Somewhere, sometime, life will likely
involve a minivan
Full Throttle Feb 1, 2016

Rhonda_Mug_shotOverview

Don’t wait for stories to appear in the store when you can become a member of Wheelbase Media’s weekly news service and save more than 50 percent while gaining instant access to the new features as they’re produced. Click here to get started.

If you are not a member of the media, but still wish to read this and other feature stories from Wheelbase Media, visit www.shiftweekly.com to subscribe to Auto Shift Weekly newsmag, available for your Apple iPad or for your home PC or laptop in pdf format.

Use: Media professionals looking to diversify their automotive readership with women authors who provide their views on a wide variety of topics.

What it is: Courtney Hansen, America’s favorite Garage Girl and the former host of The Learning Channel’s Overhaulin’ auto makeover show, a new-book author and the host of Spike TV’s weekend “Power Block,” has teamed up with Wheelbase Communications for this exclusive column. If you’re looking to build more regular readership and to bring more women into the pages of your print publication and Web pages with the help of a friendly and outgoing automotive celebrity, this bi-weekly column that alternates with our own Rhonda Wheeler is a must.

Product specifications

  • About 800-900 words; Word text file plus high-resolution art files for print and Web use.
  • Mac and PC layout with accompanying text and art files for maximum work flexibility.
  • High-resolution artwork suitable for print.
  • Coming soon! Multi-platform page layout that opens with either Quark Xpress or Adobe Indesign.

Description

Penny’s dad called it Puff the Magic Wagon. We called it the gateway to our social life. Penny only had her beginner’s permit then, but she and I found a life and newfound (if quasi-) popularity, thanks to her family’s spacious silver-blue Chrysler. She was 16 and I was 15, and McDonald’s seemed hellishly distant from our suburban neighborhoods. Graciously, her parents gave up the van on week nights. Once she was allowed by the car licence gods (not her parents, though), she’d pack as many people inside Puff that would humanly fit, and away we’d go – cruisin’ and fast-food sampling.

Please contact us to order this feature.

Profiles, Roger Penske
Feb 1, 2016

Untitled-2.inddOverview

Don’t wait for stories to appear in the store when you can become a member of Wheelbase Media’s weekly news service and save more than 50 percent while gaining instant access to the new features as they’re produced. Click here to get started.

If you are not a member of the media, but still wish to check out some of our stories online, visit www.theoctanelounge.com, which is owned by Wheelbase Media.Use: Media professionals demanding top-quality automotive content for print/Web.Professional artwork, editing. What it is: Cars are nothing without the people who create them and those who own, collect and preserve them. Profiles is designed to bring prominent, interesting car people to your readers’ attention. Fun, informative and masterfully designed, like most Wheelbase features, Profiles comes to you as a Quark Xpress/Adobe InDesign module that is completely editable for any space within your print pages or automotive Web site.

Product specifications

  • Mac and PC page layout with accompanying text and art files for maximum work flexibility.
  • High-resolution artwork suitable for print.
  • Includes Photoshop layers file of main art, where applicable.
  • Multi-platform page layout opens with either Quark Xpress or Adobe Indesign.
  • Layout is 8×21.5 inches (for newspaper use), with some depth variation from week to week, but can be reconfigured by your designer to fit most spaces.
  • PDF of layout included.
  • About 850 words: separate text file included.
  • Fonts are not included, but we attempt to stay with standard system fonts. If not, just change the fonts to match your style.

Description

Roger Penske has more than six decades of racing memories, perhaps beginning with the one about not being able to see any of the action. At age 14, he wasn’t even old enough to drive that day when his father wheeled their ’49 Ford off Georgetown Road, past the gates and into the infield at Indianapolis Motor Speedway to watch the Indy 500. “Never forget that first day,” Penske said. “I remember having terrible seats – the worst seats in the track. I don’t even think I could see the cars go by.”
How the view has changed.

Please contact us to order this feature.