You guys should listen to his intro again, Ford F150 is best seller in all states. He is talking about cars that are selling better in particular state, not best seller in that state. So car could be 15th on best seller list but it's 30th in all other states it would make it that state's car.
@@johncee853 quick google searches can be deceiving. Notice I said Ford not F-150. Ok I admit I was just trying to get a rise out of someone,but GM did sell more trucks than Ford for at least a few years. Edit: Silverado and Sierra are basically the same truck
2022 actual best sellers; Alabama Toyota Camry Alaska Ram Pickup 1500 Arizona Ram Pickup 1500 Arkansas GMC Sierra 1500 California Honda Civic Colorado Ford F-150 Connecticut Honda CR-V Delaware Chevrolet Silverado 1500 Florida Toyota RAV4 Georgia Ford F-150 Hawaii Nissan Frontier Idaho Ford F-150 Illinois Hyundai Tucson Indiana Chevrolet Silverado 1500 Iowa Ford F-150 Kansas Ford F-150 Kentucky Ram Pickup 1500 Louisiana Ford F-150 Maine Ford F-150 Maryland Honda CR-V Massachusetts Toyota RAV4 Michigan Ram Pickup 1500 Minnesota Ford F-150 Mississippi Ford F-150 Missouri Chevrolet Silverado 1500 Montana Ford F-150 Nebraska Ford F-150 Nevada Ram Pickup 1500 New Hampshire Toyota Tacoma New Jersey Honda CR-V New Mexico Ford F-150 New York Honda CR-V North Carolina Toyota Camry North Dakota Ford F-150 Ohio Ram Pickup 1500 Oklahoma Ford F-150 Oregon Toyota Tacoma Pennsylvania Honda CR-V Rhode Island Toyota Highlander South Carolina Toyota RAV4 South Dakota Ford F-150 Tennessee Ford F-150 Texas Ford F-150 Utah Ford F-150 Vermont Subaru Crosstrek Virginia Honda CR-V Washington Toyota Tacoma West Virginia Chevrolet Silverado 1500 Wisconsin Ford F-150 Wyoming Ford F-150
In NJ it's quite common to see really nice classic cars just driving around about their business a lot too. And I mean privately owned, people just going about their business driving their classic car.
Slag the Grand Caravans if you want, but pre-pandemic it was east to find a 2 year old used one decently equipped for $20k and under 20k miles. Plus with the seats folded in the floor you could get a ton of stuff in there.
They're practical for sure but to my knowledge listening to a lot of mechanics' opinions if you want value there isn't really any other minivan worth buying when compared to the toyota sienna. They can run for over 300,000 miles with little issues and you can spend under 10k on a 10+ year old one with 150,000 miles or so and it will probably outlast a brand new caravan. Maybe invest closer to 20k if you want a newer one with the fold in seats.
In fact, I just went to a site that listed the best-selling vehicle in every state in 2021 and the overwhelming majority were pick-up trucks (40 out of 50 and most of the time of American origin.) For Ohio the top five were Ford F-Series, followed by Ram, followed by Chevy Silverado, followed by Honda CR-V (manufactured in Ohio) followed by Chevy Equinox, the last two are crossovers. We own a Chevy Equinox. We have in the past owned a Chevy Silverado and a Chevy Colorado.
Mike got the CA Tesla sound right--it's so pedestrians hear it. Should you visit CA or Arizona, you might see me driving a Dodge Caravan because that's what I rent to travel from northern CA to southern AZ for the winter. I need the cargo capacity to haul all the "stuff" I need to take for 5 months. If you laugh, I'll pepper spray you. People in Nevada and other big retirement states buy cars like Fiat because they only drive to the supermarket. They don't need a hot road car and at 75 aren't likely to want one. There is, however, one exception to that. Affluent retirees very often buy the "dream car" of their youth like a Mustang or Corvette or Camaro or Dodge Charger. Then they drive that to the supermarket and polish it when they get home.
I'd think that weather could play a big part in this. In the southern US they can mostly get smaller cars but in the north they would need SUVs and trucks because they have to deal with snow and harsher weather conditions. If American made cars could go more than 80k miles without having major issues that costs thousands of dollars they would probably be doing better here. They have not proven over the last 30 years that they can make as reliable cars as Asia, or Europe unfortunately. My family always bought American and eventually switched to Asian because they last twice as long and are more reliable.
