6 Things I Hate About Car Culture In 2015
Social media has become the dominant communication tool for our generation. It’s a fantastic way to keep in touch with friends, follow what your favourite celebrities are up to, and to consume your interests to your heart’s content. For the car scene, that has unfortunately resulted in a ludicrous game of one-upmanship, where people buy and modify cars based on what will get them the most attention online.
During London’s supercar season, what used to be an impractical show of wealth has escalated into a gaudy parade of arrogant, fame hungry rich kids vying for the attention of children with mobile phones. There are plenty of people doing things for themselves in the car scene, but they’re so often overshadowed by loudmouthed show offs in chrome-wrapped cars they couldn’t care less about.
Last year I took the slightly bonkers Jaguar XFR-S for a trip into the heart of London’s supercar scene. The idea was to see if the ostentatious Jag could hold its own amongst the plethora of more exotic material on show, but the thing that I took away from the night was how crazy these supercar spotters could be.
This year, the whole spotting thing blew up, and it’ll only be a matter of time before one of these kids gets hurt, or worse, killed. They run around in the road with complete disregard for their own safety, motivated only by getting the same shot as a dozen other people. We very rarely share these videos anymore, partly because once you’ve seen one Aventador spit flames, you’ve seen them all, but also because it encourages this ridiculous behaviour.
We all like a keepsake when we see a cool car, but it’s not worth killing yourself to get a 10-second clip for YouTube. And if you’re getting the same shot time and again, and shots that anyone could get, your channel will never truly take off. There are some great YouTube channels and Instagram accounts that offer something a bit different, but the sea of repetitive revving videos has been grating on me for a while now.
3. Vlogging while driving
I’m not naming any names, but I’ve attended a few driving events that vloggers have attended, and the standard of driving is shocking. Most of the good guys have camera mounts in their cars, but some big names cruise about holding cameras. It’s incredible none of them have wrecked yet, as I’ve seen them holding phones while filming themselves driving, holding cameras out of the window and weaving across the road as they check they’ve got a decent angle.
It’s cool that there are petrolhead personalities around, but when it gets to the point where getting a shot is more important than just enjoying the car, you have to wonder what’s in it for them. It’s all about getting views rather than enjoying the car.
There will always be idiots who ruin it for the majority, but as petrolheads we have a responsibility to show that we can enjoy our cars while remaining responsible; it’s hard to justify your fast driving is safe when 30 seconds ago you were sending a Snapchat of your 0-60mph sprint.
4. The general public hates on us
No, this isn’t a new thing, but it seems more relevant now than ever. As the effects of cars on the environment come to the forefront of people’s minds, those of us who choose to drive cars tuned for performance rather than economy are looked down upon. In fact, there are many people who consider our very hobby an insult; the fact that you could covet something that destroys the environment is just plain offensive to some.
It’s funny that as the debate about autonomous cars switches from curious future mythology to genuinely viable product, petrolheads are experiencing a golden age of performance cars. Here’s hoping that the future’s bright for us, and that new car technologies can continue to excite us as the anti-car brigade keeps shouting.
5. Too much negativity
One of my favourite things about the car scene is that, for the most part, everyone’s respectful. No matter what you like or what you can afford, you can be pretty sure that people will appreciate the effort. Well, that’s true in the real world at least.
Social media is great for many things, but what it’s bad for is giving keyboard warriors a sense of detachment that allows them to be unnecessarily cruel. You also get circle-jerk jokes that are constantly recirculated by people desperate for attention. It can make going online to talk about cars quite intimidating, and is part of the reason we spend a lot of time moderating content and comments; you don’t have to like everything, but you don’t have to be insulting about it either.
6. Sub-500bhp is slow and manual always wins
I don’t know how many people are going to agree with me on this one, but it really winds me up that people are so narrow-minded. Once upon a time cars had about six moving parts, a manual gearbox and rear-wheel drive. Pretty much everything was the same, but then technology moved on and new stuff entered the scene… but attitudes haven’t moved with the times.
Load up YouTube and it’s no effort to find highly tuned cars that spit out four-figure horsepower numbers, so it’s easy to become jaded and think anything with less than 500bhp is woefully slow. It’s not. The Toyota GT86 is a prime example; it has 197bhp, and while it’s by no means fast, it’s ridiculously good fun to drive. Numbers can’t tell you that, but you can’t talk about the GT86 without multiple people piping up about its straight-line performance. Yeah, it might be more fun with more power, but it doesn’t really need it.
