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April 21, 2025 • 26 mins

Unlock the secrets of TV's most iconic custom vehicles and discover how these imaginative creations have captivated us all. Step into a world where cars are more than just machines, as we journey through the nostalgic memories and pop culture impact of such legendary rides as the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles' Turtle Van and Scooby-Doo's Mystery Machine. We'll take a closer look at how these vehicles have become symbols of creativity and adventure, sparking the imaginations of generations and cementing their places in the pantheon of television history.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Well, I'm just a kid and I'm at home and
I'm watching cartoons and with it comes one
of the cool things with some of the shows I
watch.
And one of the early shows that I watched
with something really cool in it was
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.
Remember the turtle van?
That was cool and it was one of those
amazing toys that you really wanted.
You saw it and you were like oh yeah, yeah,

(00:22):
yeah, yeah, I want that toy because I love
cars and I want the turtle van.
It shoots pizzas.
You can put all your guys in it.
There were so many cool things about it.
It was a toy that made me want it.
Well, like television shows, there's all
kinds of great icon cars from TV shows and
you can think of a whole whack of them.

(00:46):
But unlike the actual reality of the
automobile industry, with cars like the
Duxa Hazard 69 Charger, what we're going to
be taking a look at today are the icon cars
that don't exist in the real world.
Some of them may actually exist, but will
be custom variations of what you would find,
and today Autolux is going to be taking a
look at television's most iconic custom
cars.

(01:12):
Welcome back to the Autolux podcast.
I am your host, as always the doctor to the
automotive industry, mr Everett Jay, coming
to you from our host website at Autoluxnet.
If you haven't been there, stop by check it
out.
Read some of the reviews, check out some of
the ratings.
Go to the Corporate Leaks website.
Corporate lakes website page.
Big or small, we have them all, car
companies from around the globe, all
available on the autoluxnet website.
The autolux podcast is brought to you by
ecom entertainment group and distributed by

(01:33):
podbeamcom, if you'd like to get in touch
and send us an email over at email at
autoluxnet.
So, like I said in the beginning, the
turtle van one of the most iconic toy
vehicles and one of the most iconic vans,
like automobiles you can think of.
From little kids in the early 90s the ninja
turtles were big.
The release of the ninja turtle movie in
1989 just blew up the world.

(01:54):
Sure, the movie didn't have a cool van, but
the cartoon did.
Gotta remember there's always differences
between the comic book, television, cartoon
and the movies.
Hell, even when they re-released the movies
a few years back, the van was completely
different.
Again, they tried to make it similar to
what was in the comic and the cartoon, but
they really didn't get it.
Now the Turtle Van, like I said, was one of

(02:15):
those cool toys that I always wanted and I
really wish I did get it because of how
much they're worth now, but it was on TV.
Hell, from back in those days I can
remember some of the cool cars being
customized as well, and not just cartoons.
Hell, one of the most famous cartoon
vehicles of all time that you could think
of would be, in the 1970s, scooby-doo.
The scooby-doo rode around in a van that

(02:37):
didn't have any name or anything on it, so
it was always kind of a mystery to everyone.
We kind of like we looked at it and we're
like, uh, I don't know what is it?
Well, when you actually look at it, it kind
of like piecing together some of the cars
that make cars from the movie, like trying
to figure out what makes lightning mcqueen
or what makes finn mcmissile.
You could see so many different vehicles in

(02:59):
it.
Well, the scooby-doo van, which helps them
all out on their great adventures and,
trust me, they have some great adventures
that van is what you would consider kind of
like a cross between a microbus and a ford
econoline from the 1970s.
It wasn't like anything else that you had
ever seen and it became so synonymous with
a television show, the scooby-doo van.

(03:20):
People try and make it all the time
utilizing any type of van hell.
My son has the playmobil scooby-doo van,
which is built of the exact same casting
that they use to build the a-team van and
their off-road adventure van for the
playmobil series.
So it's essentially a ford econoline.
When I look at it I'm like no, no, that's.
That's not the scooby-doo van, it's more of

(03:42):
cab over style, it's similar to that of
more of a microbus or hell, even, like I
said, the original Ford Econolines, the
little red wagons, or hell, even the
Corvair vans from General Motors.
You sat over top of the front.
That's what the Scooby-Doo van was and it
was cool and we all loved it.
Even though they never put a major emphasis

