Here is a number that will probably annoy somebody you know. iPhone and Apple CarPlay users are more than twice as likely as Android users to video chat, scroll Instagram, stream Netflix or Hulu, and
Car thefts are finally dropping in America. Which sounds great until you realize the same handful of cars are still basically getting hunted like it’s open season. Here’s the w
Once you notice it, you can’t unsee it. Walk through a random parking lot in 2026 and it starts feeling weirdly dystopian. Rows of anonymous crossovers. Same sloped roofline. Same angry L
There’s a weird pattern in the U.S. car market. We stop buying something, automakers kill it, and then a few years later everyone starts asking, “wait… why did we get rid of that?&r
We drove from Austin to Dallas a few weeks ago, and somewhere around Waco I started paying attention to what was around us on I-35. Trucks. SUVs. Crossovers. More trucks. We kept counting fo
Morgan just dropped its most powerful car yet, the Supersport 400. And yeah, it sticks to what Morgan does best, just with a bit more punch. It runs BMW’s 3.0 straight-six, same family as t
Chevrolet is tweaking something small, but familiar. The gold bowtie is going away, replaced by a simpler, monochrome version. It shows up first on a teaser for the 2027 Sonic RS, which debuts in B
Every time gas prices jump, the same thing happens. People who were perfectly happy to ignore EVs start opening a calculator. That is happening again right now, and this time it feels different.
There was a time when opening your garage door from your car was the simplest thing in the world. Press a button, door goes up. That was it. No apps, no subscriptions, no thinking required.
For a long time, luxury cars followed a pretty predictable script. If someone wanted something high-end, they looked to Germany first, maybe Japan or the UK next. That was just how the market worked.