BretLudwig
April 21st 08, 04:12 AM
Saving the Environment & Anti-Momism
>>"With all the hype over the environment and carbon footprints etc etc
these days, it's worth thinking about how much excess oil has been
consumed over the last 15 years because married women with children
haven't wanted to be seen driving mom-shaped minivans that make them look
like married women with children.
Minivans, with their three rows of seats, get about 30% better gas mileage
than big Sport-Utility Vehicles with three rows of seats, due to better
aerodynamics (a more rounded look) and less general blockheadedness. But
the minivan, which traces back to Lee Iacocca's Chrysler in 1983, isn't
sexy, so, looking at Consumer Reports, I see 87 models of Sport
Utility-Vehicle listed, but only 10 models of minivans.
Tellingly, the Big Three Japanese automakers sell minivans only under
their mass market labels -- Toyota, Honda, and Nissan. Their luxury labels
(Lexus, Acura, and Infiniti, respectively), which typically take their
mainstream cars and SUVs, put some different sheet metal on them, and
offer them at $10k higher prices, don't offer any minivans. Nor do
Cadillac or Lincoln. (The Chrysler Town & Country is the only example of
rebadged upscale minivan.) Presumably, there is no demand for a prestige
minivan, and/or the companies don't want to taint their upscale marques by
associating them with minivans.
The problem with the minivan is that the only reason you'd buy one is if
you have children, so you can't pretend you're still on the market. In
contrast, moms driving around in massive SUVs can tell themselves that
everybody who sees them assumes they bought it because they, uh, go
whitewater kayaking every weekend so they need the off-road capability.
Considering the constant environmentalist propaganda we hear in the
corporate media, it's ironic that the near-extinction of the highly
efficient minivan has elicited so little comment, but, then,
environmentalism these days is mostly about status striving through sexier
shopping.
The good news is that some SUVs have been growing more aerodynamic (i.e.,
minivan-like, but, shhhh, don't tell anybody). And the station wagon has
come back from the dead, with 26 models listed, although I think much of
the revived popularity of the wagon comes from Chrysler's discovery from
the success of the PT Cruiser and its running boards -- which played such
an important role in 1930s Chicago gangster movies (mobsters would fire
their tommy-guns at the coppers while clinging to the outside of the
getaway car) -- that there was a market for evil-looking station wagons.
Thus, the introduction in 2004 of the trendsetting Dodge Magnum wagon,
with its dark-tinted windows and high beltline, making it look like what a
21st Century version of Capone's gang would drive to a rubout."<<
http://isteve.blogspot.com/2008/04/saving-environment-anti-momism.html
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Message posted using http://www.talkaboutaudio.com/group/rec.audio.opinion/
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>>"With all the hype over the environment and carbon footprints etc etc
these days, it's worth thinking about how much excess oil has been
consumed over the last 15 years because married women with children
haven't wanted to be seen driving mom-shaped minivans that make them look
like married women with children.
Minivans, with their three rows of seats, get about 30% better gas mileage
than big Sport-Utility Vehicles with three rows of seats, due to better
aerodynamics (a more rounded look) and less general blockheadedness. But
the minivan, which traces back to Lee Iacocca's Chrysler in 1983, isn't
sexy, so, looking at Consumer Reports, I see 87 models of Sport
Utility-Vehicle listed, but only 10 models of minivans.
Tellingly, the Big Three Japanese automakers sell minivans only under
their mass market labels -- Toyota, Honda, and Nissan. Their luxury labels
(Lexus, Acura, and Infiniti, respectively), which typically take their
mainstream cars and SUVs, put some different sheet metal on them, and
offer them at $10k higher prices, don't offer any minivans. Nor do
Cadillac or Lincoln. (The Chrysler Town & Country is the only example of
rebadged upscale minivan.) Presumably, there is no demand for a prestige
minivan, and/or the companies don't want to taint their upscale marques by
associating them with minivans.
The problem with the minivan is that the only reason you'd buy one is if
you have children, so you can't pretend you're still on the market. In
contrast, moms driving around in massive SUVs can tell themselves that
everybody who sees them assumes they bought it because they, uh, go
whitewater kayaking every weekend so they need the off-road capability.
Considering the constant environmentalist propaganda we hear in the
corporate media, it's ironic that the near-extinction of the highly
efficient minivan has elicited so little comment, but, then,
environmentalism these days is mostly about status striving through sexier
shopping.
The good news is that some SUVs have been growing more aerodynamic (i.e.,
minivan-like, but, shhhh, don't tell anybody). And the station wagon has
come back from the dead, with 26 models listed, although I think much of
the revived popularity of the wagon comes from Chrysler's discovery from
the success of the PT Cruiser and its running boards -- which played such
an important role in 1930s Chicago gangster movies (mobsters would fire
their tommy-guns at the coppers while clinging to the outside of the
getaway car) -- that there was a market for evil-looking station wagons.
Thus, the introduction in 2004 of the trendsetting Dodge Magnum wagon,
with its dark-tinted windows and high beltline, making it look like what a
21st Century version of Capone's gang would drive to a rubout."<<
http://isteve.blogspot.com/2008/04/saving-environment-anti-momism.html
--
Message posted using http://www.talkaboutaudio.com/group/rec.audio.opinion/
More information at http://www.talkaboutaudio.com/faq.html