(04:02):
on the Scooby-Doo van, it's one of the most
memorable vehicles in history.
We look at it and we think, yes, that's
Scooby-Doo.
We know who Scooby-Doo is.
We know that's Scooby's van.
Well, it's not Scooby's van, it's Fred's
van.
But they all ride around.
You know, with Daphne and Velma they cruise
around in the Scooby van, kind of like the
Mach 5.
Now there is a difference between the Mach

(04:23):
5 that you see in the movie when it was
released a few years back than the original
cartoon.
The Mach 5 kind of took inspiration from
the original Ford Mustang concept yeah,
hence the Mach used in its name.
But Speed Racer's Mach 5 was one of those
things that got a lot of kids into racing
Like the Mr X car.

(04:43):
That was cool, black and yellow, but moth 5
was it.
We didn't watch the show for all the other
weird antics that went along with speed
racer.
Like, trust me, you go back and you watch
the show and it's just like what, what was
I thinking watching the show?
Oh, yeah, that's right, I was watching it
because I love that car and that's what a
lot of icon cars from tv shows are.

(05:03):
It's kind of like the 1983 GMC Vandura used
by the A-Team.
Now, this wasn't a production model, it was
a customized GMC Vandura.
A top spoiler and a custom paint job, along
with aftermarket rims and a front spoiler
with lowering springs, made this van even
cooler.
And when you go back and you watch the
A-Team, yeah, start to question yourself on

(05:26):
literally what the hell was I thinking when
I was watching the show?
This is boring, oh God, this show is
whatever.
But we all watched it for two reasons Mr T
and that van.
That van made the show.
Nobody watched the A-Team because the
A-Team was good.
They watched it because of the van.
They were car enthusiasts.
When I was a kid I saw the show once and I

(05:49):
always wanted to see it.
I'm like, ah, I want to see it, I want to
see it, I want to see it.
I love that van.
Not realizing the show is so boring.
The show is supposed to be about the
characters and the missions that they're
solving.
It's not supposed to be about the van, but
it's an icon vehicle, like icons from
movies like the Back to the Future DeLorean.
The movie centers around Marty trying to
get back in time, but we all remember the

(06:10):
DeLorean.
Well, the 18 van, is it?
We all remember that GMC van.
Now that is one that actually did have the
proper proportions and we could see what it
was.
But General Motors is famous for this.
It's kind of like the 1982 Pontiac Firebird
used for KITT.
We know it's a Firebird, we know KITT is
based off of Firebird, but when you open
the door, trust me, the interior of that

(06:32):
car is completely different than a standard
Firebird.
Kitt was it.
And just like the A-Team, we didn't watch
that show for the show.
We watched it because of the cool
automotive chases with KITT, that amazing
looking customized Firebird.
We knew it was a Firebird but it was custom,
it was kit.
It's not a Firebird, that's kit, kind of
like the A-Team van.

(06:53):
That's not the GMC Vandera, that's the
A-Team van.
These are vehicles that are so synonymous
with the shows that the show names the
vehicle Like the Dukes of Hazzard.
You could think of that as an Icon car.
But it's a 69 Charger.
We all know it's a 69 Charger but it has a
name it's the General Lee.
Well, the A-Team van.
How many people knew that was an 83 Vandura?
We all knew it was a Pontiac Firebird for a

(07:14):
kid, but we can never figure out the years
for some of these.
One of the greatest custom Icon cars in
history was actually built from a concept
car.
George Barris used the original Lincoln
Futura concept from 1955 to build the
original Batmobile.
So it's a concept car made into a custom

(07:34):
car.
Yeah, batman With Adam West, we all know it
and it's the car that we all love.
You show that car all over the world.
Anybody who has ever heard of batman knows
that car.
But batman also had the batmobile for the
movies.
But every television show had its own

(07:55):
variation and I remember in the 1990s they
had that long, essentially giant brick on
wheels, the batmobile from batman, the
animated series.
And the funny thing is is my daughter.
This is one of her favorite shows to watch
with me.
She loves batman, the animated series from
the 90s.
I tried to get her in a spider-man, she
wouldn't get into it.
Try to get her into, you know, watching the

(08:16):
ewok shows or droids.
No, wouldn't go for it.
She likes batman and she likes that cool
batmobile.
Trust me, it's the only reason why I
watched that series back in the day.
It was a good series.
Now, that was one of the few that didn't
center around the car.
The car was a cool addition to the show,
kind of like the Batmobile from the
original Batman series.

