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#big red truck
missathlete31 · 10 months
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Found these under Glens tag on Instagram!!!
Please note I take NO credit for these photos
But we got a big red truck: it’s Twister Time!!!! 🌪️🌪️🌪️🌪️🌪️🌪️
I Need this movie now
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calocera · 1 year
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EPIC rap battles of history…FREIGHT…versus…COACH
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hatsalad · 8 months
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Bumblebee should be changed back to a beetle but animated made a big brain move making Optimus a fire engine and I think we actually need more of that
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jhardyfreak-blog · 21 days
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angeltannis · 25 days
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My dad not letting me store my 22-year-old truck in his giant garage the last 7 years and then being Shocked Pikachu face when it starts to rot from being left out in the elements 24/7
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belfryprepz · 1 month
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Me and my gf got into a bad car accident today
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dinahdoeeyes · 2 months
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My headcanons for StEx characters' ages. (You know... if they were human.)
(I already posted this over a year ago, but it was in a reblog, so I figured I'd post it as it's own original post. I'm just copying & pasting everything I wrote before.)
Okay, so for me, (original) StEx takes place on March 27th, 1984.
Dinah: 23. Dinah really gives me that “Youngest of the coaches" vibe, and knowing that Frances Ruffelle and Jane Krakowski were both 18 when StEx debuted in London and on Broadway (respectively) and Natalie Howard was 21 when StEx debuted in Bochum definitely adds to that vibe for me. (To me, she’s a Pisces, and would’ve very recently had her 23rd birthday.)
Greaseball: 32 or 30, but he’s almost 33 or 31 because I headcanon him as an Aries. I was feeling that Greaseball is a bit older than Dinah, but once I learned that Elvis & Priscilla have a 10-year age gap, I was like, “Yeah, that tracks.” (No pun intended.) But then I thought (literally while writing this), "Hmm, does G.B. seem almost 33?" Even with Jeff having been 36 when StEx debuted, Greaseball gives me more of a 29-31 vibe? Idk for sure now! 🤷🏽‍♀️ My headcanon is that he & Dinah have been together for almost 2 years.
Rusty: 24 or 25. I’m not entirely solid on his age yet.
Pearl: 26. I know people usually see Pearl as quite young, but I'm feeling 26 exactly from, like, every version I've seen of her.
C.B.: 25. Or 26.
Ashley: 30. I read that Ash is like “the big sister” of the girls, while I feel like Dinah is the little sister.
Buffy: 28.
Electra: 29-31.
Volta: 29.
Joule: 24 or 25. She has that younger energy; I don’t mean physical energy, I mean in her personality.
Poppa: 65-70.
Belle: 53-57.
The Rockies: 24.
Dustin: 23 or 24.
Flat-Top: 20. He definitely has the vibe of being the youngest, and I’ve read him described as quite young.
2nd & 3rd Class Sleepers: 26-27.
Duvay: 27. (I’ve gotten the headcanon that she is Ash’s younger sister, which is why I am including her.)
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I don’t care about the new Belle or Carrie or Killerwatt. I haven’t thought about the ages for Krupp, Wrench, or Purse; I honestly... don’t pay much attention to those 3. 😬 👀
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captainmvf · 1 year
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Part 14 of my StEx brainrot doodles.
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jrueships · 4 months
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Stef headbutting (bunting) Josh every five seconds and josh just letting him
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stabbyfoxandrew · 8 months
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guys,,, this is so dumb but does anyone know how firefighters work? like if i wing this completely will everyone know?
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king0fcrows · 4 months
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residentraccoon · 4 months
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Selectia nationala peaked in 2020
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ialpiriel · 8 months
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the thing is that if cursor was in a different setting, she'd be a specific kind of Truck Guy
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hellboyslady · 1 year
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Finally got these in. That black and white sketch Variant was the only one I could find!