@@jchristif Same. As a kid my mom had a Honda Odyssey and that thing was dope when you're in the middle bucket seats with a TV and automatic sliding doors. I don't think it makes sense for me to own anything bigger than a sedan though. Or anyone for that matter unless you need a pickup for work or have a bunch of kids and need an SUV.
Practicality is so much sexier in a car than anything else for most Americans, if we're going any long distance we need that space 😂 not really giving up cause you can't do anything without utility
I use to live in northern NH, the majority of the population is in the southern part of the state, however once you get above the city of Hanover and into the more rural areas, it's Jeeps, with Ford, Chevy, Toyota and Ram trucks, same can be said of northern VT.
One of the things that wouldn't show up in a sales list in Florida is classic cars. You see an absolute ton of great old cars down here. Lots of old folks with money who have gone and found the car they wanted in high school.
🇨🇦 We once ("Dominion of" Canada) had a grand selection of British cars. Everywhere - TR4/6/7, MGB, Cortina .. loved my '70 Rover saloon. We Americanized, e.g. won't see anyone over 25 in a hot hatch.
That Volvo that has the highest milage ever is Irv Gordon's Volvo p1800. The car has over 3.2 million miles. It belonged to Irv Gordon a former teacher.
I live in Illinois and my sister has that mini van and I have a Mitsubishi SUV 🤣I told her when she got her van that she had just given up her cool mom status and that I would get an 8 person SUV before I ever get a van 😫(My mom had one and I hated it) But I will say most people just drive an SUV (especially ones that have 4 wheel drive since we get a lot of snow).
I'm about halfway through the list and haven't seen a Dodge Charger or Challenger, which to me is sort of shocking as I see them constantly no matter where I go. Hell, there's at least 2 Chargers and a Challenger parked outside of my building right now
Yeah, but compared to the amount of Hondas and Toyotas, Chrysler and Dodge sales are nothing. Mopar’s been on a massive sales decline since the early 2000’s, the minivan and the acquisition of Jeep has really been their only saving grace since the mid-80’s, and Dodge’s lineup with the current iterations of the Charger, Challenger, and Durango are basically 15 years old now.
@@Poopsticle_256 The Charger and Challenger, combined, sell more than 130,000 units per year. Not really bad. The Charger is actually the best selling American sedan, although, there aren't too many American sedans left. I agree, though, the Charger and Challenger are actually still based on the 1990's Mercedes E-Class chassis. They've needed a major update for a long time now. Talk about rocking something 'til the wheels fall off. I guess it doesn't matter, though, as the Charger and Challenger are set to expire next year.
Mock minivans all you want, but they're great for what they are. I drove one while in high school/secondary as did a fews guys as well; they also served as a reliable car on a number of cross country trips. Now, as a grown man, would I get one? Sure, if the minivan meets my needs. There's a YT content creator who decided to drive a classic American school bus mainly due to having a large family - and his personality sorta lent itself towards the decision.
Fun fact: That episode where Jeremy Clarkson roasted the C6 Corvette and showed the flexibility of the rear bumper was completely biased and taken out of context. The FRP material that was used a lot in the C6 and C7 Corvettes as basically like a step down from carbon fiber, since it's lightweight, durable, and the flexibility is actually a benefit. You can throw a baseball at it and it won't dent or crack. There was a video of a woman hitting her cheating husband's Corvette with a baseball bat and she couldn't damage the body, so then she took to hitting the windows. 😂 But anyone can judge anything however they seem fit, but it doesn't make it a valid judgment if there is bias involved.
Find some video on the Woodward Dream Cruise in Detroit. Every year for a week in the summer, everyone fires up their classic car and parades them down Woodward, just like in the 60's and 70's. My Dad was an engineer at GM for 30 years. They used to take cars from ggd Tech Center out onto Woodward & Gratiot to test them out by street racing on Saturday nights.
The prices in this video seem extremely low. It must be a few years old. These may be foreign brands but many of them are made in US factories. Most of the foreign brands now have such factories here, mostly in "right to work" states where the plants are non-union.