(08:36):
It was a cool addition to the show.
We all wanted to see them jump in that
vehicle and go on out, kind of like the
Monkey Mobile, the 66 Pontiac GTO that made
the Monkey Mobile.
We all wanted the monkeys to jump in that
car and go out Hell.
We didn't like the music, we didn't like
the band, we definitely didn't like the
show, but we all wanted to see that Monkey
Mobile in action, because when they fired

(08:58):
up that engine we knew exactly what it was.
Oh, that's a Pontiac GTO V created by the
godfather of DeLorean Motor Company, mr
John Z DeLorean.
That is the GTO Gas, tires and octane, as
everybody always thought it stood for, the
original goat became the monkey mobile.
Like I said, nobody watched the show
because of it.

(09:18):
There are specific shows that did center
around the cars and two of the greatest
ones you can think of one is from the 90s
and one is from the 70s.
You didn't know this.
There was a cartoon in the 1970s called
dune buggy that centered around a talking
dune buggy.
Yeah, a cartoon dune buggy that talked.
It was pretty cool.

(09:39):
I went back and I watched it.
It followed the same premise as scooby-doo,
just this one centered around the
automobile portion of the show.
Scooby-doo had the cool van which all kids
wanted to see, but Dune Buggy centered
completely around the automobile portion
that we all wanted to see, the Dune Buggy.
And it's the 1970s when Dune Buggies were

(09:59):
the biggest thing out there.
Everyone wanted it.
Hell, go back and watch James Bond movies
from the 1970s and you'll be surprised at
how many you'll find with a dune buggy in
them.
They were a cool thing and they made a
cartoon about a dune buggy.
It's not really big and it's very hard to
find but trust me, go out and find the dune
buggy show and watch the cool cartoon.

(10:21):
It's different but hey, it's for car cult
people.
The other one was made in the 90s just
after the release of the Dodge Viper gts
coupe.
Dodge started getting into well, not dodge
chrysler corporation because of its vested
interest in its expansion and for how much
they turned themselves around and how much
money they were now making.
They decided to get into television series.

(10:42):
They remember the 1980s with the a-team and
night rider and how successful that was for
general motors.
But ch Chrysler Corporation wanted to
emulate this and they did it with a cop
drama show called Viper.
It was a standard 1996 Dodge Viper GTS Q
but for the show since it came out during
1997, they used the 97 model, that 1997

(11:03):
Dodge Viper.
When they got a call and they had to go
save the day it transformed into this weird
grayish, snakehead-looking blob essentially
of a vehicle, and they went out and they
fought crime with it.
It was essentially Chrysler's answer to
Knight Rider but with the rise of shows
like NYPD Blue in the 90s.
They wanted to base the premise off more of

(11:25):
a cop drama.
To go after more of the adults who watched
Knight Rider in the 1980s when they were
during their teen years, they wanted to
appeal to their aspect of these cop dramas
with a new show that's centered around a
Dodge Viper.
This has helped drum up sales and awareness
for both Chrysler Corporation and the Viper
in itself.
Now, the show wasn't the world's greatest,

(11:45):
trust me.
I remember going back and watching it now
and I'm just like what the hell was I
thinking?
It's because you waited for that car to
transform.
That car transformed every episode.
You just waited for that one scene to
happen.
You're just like yeah, yeah, I love it.
It's like watching the Gadgetmobile,
inspector Gadget.
One of the greatest cartoon cars in history

(12:06):
was the Gadgetmobile and it did something
that the viper from the show viper did.
It transformed when inspector gadget had to
bring penny and brain around.
It was a minivan.
Why?
Because the 80s and 90s were big for vans.
It was a family vehicle to get your family
in and around.
But when the gadget had to get going quick
and had to save the day, his van turned
into a car very similar to a 300zx.

(12:30):
It became a two-door sports car from a
minivan go-go gadget mobile.
Oh, I loved it.
I loved the gadget mobile and hell
inspector gadget was one of those ones that
I watched all the time as a kid and I loved
it.
But unfortunately the movie did not do its.
Justice is a convertible and it didn't
transform.
The only good thing about the movie version

(12:50):
is it spit out Skittles like it was the
greatest thing in the world.
I'm just looking like, oh yeah, I want that,
but unfortunately it didn't transform and
that was one of the biggest problems I had
with the Inspector Gadget movies.
The car didn't transform.
That was the Gadgetmobile.
I'm.
I'm sorry.
You can make inspector gadget have every
single cool thing in the world.

