Australia’s Most Unlikely Classic ‘Bogan’ Cars Skyrocketing In Price
Australia’s Most Unlikely Classic ‘Bogan’ Cars Skyrocketing In Price

Normally, when you think about ‘investment cars’, you think about classic, classy motors. Old Porsches. Rare Aston Martins. E30s, DeLoreans, even G-Wagens. Normally European, always distinctive, and rarely the kind of car you’d be seen dead in a pair of Nike TNs in.

But in a rather unexpected turn of events, some of Australia’s most ‘bogan’ cars are becoming insanely valuable. We’re talking VL Commodores, Mazda RX-3s, XF Falcons, Toyota Cressidas and even Geminis – widely considered one of the dinkiest cars ever sold in Australia back in the day. More modern bogan fare is also seeing huge price hikes, like Nissan Silvias or Honda CRXs and Integras.

So why are some of Australia’s most unloved, most notorious or most boring cars suddenly becoming hot property?

DMARGE spoke to Luke Lalor from MOTORbiz in Melbourne, who explained it’s all about timing.

“We’re seeing a massive movement towards bogan cars… Particularly naturally-aspirated ‘pocket rockets’ from the 70s to the 90s.”

“Not only were these the kinds of cars that [Gen X] wanted when they were young, but they sit in this nice 20-30k collector price bracket. You don’t need to drop 100k on a VL Turbo, for example.”

“Holdens in particular are holding their value, partially because of Holden pulling out of Australia. They’re just quintessentially bogan. Rotary engined cars are also holding strong, they’re so bogan too,” he laughs.

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It’s a weird phenomenon – whilst the value of bogan cars has markedly increased in recent months, their prices remain more accessible to collectors than the prices of more traditional classic car investments. Not to mention many of them beat out other classics on the performance front. They’re also not so expensive as to make you worried about actually driving them. Let’s face it, if you spend $715,000 on a classic Monaro, you’re hardly going to want to take it down to the shops.

RELATED: Motoring Experts Share How To Pick The ‘Classic Cars’ Of The Future

Indeed, one of the reasons they’re becoming so valuable is because of the bogan connection. Unmolested bogan cars are rare, because bogans like modifying (and crashing) their cars. For example, finding an old WRX that hasn’t been stolen, smashed or thrashed is incredibly difficult, so an example in good condition – especially if it’s a 2-door model – can set you back more than a new WRX in some cases.

It’s also a way of setting yourself apart from the crowd. “It’s all about originality,” Lalor concludes.

We say let the bogan Renaissance begin.

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The Clever Little Gadget From Philips Turning Australian Homes Into Immersive Movie Theatres
The Clever Little Gadget From Philips Turning Australian Homes Into Immersive Movie Theatres

This piece was produced in partnership with Philips Hue

The phrase ‘immersive’ gets thrown around all the time in relation to home theatres, but up until now, that could only refer to surround sound. Thanks to Philips Hue Play HDMI Sync Box and Philips Hue Play Gradient Light Strips, the word ‘immersive’ has never been more relevant, as they let you turn the home movie experience up to 11 with surround lighting that places you in the centre of the action.

Philips Hue is a revolutionary smart lighting system with 16 million colours to choose from to suit every mood and occasion. Philips Hue gives you total control over what colours you want in your room, including their brightness and even warmth. Since 2018, you have been able to control the lights with your voice too, with commands such as “Hey Siri/Google/Alexa, let’s watch a movie”, and the lights will change to your personal preference.

The Philips Hue Play HDMI Sync Box can sync whatever the main colour is on the screen, from whatever HDMI source you wish (games console, Apple TV etc) with your Philips Hue lights in real-time. The Hue Sync box allows Hue lights to react to the TV content to create a captivating media experience.

Image: Supplied

The Philips Hue smartphone app – available for Android and iOS – helps to ramp the action up even further, as it lets you create zones or rooms with the Hue lights you have in your house. This tells the Philips Hue Play HDMI Sync Box where the lights are and what height they’re at, as well as allowing you to choose which lights you want to be involved in the mimicking light show to create a more captivating experience.