Here in California and LA especially we still have pretty awful smog even though it’s nowhere near as bad as decades prior. Flat land with surrounding mountain ranges creates a sort of bowl and traps everything in. That’s why the EV craze has taken off here. Also the Oil companies have a monopoly and they can raise the prices essentially whenever they feel like it. California has gas prices just as close to European nations than other US states.
Smog is actually due to the weather (and pollution!). When there's a high pressure system creating sinking but warming air, pushing down on a marine layer (a cooler layer of air created from the cool Pacific Ocean), the particulate matter trapped within this marine layer can't mix out; cold air can't rise into the warmer air (temperature inversion). That air pollution is trapped and builds until it creates a fog (smog). /nerdfest
I haven't owned a car in 30 years.. 60now. I have a Silverado now, previous owned 3 S-10s, all at once. The 94 SS, a 03 crew cab and 98 with 4cyl/5spd. I just made a business proposal that will require me to get a 4WD. I'm looking at used trucks that are $35k. Some new trucks are $60k and higher.
Regarding "foreign" cars, referring to some of them as foreign owned is more accurate. In the southeast, I live within an hour of a Honda plant and Mercedes plant, and probably ones I'm forgetting
These types of lists are so pointless and not representative of real life. There are way more Dodge Ram and Ford F150 trucks in Alabama than the stupid vehicle they said.
The video is old. SUVs are big in a lot of states. Toyota Rav4, Subaru Forester, Subaru Crosstrek are examples of high demand vehicles. It matters where you live in that up north cars made for winter are more important. 4WD and AWD are definitely a consideration when you have to battle winter conditions. Many people own Subarus here, but a lot of them are older. They hold their value. I live in Maine.
7:13 In Georgia, Dodge Chargers and Challengers (Hellcats and SCAT Packs) are way more common than Nissan Leaf lmao (At least in metro Atlanta). Even with the credit on taxes, hard to believe that.
My understanding of this is that unless they were going on new vehicle registrations, the concept was what was unusually popular in each state. So, when something is selling at 400% of the national average, then that vehicle is unusually popular in that state. I can assure that the Chevy Cruze is not and never was the most popular or numerous car in Ohio. Today as we were walking over to the firehouse for an AUCE pancake breakfast (It's Feb-March and the maple syrup is beginning to run) we saw 8 trucks parked in a row, then 4 SUV or crossover type vehicles, not a single sedan among them.
The prices listed in the videos are for the absolute lowest base models of each vehicle. I'm not sure you can actually even get a 2 wheel drive single cab V6 F-150 for 24k dollars. A 4wheel drive quad cab V8 F-150 XLT model sells for around $45K.
F-150 is the number one selling vehicle in most of these states and it's not very close. Usually followed by Silverado's and Ram's. But that would have been boring I guess. Some of these their listing for market share doesn't say much. Like it listed The Altima for TN, and it's like 2% at most. In many other cases other cars are more popular as well it's just they do not have a distinctive marketshare in that state. (like Camry likely beats out percentage in many of these states then the car featured. Last, You need to try riding in a Chrysler Pacifica, it might change your mind on mini vans. It's like a luxury sedan, pickup, and minivan had a child. Very comfy, lots of power, good handling, and low road noise, not like any minivan I have driven before. Also I am kinda surprised Jeep didn't come up more I can only speak for the southeast, but there are Jeeps everywhere. Granted it's split between several models. I see more Jeeps then Altimas though.
Must be an old video, they don’t make Nissan Xterra’s anymore. I drive one. As an Alaskan I can definitely confirm that Subaru’s are definitely the states cast up here.
You're decades behind on the horrors of minivans. My grade school teachers' shell-shocked husbands would drive us around in them, looking like terminal patients hoping for euthanasia. I'm incredibly sorry how much we laughed at them.
On the artificial sound thing. With my C-Max hybrid in battery mode is silent especially in parking lots and city driving. People don't realize how much they rely on all of their senses walking about. I have to be careful because people just step out in front of me because they can't hear me. I think they see the car, but because it is nearly silent they think it is parked or stopped.
Yeah, that is why in California they mandated all EVs have to have engine noise. People were getting hit at night because they did not hear the car coming.
I can't imagine getting stuck in traffic with a Tesla and the battery running out. Honda Civic Sedans are not $19,000 MSRP in NY they were more than that in 2019. You see a lot of different Honda's, Toyota's, Subaru's and Chevrolet's around in NY State and you see a lot of pickup trucks/SUV'S. Their so full of crap on the MSRP prices. They have them listed cheaper. Even listed for 5 years ago.