When automatic gearboxes were first introduced, they were slow, juddery and indecisive, so it’s understandable why people considered manuals to be the enthusiast’s option. It’s just not inherently true anymore. Yeah, sometimes cars are better with manuals, but sometimes the shift is rubbish and adds nothing to the experience.
For an industry that moves along at such a pace, it’s incredible how supposed enthusiasts’ attitudes are so resistant to change.
Comments
I’m so glad I’m not the only one disapproving on celebrities/rich arabs/youtubers trying to get attention by wrapping their car stupidly.
Am I the only one that thinks Yanimize do really chavvy wraps?
Or companies like Hamann making bodykits that are uglier than alcoholic squirrels on cocaine…
At this point I shall point out that worldwide cow ‘emissions’ are actually more damaging to the environment than CO2 produced by cars, as with aviation, and yet no-one seems to bat an eyelid towards them
So what you’re saying is we should make more burgers? I’m fine with that
We should put proper exhaust systems on cows, they cant stay straightpiped.
To be fair, there are actually people working on food that interferes with the cow’s digestive process and can cut its ‘harmful emissions’ by up to 60 per cent!
It’s also interesting that beef requires insanely more land than other meat like pork and chicken, so when you add it all together, it’s believed that giving up beef would actually be better for the environment than giving up your car. Mad, but true.
Have you consided the VW’s in your post? #Dieselgate
Actually, that’s proved wrong. You can google it.
those of us who cant afford to engage in car culture (in the ways that we would like to) aren’t exactly catered to in the virtual world, especially for sony ponies such as myself. WRC5 looked like a PS3 launch title, NFS 2015 had numerous faults (for me it would of been unplayable because my internet is rubbish at the moment), the steering in project cars makes it unplayable half the time with a controller, and… well that’s it. driveclub is good albeit much later than it should of been, the crew is ok if your friends have it, but the whole situation isn’t great. does anyone else remember how many rally games alone were released in the early 2000’s? much more than the entire racing game genre for the 8th generation of consoles so far.
edit: CT your comments are doing that thing again where a number gets changed to a 1
If you get a PC, you’ll have no trouble finding good simulators like Assetto Corsa, rFactor 2, Live for Speed, Richard Burns Rally, etc, as well as some other interesting games as DiRT Rally, Automation, Car Mechanic Simulator, Spintires, BeamNG, etc. :D
Oh my god, those supercar spotting kids… That’s natural selection just waiting to happen
I know, I’m a Subaru spotter. so I’m safe. XD
if i see a car spotter on the road i will run him over.. sorry but pedestrians have sidewalks to go on….
Thanks to this awesome community here we’re pretty good fighting number 5.
If I see something I don’t like, I try to ignore it rather than spread the hate. It’s when people say I’m not as much of a “true car guy” because I don’t respect a slammed, excessively cambered STI that pisses me off. F*ck that. Somebody has ruined the functionality of the car then it grates me. CT is good for encompassing all scenes and shining mostly positive lights on them, but at the same time, a lot of people forget the “You don’t have to like everything” part of Point 5. I agree with the “You don’t have to be insulting either” but some people here are so self-righteous, they’re just as bad by not respecting the other guy’s opinion, just because it’s different to their own.
I assume most will disagree with this but I don’t like super car modification in general e.g. Liberty Walk kits or Rocket Bunny kits for stuff like Ferraris or Lambos etc… I think that these type of vehicles need no cosmetic modification and it really spoils them. And teaming that with a Yianni wrap just makes it look awful. Also I’ve seen a Hamann M5 in London and it was not a pretty sight at all… again all just opinion.
Agreed
I looked up a liberty walk car video, and saw the terrible sight of a man drilling holes into a ferrari 458. I almost cried :(
Well said.
2nd reason is what I agree the most with you, Darren. I as many of the teenagers watch videos of Shmee150, SOL etc… are chasing the dream that with car spotting we could achieve as big amount of money as Tim, Paul etc…, so we can get ourselves a supercar. After I realised, in the short future killing time in it for example: carspotting instead of studying, won’t worth it.
I think car spotting is good if you have a genuine interest in it but if your in it to try and make money then I think that’s where it goes downhill
After a friend took me carspotting once I thought there wouldn´t be that much people doing it….oh how wrong I was. And the saddest part: there are children at the age of 10 with cameras worth more than my car who all dream of getting rich with it
bhp internet figures..