The Nissan GT-R has been around for almost a decade. Even though people have always been tuning it with huge turbos and custom wings, 2015 is the year when it all started coming together. That's when Kuhl Racing did that chrome car, when Prior Design made its widebody kit, and when the Liberty Walk look took off.
Nowadays, you can't make a custom GT-R without the Liberty Walk package, be it for a drift machine or a drag racer with turbos coming out through the hood.
We don't know which of these "Bluezilla" is, but we love it nonetheless. The owner's name is Sam, and we think he was pretty wise for making this video with Krispy Media. They put a nice twist that we would never have thought of.
Why is it about pizza? Well, if you listen carefully, you can hear the cop say "street's closed pizza boy," which is actually an insert from Fast and Furious 1, the original that started it all.
"Sam came to me and asked that we work together and create a feature for his one-off Liberty Walk GTR. I had some ideas and Sam had some locations in mind for a regular feature shoot and right up to a few days before the actual shoot date that's all we were going to do," says the video editor. However, a few days after that, he asked for some background information and was surprised to learn that Sam owned a pizza shop in Greenwich, the same place in Connecticut where Trump had a mansion.
That's when the idea of making the Liberty Walk GT-R into a pizza delivery vehicle clicked. Sam's car seems like it was a 2015 or 2016 model year GT-R before all the Liberty Walk bits were added. All the spoilers and skirts are made from carbon fiber, so if you want your delicious slice of pepperoni to be delivered by a car like this one, you'd better be willing to walk to your driveway.
We don't know which of these "Bluezilla" is, but we love it nonetheless. The owner's name is Sam, and we think he was pretty wise for making this video with Krispy Media. They put a nice twist that we would never have thought of.
Why is it about pizza? Well, if you listen carefully, you can hear the cop say "street's closed pizza boy," which is actually an insert from Fast and Furious 1, the original that started it all.
"Sam came to me and asked that we work together and create a feature for his one-off Liberty Walk GTR. I had some ideas and Sam had some locations in mind for a regular feature shoot and right up to a few days before the actual shoot date that's all we were going to do," says the video editor. However, a few days after that, he asked for some background information and was surprised to learn that Sam owned a pizza shop in Greenwich, the same place in Connecticut where Trump had a mansion.
That's when the idea of making the Liberty Walk GT-R into a pizza delivery vehicle clicked. Sam's car seems like it was a 2015 or 2016 model year GT-R before all the Liberty Walk bits were added. All the spoilers and skirts are made from carbon fiber, so if you want your delicious slice of pepperoni to be delivered by a car like this one, you'd better be willing to walk to your driveway.