Aw, dang. A very wistful RIP to Raquel Welch, who left an indelible impression on my youth. To follow, a short #DavesCarIDService thread dedicated to her:
Raquel Tejada (her maiden name) regally waving as San Diego County Fair Queen in a 1959 Ford Galaxie 500 convertible.
*she married (and quickly divorced) her high school sweetheart James Welch, but kept the name for the rest of her life.
Pre-film fame, as a trophy queen at Southern California race tracks, congratulating a very luck Bob O'Leary and his victorious Kurtis Offy sprint car.
Behind the wheel of a small block Chevy-powered T-bucket hot rod, circa 1965.
Holy moly. Raquel with a 1960 Chevy Corvette.
1967, with her film career in full swing: with a 1965 Ferrari 275 GTS, and yep, this car she actually owned.
That Ferrari deserves another look.
With a 1968ish Volvo P1800S coupe.
One more; Raquel with a 1968ish Piaggio Vespa Super 150.
Farewell, you goddess, you will be missed.
correction - driver pictured here is Don Cameron, who drove the Bob O'Leary Kurtis-Offy. 1958, Balboa Stadium Speedway San Diego.
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I'm willing to admit a lot of people over 75 become resource burdens to society, if you will admit a lot of people have already gotten a 50 year head start
Happy Super Bowl Sunday from #DavesCarIDService! Len Dawson celebrates the Chiefs' upset win in SB IV by buying his missus a fur coat and taking her out to Mamma Leone's Pizza KC in his new 1970 Dodge Challenger RT/SE, his reward for winning game MVP.
Sport Magazine once gave a new car to Super Bowl MVP, starting with Bart Starr's snazzy 67 Corvette in SB I. The Packers routed the Chiefs in that game, and Len Dawson famously sat in halftime locker room contemplation with a lung dart and Fresca.
A new car was a sizeable incentive back before 8-figure salaries and when most NFL players had off season jobs. Other prizewinners included Terry Bradshaw (1979 Pontiac Trans-Am) and the unfortunate Fred Biletnikoff (velour upholstered 1977 Ford Mustang II)
I usually don’t ID 1980s cars, but I thought this custom 1982 DMC DeLorean I saw at the car wash was kinda cool.
OK, not the car wash, but the Petersen Museum LA, and the real deal "star" car from Back To The Future. The movie used 3 different DeLoreans; 1 for stunts, 1 for special FX, this one used for regular scenes. Customization designed by Lawrence Paull, and built by Michael Fink.
My weekend off means a big inbox of ID requests, so time to get right at it - but with a gentle reminder of the the ID request guidelines:
God said, "I need someone who will stunt hopscotch over a river of hungry crocodiles like the ones who ate his dad, in a tuxedo, no matter how many takes or stitches are involved, for $1500."
I've always thought those were fake Disneyland animatronic crocodiles, and honestly it probably wouldn't have changed the quality of the shot if they were
But hey, why blow $10k of your budget on prop robo-crocs when good ol' crazy Crocodile Ron is happy to roll up to the set with his first aid kit and tanker full of live snapping hungry boys and do the whole scene for $800