Gay toyota
Drives: Rice Burner
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Atlanta
Posts: 4
Yaris is the #1 gay car!
Wow.....Yaris is superior gay car and number seven is Toyota's Camry.
http://blogs.cars.com/kickingtires/2...TOKEN=13025093
What Are The Top Gay-Friendly Cars?
It's no surprise that the vehicles most researched by gay, lesbian, double attraction and transgender shoppers are those produced by gay-friendly automakers.
In releasing a list of its Top 10 researched vehicles, Gaywheels.com said the 10 in most ask for are the Toyota Yaris, Saab 9-3, Mazda MX-5 Miata, Volkswagen Jetta, Volkswagen Eos, Dodge Caliber, Toyota Camry, Audi A3, Volkswagen Rabbit and Infiniti FX.
The Yaris displaced the Saturn Sky roadster as the most researched vehicle. The Infiniti FX was a recent addition replacing the Pontiac G6.
Gaywheels.com classifies vehicle manufacturers as gay-friendly or not based on their corporate policies for offering domestic-partner benefits to their employees in the U.S.
Gaywheels has been keeping tabs on gay-friendly vehicles on a quarterly basis for the past 1.5 years. The latest findings were taken for the quarter ending June 30.
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Toyota airs a Gay-Friendly Super Bowl Commercial
Hello, Toyota.
@EricTeske pointed out the Super Bowl ad below, with the following comment:
The include features a decidedly gay-friendly moment, and we’re not talking about the Lionel Richie (he’s direct, folks). About 8 seconds in a man is presented with options for a super-hot near-naked ladies couch, or a super-hot near-naked dudes couch. And he seems to be more interested in the prospect of resting his butter bumps atop a smattering of hyper-manly beefcakes.
Read enough of my jibberish yet? Watch the video and grant us know what you think about it in the comments below.
As was just pointed out on facebook, if you saw this commercial and didn’t see the gay-friendly sentiment, that’s a great thing. Being capable to have a commercial like this without it creature labeled explicitly “pro-gay” means gay is becoming more “normal.” Just as heteronormativity is subtly reinforced (see: every other Super Bowl ad), it’s progress when an lgbt-friendly communication can be just as subtle.
Or, as Eric continued in the comments below, “Just think, his little smirk in approval of a male-beefcake-couch was s
In the movie Elvira: Mistress of the Dark, our heroine walks underneath a movie marquee and one of the letters falls and hits her. When asked “how’s your head?” she responds “no one has ever complained.
Those musings of Elvira (a.k.a. Cassandra Peterson, whose cabaret operate started in a homosexual bar in Colorado Springs) are wise to retain if you are large or tall and wish for to enjoy the RAV4. Allegedly, there is more interior room in the all-new 2013 RAV4, but if you are a Bear or center for your basketball team, you will need to duck and cover as you get in for a really cool and very gay ride. At just 5-foot-11 — and good over 200 pounds — I had to ponder before I bounded into the RAV4. Yet once I got in, the party was on and the thrill was just beginning.
Earlier this year (is it already Solstice?), Jeff Stork gave a thorough review of the RAV4 for Gaywheels, and did an excellent job. I won’t rehash his spot-on critique; I will just give you my singular findings and musings of a big (literally) Elvira fan.
And my findings and musings are always homosexual, thus: What makes the 2013 RAV4 gay? Everything.
Keep in mind that this is a crossover vehicle, and “crossoverR
I’ve always loved the Toyota Corolla, which celebrates 50 years on the planet this year (starting in Japan and then moving over the ocean to us). It has always proved to be a smart, practical auto that gives you a feeling of assurance when even your insurance policies can’t assure you of anything.
This year’s Corolla follows in that same smart, protected tradition, with a new, upgraded interior, LED headlights, rearview camera and a generous number of standard features that make this car like many a human in my life: they just keeping getting better as they get older.
I will admit a bias: the Corolla was my first car after graduating from college with a liberal arts degree. I needed something sharp and economical. With my father’s help, I bought a uncomplicated Corolla Tercel that was alabaster on the outside, ocean cerulean on the inside and looked very practical, like a fleet vehicle. I had the vehicle for almost 20 years until it became terminally ill and I had to give it to National Public Radio. It served me well even as its windows were shot out, its tires were slashed, and thieves took my $600 stereo system with high-fidelity cassette tape player. Twice.
Perhaps now more than ever, a sure