Lifestyle
Tesla’s next-gen Roadster unleashes Jay Leno’s inner child in ‘Jay Leno’s Garage’ segment
Iconic talk show host Jay Leno loves cars, particularly those that are unique and are capable of going incredibly fast. After retiring from late-night TV, Leno now hosts Jay Leno’s Garage on CNBC, a program where he goes hands-on with some of the world’s most compelling vehicles. This week, Jay Leno’s Garage featured a segment about a rather impressive and unique car — the next-generation Tesla Roadster.
Just like his segment with the Tesla Model S back in 2012, Jay Leno was joined by Tesla Chief Designer Franz von Holzhausen, who provided some insights and background on the upcoming all-electric supercar. Leno met up with the Chief Designer in Tesla’s design studio driving his first-generation Roadster, which he dubbed as a revolutionary automobile.
“I’m driving the past so I can look at the future,” Leno said.
- Jay Leno checks out the next-generation Tesla Roadster. [Credit: Jay Leno’s Garage/CNBC]
- Jay Leno checks out the next-generation Tesla Roadster. [Credit: Jay Leno’s Garage/CNBC]
- Jay Leno checks out the next-generation Tesla Roadster. [Credit: Jay Leno’s Garage/CNBC]
- Jay Leno checks out the next-generation Tesla Roadster. [Credit: Jay Leno’s Garage/CNBC]
- Jay Leno checks out the next-generation Tesla Roadster. [Credit: Jay Leno’s Garage/CNBC]
Leno’s Tesla visit began with a brief test drive of the Model 3. Leno was largely impressed with the electric sedan, stating that the smaller car “feels exactly like a Model S.” That said, what really got the veteran host excited was the Model 3’s faster, more insane brother — the next-generation Tesla Roadster. Leno’s response to the upcoming Roadster was one of wonder, comparing the vehicle’s top speed to that of a fighter jet and the car’s quarter-mile time to that of a purpose-built drag racer. The veteran host’s inner child was in full force during the segment, particularly during a sprint when he alternately screamed “I’ll buy it! I’ll take it!” while Franz was flooring the vehicle.
The next-generation Tesla Roadster is designed to be a supercar to end all supercars. Equipped with three electric motors, the base variant of the vehicle is capable of sprinting from 0-60 mph in 1.9 seconds, allowing it to do quarter-mile runs in 8.8 seconds. The next-gen Roadster’s top speed of over 250 mph, as well as its 200 kWh battery that gives it a range of 620 miles on a single charge, are all designed, according to Elon Musk, to “give a hardcore smackdown to gasoline-powered cars.”
- The next-generation Tesla Roadster as featured in ‘Jay Leno’s Garage.’ [Credit: Jay Leno’s Garage/CNBC]
- The next-generation Tesla Roadster as featured in ‘Jay Leno’s Garage.’ [Credit: Jay Leno’s Garage/CNBC]
- The next-generation Tesla Roadster as featured in ‘Jay Leno’s Garage.’ [Credit: Jay Leno’s Garage/CNBC]
- The next-generation Tesla Roadster as featured in ‘Jay Leno’s Garage.’ [Credit: Jay Leno’s Garage/CNBC]
- The next-generation Tesla Roadster as featured in ‘Jay Leno’s Garage.’ [Credit: Jay Leno’s Garage/CNBC]
- The next-generation Tesla Roadster as featured in ‘Jay Leno’s Garage.’ [Credit: Jay Leno’s Garage/CNBC]
- The next-generation Tesla Roadster as featured in ‘Jay Leno’s Garage.’ [Credit: Jay Leno’s Garage/CNBC]
- The next-generation Tesla Roadster as featured in ‘Jay Leno’s Garage.’ [Credit: Jay Leno’s Garage/CNBC]
- The next-generation Tesla Roadster as featured in ‘Jay Leno’s Garage.’ [Credit: Jay Leno’s Garage/CNBC]
- The next-generation Tesla Roadster as featured in ‘Jay Leno’s Garage.’ [Credit: Jay Leno’s Garage/CNBC]
What is particularly notable about the Roadster is that Tesla has only revealed the specs of the vehicle’s base variant. Elon Musk has since stated that there will be higher-trim models available, among them being the nothing-short-of-insane-but-cool-just-the-same SpaceX option, which uses rocket tech to help the supercar go faster. That said, Tesla’s ambitious performance claims for the Roadster were recently confirmed by test driver Emile Bouret, who gave test drives in Maximum Plaid Mode during the vehicle’s unveiling last November. According to the professional driver, the Roadster’s specs are not theoretical at all, as Tesla has actually “done those numbers.”
