Lee Iacocca, the car industry legend who created the iconic Ford Mustang and saved Chrysler from bankruptcy, has died at the age of 94. He died at his home in Los Angeles from complications from ...
Last night, Lee Iacocca himself drew back the curtain hiding his 45th Anniversary Edition Ford Mustang. The pictures don't lie: this silver beast is every bit as menacing and low in the flesh as ...
Jack Flemming covers real estate for the Los Angeles Times. He was raised in St. Louis and studied journalism at the University of Missouri. Before joining The Times as an intern in 2017, he wrote ...
Shelby made his name racing Fords, but during the '80s and '90s, he was all about Mopar turbo power. This Charger GLH-S is ...
This particular F40, you see, was built for Lee Iacocca during his tenure as chief executive at Chrysler. When the CEO of a major automaker orders a vehicle from another automaker, it says a lot.
The Ford Mustang was born from an ambitious vision spearheaded by Lee Iacocca, Ford's then-Vice President. Iacocca recognized ...
Iacocca, former president of Ford Motor Company, took over Chrysler when it was leaning towards bankruptcy. He asked Congress for a loan, arguing that if Chrysler filed for bankruptcy, the government ...
Ronald Acuña Jr. is the player of the moment in Major League Baseball. So why not add this stunning car to his collection?
The members of the billionaire executive class have billed themselves as great men of history beyond scrutiny and reproach.
One of Lee Iacocca's Chrysler-saving K-Cars, now junked in Arizona. The early K-Cars could be purchased with optional Mitsubishi Astron 2.6-liter four-cylinder (complete with "HEMI 2.6" badging ...
“It was just last year that the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed and some things that were originally going through Baltimore, like cars, were diverted through Philly,” Dr. Kathleen Iacocca ...
The Best of France & Italy car show wasn’t just concours-ready classics but every cool old French and Italian car in Southern ...