Global car magazine makes car enthusiasts famous on TV Show

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What if I told you that you may potentially be a TV program feature? Not YouTube, like every other person on the planet (no offense to YouTube), but TV, displaying your car. What would your thoughts be on that? It has been made possible by Street Cars 101 Magazine! When Street Cars 101 Magazine was first established in early 2023, its owner and editor, Randall Prep Threatt, set out to create something unique for the automotive business, car scene, and car enthusiasts alike. His goal was to provide everyone with an opportunity to be seen on the largest possible platform. In addition to publishing the magazine, which sells 70 copies a week on average from large retail outlets, he and his buddy Tim Harrell, who owns Auto Rush 360, came up with the notion to produce a television program. Originally called Auto Plaza Deals TV, it was centered around Prep’s drop shipping company, which enabled him to buy the fastest-producing Camaro on the market—the ZL1 1LE.

Initially, the channel was centered around Prep’s learning of driving and racing skills while participating in an event at Rockingham Dragway. When Prep and Tim first met, Tom Polaski taught Prep the basics of staging, reading the tree, and a spinning-free launch. In this chat, Tom told Prep about his background in racing. While driving home, Prep had a notion to start something, and Tim mentioned all types of ideas, including a publication that would tell people’s stories; thus, Street Cars 101 Magazine was created. Auto Plaza Deals TV concept remained in motion. The idea for Auto Plaza Deals TV was still in motion, but it was less focused since, on May 6, Prep’s birthday, the magazine released its debut edition, and, while Prep was drag racing at Darlington Dragway, it had over 10,000 views in less than 14 hours.

After two years, Auto Plaza Deals was reborn under the new name Street Cars 101 TV. This time, the show’s focus was on car fans and their stories about why they like their cars, told in video format to correspond with the magazine issue that they were featured in. YouTube was not enough for Prep because he wanted to bring what he termed the Published Family to the big screen—something that many people couldn’t just begin—and fulfill other people’s wishes, as always. Getting included in a well-known publication, getting highlighted on a real TV program, and having a big magazine published. Now, the first episode may be seen live on Roku TV, Amazon Fire TV, (Coming Soon)Amazon Prime, and maybe Tubi.

Here’s your opportunity to appear on a real TV show with automobile fans, technicians, hosts of car shows and events, and everyone involved in the auto industry. The best part is that it is raw, with no made-up stories, over-the-top exaggerations, no movie storylines, and not solely centered on celebrities. According to Prep, “the role of a magazine publisher is not limited to covering celebrities. Even so, they could have larger fan bases, stronger marketing expenditures, and PR. What a magazine does is create The purpose of a magazine is to make people famous, not merely to publicize those who already are, and I intend to do the same with my TV program. Make them famous or just create history that they will be able to cherish for the rest of their lives.” Try it out for yourself by downloading the Roku TV app and Amazon Fire TV!


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