Electric vehicles are so much more dangerous from a firefighter's perspective regarding fighting car fires. It's easier to get a vehicle loan for a new vehicle than a used one. If it's repossessed the bank can sell a new car with lower miles for more money. Chrysler and Jeep are American by now are of an international group that also owns Fiat. It's one of the reasons that j at Fiats are so popular here. I happen to agree with you guys about minivans! Lmao!
It sucks that the source video is misleading. Especially for the pickup trucks, those prices DO NOT reflect the model shown. There are numerous trim packages, ranging from work truck with hand crank windows and manual locks to fully loaded with all the bells and whistles. Fully loaded ones are approaching the 100K mark brand new these days but are equipped extremely well.
I live in Arizona and I don't see a lot of Fiat 500s, at least not in my city of Tucson, I do see a shit load of trucks and trucks of all models I wonder if he was just doing the most popular cars in the biggest cities of each state.
I don’t know where these figures come from but I know this is bullshit. I can personally attest to the fact that Fiat anything is a fraction of total cars on the road in Las Vegas where most of the population lives. In NC full size pickups and SUV’s have to be at least 50% of what’s on the road in most counties. If General Motors quit selling pick ups and SUV’s, they’d go out of business in one year.
Not sure where this guy gets his info from but definitely far off from the truth. Arizona resident here and we drive supposedly drive Nissan Leafs....Actually havent seen one out here at all...maybe 1 out of every few thousand is a leaf. We drive big trucks and SUV.s. F150 and Silverados everywhere. Toyota Tundras also. As far as cars go, lots of Teslas and depend what part of town youre in, wego from German to American muscle...lots and lots of American Muscle. And no, Americam Muscle is for teenagers, its for us older guys still living that childhood dream and the need for power and speed. I personally always had a truck and my fun car is the Dodge Charger V8 Hemo RT
You guys should listen to his intro again, Ford F150 is best seller in all states. He is talking about cars that are selling better in particular state, not best seller in that state. So car could be 15th on best seller list but it's 30th in all other states it would make it that state's car.
YOU should listen more, they acknowledged that.
Ford is actually not the number one truck seller anymore.
@@jrhackman7414 46 straight years thru 2022. They most certainly are. A quick and easy Google search will confirm it for yourself.
@@johncee853 quick google searches can be deceiving. Notice I said Ford not F-150. Ok I admit I was just trying to get a rise out of someone,but GM did sell more trucks than Ford for at least a few years.
Edit: Silverado and Sierra are basically the same truck
@@jrhackman7414 The quick Google search isn't deceiving at all. You are the one trying to be deceiving here buddy.
Video is 4 years old guys, prices are much higher now
2022 actual best sellers;
Alabama Toyota Camry
Alaska Ram Pickup 1500
Arizona Ram Pickup 1500
Arkansas GMC Sierra 1500
California Honda Civic
Colorado Ford F-150
Connecticut Honda CR-V
Delaware Chevrolet Silverado 1500
Florida Toyota RAV4
Georgia Ford F-150
Hawaii Nissan Frontier
Idaho Ford F-150
Illinois Hyundai Tucson
Indiana Chevrolet Silverado 1500
Iowa Ford F-150
Kansas Ford F-150
Kentucky Ram Pickup 1500
Louisiana Ford F-150
Maine Ford F-150
Maryland Honda CR-V
Massachusetts Toyota RAV4
Michigan Ram Pickup 1500
Minnesota Ford F-150
Mississippi Ford F-150
Missouri Chevrolet Silverado 1500
Montana Ford F-150
Nebraska Ford F-150
Nevada Ram Pickup 1500
New Hampshire Toyota Tacoma
New Jersey Honda CR-V
New Mexico Ford F-150
New York Honda CR-V
North Carolina Toyota Camry
North Dakota Ford F-150
Ohio Ram Pickup 1500
Oklahoma Ford F-150
Oregon Toyota Tacoma
Pennsylvania Honda CR-V
Rhode Island Toyota Highlander
South Carolina Toyota RAV4
South Dakota Ford F-150
Tennessee Ford F-150
Texas Ford F-150
Utah Ford F-150
Vermont Subaru Crosstrek
Virginia Honda CR-V
Washington Toyota Tacoma
West Virginia Chevrolet Silverado 1500
Wisconsin Ford F-150
Wyoming Ford F-150
In NJ it's quite common to see really nice classic cars just driving around about their business a lot too. And I mean privately owned, people just going about their business driving their classic car.
