The real Wolf of Wall Street's Ferrari Testarossa is for sale
A white 1991 Ferrari Testarossa that originally belonged to Jordan Belfort, the real Wolf of Wall Street, has gone up for sale in Monaco.
A white 1991 Ferrari Testarossa that originally belonged to Jordan Belfort, the real Wolf of Wall Street, has gone up for sale in Monaco.
Mecum Auctions is selling one of the two 1986 Ferrari Testarossa hero cars from the '80s TV show Miami Vice during Monterey Car Week.
This one-of-a-kind Ferrari Testa D'Oro Colani was clocked at 218 miles per hour at Bonneville in 1991. Now it's up for sale at a showroom in Maranello.
Evo magazine impresario Harry Metcalfe goes on an epic road trip from London to the Sahara Desert in his Ferrari Testarossa.
Drive serves up a five-minute video of John Pogson, an Englishman who's been restoring Ferraris for decades, discussing the ups and downs of a car that perhaps had the best shoulder pads of that whole decade.
Just in time for the holiday season, a seller is offering one of the two 1986 Ferrari Testarossas used in the show Miami Vice on eBay for $1.75M. It comes with Ferrari documentation, the full service history and just 16,000 miles on the odometer.
Harry Metcalfe, of Evo fame, got our attention earlier this week with a review of the 1954 Series I Land Rover. Today, he's gone a bit more... '80s.
Celebrity provenance can add significant value to a car, and this month's Barrett-Jackson auction in Scottsdale, AZ will feature more than a few vehicles with some added star power. Included among the celebrity-affiliated lots consigned to this year's auction are Simon Cowell's Bugatti Veyron, a Noah Joseph
Join us for a moment in putting on our way-back hats, zeroing in on the late 1980s. Imagine that you're in your bedroom. Look over at the wall across from your bed. What car do you see on the poster? If you're anything like us, it's a Lamborghini Countach – in fact, it's a trio of Lamborghini Countach models in an array of colors. Oh, and there's also a 1:18-scale diecast Countach in black sittin
Switzerland doesn't mess around when it comes to speeding tickets. Get caught with a lead foot in the land of Alpine vistas and serious chocolate and the cost of your transgression won't be based on a flat rate for the infraction, it will be based on how wealthy you are. An unnamed driver of a Ferrari Testarossa found this out the hard way when he was caught driving 85 miles per hour through the village of St. Gallen. According to the BBC
What do you get when you mix an art student, 12 miles of yarn, and an affinity for Maranello's finest?