The production of the next-generation Tesla Roadster is expected to begin in 2020. Test drives for the all-electric supercar are expected to begin sometime next year as well.
Watch the Tesla Model 3 and next-gen Tesla Roadster’s segment in Jay Leno’s Garage in the video below.
Elon Musk
The Boring Company clears final Nashville hurdle: Music City loop is full speed ahead
The Boring Company has cleared its final Nashville hurdles, putting the Music City Loop on track for 2026.
The Boring Company has cleared one of its most significant regulatory milestones yet, securing a key easement from the Music City Center in Nashville just days ago, the latest in a series of approvals that have pushed the Music City Loop project firmly into construction reality.
On March 24, 2026, the Convention Center Authority voted to grant The Boring Company access to an easement along the west side of the Music City Center property, allowing tunneling beneath the privately owned venue. The move follows a unanimous 7-0 vote by the Metro Nashville Airport Authority on February 18, and a joint state and federal approval from the Tennessee Department of Transportation and the Federal Highway Administration on February 25. Together, these green lights have cleared the path for a roughly 10-mile underground tunnel connecting downtown Nashville to Nashville International Airport, with potential extensions into midtown along West End Avenue.
Music City Loop could highlight The Boring Company’s real disruption
Nashville was selected by The Boring Company largely because of its rapid population growth and the strain that growth has placed on surface infrastructure. Traffic has become a persistent problem for residents, convention visitors, and airport travelers alike. The Music City Loop promises an approximately 8-minute underground transit time between downtown and the Nashville International Airport (BNA), removing thousands of vehicles from surface roads daily while operating as a fully electric, zero-emissions system at no cost to taxpayers.
The project fits squarely within a broader vision Musk has championed for years. In responding to a breakdown of the Loop’s construction costs, Musk posted on X: “Tunnels are so underrated.” The comment reflected a longstanding belief that underground transit represents one of the most cost-effective and scalable infrastructure solutions available. The Boring Company has claimed it can build 13 miles of twin tunnels in Nashville for between $240 million and $300 million total, a fraction of what comparable projects cost elsewhere in the country.

Image Credit: The Boring Company/Twitter
The Las Vegas Loop, The Boring Company’s first operational system, has served as a proof of concept. During the CONEXPO trade show in March 2026, the Vegas Loop transported approximately 82,000 passengers over five days at the Las Vegas Convention Center, demonstrating the system’s capacity during large-scale events. Nashville draws millions of convention visitors and tourists each year, and local business leaders have pointed to that same capacity as a major draw for supporting the project.
The Music City Loop was first announced in July 2025. Construction began within hours of the February 25 state approval, with The Boring Company’s Prufrock tunneling machine already in the ground the same evening. The first operational segment is targeted for late 2026, with the full route expected to be complete by 2029. The project represents one of the largest privately funded infrastructure efforts currently underway in the United States.
Elon Musk
Elon Musk’s $10 Trillion robot: Inside Tesla’s push to mass produce Optimus
Tesla’s surging Optimus job listings reveal a company sprinting from prototype to one million robot production.
Tesla is accelerating its push to bring the Optimus humanoid robot to high volume production, and its recent job listings tells the story as clearly as any earnings call.
With well over 100 Optimus related job openings now posted across its U.S. facilities, Tesla is signaling a critical pivot for the program, moving it from a captivating tech demo to a serious manufacturing endeavor. Roles span the full spectrum of the product lifecycle, from Robotics Software Engineers and Manufacturing Engineers to Mechanical Integration Engineers and AI Engineers focused on world modeling and video generation. One active listing for a Software Engineer on the Optimus team asks candidates to build scalable and reliable data pipelines for Optimus manufacturing lines and develop automation tools that accelerate analysis and visualization for mass manufacturing.
Tesla is racing toward a one million unit annual production target. The clearest signal yet that Tesla is treating Optimus as its primary business came on January 28, 2026, during the company’s Q4 2025 earnings call. Musk announced that Tesla is ending production of the Model S and Model X, and will repurpose those lines at its Fremont, California factory to build Optimus humanoid robots.