(13:11):
You can make them any after, but the gadget
mobile has to turn from a minivan into a
sports car.
I'm sorry, but that's the gadget mobile.
We all remember it and that is how it was.
It had to transform, kind of like the
jetson aero car.
Oh yeah, it transformed as well.
It became george jetson's briefcase for
work.

(13:32):
Okay, it flew through the skies.
And if you didn't know this about the
jetsons, there's a reason why they live in
the sky is because we've polluted our
planet so badly that we now have to live in
the sky, above the pollution.
Luckily, by this time and age we have
flying cars, so we can live above the
clouds in these massive cities.
Don't you remember in the movie?

(13:52):
And he pushes the button and like, oh, it's
so crummy outside, let's get out of this
and go above the clouds and all these
apartment buildings start popping up out of
the clouds, out of the pollution.
To get around, we need our Aero car.
And if you're wondering no, that's not how
I got the name for my car company it's not
from the Jetsons, but the Arrow.
It takes the family in and around, it can

(14:13):
travel through space, it can bring them to
the moon and it brings George to work every
single day.
And then it becomes a briefcase.
It's cool, just like the other Hanna-Barber.
The footmobile from the flintstones yes,
the footmobile.
Fred flintstone had to use his feet to get
this vehicle moving and it's just too cool.
We all want to make one and we all want to

(14:34):
roll around in it.
But literally, if you try to make one the
same way it's made there, it'll take you
forever to get it moving.
And then how do you turn corners?
Like he has a steering wheel in front of
him, but the wheels are fixed straight.
There is no curvability to them.
How does he turn the car?
That is a question we all want answered.
You can't.

(14:54):
The steering wheel is literally just there
for him to hold on to.
But the footmobile is one of the coolest
things.
Like we all grew up watching the jetsons
and the flintstones, we all loved the shows.
They were great shows.
There were amazing cartoons.
We loved them.
But seeing those vehicles in the shows just
made it even better and they became one of
the most iconic custom vehicles of all time.

(15:15):
You ask people to name a list of their top
10 most iconic cars.
I could think of the Jetson car and the
footmobile.
At least one of them will make it into the
list, along with the Mach 5 and the
Scooby-Doo van.
If you're not a car person, trust me, the
Flintstone footmobile and the Scooby-Doo
van will always be part of the list.
For myself, the Ninja Turtle turtle van is

(15:35):
part of that list as well.
There's so many cool cars out there and
they do this to fit with the personalities
in the show.
That's kind of like the Green Hornet and
the Munsters.
Now remember, the Munsters not unlike the
Addams family didn't drive around in
regular vehicles.
Older vehicles were custom.
The Munster mobile was a custom-built car
but his grandpa's Dragula not to be

(15:57):
confused with Dragula from Rob Zombie,
although he does hint towards that Uh, yeah,
dragula, yeah, the Munster's Dragula, it's
a dragster that's made from a coffin
because grandpa is a vampire, even though
he takes it out during the day to go drag
racing.
Come on, the monster mobile is not as
memorable as the dragula.

(16:19):
Trust me, if you've ever watched the
monsters and you've seen their vehicles, it
was like, yeah, yeah, yeah, you kind of
remembered that.
But it kind of reminds you of the adams
family and the beverlybillies.
It's an old, classic car.
It's like, okay, it's custom, it's the
Monster Mobile.
If you saw it in real life you're like, oh,
the Monster Mobile, but the Dragula,
grandpa's drag racing car.
You see that in real life.
You're like, ah, that's the Dragula, that's

(16:42):
grandpa's car.
Oh yeah, that's too cool.
It's just like seeing a 1966 Chrysler
Imperial Crown in jet black, with no front
bumper, all blacked out and an oversized
front chrome grille.
That's the Green Hornet, or the Green
Hornet's car, known as Black Beauty.

