![]() The married attorney turned novelist talked about the eye-opening research that went into writing the story of Georgina Wagman (think Cher from Clueless, but smart and grown up,) and her sex-positive solution to saving her marriage after catching her husband with another woman. Taylor Hahn, The Lifestyle: A very modern, NYC retelling of the Jane Austen classic, “Emma,” Taylor Hahn’s “The Lifestyle” is a beach read that will make you blush! The lawyer turned novelist joins Olivia in the podcast studio of her Arizona hometown to talk about the research she did- and didn’t do- to learn the swinger lifestyle for her sexy story. First SMILE AND LOOK PRETTY by Amanda Pellegrino, and Alex Finlay’s THE NIGHT SHIFT. Moment With Margaret: Margaret & Olivia discuss two other books that touch on the power or influence of social media that Margaret recently enjoyed. CITY OF LIKES is available now from Nacelle Books. ![]() In the way only Jenny has, she describes the motivation and drive that she mines from these relationships. Art Mollen, and wife to actor Jason Biggs. Celebrity status and the feeling of being celebrity adjacent is a concept that Jenny knows well, as daughter to Arizona TV favorite, Dr. Jenny Mollen, the New York Times bestselling author of I LIKE YOU JUST THE WAY I AM and LIVE FAST, DIE HOT joins the podcast to talk with Olivia about her first novel. Jenny Mollen, “City of Likes”: When Meg Chernoff moves from LA to NYC and becomes friends with Instagram influencer Daphne, everything changes, including her own priorities. It’s restrained.Available Now: Stream | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Amazon Music | Stitcher | Google Podcasts MORE EPISODES The rest of the cabin telegraphs functionality over decoration. The fact it took a startup to solve this org chart tells you something about how mainstream carmakers have too many cooks in the kitchen. There’s a great deal going on, but the top-level sift buries functions you’ll use less often and that makes the setup less mesmerizing. On the center screen, large, simple icons make it clear to the driver and front passenger whether you’re in the music section or the navigation screen, how to adjust climate, etc. Plus, the driver has scroll wheels on the steering wheel for quick changes in, say, song choice and volume (wheel functions depend on what sub-menu you’re in). The screen in front of the driver displays what you expect, but is also easily reconfigured. In the R1S, you get two screens, both highly versatile, and both nested in a gorgeous, three-dimensional wooden sculpture that forms the dash. Rivian’s approach beats Tesla’s idea of burying everything in one hideous, oversized screen. Is America Prepared for Electric Vehicles to Be the Future? Read article This is a rubber-burning beast without any of the atmosphere-cooking bombast of its “muscle truck” peers. ![]() That should also tell you it’s every bit as quick as the numbers suggest. Oh, and that torque number (908 lb-ft) makes even a Lamborghini’s 627 lb-ft look shabby. With the R1S you can be oh-so-gentle and still clamber over obstacles with aplomb. That’s one reason it’s easier to drive the 7,000-pound vehicle more precisely than an equivalent sized, three-row gasoline SUV, where you’re waiting for the muscle to get from the lump under the hood to the wheels. Rivian will also sell a two-motor R1S eventually.Įither way, there’ll be zero lag to power application. In the case of the Rivian R1S with the Adventure Package, that means motors at each corner. One reason it’s so capable is that, like all EVs, it delivers instantaneous torque to its motors. With the aid of around-view cameras, it monstered through a soaked forest like we were driving on asphalt to the local mall. ![]() The R1S-lifted to its tallest ride height and wheels shod in fairly quiet Pirelli Scorpion rubber-traversed logs and boulders with ease, bombing up and over 30-degree slopes that would’ve been black diamond runs had they been covered in snow rather than mud. We had epic rain for our morning of off-roading. Courtesy Image Rivian R1s Goes Anywhere You Dare Take It
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