A Malibu resident is telling his story about how he captured a now-viral photo of a Volkswagen Bus that survived the deadly Palisades Fire. “Get out of the house, now! There’s a massive fireball heading your way,
In travel news this week: the world’s 50 best cities according to Time Out, huge religious festivals in Italy and India, plus the little blue bus that faced down wildfires and is ready to hit the road.
Conspiracy theorists claim blue objects that make it through infernos, like this Volkswagen, are evidence of something sinister.
The two friends who own the Volkswagen van went surfing the Sunday before the Palisades Fire erupted and then parked the van in a neighborhood that was later destroyed. They were sure it was a goner.
Preston Martin figured the retro blue Volkswagen van he slept in for a year during college was a goner, given that he parked it in a Malibu neighborhood just before the Palisades fire ripped through, reducing homes and cars to rubble and charred metal.
ALBAWABA - Shocking footage has been emerging from Los Angeles as firefighters are bracing to combat the wildfire that has been going on for many days.
Amid the rubble of the wildfires, a blue Voklswagen van from the 1970s somehow remained untouched. The van belonged to surfboard designer Megan Weinraub who was surfing with friends in Malibu just before the fire.
Amid the devastation of Southern California's Palisades Fire, an image has emerged as a symbol of hope for the masses. It's a blue 1977 Volkswagen Type 2 van affectionately named "Azul."
A Volkswagen camper van that improbably survived the Pacific Palisades fire, inexplicably standing unscathed amid the charred remains of burned-out homes, has been dubbed a 'beacon of hope'.
Amid the unbelievable destruction left behind by the Palisades Fire, a Volkswagen Beetle that was in the middle of the flames is still intact.
If you're budgeting and shopping for a new sedan in 2025, you might have some difficulty. American car manufacturers are shifting gears and no longer making sedans en mass. Instead, they're