A FLEET of high-profile celebrities have been turning heads as they navigate the streets in the highly anticipated Tesla Cybertruck.
The silver, angular Tesla pickup truck has quickly become a celebrity fan-favorite car in the months since its introduction.
Several celebrities have been spotted driving the electric truck around town.
Kim Kardashian and Lady Gaga both grabbed cups of coffee in the electric truck.
Jay Leno was also captured driving the truck down California's streets while a fan shouted out another car window.
A Cybertruck towing a billboard advertising Beyoncé's latest hit single, Texas Hold 'Em, was spotted in Los Angeles days before Jay Z's own model was captured in his driveway.
Pharrell Williams grabbed headlines as he struggled to park his Cybertruck in Miami, Florida.
Several celebrities were caught on camera driving the new truck in this post on X, the site formerly called Twitter.
Popular social media personalities have posted videos of their Cybertrucks, too.
Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian was seen driving the electric truck near his home.
Adin Ross, a YouTuber and permanently banned former Twitch streamer, posted a video shooting the Cybertruck at a gun range.
Elon Musk, Tesla's CEO, has maintained that the car's proprietary metals are bulletproof.
The Cybertruck, Tesla's foray into the pickup market, has been one of the most controversial vehicles in the new car market.
Musk initially claimed in 2019 that the electric truck would have a starting MSRP of $39,900.
The company started accepting thousands of $100 reservations in the years following the announcement.
Tesla built its first production Cybertrucks two years behind schedule and with a base price of $20,000, more expensive than the originally announced cost.
Supply chain issues and manufacturing issues forced the company to hold off from assembling production models for years.
The pause had a financial impact on the truck's initial prices.
The car's three variants range from $60,990 to just under $100,000.
Drivers have chastised the company for its loftier prices. Some drivers speculated celebrities jumped the long queues to get their hands on the vehicles.
"A car for normal people… Celebs still get them first," a person wrote on X.
"Celebrities are skipping the line," another person on X claimed.
It is unknown when the celebrities and personalities in this article were entered into the queue.
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