If you’re like me, one way in which you make sense of the world is by relating the things you see to cars. That’s what my series Car Connections is all about. I take three words from the Random Word Generator, which are often seemingly unrelated to automobiles, then find ways to link them to cars. This week’s words are legend, reluctance, and raw. How would you associate these words with cars? Tell us in the Comments section below.

Legend: “I Am Legend,” the 2007 movie in which Robert Neville (played by Will Smith) strives to find a cure to a virus that wiped out most of humanity (but also created mutant Darkseekers). It’s bleak, but at least there’s a cool car: an S197 Ford Mustang Shelby GT500, which Neville uses to zoom around a desolate, overgrown Manhattan with his dog Sam. Crank up the volume to get an earful of supercharger whine from the video below.

Reluctance: Back in 2017, BMW sent me an X4 M40i to review. I must admit that I was reluctant to tolerate the “Sports Activity Coupe” before I even drove it. I saw it as the answer to a question that nobody asked. My week behind the wheel completely changed my mind. The twin-turbo 3.0-liter I-6 was powerful and responsive, the eight-speed automatic was always in the right gear, the second row had a surprising amount of headroom despite the swoopy roofline, and there was plenty of cargo space in the rear.

Raw: As in raw meat. I’m not a scientist, but I know dinosaurs ate plenty of that because they didn’t cook. When Ram introduced the supercharged Hemi-powered 1500 TRX (aka T-Rex) for the 2021 model year, it called the 702-horsepower high-performance pickup “the apex predator of the truck world,” a not-so-subtle jab at the Ford F-150 Raptor, which only offered 450 horsepower via the EcoBoost V-6. That eventually led to Ford introducing the Raptor R, which currently has a 720-horsepower, supercharged 5.2-liter V-8. Ram recently announced the 2027 Ram 1500 SRT TRX, which is more potent than ever, cranking out 777 horsepower and 680 lb.-ft. of torque. In a way, dinosaurs still exist — and they’ve evolved (but they still can’t cook).
