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{
"@context": [
"https://join-lemmy.org/context.json",
"https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams"
],
"type": "Page",
"id": "https://lemmy.world/post/27778678",
"attributedTo": "https://lemmy.world/u/HarbingerOfTomb",
"to": [
"https://lemmy.world/c/endlessthread",
"https://www.w3.org/ns/activitystreams#Public"
],
"name": "Toyota Hilux trucks from the 80s and 90s are famous online. Why?",
"cc": [],
"content": "<p>Credits:</p>\n<p>Episode producer: Dean Russell, Ben Brock Johnson</p>\n<p>Editor: Meg Cramer</p>\n<p>Co-hosts: Ben Brock Johnson, Amory Sivertson,</p>\n<p>Show producers: Samata Joshi, Grace Tatter, Frannie Monahan, Emily Jankowski</p>\n<p>Mixer and sound designer: Paul Vaitkus</p>\n<p>In April of 2024, a group of aid workers were killed by Israeli Defense Forces while bringing food to Central Gaza. The IDF had alleged that its military analysts had identified a gunman on top of one of the trucks carrying supplies, suggesting it was a military vehicle, not an aid vehicle.</p>\n<p>In the online debate following the event, a familiar trope popped up: arguing over whether one of the aid trucks a Toyota Hilux. The reason? In military conflict around the globe, the Hilux is a familiar character. Whether you’re a U.S. designated terrorist group, a “freedom fighter,” or someone else involved in direct armed conflict, you probably know about the Hilux.</p>\n<p>Endless Thread wanted to know why, and how, this happened. So we took a journey beyond America’s commercial pickup truck identity to understand why beyond our borders, the Hilux is the truck of choice.</p>\n",
"mediaType": "text/html",
"source": {
"content": "Credits:\n\nEpisode producer: Dean Russell, Ben Brock Johnson\n\nEditor: Meg Cramer\n\nCo-hosts: Ben Brock Johnson, Amory Sivertson,\n\nShow producers: Samata Joshi, Grace Tatter, Frannie Monahan, Emily Jankowski\n\nMixer and sound designer: Paul Vaitkus\n\nIn April of 2024, a group of aid workers were killed by Israeli Defense Forces while bringing food to Central Gaza. The IDF had alleged that its military analysts had identified a gunman on top of one of the trucks carrying supplies, suggesting it was a military vehicle, not an aid vehicle.\n\nIn the online debate following the event, a familiar trope popped up: arguing over whether one of the aid trucks a Toyota Hilux. The reason? In military conflict around the globe, the Hilux is a familiar character. Whether you're a U.S. designated terrorist group, a \"freedom fighter,\" or someone else involved in direct armed conflict, you probably know about the Hilux.\n\nEndless Thread wanted to know why, and how, this happened. So we took a journey beyond America's commercial pickup truck identity to understand why beyond our borders, the Hilux is the truck of choice.",
"mediaType": "text/markdown"
},
"attachment": [
{
"href": "https://www.wbur.org/endlessthread/2025/04/04/toyota-hilux-war",
"mediaType": "text/html; charset=utf-8",
"type": "Link"
}
],
"image": {
"type": "Image",
"url": "https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/8b15077b-87dd-457b-a452-f02bbaa75696.jpeg"
},
"sensitive": false,
"published": "2025-04-04T14:17:19.084119Z",
"language": {
"identifier": "en",
"name": "English"
},
"audience": "https://lemmy.world/c/endlessthread",
"tag": [
{
"href": "https://lemmy.world/post/27778678",
"name": "#endlessthread",
"type": "Hashtag"
}
]
}