The intensity of the lighting can also be changed for each source: think vibrant levels for gaming, and something a little more sedate for drama movies. To really show off your system, you’ll want to turn up the dials for movies with plenty of explosions.

The Philips Hue Play HDMI Sync Box also doubles up as a competent HDMI switching box, meaning you will no longer need to physically change the input on your TV for the source you want to be displayed, as the box will take care of everything for you. It’s future-proof too, being able to support all the latest video and audio codecs including 4K, HD10+, Dolby Vision and Dolby Atmos and, perhaps most important, is HDCP 2.2 compliant, a vital feature for negating copyright protection issues.

Buy Now $499

Image: Supplied

The Philips Hue Gradient Light Strip adds an extra layer to home theatre set up. This strip – available for 55, 65 and 75-inch TVs – extends the colour lighting from behind the TV onto the rear wall, making the effective viewing area even more immersive. The gradient light strip features an array of 7 independently controlled LED lights and flawlessly blends multiple colours at the same time while mimicking the content on the TV screen for an immersive, full-room entertainment experience unlike any other.

Image: Supplied

With the rear wall being lit up and Hue lights around your room mimicking what’s on-screen, you become quite literally enveloped in the action.

A full Philips Hue lighting system, synchronised with your TV, is undeniably cool. If you’re playing a game like Call of Duty, it means your room will reflect various shades of green and brown, just as if you’re crawling through a rainforest landscape, making it seem like it’s actually you who is completing the various missions.

Pre-Order Now $439

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Docoding Australia’s Most Controversial Men’s Haircut
Docoding Australia’s Most Controversial Men’s Haircut

It’s been a hairy year in more ways than one. Australia has seen influencers growing mustaches, civilians mimicking Chris Hemsworth’s lockdown beard and various other bizarre grooming trends as a result of all the extra time we’ve now got at home.Reaching fever pitch, Matt Damon this week shocked American fans by stepping out with a ‘dirty’ Australian haircut last popular in Europe and America in the middle ages. Suffice to say, we thought the world of male grooming couldn’t get any crazier.How wrong we were… Enter the skullet.Taking the cake for the most ‘confronting’ quiff this year is ‘the Dusty’ (also known as ‘the skullet’). What’s that, you might ask? A haircut that looks like an elbow (essentially, a version of the mullet, but with the top either fully shaved or extra short).Rocked two years ago by AFL player Dustin Martin, ‘the Dusty’ is now sweeping the country (as are mullets more generally, inspired by icons like professional surfer Mikey Wright), proving once again how long it takes for a bold new look to filter down to the mainstream after initially being laughed at.It’s not just Gold Coast groms and aspiring AFL players getting in on the action either, with DMARGE this week capturing a couple of young kings rocking ‘the dusty’ whilst ambling around South Sydney.

Though the snobs might recoil at such a cut, others – like Sydney barbershop owner Jacob Martin (proprietor of Tate & Lyle) say it could be evidence that Australian men are paying more attention to their mental health, with the ‘mullets for mental health’ month having just come to a conclusion.As for the ‘finer’ details of the skullet cut itself, Mr. Martin said, “AFL players seem to treat dirtiness like a trophy… [but] at least the mullet section has straight lines.”In regards to rocking this look for yourself: “the dirtier the skullet, the better.”We didn’t stop there. Adam Walmsley, the owner from an inner Sydney salon, Friends & Family, was equally as perplexed by this ongoing trend.“I’m not sure myself….is it part of the skullet family?”, Adam commented. Turns out Adam was the winner with the ‘skullet’ being the most logical answer.Wikipedia confirms this is the case, explaining the “skullet (plural skullets)” is “a more extreme form of the mullet hairstyle, in which the hair at the back is kept long, whilst the hair on the top and the sides is shaven in a buzzcut or skinhead style.”
Early example of what would later be called a “skullet”, by (partially bald) Benjamin Butler in the 1870s.
Even if it may be intrinsically associated with having ‘a rude head’, we’d argue men should be able to snipper their skulls however they want, and not obsess about what others think. Indeed, half the ‘cool’ factor of a new haircut trend (whether its a Faux Viking Hipster Undercut or a Peaky Blinders Special) is in its rarity.Only problem is the ‘skullet’ movement is ‘growing’ so fast it may soon lose its shock value…