Slag the Grand Caravans if you want, but pre-pandemic it was east to find a 2 year old used one decently equipped for $20k and under 20k miles. Plus with the seats folded in the floor you could get a ton of stuff in there.
They're practical for sure but to my knowledge listening to a lot of mechanics' opinions if you want value there isn't really any other minivan worth buying when compared to the toyota sienna. They can run for over 300,000 miles with little issues and you can spend under 10k on a 10+ year old one with 150,000 miles or so and it will probably outlast a brand new caravan. Maybe invest closer to 20k if you want a newer one with the fold in seats.
In fact, I just went to a site that listed the best-selling vehicle in every state in 2021 and the overwhelming majority were pick-up trucks (40 out of 50 and most of the time of American origin.) For Ohio the top five were Ford F-Series, followed by Ram, followed by Chevy Silverado, followed by Honda CR-V (manufactured in Ohio) followed by Chevy Equinox, the last two are crossovers. We own a Chevy Equinox. We have in the past owned a Chevy Silverado and a Chevy Colorado.
I'm in Kentucky but I have Michigan's car, the Chevy Malibu. My last three cars were all Malibus, the first one I bought when I lived in Florida.
We live in Michigan and just recently got the Chevy Malibu funny enough.
Mike got the CA Tesla sound right--it's so pedestrians hear it. Should you visit CA or Arizona, you might see me driving a Dodge Caravan because that's what I rent to travel from northern CA to southern AZ for the winter. I need the cargo capacity to haul all the "stuff" I need to take for 5 months. If you laugh, I'll pepper spray you.
People in Nevada and other big retirement states buy cars like Fiat because they only drive to the supermarket. They don't need a hot road car and at 75 aren't likely to want one. There is, however, one exception to that. Affluent retirees very often buy the "dream car" of their youth like a Mustang or Corvette or Camaro or Dodge Charger. Then they drive that to the supermarket and polish it when they get home.
This is an old video. New f150 for $21,000? Not a chance
V6 base price around $45,000 for a 2023
The 2019 model (someone said the video is 4 years old) might still be selling for $21,000. LOL
@@BTinSF maybe. I think it’s older than that. He referenced 2016 a couple times
I'd think that weather could play a big part in this. In the southern US they can mostly get smaller cars but in the north they would need SUVs and trucks because they have to deal with snow and harsher weather conditions. If American made cars could go more than 80k miles without having major issues that costs thousands of dollars they would probably be doing better here. They have not proven over the last 30 years that they can make as reliable cars as Asia, or Europe unfortunately. My family always bought American and eventually switched to Asian because they last twice as long and are more reliable.
Mini vans, while hideous..are really nice to drive. So much room and they're surprisingly fast if you don't have a ton of passengers in it.
you're still driving a minivan, and the minivan is the most evil thing humanity ever came up with... even worse than religion and slavery.
They do drive really well, my step mom had a Honda odyssey but I’m not ever buying one
@@jchristif Same. As a kid my mom had a Honda Odyssey and that thing was dope when you're in the middle bucket seats with a TV and automatic sliding doors.
I don't think it makes sense for me to own anything bigger than a sedan though. Or anyone for that matter unless you need a pickup for work or have a bunch of kids and need an SUV.
They’re nice to drive but let’s be honest, they’re not fast, there are cars out there that are FAST
@@TheRedStateBlue This is the dumbest thing I've read on the internet today. And I've been on Reddit too.
Practicality is so much sexier in a car than anything else for most Americans, if we're going any long distance we need that space 😂 not really giving up cause you can't do anything without utility
But we also tend to buy Expeditions over Minivans in some states
I use to live in northern NH, the majority of the population is in the southern part of the state, however once you get above the city of Hanover and into the more rural areas, it's Jeeps, with Ford, Chevy, Toyota and Ram trucks, same can be said of northern VT.
The prices are lower because the reporter said this video is from 2016. The prices have almost doubled by 2023 prices.
