It’s TRUST NUMBER 1, ie, himself.
Maybe he was just celebrating his first cheat:
Tryst #1
A formal opening to one on my favorite Soap Box Topics! States should require bumper stickers for cars with vanity plates that explains how to pronounce it, or what it means, etc.
My soap box started with some joker cutting me off in traffic with an obvious vanity plate that read like the alphabet song.
After reading some of these posts I may need to modify my soap box requirements. I can see wanting to retain mystery with a vanity plate meaning, but if I’m tired, I don’t want to figure it out. Unfortunately I’m OCD and it’s hard to turn away from the challenge of trying to figure it out.
Why don’t you try this one :evil grin: …
I saw GNA5H yesterday
I had a twofer at a red light on a four lane street.
Right in front of me was a Nissan Cube, light green, and with a tartan stripe the ran up the back and onto the roof (looked like Flower of Scotland). Its plate:
WEECUBE
and in the lane beside it, there was a low-slung, white Chevy sports car if some sort. Its plate:
SRRYMOM
There’s a story there. Blew your inheritance on a sports car?
While walking my dog recently, I saw a car with the vanity plate FAERIE parked on the street a few houses down from my building. I’m dying to know what the driver looks like, but I haven’t seen the vehicle since that afternoon.
I see that Maine’s stance on personalized plates has been mentioned upthread…I have seen the “TOESUKR” (complete with a variety of toe- and foot-themed stickers) while in the Brunswick/Topsham area, but I was driving at the time and couldn’t get a picture.
Driving on the freeway today I was following a black Jeep with a DPNLVR plate.
Maybe the owner is a dermatologist.
Perhaps that’s a chewing tobacco aficionado. Or there’s someplace near where they live or like to vacation where “DPN” is a reasonable contraction of the place name.
This afternoon I saw 2DEC0R8. Presumably an interior designer.
The character between C and R is a zero, not an oh. I suppose somebody else beat them to the conventional spelling.
A lot of states simply don’t use the letters “I” and “O” for license plates.
Which makes sense, but Florida is not among those states. They also use both O & Q which isn’t good for fleeting recognition at a distance either.
I saw one today that read HR DRAMA. I’m guessing the person works in HR, but I guess they could also just create a lot a drama for the HR people at work.
A few years ago I saw a Jeep with a license plate that read LAX RULES or something to that effect. At the time I joked that I wasn’t sure if the owner was a big fan of the Los Angeles International Airport, or if they were opposed to strictly enforcing rules. I later learned that LAX is slang for the sport lacrosse, so I assume that’s what it was actually about.
This morning: NCOLSLAW.
A legal firm, Nichols Law?
Advocacy for a new law named after a child, Nicole’s Law?
A commentary on cabbage, No cole slaw? In cole slaw?
I like the cole slaw alternatives best, but your mileage may vary.
I saw one the other day:
U
That’s it. But Y?
Black Tesla with SPCEBAL1
Texas plate, but with the colors reversed: White letters on a black background.
I was surprised to see that E MUSK *wasn’t * on a Tesla - it was one of those big Mercedes jeep things.
Just remembered a good one…waaaaay back in college, I saw a red Mazda Miata with a “TOMSERVO” plate. I tried to catch up to let the driver know I got the reference.