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‘Unearthed’ 60s Cattle Class Images Prove Economy Wasn’t Always A Hell Hole
‘Unearthed’ 60s Cattle Class Images Prove Economy Wasn’t Always A Hell Hole

If first class is a gold-lacquered prison, cattle class is a knee-crunching jail. From sticky tray tables to claustrophobic night terrors, economy has become known as a special kind of hell – the perfect penance for those flitting overseas to flood their friends’ feeds with FOMO.

Suffice to say: thanks to the reclining wars and rude antics of economy passengers worldwide (never mind that the pointy end has plenty of problems of its own), economy has officially been cast, rightly or wrongly, for some time now, as a hell hole.

But photos dug up by obscure Instagram account @joanday show that economy travel wasn’t always this way. Even more interestingly, they suggest the difference is not so much in the physical difference between ‘now and then’ amenities but in attitude.

 

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The first photo, taken on a Malaysia-Singapore Airlines flight (a carrier which came into being in 1966, and which ceased six years later in 1972 when both governments decided to set up their own national airlines), shows one man with a – symbolic – face full of hope (presumably waiting for a beer), a flight attendant serving a drink to another passenger, and an old man relaxing back into his seat.

“The good old days,” one Instagram user mused.

Whether planes back then really had a touch more class (or whether its just nostalgia talking) we’ll leave up to you.

Another photo posted by @joanday in August, shows a scene from what appears to be the 90s, taken on a Philippine Airlines flight.

 

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Though this image shows a touch of class we’d argue is lacking from economy in 2020, Instagram comments suggest the public perception of cattle class was already on the decline by this point.

“Front row window seat lady looks unimpressed.”

“One of the worst airlines I travels [sic] with in the laser 90s.”

It’s not all bad news though: as Business Insider reports, “Flying, [now] in general, is significantly more safe and reliable.”

“According to data from the Flight Safety Foundation, the rate of fatal airliner accidents decreased from 4.2 per 1 million flight in 1977 to around 0.2 per million flights in 2017,” Business Insider reports.”

Champagne for thought.

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Jaden Smith’s Remarkable Body Transformation Gives Hope To ‘Ectomorphs’ Everywhere
Jaden Smith’s Remarkable Body Transformation Gives Hope To ‘Ectomorphs’ Everywhere

Yep, that headline reads right, we’re talking about Jaden Smith and his association with fitness. Normally one to attract attention for his outlandish clothing choices or controversial statements regarding the Illuminati and extraterrestrial life, Jaden has instead, it seems, been using the lockdown period afforded to him to bulk up.

The actor, rapper and son of Will Smith looks almost unrecognisable in a recent Instagram post, showing off a far more muscular frame than what we’re used to seeing. A scroll back through his feed reveals the new look was well on its way, with a similarly ripped photo being posted at the end of August, but go back further and it’s apparent that Jaden was always more of a ‘skinny-muscular’ guy, sporting muscular definition, but more because of a lack of any real body fat.

While we can see gym equipment in the background of his Instagram post, he hasn’t revealed his workout. So, what has Jaden done in The Pursuit Of Muscles?

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We reached out to Roman Brady, Founder and CEO of Air Locker Training, an Australian-based training facility that reduces the amount of oxygen in the room to simulate altitude training, to get the full lowdown.

It’s clear from the image that Jaden has put a lot of effort into his upper body, and Roman tells us he’s most likely performed “side lateral raises to build out his delts and dips to round out his chest.

Bicep curls and tricep pushdowns have been used to thicken his arms, and lat pulldowns are what have helped to give his frame much much more pronounced V-frame.”

As for the washboard abs? “He is very lean, say 6-8% body fat, which comes from cardio and diet. This is what gives his abs great definition. Additionally, he would be doing a lot of crunches and sit-ups.”

