This one seems to have taken ages. It's my own fault for starting 2 projects at once . It proved very hard getting good reference photos for this one because hardly any Jeep owners seem to keep their vehicles standard. I've tried to make it a stock CJ-7. Dixie kept changing, and trim such as wipers and mirrors disappear and reappear between shots. I've gone for a manual transmission version. I based the 'DIXIE' hood graphics on the Jeep at Cooter's because the photos I found online were much higher resolution than any screengrabs I could get - they are slightly different from the series (I think the Jeep at Cooter's is a CJ-5, not a CJ-7 - any Jeep experts can correct me if I'm wrong). The Jeep emblems have been left in place as that's how they appeared in earlier shows.
I was wondering what the moderator online messages at the bottom of the screen were all about. Today it tells me you've all "Gone fishin'" . Thanks also for the Social Toolbar. It will act as a constant reminder that I should get a life .
For those of you unfamiliar with Max Headroom, he was touted as a sophisticated, computer-generated character. In reality it was actor Matt Frewer in heavy make-up with some clever visual effects. Let's face it; computer graphics in the mid '80s just weren't up to the job. Now that would make an interesting trio .
That must have been an easier one than I thought - points all 'round. Q. One more from 'Dukes Meet Cale Yarborough'. Name the mechanic who used to work on Black Tillie.
A song that manages to be equally beautiful and sad. If you don't know the story behind the song, read the description under the video on the YouTube link.
Roger; you're obviously a poet, and didn't know it . Sadly though, you're both wrong. City Ordinance 7763-B is "when you cross the road you got to ring a cowbell". Q. Also in 'Dukes Meet Cale Yarborough', which county used to own the race track Cale was using before it was sold?.