
As for anything said on the show being true-- The show referred to the car repeatedly as a "Ford Pantera", which should tell you everything about how much the show cares about dispensing accurate information. As we all know, TV is about ratings. Keeping the show on the air is the goal so wherever true information is boring, the producers have a duty to bang it up. (Sadly, the entire world of human affairs spins on an axle excessively greased by the sh*t of bulls and the media is King of the cow pastures.) Most likely, the only thing true about this episode is that we are seeing a banged-up white 72 getting an Ecoboost V6 put in it for our entertainment. -- Not a heck of a lot different from what a lot of Pantera owners have done. (Like someone said, at least it's a Ford engine.) Of course, the upside here is that whenever yet another Pantera gets irretrievably molested, all the remaining stockers out there get harder and harder to obtain. As for anything said on the show being true-- The show referred to the car repeatedly as a "Ford Pantera", which should tell you everything about how much the show cares about dispensing accurate information. As we all know, TV is about ratings. Keeping the show on the air is the goal so wherever true information is boring, the producers have a duty to bang it up. (Sadly, the entire world of human affairs spins on an axle excessively greased by the sh*t of bulls and the media is King of the cow pastures.) Most likely, the only thing true about this episode is that we are seeing a banged-up white 72 getting an Ecoboost V6 put in it for our entertainment. -- Not a heck of a lot different from what a lot of Pantera owners have done. (Like someone said, at least it's a Ford engine.) Of course, the upside here is that whenever yet another Pantera gets irretrievably molested, all the remaining stockers out there get harder and harder to obtain.