These where Mother’s Day gifts, you know who you are. Thank you so much and if some are wondering I am actually doing a Comic Cover for my Hillzanora Knight Comic I am working on after I finish the what if fan Comic of Hellboy & Hillzanora showing how they met in a prequel comic and a current time line comic when they reunite unexpectedly after so many years apart.
You all will get to read them when they are finished and available to everyone to read, now the Fan Comic that has a Hellboy and Hillzanora in it will be free for everyone to read.
But the comic of Hillzanora will be a paid series, not sure how many copy’s will be made yet either but that will come later. I do have the concept sketched up but will not show it to people until the comic page I am working on is finished.
Anyway I want to thank you all so much and let me know what you all think on the comics in the image and the upcoming idea’s and my cover idea that I am working on, (I did have the idea for the cover before I even saw this cover of Red Sonja).
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Red Simpson - Diesel smoke,
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mywifeleftme · 1 year
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1: Various Artists // Keep on Truckin'
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Keep on Truckin' Various Artists 1979, Realistic Records
America was big rig crazy in the mid-to-late ‘70s, as this novelty compilation attests. Released on Radio Shack’s in-house Realistic label, Keep On Truckin’ collects a hodgepodge of sides by trucker country stalwarts. There were dozens of similarly themed comps on the market at the time and while there isn’t anything particularly special about this one, it’s a fun representative of a forgotten fad.
Social and economic factors played their parts in moulding the figure of the long-haul trucker into the era’s diesel-powered avatar of individualism, but it wouldn’t be an American story without some help from the advertising world. Omaha-based ad man Bill Fries created the character of singing truck driver C.W. McCall for a regional series of television commercials hocking Old Home Bread. Fries provided talk-sung narration for the ads, in which the affable C.W. (a dead ringer for, uh, documentary film performer Steve Holmes) flirts with blonde waitress Mavis Davis over various buns, rolls, and cakes.
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The spots were a local phenomenon, but even Fries was surprised when the cash-in singles he released as the C.W. character became national hits. By the time “Convoy” reached #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1975, trucker country was everywhere. (For context, this would be like if a 2000s Folgers commercial had sparked renewed interest in incest.)
In fairness, the account above is a bit of an oversimplification. Singers like Dave Dudley (who sounds kinda like Don Gibson and shows up twice on Keep On Truckin’) had been recording songs about truckers since at least the mid-1960s, and most of the best numbers here are by genre veterans. My fav is Dick Curless, a tough-looking one-eyed bastard with a bass-baritone to rival Johnny Cash. His strutting “Drag ‘Em Off the Interstate, Sock it to ‘Em, J.P. Blues” drips with condescension for crooked rural police, even pulling out a siren-mocking slide whistle during the chorus.
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The most memorable tune, however, is “Teddy Bear’s Last Ride,” a deranged 1976 single by the otherwise unknown Diana Williams. Earlier that same year, Red Sovine had a major country hit with “Teddy Bear”, a maudlin story song about “a little cripple boy” whose trucker father had been killed in a highway accident. The lonely child turns to talking to random truckers over his CB radio for comfort. As you'd expect, after he gives his address out over the air dozens of them quickly descend upon his home to “ride little Teddy Bear” before his mother gets home. (He's delighted.)
Diana Williams’ hastily cut ‘sequel’ was written and recorded without Sovine’s involvement. She doubles down on the treacle by killing Teddy Bear off and depositing his corpse into a black mack truck that serves as a makeshift hearse. There’s something endearingly bald-faced about Williams’ attempt to ring out any last droplets Sovine’s original might have left hanging in the listener’s tear ducts.
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Keep On Truckin’ throws in a song about a drag race between a diesel and a flying saucer, a Glen Campbell recording from 1962, and a heap of serviceable-at-worst ‘70s honky tonk in a Waylon Jennings vein. That’s something like the platonic ideal of a dollar bin darling. Honk if you’re lonesome tonight.
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