(17:09):
Anyone who has a 66 Chrysler Imperial.
A lot of people will look at it and go, ah,
that'd make, that'd be really cool if you
made it into a Black Beauty.
But nobody wants to do that because the
Chrysler Imperial on its own is such a
classic and rare vehicle.
But Black Beauty Chrysler owned it before
General Motors.
They had the Black Beauty.
Now it really wasn't fully customized when
you consider it compared to some of the
other ones on this list.
But Black Beauty was still a customized
variation of the original product, kind of

(17:31):
like the show Sunset Strip with their
Cookie T, a custom-built vehicle for the
series.
There's been a lot of them out there, but
the show that has some of the most
memorable cars in history.
It's got to be the longest-running
television show in both the comedy, sitcom
and cartoon faction, running for over 35
years.

(17:52):
The Simpsons have given us some of the most
iconic custom-made vehicles for the
television world.
The Simpsons gave us a 1986 pink sedan and
orange station wagon, very similar to
Plymouth products from that time period.
Anybody who has a pink sedan, four-door and
it has a boxy image, people automatically
think oh, that's the Simpson car.

(18:14):
But the Simpsons have done it more than
once.
When Homer meets his brother, you find out
about Powell Motors.
Powell Motors does show up later on in the
show.
But you find the other most iconic vehicle
from the Simpsons, the Powell Motors Homer,
and we've done an entire podcast about the
Homer.
We actually released it on April 19th, the

(18:35):
international date for the Simpsons.
Why?
Because that's the date it first aired on
the Tracy Allman Show in 1987.
Yes, the Homer.
It's his weird bubble vehicle that Homer
designs to save his brother's company.
But his brother doesn't understand.
Homer doesn't know anything about the car
buying public and he gives the public the
car that he thinks the average person wants

(18:58):
and it's a flop and they do it in a way on
the show that is reminiscent of another
major American flop, the Tucker.
Yeah, the Homer, but the Simpsons have done
it yet again the Plow.
Some of the most iconic episodes were
written by Conan O'Brien, like the Monorail
and Mr Plow.
What's that name?
Name again is Mr Plow.

(19:18):
Yes, it's a standard gelatinous truck.
Look, a two-box design with a plow on the
front of it.
Like anybody can make that.
But if you have an old Chevy short box from
the 1980s, you paint it black and put a red
plow on the front of it with a roll bar.
People are going to look at it and see Mr
Plow and they're going to be asking you are

(19:38):
you wearing a Mr Plow jacket?
Hell, kids today who've watched the
Simpsons, grown up with it or even just
watch it now and have seen that episode and
love that episode.
Anytime they see a plow truck on the road
they think that's mr plow.
It's so iconic and it's so generalized
design that made the mr plow truck just
like the original pink sedan and station

(19:59):
wagon, the homer you'll never see on the
street.
It's custom, it's like the dragula or the
aero car.
It's made for the shows.
But in every simpson fashion, all their
vehicles are essentially two-box designs.
And if you remember back to one of the most
famous vehicles, it gets promoted in one
episode and then Homer buys one and
realizes it's the girl version.

(20:20):
The F-series making fun of Ford the
Canyonero.
You have to remember the Canyonero.
It's the only SUV endorsed by a clown,
krusty.
When he stops doing comedy because they
find out he's not that funny compared to
someone like Jay Leno and he reinvents
himself, then he gets approached by the
guys creating the Canyonero and he's a
sellout.
Krusty is a sellout Anything for money, so

(20:40):
he sells his soul, essentially, and gets a
Canyon Aero and they take Bart home and
there's the whole freaking advertising
thing at the end and the only SUV endorsed
by a clown, yee-haw.
And then Homer buys it.
He just he gets tired of driving his car
and he buys a Canyon Aero because he wants
a big, burly SUV.
It's the early 2000s and everyone's got
SUVs, that's what I want.

(21:01):
And he drives it to work and all the guys
are whistling at him because they think
it's a girl.
He's like oh yeah, that's the F-Series Girl
fight.
See, your cigarette lighter is for lipstick
and look, it even has steps.
I'm driving a girl car here.
Where are your keys to the station wagon?
I don't want to drive my fruity car today.
Yeah, the Canyonero.
It's funny because it's a company that
doesn't exist.

(21:22):
It's a design that's so generic and it only
shows up for a few episodes.
And yet anyone who watches the Simpsons and
understands the series can remember it.
We can remember the plow truck, we can
remember the sedan, we can remember the
orange station wagon and we all remember
the canyon arrow.
Canyon arrow, canyon arrow.

(21:42):
You watch that episode.
It's ingrained into your mind, just like
all the other custom, iconic vehicles.
There's so many great ones out there and so
many tv shows with great cars.
This episode we only focused on the custom
ones, and some of these custom vehicles
aren't even much different than their
regular bodied products and some of them we
don't even know to this day what they are.