We also asked Roman if he thinks Jaden’s frame is a little out of proportion (it could well be possible that Master Smith has skipped a few leg days in his quest for upper body perfection and deliberately cropped them out of the photo).

“Naturally he is an ectomorph,” – a naturally skinny body type that often finds it hard to build muscle and mass. Ectomorphs also tend to have fast metabolisms and so need to consume a huge number of calories in order to gain any real weight – “to get his body looking the way it does, he has put in a tremendous amount of work over a long period of time.”

“But yes, he has definitely neglected legs, as his leg development is poor. If he incorporated more leg days into his regime he would be a lot more proportioned and look more balanced.”

So, while Jaden’s body transformation may not quite be in a similar league to the unreal changes we’ve seen from the likes of Sergio Ramos, his more muscular look gives hope to all the skinny guys out there – although remember, if you’re trying to bulk up, make sure you get advice from reliable sources.

Just keep lifting, eating and never, ever skip leg day.

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Australian Model Reveals ‘Holy Grail’ Quality Influencers Seek In A Partner
Australian Model Reveals ‘Holy Grail’ Quality Influencers Seek In A Partner

A beard. A trust. A private jet. A thousand-watt smile. A good sarcasm detector. Ask different women (or for that matter men) what they look for in a man and the answer is sure to vary. But there are some ‘holy grail’ characteristics so rare they typically inspire all of us to stop scrolling and take notice.

Enter: Monika Clarke, an Australian model living in New York who, in her own words, is recently and “extremely” single. Monika this week took to Instagram to field a series of questions about her break up, dating and social media.

Amid the revelations, Monika dropped an atomic bomb on our preconception the ‘perfect man’ must have a drop-dead Facebook DP, an artistic Instagram and a Tinder profile full of Golden Retrievers and wholesome hobbies.

For Monika, a man not having social media, is a “holy grail.”

On her Instagram story, in response to the question, “Would you ever date a non ‘clout’ person or normal guy?” she wrote: “A guy who doesn’t have social media is like the holy grail in my eyes!”

DMARGE interviewed Monika to understand why.

“It shows that social media is not of importance to his personal life and leaves him being a lot more present in time,” Monika told DMARGE.

“Social media is part of my job, and some men are attracted to a girl purely based on her following, which I find shallow,” Monika continued.

“I love the idea he would know nothing about me unless he personally gets to know me.”

“Lastly: one of my biggest turn-offs is a guy posting a mirror selfie in a bath towel. So I wouldn’t have to worry about him having done that haha.”

 

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Australian model Simone Holtznagel and Los Angeles based model Ashley Ann have both made similar comments to DMARGE, emphasizing the importance of being humble, authentic; maybe a little bit witty.

RELATED: Simone Holtznagel Reveals How To Successfully Slide Into A Girl’s DMs

On Instagram Monika also answered the question: “What do you find attractive in a man?”.

Monika wrote: “Humor is a big thing for me. And someone who appreciates sarcasm. Also: a man who is humble and can always have an interesting conversation. Confidence without arrogance. A man who makes his woman feel appreciated and respected.”

RELATED: What It Means When Your Partner Starts Liking Your Insta Crush’s Photos

How, exactly, does one achieve that? Monika told DMARGE it all comes down to authenticity: “In my opinion, if a guy wants to show confidence and not arrogance on social media, put a shirt on, showcase a smile, don’t try and post materialistic things. Less is more.”

“I don’t care about the watch you’re wearing while you’re holding your car steering a wheel. I want to see you enjoying time with your friends and family.”

“I want to look at a guy’s social and think: ‘I want to know more about him’ not ‘this guy is all about the clubs and the ‘clout.'”

It’s also helpful if you want to “shoot your shot” with a model, to understand “social media is a modern take on blockbuster movies” and that there is a hidden controversy and a “warped reality” behind the screen with “someone left feeling lonely and misunderstood while at the same time living a crazy blessed and cursed lifestyle while fans watch on wanting to be them or be with them.”

No pressure.

Monika also dropped a few gems of New York specific dating advice on her Instagram story.

