OT: What do you do for a living? What do you drive? Social pressure?

Submitted by dupont circle on
Although my dad was in management for the Big 3, and we always had new nice cars, I've never been a car guy. Having lived in two major cities thus far after college, it seems like even my peers who said they'd never buy a car, period, let alone anything flashy, are caving. (Where did all these Audis and Land Rovers come from?) Mid to late 20s the el and Metro have officially stopped being acceptable, I guess. Amongst friends and especially at work there is this weird undercurrent to fit in or fit out, with regard to buying a luxury car or SUV. Also projecting a certain image.

GoBlueDenver

March 10th, 2015 at 9:07 PM ^

1. Graphic designer
2. 99 Toyota 4Runner
3.Not here in Denver. Kinda the opposite. "Why would you spend so much on a car? Where's all your granola" kinda thing. My buddies I went to school with are all in the upgrade stage tho. I'd love a Range Rover, just would feel like a tool driving one in my peer group.

AlphaBlue

March 10th, 2015 at 9:08 PM ^

1. Sr. Analyst- Fedex Freight
2. 2011 Chevy Traverse (wife)/2013 Ford Taurus (mine-best car I've ever owned)
3. Only when it comes to cars cuz I'm a sucker for new vehicles. Lol I'd like to thank my grandpa who retired from ford and traded his mustang every 2-3 years for the next best one!



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Bigasshammm

March 10th, 2015 at 9:09 PM ^

UPS part time

UPS truck part time
99 Camry 05 trailblazer.
Our "next" car is for me and will hopefully be a 08-10 Mitsubishi EVO VIII or IX. But I've had a hell of a time finding one in decent condition or I'd probably own one already. Plus I'm picky about the color.

If that fails then I'm thinking I might get a Subaru BRZ.


I could care less about other peoples opinions.

F5

March 10th, 2015 at 9:13 PM ^

Sales consultant in the auto industry, newish Malibu to tote my son around and a 1972 Ford Maverick Grabber that I am almost done restoring. I truly do not care what people drive... As long as they buy said car from me!

rpm881

March 10th, 2015 at 9:14 PM ^

A. Morning Kitchen Supervisor (Glorified line cook)

B. 2001 GMC Sonoma. Love my truck. It's gets me to work and back. It plows me through snow drifts at 3:30 a.m. all more the fun.

C. No pressure. My Chef drives a 2002 Blazer.

uncleFred

March 10th, 2015 at 9:17 PM ^

So let us all understand that questions like this stem from the notion that there is some universal  "correct" assessment of what should be driven. One of my and my business partner's passions is teaching high performance driving. I and my partner are software and high tech management consultants. Over the years I and my partner's business vehicles were used 18 month old nine passenger station wagons because we could by them very cheap. Then when the tax laws changed we leased new sedans. Our business vehicles support our business and allow us to take clients to lunch in comfort. Our personal vehicles are our passion. My partner's personal vehicle is a race modified 325i with a M motor.

So at the moment:

1: see above

2: Personal - a highly modifed 1987 corvette - Business - a 2009 Chrysler 300 awd (soon to be replaced when the lease expires). 

3: Seriously? No. 

Gonechickin

March 10th, 2015 at 9:18 PM ^

Inbound operations for a freight company.
06 Chevy Colorado. 06 Chevy Trailblazer for wife. But she is getting a company car in two weeks. 15 MB c300.
No pressure at all.



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flyboy

March 10th, 2015 at 9:22 PM ^

1. I land planes on aircraft carriers

2. 2003 Honda Accord (4 door)

3. I've been told that my automobile is not fitting of my station in life, but it gets me from point A to point B and I really don't care what others think of my car. 

I dumped the Dope

March 10th, 2015 at 9:25 PM ^

1. manufacturing technician

2. '09 Chevy Malibu

3. I could care less.  I will drive it until I can't fix it myself or it gets so rusty I feel like a catastrophe is around the corner, which was the tipping point of my last Grand Prix @ 226k.  I had replaced 2 brake lines, a trans cooler line, all from rust, and the fuel lines looked like they were made from rust, with no easy replacement.  I fully expect 200k from every vehicle I get, no matter what the original starting mileage, and have succeeded on that with 2 trucks, a Yukon, and the GP.

