About LCT Blog

Welcome to LCT Blog, LCT Magazine's blog devoted to "stretching chauffeured transportation." The LCT team appreciates you clicking in, and hopes you'll find some useful and entertaining information. Read more

Contributors

Martin Romjue

Martin Romjue joined LCT Magazine as editor on Jan. 2, 2008. He most recently worked as a business editor for the Los Angeles Newspaper Group, and previously reported at newspapers in Virginia, Florida, and California. Read more

Jim Luff

Jim Luff is an operator from Bakersfield, CA who wears a few different hats. Jim began his career in the industry as a private chauffeur in 1990. In 1993 he found a permanent home at The Limousine Scene as the general manager, later becoming a partner. Read more

Michael Campos

Michael Campos joined LCT Magazine as assistant editor on January 3, 2011. He is a graduate of the University of Southern California’s English/Creative Writing program. Michael attended his first International LCT Show in February 2011, where he met and interacted with operators and vendors. He will be helping LCT further develop its digital media content. Read more

Big Luxury Buses And The Celebrities Who Ride Them

The double-decker mega-trailer pictured here is a 1,000-square-foot, 30-ton “mobile estate” for star actor Ashton Kutcher to use while filming on the set of the Emmy-winning TV show “Two and a Half Men.” It comes complete with seven 60-inch 3-D plasma TVs, a conference area, two bathrooms and a full kitchen.
 
Legendary NFL coach and sportscaster John Madden travels around in “The Madden Cruiser IV”, an MCI E4500 sporting three plasma televisions, a queen-sized bed, steam shower, sauna, high-speed Internet access and a generator big enough to power a 5,000-square-foot house.
 
Other celebrities who enjoy their own big luxury buses are Justin Bieber, Whoopi Goldberg, rap artist T.I., Dolly Parton, and of course, President Obama, whose all-black $1.1 million motorcoach likely has state-of-the art amenities that we aren’t even allowed to imagine because they’re classified (and taxpayer-funded).
 
-- Michael Campos, LCT assistant editor
Print | posted on Wednesday, November 02, 2011 12:18 PM
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