A production intent prototype of Optimus Version 3 is planned to be ready in early 2026, after which Tesla intends to build a one million unit production line with a targeted production start by the end of 2026. To support that ramp, Tesla broke ground on a massive new Optimus manufacturing facility at Gigafactory Texas in late 2025, with ambitions to eventually reach 10 million units per year.
Tesla Giga Texas to feature massive Optimus V4 production line
The business case for scaling this aggressively is rooted in labor economics. Musk has stated that “Optimus has the potential to be the biggest product of all time,” reasoning that if Tesla can produce capable humanoid robots at scale and reasonable cost, every task currently performed by human labor becomes a potential application. In a separate statement, Musk framed Optimus’s long term importance even more bluntly, saying it could surpass Tesla’s vehicle business in scale with the potential to generate $10 trillion in revenue.
The industries Tesla is targeting first are those most burdened by repetitive physical labor. Early applications include manufacturing assembly, material handling and quality inspection, as well as logistics tasks like loading, unloading, sorting, and transporting goods in warehouses and distribution centers. Longer term, Tesla’s vision is for Optimus to penetrate household, medical, and logistics scenarios at the scale of a smartphone rollout.
Elon Musk
Elon Musk’s Boring Co. Tunnel Vision Challenge ends with a surprise for Louisiana, Maryland and Dallas
The Boring Company stunned three cities today, awarding New Orleans, Baltimore, and Dallas free underground Loop tunnels.
Elon Musk’s The Boring Company (TBC) announced today that it is building free underground Loop tunnels in three American cities: New Orleans, Louisiana; Baltimore, Maryland; and Dallas, Texas. The company had promised one winner when it launched the Tunnel Vision Challenge in January. After receiving 487 submissions, it selected three, committing to fund and construct all of them pending a feasibility review, entirely at its own expense. For a company that has faced years of skepticism over the gap between its promises and its delivered projects, choosing to expand its commitment rather than narrow it is a notable shift in both scale and accountability.
All three projects will now enter a rigorous, fully funded diligence phase that includes meetings with elected officials, regulators, community and business leaders, geotechnical borings, and a complete investigation of subsurface utilities and infrastructure. TBC confirmed that all costs associated with this diligence process are 100% funded by the company. If all three projects pass feasibility, all three get built. If only one clears the bar, that one gets built. The company’s willingness to fund the due diligence regardless of outcome removes one of the most common early-stage barriers that kills promising infrastructure proposals before they leave a spreadsheet.
Beyond the three winners, TBC announced it will continue working with two additional entrants it found compelling enough to pursue independently: the Hendersonville Utility Tunnel in Hendersonville, Tennessee, and the Morgan’s Wonderland Tunnel in San Antonio, Texas, which would notably serve one of the nation’s premier theme parks built specifically for guests with special needs.
The challenge also coincides with TBC’s most active construction period to date. The company recently began drilling on the Music City Loop near the Tennessee State Capitol in Nashville, and in February it broke ground on a Loop in Dubai. Musk has long argued that the fundamental problem with urban infrastructure is cost and bureaucratic inertia, not engineering. “The key to solving traffic is making going 3D either up or down,” he said in 2018, a conviction now reflected in a company structure built to absorb the financial risk that typically stalls public projects for years.
Music City Loop could highlight The Boring Company’s real disruption
The Tunnel Vision Challenge’s most underappreciated element may be what it produced beyond three winners. Submissions came from individuals, companies, and governments across states including Alaska, Arkansas, Colorado, Kansas, Louisiana, Maryland, New York, and Texas, as well as from international entrants. Musk captured the underlying logic years ago when he said, “Traffic is driving me nuts. I’m going to build a tunnel boring machine and just start digging.” Today, three American cities are counting on exactly that.
Tunnel Vision Challenge results!
We’ve been overwhelmed with the amazing submissions…so we are announcing three winners!
The Thrilling Three are:
– NOLA Loop (New Orleans, LA)
– Ravens Loop (Baltimore, MD)
– University Hills Loop (Dallas, TX)What happens next? TBC and the… https://t.co/cY2ULftfiK
— The Boring Company (@boringcompany) March 24, 2026














