The little things in a row over over the fender, specifically mimicking the appearance of 1950s Buicks. I see they are probably more commonly known as ‘fender vents’.
Here is an Edmunds article examinging the relative tackiness of these vs. fake convertible tops:
This caused me to bellow “My car needs eyelashes!” at my husband. He was a bit confused, looked at the pic, and said that my car did NOT need eyelashes…but that his car needs a mustache.
I laughed until I had to pull over recently when I saw a mid0-70’s station wagon (Blue, Ford, fake wood panel down the side) with paint peeling and the hood bouncing in the wind, with 20" gold-tone SPINNERS! I mean, really, WTF? Car first, then wheels. Not the other way around.
Never seen a rolling obit.
I have never seen obits, fake portholes, eyelashes or testicles on cars here in Idaho. I don’t know if that means we have better taste or are just behind the times.
Given them amount of fake bullet holes and large Mother Mary murals on trunks here though, I’m guessing the latter.
The best car in the WORLD is toss up between a rusted out, ancient blue Buick that has a “CENTURY” decal across the windshield that probably cost more than the car is worth or the Dynasty (… yeah) with the FAKE spinners and the factory speakers with the bass turned all the way up.
Actually, I really kind of want to punch that second guy. What a dickbag.
The rear window eulogy thing is real popular among the local Native American population. That and bumper stickers that say “I was Native before it was Cool” or something, which makes about as much sense as this pregnancy photo I found earlier. WTF.
But, really, the coolest car around here is the Smart car with the decal on the front that looks like shark teeth. It makes me smile every time I see it.
SO weird. I’ve been thinking about starting a similar thread for years. I personally find it morbid and creepy. I haven’t seen as many around here (but I don’t drive that much, usually take the light rail), but it was fairly common in Anchorage. Something like “in loving memory of Joe Smith, 1973 to 2000” or whatever.
Just seems really odd to me, akin to having a tombstone on your vehicle or something.
One day “society” will reach the point where there will be rocks on every street corner with a plaque next to it. People will walk by, look down, and touch the rock. And I’ll say to the fools, “It’s *a *rock.” There will be entire college campuses where every rock, every tree is dedicated to some dead professors. You will have the William T. Jones drinking fountain. :rolleyes: :dubious: :smack:
They don’t bother me in the sense that they affect me in any real sense, but when I see some obit or “In loving memory…” on a car, I think to myself, “I guess I’m sorry that someone died, but really, I don’t know the person, and it has no effect on me, so really, why the hell am I supposed to care?”
I don’t know why people feel they have to advertise everything about themselves (obviously that’s not limited to obits). But go for it with the memorials. Just don’t expect me to care if I didn’t know the person.
Good grief, we are overrun with those things here in WV. I’m waiting to see someone with their entire back window covered with “In Memory Of…” along with the Calvin peeing on something sticker and the NASCAR driver of their choice’s car #.
The memorial in the back window is indeed a cultural phenomenon, pretty prominent with the Latino community. I’m in a SoCal city, and it’s common here as a way for a family to share their grief. If you check the dates, a fair number of the deceased are young; I’m not saying they were gang members, but in many cases the cause of death relates to those activities.
I think a lot of times a family does it because we really don’t have headstones and cemeteries the way we used to. A flat plaque in a lawnmowed field doesn’t get seen as much, and if the act of tattooing their loved one on their car helps them though their grief, I’m okay with it.