GoBlueMC311

March 10th, 2015 at 9:23 PM ^

1. UPS driver 2. 2014 GMC SIERRA (Because...Michigan) 3. Absolutely not. Everyone drives pretty practical vehicles. No judgement. Everyone has a different situation. Go Blue!!!

naijablue

March 10th, 2015 at 9:29 PM ^

1.) Director of Real Estate for Fortune 500 retailer based in SF Bay Area.
2.) 2008 Mercedes E350 and 2014 E350 for the wife.
3.) No pressure. McConaughey voice-"I just like them."

ToledoWolverine

March 10th, 2015 at 9:30 PM ^

1. Locomotive Engineer 2. 2013 Chevy Malibu (my 3rd Malibu) 3. Not since 8th grade

The irony is I just got out of the Army where I made 1/3 of what I make now and drove a 97 cavalier around Fort Lewis. Most of my peers in the Army drove something new or flashy or both. Now most of my peers, again who make 3 times more than a typical soldier, drive older pieces of shit, comparatively speaking. Priorities son....

js10

March 10th, 2015 at 9:31 PM ^

Firefighter/Paramedic. Honda CRV Zero pressure other than finding enough time getting kids to and from every sport they are in.

Doc Brown

March 10th, 2015 at 9:33 PM ^

1. local inventor, scientist, time traveler with my wife Clara and two kids Joules and Verne, amd my dog Einstein.
2. I used to drive a 1981 Delorean with a hover conversion, Mr. Fusion, and a flux capacitor for time traveling when I hit 88 mph. Now I drive a time traveling train with a hover conversion.
3. No pressure. I am only interested in studying mankind throughout history. The pits, the perils, and the promise.



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Sleepy

March 10th, 2015 at 9:33 PM ^

2) The '84 Monte Carlo (that I'd had since 2001) died last summer. Worst-ish day I've had in a long time. Now, '15 Wrangler. 3) Nope.

Louie C

March 11th, 2015 at 12:53 AM ^

I feel your pain. I had an '84 Monte Carlo when I was younger, and I loved that thing. Was going to put a 350 in it and paint her all black, but the city of Lansing had other plans. Towed it away when I was working an overnight shift. I even had insurance on it. Thanks fuckfaces!

Lucky Socks

March 10th, 2015 at 9:34 PM ^

1.  I am soon to graduate from medical school

2.  I drive the same Honda Accord I purchased when I first got my liscence.  It's a solid car.

3.  I plan on driving that car into the ground in order to save money to pay off loans.  Even when I do, I'll buy something decent and reliable...with 4-wheel drive.  I've never coveted a luxury car.  

Ike613

March 10th, 2015 at 10:31 PM ^

Good mindset to have... amazing how many times you see a $100k+ car parked in a physicians lot.  Yes, doctors work hard to get where they are... but everyone else at the hospital/practice not making that kind of salary still reserve the right to think you are a complete d-bag.  Ok to own those cars, not ok to drive them to work.  Seems like this should be pretty universal amongst professions.

Kewaga.

March 10th, 2015 at 9:34 PM ^

1) Physician's Assistant (Economics undergrad)

2) 2009 VW Jetta, (good deal, low millage, manual, fun to drive)... will trick out a bit instead of spending a LOT more money on an Audi or BMW

3) (0= none, 10= most)... me 4/10, I care somewhat, but I want a reasonable deal. Am a Buddhist, so one tenet is being nonattached to material things... so working towards keeping that number down... maybe try for 3.5/10 

...In my younger years 8/10  

ptrack

March 10th, 2015 at 9:34 PM ^

1) Computer / Electrical engineer

2) 2002 Subaru WRX that I bought sophmore year of college

3) No social pressure but a personal goal of replacing it with a Tesla Model 3 or whatever they call it if it is cheap enough when the WRX dies...

M-GoGirl

March 10th, 2015 at 9:35 PM ^

  1. I talk to people with software/other IT problems all day and tell them, with what they think over the phone must be a straight face, "No, [sir/ma'am], that's okay, there are no stupid questions. Really."  Seriously, I've been asked if by "the space bar" I meant the long skinny one on the bottom!
  2. 2007 Ford Escape XLT - with it I face winter fearlessly and it lugs my kayaks/bikes around nicely in the summer.
  3. When I turned 40, I stopped giving a rip what other people think.