Wrecked - Life in the Crash Lane TV show is the series produced by NorthSouth Productions for the Speed Channel. The show follows the O'Hare Towing owners and tow truck operators, focusing primarily on vehicle recoveries throughout the greater Chicago area. The show focuses on O'Hare's heavy-duty, 25-60 ton tow trucks, performing recoveries on semi trucks and other large vehicles. Accidents happen, and cleaning up the mess isn't for the faint of heart. SPEED ventures into one of the busiest transportation hubs in the United States and follows Chicago's toughest towing family living life in the crash lane. Ride with the brave crew of O'Hare Towing. Hear real stories. Witness real danger. Discover the untold side of this dangerous business with the crew from O'Hare Towing as they put their lives on the double yellow line. Get hooked on Wrecked - life in the crash lane.
The Beach Boys composed the anthem, singing, "If that ain't enough to make you flip your lid, just one more thing"”I got the pink slip, Daddy." In California, "the pink slip" was the DMV's proof of title to the car. When hot-rodders drag-raced "for pinks," the winner took home the loser's car"”free and clear. Often deadly, always flagrantly illegal, in the Beach Boys' era, racing for pinks held at least as hallowed a place in the So Cal culture as long boards, buffalo plaid, and blondes. Speed Channel thoughtfully has reprised the winner-take-all drags on "Pinks" and "Pinks, All Out." "Pinks" does not provide a venue for "rice rockets" a la remakes of and sequels to The Fast and the Furious. Only American muscle cars need apply, and the drivers race by the "old school" rules"”no electronic timing or photo finishes. Usually burning up the quarter mile at closed, legal drag strips, competitors put the pedal to the metal until one wins three of five races and claims the precious pink.
Every week on "SuperCars Exposed" TV show Tanner Foust and Louise Brady take eager viewers into the turbo-charged, jaw-droppingly pricey world of exotic cars. "SuperCars Exposed" TV series make it clear, however, how belittling and insulting it is to call these works of art "cars" or "automobiles." The names--Ferraris, Porsches, Lamborghinis"”are eponyms for masterworks of metal and internal combustion. Clearly, it is good to be Tanner Foust and Louise Brady. The list of "SuperCars Exposed" episodes reads like a list of adolescent boys' fantasies: Tanner Foust pilots a Lamborghini Gallardo down the California coastline; then, Tanner Foust puts the petal to the metal in an Audi R8, flying over the Alps and then gives drifting lessons as he pushes a Ferrari 599 GTB down the Autobahn. Taking time out from driving for a little serious wrenching, Tanner Foust devotes some time to exposing the SuperCars, learning how to tune the newest top-of-the-line Porsches. Then, he drives an Aston Martin around Nurburgring. Finally, Louise Brady gets to do something besides narrate and comment, taking a turn behind the wheel of Mercedes-Benz performance cars.
American Muscle Car is a weekly television show on Speed (TV channel), produced by Restoration Productions LLC., about muscle cars. See Detroit's finest muscle machines in all their glory, telling their stories and "sharing the joy" of owning and restoring the most memorable and exciting cars ever created. Each half-hour showcases one legendary muscle car from the fifties, sixties and seventies in the finest detail.