's a pretty satisfying capper to our list, then – a Hollywood-worthy GT40 with kudos from the King of Cool with an $11M sticker price. The top dog for now, we fully expect this list to be one in a state of flux as long as this new golden age for auction records steams forward. Save your pennies.
3. 1965 Shelby Daytona Cobra Coupe – $7,685,000
The Shelby Daytona Cobra Coupe was a purpose-built racecar, invented and deployed with the mission to take down Ferrari in GT road racing. In 1965, that's exactly what this stunning example did, time and time again. Chassis #CSX2602 raced at (ready for this?) Daytona, Sebring, Monza, Spa, the Nürburgring, Reims, Enna and Le Mans during that season, winning four of its eight races. The car crossed the finish line to score the points that won Shelby the 1965 World Manufacturers Championship. Bob Bondurant was one of the Cobra Coupe's winning pilots that season, and eventually bought the car, selling it just a few decades too early, in 1969.
Bob did okay though, even without that particular $7.685M-feather in his cap.
4. 1964 Ford GT40 Prototype – $7,000,000
One of the first GT40s built, car GT/104 was a lightweight version with a 4.7-liter V8 mounted amidships (more potent than the original-recipe 4.2L engine), and a Le Mans pedigree. This particular example was forced to retire from that 1964 endurance race, but it saw a podium finish at the 1965 Daytona Continental 2,000 Kilometers, where no less than Bob Bondurant and Ritchie Ginther piloted it to third place.
Boasting its original engine and gearbox in running form, this amazing piece of US racing history killed it a Mecum auction in Houston this year, racking up and incredible $7-million total sale price. The scary thing is that, at that rate, it's only the second-most expensive GT40 on this list.
5. 1966 Shelby Cobra 427 Super Snake – $5,500,000
At the halfway turn of our expensive American cars list, values start to really jump, with almost a million dollars separating the Batmobile from one stunning Shelby Cobra 427 – that feels right to us.
The ultra rare Super Snake competition models were stunningly powerful and difficult to tame. So much so that the 427 inspired Carroll Shelby-friend Bill Cosby to create the hilarious 200 MPH bit (kids, if you haven't heard the man's pre-Cosby Show-era standup, do yourselves a favor and buy the record).
Anyway . . . car CSX3015 was Shelby's personal vehicle for years, and offered more than enough provenance to sky-rocket up to $5.5M in a 2007 Barrett-Jackson action (a record-setting sum for an American-made car at the time.)
Complete list (AutoBlog.com)
A Once In A Lifetime Find
$700 Craigslist car find worth millions
This basket case could have been yours for perhaps $700. To no one’s surprise, it didn’t sell.
Here’s one that was posted on Craigslist in the Tampa Bay area of Florida about five years ago:
”SERIAL
# X53L on documented 1953 pre-production Corvette Frame. We believe
this to be a 1953 Pontiac prototype that was to assume the name
Longoria? Info received todate indicates that ZAGATO designed and
PINNAFARINA constructed the body for GM in late 52.”
The
typos and misspelling might have been one clue that the person who
wrote the ad did not know much about the car being offered.
This basket case could have been yours for perhaps $700. To no one’s surprise, it didn’t sell.
Here’s
what that wreck actually was: arguably, the most sought-after Corvette
ever built. Today it is very likely worth several million dollars.
It is the storied No. 1 Cunningham Corvette.
Instead
of a “documented 1953 pre-production Corvette Frame” this car is a 1960
model that was among three turned into racecars by the sportsman Briggs
Cunningham. He raced them at the 24 Hours of Le Mans that year; the
cars, marked “1”, “2” and “3”, took turns leading the race and
delighting fans with their thunderous V-8 engines. Numbers 1 and 2 did
not finish, but number 3 did, winning its class and a permanent place in
Corvette lore.
The Dish Is Subtle, Yet Complex
How One Dish Has Kept A Restaurant Open For Over 250 Years
This is a very interesting and well created short going into the life of renowned chef Yamada Kosuke. Chef Kosuke is the owner of a very popular restaurant in Japan called Tamahide. It’s so popular that people will wait for as long as four hours just to get a taste of their dish, Oyako-don. Oyako-don is a popular dish consisting of chicken, rice, scallion and many other ingredients.
Interview link (RantLifeStyle.com)
This is a very interesting and well created short going into the life of renowned chef Yamada Kosuke. Chef Kosuke is the owner of a very popular restaurant in Japan called Tamahide. It’s so popular that people will wait for as long as four hours just to get a taste of their dish, Oyako-don. Oyako-don is a popular dish consisting of chicken, rice, scallion and many other ingredients.
Interview link (RantLifeStyle.com)
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