Colorado gal here....by far the most popular vehicles are either Subarus and Jeeps along with F150s
Colorado guy here, I like my Hyundai!
Yea as a former colorado citizen... You always saw subarus more prevalent....least up in the northern area
One of the things that wouldn't show up in a sales list in Florida is classic cars. You see an absolute ton of great old cars down here. Lots of old folks with money who have gone and found the car they wanted in high school.
The car noise is 100 percent a safety thing. People kept getting hit because they could hear it, especially blind people of course.
mike misheard the truck's price as 12000 but narrator said 21000
The data is from 2016; seven years ago. NFG. A few things have changed since then.
🇨🇦 We once ("Dominion of" Canada) had a grand selection of British cars. Everywhere - TR4/6/7, MGB, Cortina .. loved my '70 Rover saloon. We Americanized, e.g. won't see anyone over 25 in a hot hatch.
That Volvo that has the highest milage ever is Irv Gordon's Volvo p1800. The car has over 3.2 million miles. It belonged to Irv Gordon a former teacher.
I live in Illinois and my sister has that mini van and I have a Mitsubishi SUV 🤣I told her when she got her van that she had just given up her cool mom status and that I would get an 8 person SUV before I ever get a van 😫(My mom had one and I hated it) But I will say most people just drive an SUV (especially ones that have 4 wheel drive since we get a lot of snow).
I'm about halfway through the list and haven't seen a Dodge Charger or Challenger, which to me is sort of shocking as I see them constantly no matter where I go. Hell, there's at least 2 Chargers and a Challenger parked outside of my building right now
Yeah, but compared to the amount of Hondas and Toyotas, Chrysler and Dodge sales are nothing. Mopar’s been on a massive sales decline since the early 2000’s, the minivan and the acquisition of Jeep has really been their only saving grace since the mid-80’s, and Dodge’s lineup with the current iterations of the Charger, Challenger, and Durango are basically 15 years old now.
@@Poopsticle_256 The Charger and Challenger, combined, sell more than 130,000 units per year. Not really bad. The Charger is actually the best selling American sedan, although, there aren't too many American sedans left. I agree, though, the Charger and Challenger are actually still based on the 1990's Mercedes E-Class chassis. They've needed a major update for a long time now. Talk about rocking something 'til the wheels fall off. I guess it doesn't matter, though, as the Charger and Challenger are set to expire next year.
Mock minivans all you want, but they're great for what they are. I drove one while in high school/secondary as did a fews guys as well; they also served as a reliable car on a number of cross country trips. Now, as a grown man, would I get one? Sure, if the minivan meets my needs. There's a YT content creator who decided to drive a classic American school bus mainly due to having a large family - and his personality sorta lent itself towards the decision.
These prices are old, real old prices. The F150 starts at like $30K nowadays.
Fun fact: That episode where Jeremy Clarkson roasted the C6 Corvette and showed the flexibility of the rear bumper was completely biased and taken out of context. The FRP material that was used a lot in the C6 and C7 Corvettes as basically like a step down from carbon fiber, since it's lightweight, durable, and the flexibility is actually a benefit. You can throw a baseball at it and it won't dent or crack. There was a video of a woman hitting her cheating husband's Corvette with a baseball bat and she couldn't damage the body, so then she took to hitting the windows. 😂 But anyone can judge anything however they seem fit, but it doesn't make it a valid judgment if there is bias involved.
Find some video on the Woodward Dream Cruise in Detroit. Every year for a week in the summer, everyone fires up their classic car and parades them down Woodward, just like in the 60's and 70's. My Dad was an engineer at GM for 30 years. They used to take cars from ggd Tech Center out onto Woodward & Gratiot to test them out by street racing on Saturday nights.
Btw the ford f150 is not 12000 usd, I think you switched the numbers cause it's more like 21000 to 33000 usd.
The prices in this video seem extremely low. It must be a few years old.
These may be foreign brands but many of them are made in US factories. Most of the foreign brands now have such factories here, mostly in "right to work" states where the plants are non-union.
Here in California and LA especially we still have pretty awful smog even though it’s nowhere near as bad as decades prior. Flat land with surrounding mountain ranges creates a sort of bowl and traps everything in. That’s why the EV craze has taken off here. Also the Oil companies have a monopoly and they can raise the prices essentially whenever they feel like it. California has gas prices just as close to European nations than other US states.
