Posted September 18, 200519 yr I have associations with each car produced. Which of the following make you think of an "older" (60+) womens car. It seems like every toyota camry is driven by women over 60, though I've known younger females whos father made them buy it because it was a good pick for their Mom.
September 18, 200519 yr I picked Buick Century, both the '82-'96 A body, and the '97-current W. The size is manageable, it's comfortable, virtually maintenance-free, and it has inoffensive looks. I find that old people in general love their A-bodies something fierce.
September 18, 200519 yr The Century or the Sable comes to mind as the most likely of that group. My mother is a older female driver (past 70) but I don't think she would be interested in any of those cars.... Her primary cars are a '98 Lincoln Town Car and an '05 Lincoln Navigator. She also has a '90 Mustang LX 5.0 convertible, a '69 Mustang Mach 1 (had it since it was new), and 3 '67-68 Cougars (all cars she & my late father collected over the years)..
September 18, 200519 yr The Buick Century is the car of choice for this demographic. Safe, reliable and predictable. Edited September 18, 200519 yr by HarleyEarl
September 18, 200519 yr Better put that thing in high gear, Paulie, bingo's about to start! :) [post="16174"]<{POST_SNAPBACK}>[/post] :D
September 18, 200519 yr Priuses are also very popular among old women. Yesterday I've seen four of them with senior drivers.
September 18, 200519 yr Author Funny, I see older men driving Centurys but I don't see many older women.
September 18, 200519 yr Buick and Olds in general just screamed senior citizen's brand in these days and times. It's like the car you grip when a Cadillac is too expensive or obnoxious. Before the '92 came out (where it then just became a woman's car), the Camry to me was a Korean parent's car, because I saw so many family-age Koreans driving them.....
September 18, 200519 yr Better put that thing in high gear, Paulie, bingo's about to start! :) [post="16174"]<{POST_SNAPBACK}>[/post] In high gear? I have 4. Just four. Oh wait, even though my car is 13 years old, it still has the same number of gears as do many current GM products ;)
September 19, 200519 yr i dont think Olds screamed old people when they went out..the aurora, alero, intrigue look very good. i road in a rental alero before and i really liked it. im sure most would agree that they would rather be seen in an intrique than a century...no offense buick fans..i love buick too :). Edited September 19, 200519 yr by zoomtm
September 19, 200519 yr I think part of the problem with Oldsmobile is that it... well... look at the name. Oldsmobile. It really didn't match the last few vehicles... The Aurora, Alero, Intrigue. All anything but old-looking, you know? As for Buicks... Well, they abandoned any sportiness they had. What happened to all the coupes? What happened to all the T-Types? What happened to all the turbos? What the hell happened? Nowadays... I don't think I'd want to be seen in a new Buick.
September 19, 200519 yr thats true I agree with the Olds name. I only like to be seen in a new Regal or Park Avenue. :)
September 19, 200519 yr Author Having been an owner of 2 Intrigues and 1 Alero I know they don't have the right seats have suspension for "older" people. My Parents & Grandmother traded in the Alero they bought from us because the suspension and seats where to hard. As far as who drives them - My wife and I have noticed mostly younger (25 to 45) females.
September 19, 200519 yr I see many older mens driving Buick and Olds while I see many older women driving Camry's I also see many people my age (early 20's) driving Aleros and Grand Am.
September 20, 200519 yr Aleros are big with the high school/sorority girl crowd. [post="16611"]<{POST_SNAPBACK}>[/post] Ditto that.
September 20, 200519 yr Wow, Sixt8... You found some cars that fit the name perfectly! They're just so old!
September 20, 200519 yr Yeah, choosing pre-war models of any car is probably the worst way to illustrate its contemporary and dynamic nature...
September 20, 200519 yr Obviously BV and Fly need to learn to READ and not judge an ad based on face value. "Look to OLDS for all that's NEW" I was trying to make a point about the Olds name being a funny icebreaker in advertising. Of all people I would think the resident Aurora obssesed Floridian would get it... :rolleyes: BTW: the first one is a '42 but the 2nd and 3rd are '46 Oldsmobiles. NOT pre-war. <_< Edited September 20, 200519 yr by Sixty8panther
September 20, 200519 yr Fly, dont be so hard, the Hydra-Matic are probably the same as the one in your car. :o :P Yeah, ads from 60 years ago do nothing more than confirm that GM has fallen a lot from where they were. And having "Old" in a name really doesn't help any, it is a little better than having "Crap" or "Junk" in a name in terms of what pops into peoples minds when they hear the name.
September 20, 200519 yr Obviously BV and Fly need to learn to READ and not judge an ad based on face value. "Look to OLDS for all that's NEW" I was trying to make a point about the Olds name being a funny icebreaker in advertising. Of all people I would think the resident Aurora obssesed Floridian would get it... :rolleyes: BTW: the first one is a '42 but the 2nd and 3rd are '46 Oldsmobiles. NOT pre-war. <_< [post="17281"]<{POST_SNAPBACK}>[/post] I read them and only the middle one really conveys that message in a way people would pick up on. Its a theme that's been used a whole lot in classic Oldsmobile advertising ("What's OLDS is NEW again" "Find something NEW in an OLDS" etc). The other two are simply ads that have nothing to do with your theory. BTW: A '46 car of virtually any make is pretty much a prewar car. For four years prior, everyone was kinda busy making tanks and planes and things that go boom, so the new 1946 cars (and a handful of '45s) were really not new - mostly rebodied '42s with slightly updated grilles. That fact really brings home the irony of the New '46 Olds - Its Olds, but its new, but really...its old. The real 'new' cars came in '47, '48, and so on...
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.