2002 Lincoln Continental 4-door Sedan, Leather, Front Wheel Drive, 4.6l on 2040-cars
Guilford, Connecticut, United States
LESS THAN 7K Miles / YEAR! My parents are the original owners of this Lincoln Continental. Has been their "baby" since 2002 when bought new. They are not smokers, take care of their car and basically drove it back and forth to Florida from the New York Area. It has minor scratches / dings on bumpers, but the rest is in great shape. New tires a few years ago, brand new (6 months) battery. Car has been regularly serviced and runs / operates perfectly. It is in my driveway in Connecticut (shore town north of New Haven) and it is time to sell the car. I have the latest CARFAX report and can send it to you. There has been NO structural damage to this car, no flooding, no salvage, not a lemon. They had two minor accidents, one in April of 2007 and one in November of 2011. As you can see from the pictures, both have been taken care of (cosmetic / painting). All doors, hood and trunk open / close easily. The front seat is movable bench seat so you can fit 6! The trunk is amazing...very deep, very wide. Runs great. Consistently maintained at Margate (FL) Lincoln Mercury, has passed all NY inspections. This is a great car to drive, pleasure to own. Contact me for any further details. |
Lincoln Continental for Sale
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Auto Services in Connecticut
Wilton Auto Body Repair ★★★★★
Suburban Subaru ★★★★★
Stanley`s Auto Body ★★★★★
Shippan Auto Body ★★★★★
Safelite AutoGlass - North Haven ★★★★★
S & J Automotive ★★★★★
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SNL, Jim Carrey late to the Lincoln MKC ad spoof party
Mon, 27 Oct 2014At this point, making fun of the Lincoln MKC ads starring Matthew McConaughey is getting pretty old, though apparently Lincoln loves it. The commercials have been airing for over a month, but Conan O'Brien, Ellen DeGeneres and even South Park have all taken their swipes at the spots with the smooth-talking actor monologuing about his new luxury crossover. Saturday Night Live might have finally killed the joke in its recent episode featuring Jim Carrey.
The problem certainly isn't that Carrey does a bad job in the spoofs, and he actually pulls off a pretty good McConaughey impression. They start out as pretty direct mimicry and slowly evolve into the absurd, including cracks at McConaughey's acting career and the way he rubs his thumb and finger together. Carrey certainly raises at least a chuckle at times, though.
However, the comedian's engaging performance can't take away from the fact that SNL has arriving to this mocking party pretty late in the game. The jokes just don't feel fresh anymore, so hopefully these ads put the final nails in the coffin for the riffs - at least until the next batch of Lincoln ads arrive.
Lincoln needs a farewell address, not a new marketing plan
Tue, 09 Apr 2013
The trouble with Ford's Lincoln brand is that no one cares about it any more.
Not long after I heard that Mark LaNeve, chief operating officer of Ford agency Team Detroit, was moving to take over direct operations of the New York ad agency Hudson Rouge for Lincoln, I heard that JCPenney CEO Ron Johnson was ousted. The two events are connected.
Lincoln 'not true luxury' yet, says Ford design chief
Wed, 28 Aug 2013Lincoln is "not true luxury," according to Ford's design boss, J Mays. His statements come from a story in The Detroit News that saw candid language on the issues facing Ford's troubled premium brand. Notably, there's a need for a strong character, with Mays saying, "Every brand needs to have a DNA and a unique selling point and things in the vehicle that make you think, 'That's that particular brand.'"
With a range of rebadged Fords, it's not hard to see why that DNA is missing. Mays hinted that a full recovery for Lincoln will be a ten-year process, that's been kicked off with the MKZ sedan. While that car is still largely a Ford Fusion under its extremely pretty wrapper, it's the first Lincoln in some time to inject its own unique take both through the exterior styling and through interior features, such as the vertical, pushbutton gear selection.
Some analysts weren't so certain about Mays' 10-year estimate. Jim Hall of 2953 Analytics thinks it'll be more like 30 years before Lincoln can show a true return to form. The issue, as Hall explains it, is that, "luxury has a degree of exclusivity," that Lincoln just doesn't have. Michelle Krebs from Edmunds adds, "it's definitely a wanna-be luxury brand," comparing the troubled American brand with Infiniti and Acura, two other brands that have struggled to find their place in the luxury market.