One was on how to approach a woman: “I’m no pick up master, but I will say this: In NY if you see a girl out just approach her. If she doesn’t vibe back don’t be offended. But don’t be one of those guys who stare at a girl all night, goes home, then DM’s her. Just have the balls to say hi.”

For date plans, Monika’s best New York rendezvous idea is: “keep it simple; take her to dinner where the music isn’t too loud and you can sit in a corner, have some drinks and just get to know each other.”

 

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Monika also provided some more general New York insights. For starters – contrary to what many across the pond might think – The Big Apple is “most certainly” not dead.

“Times are stressful, times are tough but New York is going to pull through – New Yorkers are tough.”

Secondly, Monika admitted there are some silver linings to 2020: “I hate the club life – I am a dinner and drinks with friends kind of girl.”

Finally, Monika left some advice for anyone who might move to New York in the future, saying “go[ing] to a coffee place” or using bumble are both good ways to meet people and make friends.

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Nutrition Coach Busts ‘Salty’ Myth Fitness Influencers Keep Promoting
Nutrition Coach Busts ‘Salty’ Myth Fitness Influencers Keep Promoting

We all know foodies are ‘the worst.’ But there’s something even more irritating than someone turning the table next to you into a flashing mis en scene; someone unqualified giving nutrition advice.

Often this takes the form of a fitness blogger or influencer, castigating you for something criminal like using too much salt.

The trend of people listening to low carb gurus instead of science has already been reported on at length. What’s interesting today is a revelation made by nutrition coach Max Lugavere, who recently took to Instagram to share an insight we can all learn from.

Lugavere suggests one of your guiltiest food habits may not be as bad as you think, as well as explaining why some of the so-called benign elements of your diet may be leading you further astray than anticipated.

 

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“Turns out, sodium (which is what salt basically is) is incredibly important for health and wellbeing. It’s a macromineral, just like potassium and magnesium—meaning we need a lot of it, relatively speaking, to thrive!” Lugavere wrote.

“Unfortunately, salt has become demonized by everyone from the media to mainstream medicine. But the salt we are told to cut is often that which we add to our own home cooked meals to make them delicious! What a shame, considering the top source of salt in Western diets is now bread and rolls and other processed foods.”

“In fact, 11 percent (!!) of the salt in the modern diet cones from food you prepare at home. 11! The rest is from processed foods and restaurants,” Lugavere concludes.

Food for thought indeed.

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Shia LaBeouf Spotted Committing The Ultimate Men’s Activewear Crime
Shia LaBeouf Spotted Committing The Ultimate Men’s Activewear Crime

Say what you like about Shia LaBeouf’s personality, acting or activism – but the man’s got a sense of humour, and he knows how to dress.

Whether it’s effortlessly rocking military-inspired looks or scrubbing up in Gucci suits that are crisper than a starched napkin, the enigmatic actor normally puts a lot of thought into his ensembles.

However, the ‘revealing’ outfit he was spotted in yesterday is a little more lowkey, and one that many would say is guilty of committing the ultimate men’s activewear crime. Yet bizarrely, the man makes it work, lending further credence to the celebrity-led athleisure trend that more Australian men ought to get amongst.

Going for a jog in his Pasadena neighbourhood, the 34-year-old Los Angeles native sported a U.S. Mail ‘dad cap’, a Harvard University t-shirt, Brooks trainers and Nike compression tights – sans shorts.

Credit: Getty Images

While the outfit’s a little tight for our liking (which is what’s made most people unhappy, if you catch our drift) it breaks an activewear boundary ripe for the romping: the so-called ‘necessity’ to always wear shorts over your compression tights.

Think about it: other than stopping those who are insecure about their own masculinity mocking you for looking like a ‘yoga chick’ or asking the never-hilarious ‘forgetting something?’, shorts have no practical value when worn over your Skins. Indeed, they might be counterproductive – a greater crime than letting it all hang loose, brah.

Another celebrity who’s on the same wavelength as LaBeouf is LeBron – ‘King James’ shared a photo of himself working out in nothing but some compression shorts (and his signature basketball sneakers. Gotta rep the sponsors.) Of course, this is in the comfort of his own home, so not a ‘crime’ by any means. Fashion is fickle.

