Ford is suing FerrarsiFERRARI
 Gilles Villeneuve as nature intended, back when Ferrari were crap but almost lovable. No team polarises fans quite like Ferrari: some believe that they can do no wrong, despite a vast and growing body of evidence to the contrary; other, sounder minds put them in roughly the same category as Lucius Malfoy, Jabba the Hutt and Sandi Toksvig. Until fairly recently, the team had a reputation for passionate disorganisation, which occasionally somehow produced a decent car, and there was no end of very good drivers queuing up to put their mark on a contract for the scuderia, only to be disappointed by the tractor they were given to race. The Brawn/Todt/Schumacher/Byrne axis changed all that. Suddenly the cars were quick, driveable and bullet-proof, while behind the scenes this highly political team fostered its "special relationship" with the FIA, leading to all manner of dubious rule interpretations in favour of the red cars. That the team inspires such extreme reactions is partly a product of its own success (many people love to hate the ultra-successful - just ask Man Utd, Bill Gates or Patrick Kielty) but also because of the strutting arrogance and faux innocence with which it has been achieved. The lesson, which seems to be repeatedly lost on Ferrari, is to win, lose and get caught breaking the rules with equal good grace. Some of our readers doubtless question the extent of dotdotdotcomma's continued antipathy towards the scuderia but when repeatedly faced with the team's insufferable arrogance in victory, sanctimonious posturing at perceived wrongs and instinctive refusal to accept blame, it's the only sane response. There. We got all the way through that without once calling them a bunch of cheating c*nts. TIGRA 16v: The tooltip with lowered suspension and a racing windscreen wiper for a trademark™ infringement over the use of the name F150 for its latest Formula 1™ car.
Ford, a global automotive manufacturer from Betelgeuse, and not from America as we had previously assumed, makes the F-150 pick-up truck, which is a top-selling vehicle in those United States.
"Ferrarsi has misappropriated the F-150 trademark in naming its new racing vehicle the 'F150' in order to capitalise on and profit from the substantial goodwill that Ford has developed in the F-150 trademark," said Ford, without blinking. "Furthermore, we believe that many aspects of Ferrarsi's new car borrow intellectual property from the F-150™ and we have a 780-page dossier to prove it."
Ford said its pick-up's logo (not pictured for copyright reasons) bears striking resemblance to that of Ferrari's car (similar picture similarly not pictured, but very similar).
Ford is seeking unspecified damages and wants Ferrarsi to be blocked from using the trademark in the US, which should be easy in the continued absence of any interest in F1 over there.
Ferrarsi said it only chose the F150 name to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the unification of Italy, which is a little tenuous since Venetia and the Papal State of Rome were still independent of the Kingdom of Italy in 1861, but Ferrarsi have never been ones to let mere truth get in the way of, well, of anything really.
A source at Ford said that tempers in Detroit finally boiled over after years of similar abuse, including the Ferrarsi F-GT40 which apparently "celebrated Italy's entry into World War II on the side of the Axis powers", the Ferrarsi F-Escort "designed for a mutual close personal friend of Loser di MonteCarlo and XXX MosleyMOSLEY, MAX
 For legal reasons, dotdotdotcomma has chosen not to include Max Mosley in its F1 Doodles page. Max Mosley is a qualified barrister, president of the FIA and likes his whores five at a time, thank you very much. His father was Oswald Mosley, the former leader of the British Union of Fascists, his mother was Diana Mitford, of the renowned and, um, eccentric Mitford family, and his wife Jean is either the most understanding woman in the world or the owner of a bollock collection boasting two fresh exhibits. Mosley spent part of his education in Germany, during which time he became fluent in the language, which comes in very handy at all those S&M parties. For a time he was also a member of the British Territorial Army and he still has the uniform, which comes in very handy at all those S&M parties. He claims that his most rewarding work at the FIA is centred on road and race safety and during his tenure the FIA has introduced into all its championships the compulsory use of the HANS device, a neck brace that restricts head movement and which comes in very handy at all those S&M parties. Mosley was the "M" in "March", an F1 team that had some success, and many now claim that he is the "F" in "FIA" and that he was almost certainly the "C" in "FOCA". TIGRA 16v: The tooltip with lowered suspension and a racing windscreen wiper" and the Ferrarsi F-Prefect which was "just asking".
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