“Well, a guy is on a mountain in southwest Colorado, where I bought this 1950 Chevrolet sight unseen. It doesn’t run, and it’s been off the road for 20 years. I am going to try to get it fired up and drive it 1,400 miles back home.”That is Derek Bieri of the YouTube channel Vice Grip Garage, and “home” is south-central Tennessee. The “revival” theme is prevalent throughout Bieri’s channel, where more than 2.5 million subscribers tune in every Friday to see his latest project.The setup, as Bieri tells viewers at the start of every video, which begins with a tongue-in-cheek, “I’m an idiot,” is not necessarily educational. It is, however, deeply familiar to anyone who has ever pulled a tarp off something rusty and wondered whether it could be made to run again. Bieri buys old cars and trucks he has never seen in person, flies one-way to wherever they are sitting, and tries to nurse them back to life with a cheap set of tools and whatever he can grab at the nearest parts store. It’s the theme of “Will it run and drive?” He is often successful, but sometimes it does not work out at first. The Chevy on the Colorado mountain did not make it home under its own power. The transmission gave out halfway home, and the car finished the trip on a U-Haul trailer. The journey home and the repairs along the way are a significant part of the show.