While women have been wearing unadorned activewear for yonks (even when not working out, which is perhaps missing the point) men haven’t been quite as keen to embrace skin-tight style. LaBeouf is somewhat of a fashion bellwether, however, so perhaps it’s time to get over the stigma of feeling we must wear shorts over compression tights.

That said, LaBeouf’s got a lot on his mind at the moment, so maybe it’s not as intentional of a fashion choice as it seems. The actor is facing misdemeanour charges over the alleged theft of a man’s hat, after a nasty scuffle he had a few months ago, the Los Angeles Times reports.

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Ultra-Rare $120,000 Gold Coast Hot Hatch Leaves ‘Bogan’ Stereotypes For Dead
Ultra-Rare $120,000 Gold Coast Hot Hatch Leaves ‘Bogan’ Stereotypes For Dead

All major Australian cities are burdened with unfair stereotypes. Sydney has terrible nightlife and a crazy property market; Canberra is boring and only good for school excursions; Melburnians are obsessed with truffle oil and alleyways…

But the Gold Coast? People seem to really hate it for some reason, even if they’ve never been. It gets written off as some bogan paradise. It’s a shame because the Gold Coast is a really lovely place, particularly if you like going to theme parks or the beach. (We swear that’s not a burn.)

Now there’s another reason to visit the Gold Coast (once the borders open back up, that is) – to pick up this incredibly rare and exceedingly cool manual 1985 Renault 5 Turbo 2 listed on Carsales.

Pearly-white pint-sized Pacific Fair carpark sprinter. Image: Carsales

The regular Renault 5 was a boxy little hatchback that became one of Europe’s most successful cars of all time: “low on style, but high on personality and practicality” according to its American advertising campaign (where it was marketed as ‘Le Car’ – très wanky).

However, the R5 Turbo was a completely different beast. One of the original ‘hot hatches’, the Turbo took the boring little 5 and added sweeping new bodywork, swapped the car from front to rear-wheel drive and ripped the back seats out in order to mid-mount a fuel-injected, turbocharged 1.4L inline-four putting out 118kW. That doesn’t sound like a lot, but consider that the R5 Turbo weighed only 970kg – meaning it had a better power-to-weight ratio than a Corvette from the same time period.

The Turbo was made to comply with Group 4 homologation in order to allow the car to compete in international rallies, and featured a spectacular Bertone-designed interior. After the success of the Turbo, Renault released the Turbo 2: essentially a cheaper version of the race-designed ‘Turbo 1’, the R5 T2 replaced many of the light alloy components from the original with stock Renault 5 parts, most notably featuring a standard R5 interior. Despite this, the Turbo 2 had essentially the same performance as the Turbo 1, and retained what many consider to be the most important thing about the car: its wild looks.

Comes with a packet of Gauloises in the centre console. Image: Carsales

With only 59,500km on the clock, a roadworthy certificate and presenting a completely immaculate exterior, this pocket rocket is a true survivor.

Just over 3,100 R5 T2s were made, and the car was never sold in Australia, making this baby particularly rare. The 80s was the era of the hot hatch and any performance hero from that era is now hot property – think Mk1 VW Golf GTIs, Lancia Delta HF Integrales or Ford Sierra RS Cosworths – but the plucky little Renault is arguably the most desirable, due to its rarity and distinctive character.

While its lack of a rear seat (or boot space, or ‘frunk’ space) means it’s not the most practical daily driver, its tiny size means you’d be able to find a park anywhere – and chop just about anyone at the traffic lights. The engine note on these things is amazing, as is the sensation of having that tiny box of explosions just behind your head. The turbo lag is legendary – but that’s half the fun of driving a turbo car from this era.

More horses than a frozen French lasagna. Image: Carsales

So actually the $120,000 sticker price isn’t that bad, all things considered. Yes, that’s right. We didn’t accidentally add a zero.

If you’ve got a hankering for a piece of 80s goodness and have a few francs burning a hole in your pocket, you can check out this petit French beauty on Carsales for sale in Hope Island.

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