@@MrWolfSnackFalse. I currently own (8) 91-97 f350s, and have had over 20 on my life, all Texas/Oklahoma trucks. It's hard enough to find one with a tilt steering wheel and A/C, let alone damn seat heaters. 90% of the trucks sold were for work use, trucks hadn't yet become the luxury vehicles are now.
Have to go through the five stages of grief, considering it's a little weird, even for guys, to get upset over a vehicle that's not even a real person, in other words, Hank shouldn't even be blaming Bobby for his truck getting destroyed by a train, and he should realize no car/van/trucks can last forever. Nickelodeon really should've made an episode of The Loud House based on this with Vanzilla, since due to it being made inthe 1960s, it should've already been dead, and Vantastic Voyage does seem like a terrible episode due to Lincoln and the girls' dad being too attached to it, who knew guys are idiots when it comes to vehicles, although I wasn't expecting Lana to also have this kind of behavior when it really did die in Leave No Van Behind, curse her tomboyish personality.
"A brother may stab you in the back, a woman definitely will, but a bike will never let you down." - Johnny Klebitz, GTA IV, The Lost & Damned. Aside from that, most folks associate vehicles with life events. Hank's truck was there for him when he needed to drive to & from work, to take his son to school, adventures with his buddies, ETC. I can relate to this personally because of my dad's old Mustang. I must've been about Bobby's age when my dad bought his car. He took me to school, to job interviews, hell, even to work as an adult. He sold it before we moved out-of-state, and he still misses it. I promised him that I'm gonna get him one just like it, someday. As for the 60's van, most cars back then were much more reliable than a lot of the newer ones we have today, provided that they were taken care of. That may not be true for every example, but you get the idea.
The episodes where Hank and Bobby grow closer are always the best.
Ridiculously packed F250
Very common for Texas in the late 90s.
@@MrWolfSnackFalse.
I currently own (8) 91-97 f350s, and have had over 20 on my life, all Texas/Oklahoma trucks.
It's hard enough to find one with a tilt steering wheel and A/C, let alone damn seat heaters. 90% of the trucks sold were for work use, trucks hadn't yet become the luxury vehicles are now.
@@FedSmoker64did you ever see and centurion/roll a long conversions?
@@FedSmoker64 yep, this cartoon is like if Range Rover made a full-size pickup.
Super Duty’s back then didn’t have headlight wipers 😆
@@MrWolfSnack Nah. This is a fictionalized F-250. Irl, they didn't have some of those features in that generation.
The fact the random man did width size and suggested he needed the exercise... 😂😂😂
0:21 1999 Ford F-250
Rip old truck i wish he brought another of the same
Have to go through the five stages of grief, considering it's a little weird, even for guys, to get upset over a vehicle that's not even a real person, in other words, Hank shouldn't even be blaming Bobby for his truck getting destroyed by a train, and he should realize no car/van/trucks can last forever. Nickelodeon really should've made an episode of The Loud House based on this with Vanzilla, since due to it being made inthe 1960s, it should've already been dead, and Vantastic Voyage does seem like a terrible episode due to Lincoln and the girls' dad being too attached to it, who knew guys are idiots when it comes to vehicles, although I wasn't expecting Lana to also have this kind of behavior when it really did die in Leave No Van Behind, curse her tomboyish personality.
"A brother may stab you in the back, a woman definitely will, but a bike will never let you down." - Johnny Klebitz, GTA IV, The Lost & Damned.
Aside from that, most folks associate vehicles with life events. Hank's truck was there for him when he needed to drive to & from work, to take his son to school, adventures with his buddies, ETC. I can relate to this personally because of my dad's old Mustang. I must've been about Bobby's age when my dad bought his car. He took me to school, to job interviews, hell, even to work as an adult. He sold it before we moved out-of-state, and he still misses it. I promised him that I'm gonna get him one just like it, someday.
As for the 60's van, most cars back then were much more reliable than a lot of the newer ones we have today, provided that they were taken care of. That may not be true for every example, but you get the idea.
@@MrRAGE-md5rj funny, I feel the same way about my 2003 ford escape.
Can you do the one that Peggy and Bobby feed the football team bugged vegetables
Can you do Bobby pretending to be a high school student 🎉
Here ya go: ua-cam.com/video/sj5Ux-0rIkw/v-deo.html
Can you upload Carolyn's mom
What was the name of this episode ?
Chasing Bobby