The 1961 Chrysler New Yorker, slathered in improbable Dubonnet Iridescent—a shocking OE color that presaged the wild high-impact colors that would arrive on muscle Mopars just a few years later—is the ...
Brian is a published author who has been writing professionally for a decade in politics and entertainment, but found his calling covering the automotive industry. His love of cars started at an early ...
Outside of avid classic muscle enthusiasts, not many people know that the 1964.5 Ford Mustang didn't invent the pony car segment that came to define the American enthusiast car market in the late ...
Produced from 1968 to 1975 (as a stand-alone nameplate), the Plymouth Road Runner is arguably one of the most iconic muscle cars from the golden era. It's also a pretty common classic nowadays. Road ...
The 1971 Plymouth Hemi ’Cuda crossed a line that even other blue-chip muscle cars never quite reached, shifting from coveted collectible to something closer to untouchable myth. Scarcity, racing-bred ...
The 1970 Plymouth HEMI Cuda was the high-water mark for Chrysler muscle cars of its era. The 1970-74 E-body Plymouth Barracuda and its sibling, the Dodge Challenger, were Chrysler's "pony cars," ...