(22:04):
But they're famous and we know what they
are.
We could draw a silhouette image of it and
we automatically know what it is.
You draw the outline of a two box sedan and
put a little dent in the front and people
would be like oh Simpsons.
You draw a generic truck and the second.
You draw a plow on the front of it.
It's mr plow.
You paint your dodge viper pure gray and
people think it's the car from viper.

(22:25):
Hell, you have a custom ford coupe and
people think it's the monster coach.
They're iconic cars.
We all know them and if we love the
automobile industry, you'll know them.
Hell, people that don't even like cars will
know them, and one of my favorite ones
throughout history plays such a short role
but makes the biggest statement of all time
the most famous custom car, which literally

(22:48):
showed up on this tv series for only a few
seconds, but you'll remember it for all
time.
What car am I talking about?
I'm thinking you'd look great in the
Thunder Cougar Falcon Bird yes, making fun
of Ford and their animal product, the
Thunder Cougar Falcon Bird.
What show is it on?
Futurama, amy's looking for a new car.

(23:08):
They go and look and the salesman all slick
and sly trying to sell her on the Thunder
Cougar Falcon Bird.
And when you hear him say that you're like
like well, that's pretty funny, those are
old names of real cars.
It gets stuck in your head for life.
I watched that episode with my son and he
I'm like what thunder cuckoo falco bird?

(23:29):
He's like futurama, seriously like simpsons
had a pink sedan.
Futurama.
We all remember the spaceship, one of the
most iconic flying spaceships of all time,
the planet express spaceship.
It's funny because this one goes with
another mac reigning show.
But the thunder cougar falcon bird, it's
like joey jojo jr's shabadoo.
He shows up in one episode for a split
second but we all know who he is and if you
watch futurama and know the simpsons, all

(23:51):
you have to do to somebody is just say
thunder cougar falcon bird and they'll
probably giggle.
These shows have done this to us.
They've ingrained it in our minds.
When you listen to Rob Zombie's song
Dragula, how many times do you see Grandpa
Monster in his car?
Thunder Cougar Falcon Bird.
How many of you just saw a
futuristic-looking Thunderbird Cougar mixed
with a falcon Like, come on, we know these

(24:12):
cars, we see them all the time and we love
them.
They're iconic cars and they don't even
exist in the real world because they were
custom made for the TV shows we all love,
and that's what it's about creating
something memorable throughout the ages.
Scooby-doo can go off the air tomorrow.
People can forget about it, but when you
ask them about the most iconic television
series Cars of All Time, that'll show up.

(24:34):
There's so many of them and so many shows
out there, and for our next episode we're
gonna have to talk about the actual icon
cars, the ones that do exist and we do know.
When you see them, you just automatically
think of those tv series.
These are the custom ones, for batmobiles
to flying cars.
They're all customized and made especially
for these shows, but they're all memorable.
No matter how bad the show is, we remember

(24:56):
the car.
So if you like this podcast, please like,
share or comment on any of the major social
feeds or streaming sites that you found the
outlooks podcast on.
Remember to click the like button at the
bottom, the little button at the bottom
that says like, click it and then send a
comment to us.
Tell us about your favorite custom icon
cars from the world around you.
Tell us about all the ones from across the
globe, all of these amazing cars like.

(25:17):
There's so many of them.
We just can't talk about every single one
of them.
We can only talk about the top ones, and
these are only the top ones that you'd find
in North American climates.
Tell us about all the great cars from
around the globe.
Send us an email, send us a text, send us a
comment on a website or the social sites or
streaming sites that you found the Outlooks
podcast on, and then click the like button
so you can find out more from the Autolux

(25:38):
podcast when our next episode comes out.
The Autolux podcast is brought to you by
Ecom Entertainment Group and distributed by
Podbeancom.
If you'd like to get in touch with us, send
us an email over at email at Autoluxnet.
The Autolux podcast is hosted by the one
and only Everett Jay, who's also the owner,
the creator, the producer and sound
technician from the Ecom Entertainment
Group.

(25:58):
Everett Jay is the one who handles it.
So for myself, everett Jay, the Ecom
Entertainment Group and Podbeancom, strap
yourself in for this one fun wild ride that
these custom TV icon cars are going to take
us on.
Thank you,
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