Posted on 01/06/2011 9:22:43 AM PST by Notary Sojac
It's boxy, bland, and relentlessly practical, but in an age of diminished wealth and high unemployment, maybe that combination doesn't sound so bad. Despite those qualities, or because of them, the minivan is making a comeback.
Sales are up, new models are appearing, and the woman who once did the blog "Rage Against the Minivan" has fallen in love with one. "In marketing campaigns featuring heavy-metal theme songs, rapping parents, secret agents in cat masks, pyrotechnics and even Godzilla, minivan makers are trying to recast the much-ridiculed mom-mobile as something that parents can be proudor at least unashamedof driving," reports The New York Times.
This is known as reinventing the wheel. Minivans became popular in the 1980s because they offered so many thingsabundant seating, ease of entry for young children, decent fuel economy, and cargo space without excessive bulk. For a generation in its fertile years, they were the solution to every need.
Except one: the perennial urge of many baby boomers to believe they are cool. Our parents knew better than to expect hipness to coexist with diapers and PTA meetings. But the postwar generation is the one advertisers asked, seductively: "Who says you can't have it all?"
Apparently, though, the urge to be awesome has carried over to Generation X. That explains why automakers are trying so hard to convince them that basic, functional transportation is not a fate worse than fiery death.
Toyota is selling the Sienna as a "Swagger Wagon" after hearing consumers lament, "I don't like being the soccer-mom joke or feeling like I've given up all trace of my identity to be a parent," according to marketing manager Richard Bame.
Good luck with that. Portraying minivans as radical is like trying to sell Kansas to snowboarders.
It's also largely pointless. The world is divided into two kinds of people: those who, when they have kids, worry they are no longer cool, and those who, when they have kids, think being a parent is cooler than anything they've ever done. The latter group will consider a minivan. The former won't, even if you paint a skull and crossbones on it.
For those captivated by parenthood, the appeal of stylish wheels is (or was) nothing compared to a car that could carry baseball gear for an entire Little League, transport a flock of first-graders to Chuck E. Cheese's, get double-digit gas mileage, and ride appreciably better than a Conestoga wagon. In my book, coolness was a consolation prize for the poor mopes who were missing out on Indian Princesses.
But some people feel differently, which is why the rise of minivans was accompanied by the rise of something far less sensible: the sport-utility vehicle. With its truck frame, macho looks, and off-road capability, it allowed Americans to drive station wagons to the grocery store and ballet lessons while pretending to be Marlboro Men (and Women) riding the range.
Never mind that SUVs typically carried fewer passengers, got worse fuel economy, handled like front-end loaders and had a regrettable tendency to flip over. Plenty of people were desperate to overlook all these shortcomings rather than be publicly unmasked as parents.
The SUV's cherished dirt-eating, boulder-climbing feature was generally unneeded by suburban parents. For that matter, it was greatly exaggerated. One of the more surreal experiences of my life came when the people at DaimlerChrysler refused to honor the transmission warranty on my son's Jeep becauseprepare to be shockedhe had taken it off-road.
Maybe Generations X and Y are getting past the drab associations that once hung over minivans. Sales reached about 450,000 last year, up 9 percent over 2008. But that was still only about a third of the total at the peak 10 years ago.
How come? Because the industry has figured out a different way to capture those buyers looking for the best features of a minivan. SUVs and "crossover" vehicles have acquired smoother rides, third-row seats, and better fuel economy. In essence, millions of Americans are driving minivans disguised as truckssheep in wolves' clothing.
Maybe minivans will take a bigger share of the market as some consumers decide they might as well have the real thing. But with all their interior space, minivans can't carry the one thing many motorists must have at all times: their illusions.
please see my reply at #37. I should have chosen my words a bit carefully.
With rear seats removed, my cavernous PT Cruiser is like a mini-mini-van WITH a 5-speed.
I can put an entire bicycle (both wheels ON) inside and close the hatch.
Awww...us old guys will stop piling on.
Now, the chicks do dig my gold chains and shades. We can all agree on that, right?
You do, and you'll clean it up. By golly.
LOL!
I’m actually attracted to 50+ bald guys WITHOUT the jewelry. At 50+, shades may be esthetically necessary!
“LOL!
Im actually attracted to 50+ bald guys WITHOUT the jewelry. At 50+, shades may be esthetically necessary!”
Funny how the internet works... I assumed you were male until I read that! I guess you still could be a guy, but that would just be creepy.
Are the shades necessary for the 50+ guy, or for you to wear when you look at them?! ;)
“I sometimes really wish for a real station wagon again.”
Look at the Ford Flex. Not overly attractive, but it’s a station wagon. I think there are other wagons that can be had. The nice thing about minivans is the flexibilty of removing seats.
“Both, I think”, she snickers.
I don't drive my car to impress coyotes. I drive my car because it is fun and to see the expressions on the young dudes faces when I blow by them. Actually, my car is quite discreet. Dark color, NO emblems or badges, no hood scoop, no spoiler but really nice wheels and a killer exhaust.
Ah, but in the old station wagons you could lay all the seats down and have a perfectly flat surface to lay a sheet of plywood on or a huge amount of stuff. As a kid, I especially loved the rear facing seats in the back. (Probably not the safest things in the world)
*** Both, I think, she snickers. ***
Attracted to 50+ bald guys? You must be 60+ then! :P
Hmmpf!.... Hardly!
They’re not so “mini” anymore- big, dumb, pregnant looking things. They were far more practical 15 or more years ago.
I keep telling my bride that for a midlife crisis, I don’t want a sports car, I want an elk hunt.
But I have wanted an elk hunt since I was 15!
Around here though, most men over the age of 38 get a Harley because they don’t want to be just thought of as a “Dad”. To each his own I guess.
This, coming from someone who chose their screen name to identify with the Browns? Now that’s really low.
I hear you on the napping capacity. I’m trying to skip buying an SUV in favor of a Ford F-350 in 6.0L diesel. If I can get a decent used one, a 4x4 conversion only runs about $10k. Expect 400K on the engine, 20-25mpg, the van doesn’t look like it needs to be stolen or keyed, and more security for stuff when I’m backpacking. The ability to sleep comfortably in the vehicle is a major plus.
“This, coming from someone who chose their screen name to identify with the Browns? Now thats really low.”
Hmmmmm... it sounds like you have a tenuous grip on reality? If you equate a screen name selection on a website where no one can actually associate the screen name with me, and the need for validation through automobile selection, you need to work on some identification skills.
Wow, are you guys heavy into projection. It's hard to breathe in here with all your smug.
Where are you getting the idea that people define themselves by their vehicles? I think you and brownsfan both have some envy issues to work through if you're reading this into other people's expressions of preference for or against particular vehicles.
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