They should have built giant tunnels with huge fans in them thru the mountains to suck the smog out of San Bernadino years ago!
Smog is actually due to the weather (and pollution!). When there's a high pressure system creating sinking but warming air, pushing down on a marine layer (a cooler layer of air created from the cool Pacific Ocean), the particulate matter trapped within this marine layer can't mix out; cold air can't rise into the warmer air (temperature inversion). That air pollution is trapped and builds until it creates a fog (smog). /nerdfest
I haven't owned a car in 30 years.. 60now.
I have a Silverado now, previous owned 3 S-10s, all at once. The 94 SS, a 03 crew cab and 98 with 4cyl/5spd.
I just made a business proposal that will require me to get a 4WD.
I'm looking at used trucks that are $35k.
Some new trucks are
$60k and higher.
Can't help but be curious as to what you blokes are driving
I’m pretty sure the Subaru Forester is the most popular car in Vermont.
Regarding "foreign" cars, referring to some of them as foreign owned is more accurate. In the southeast, I live within an hour of a Honda plant and Mercedes plant, and probably ones I'm forgetting
I bet the Blokes would love 'Hot August Nights' in Reno/Sparks, NV.
These types of lists are so pointless and not representative of real life. There are way more Dodge Ram and Ford F150 trucks in Alabama than the stupid vehicle they said.
The video is old. SUVs are big in a lot of states. Toyota Rav4, Subaru Forester, Subaru Crosstrek are examples of high demand vehicles. It matters where you live in that up north cars made for winter are more important. 4WD and AWD are definitely a consideration when you have to battle winter conditions. Many people own Subarus here, but a lot of them are older. They hold their value. I live in Maine.
7:13 In Georgia, Dodge Chargers and Challengers (Hellcats and SCAT Packs) are way more common than Nissan Leaf lmao (At least in metro Atlanta). Even with the credit on taxes, hard to believe that.
I drive a 17 Caravan, I'm so offended.
This is mostly about availability. Indiana for example has huge Buick dealerships or those majorly Buicks so people pick them up.
I don’t think anyone in Alabama has bought a new car in years😂
My understanding of this is that unless they were going on new vehicle registrations, the concept was what was unusually popular in each state. So, when something is selling at 400% of the national average, then that vehicle is unusually popular in that state. I can assure that the Chevy Cruze is not and never was the most popular or numerous car in Ohio. Today as we were walking over to the firehouse for an AUCE pancake breakfast (It's Feb-March and the maple syrup is beginning to run) we saw 8 trucks parked in a row, then 4 SUV or crossover type vehicles, not a single sedan among them.
The prices listed in the videos are for the absolute lowest base models of each vehicle. I'm not sure you can actually even get a 2 wheel drive single cab V6 F-150 for 24k dollars. A 4wheel drive quad cab V8 F-150 XLT model sells for around $45K.
F-150 is the number one selling vehicle in most of these states and it's not very close. Usually followed by Silverado's and Ram's. But that would have been boring I guess. Some of these their listing for market share doesn't say much. Like it listed The Altima for TN, and it's like 2% at most. In many other cases other cars are more popular as well it's just they do not have a distinctive marketshare in that state. (like Camry likely beats out percentage in many of these states then the car featured. Last, You need to try riding in a Chrysler Pacifica, it might change your mind on mini vans. It's like a luxury sedan, pickup, and minivan had a child. Very comfy, lots of power, good handling, and low road noise, not like any minivan I have driven before. Also I am kinda surprised Jeep didn't come up more I can only speak for the southeast, but there are Jeeps everywhere. Granted it's split between several models. I see more Jeeps then Altimas though.
39 states the Ford F-Series is the most owned. All 2016 numbers, it's so different now
I've never seen a fiat in AZ in my whole life.
I live south of Tucson and I have a neighbor who has 2, "His" and "Hers". They are an older retired couple.
The 1991 dodge Daytona was the best car in NY in the 90s... I miss those days
Must be an old video, they don’t make Nissan Xterra’s anymore. I drive one. As an Alaskan I can definitely confirm that Subaru’s are definitely the states cast up here.
Fellow Alaskan and can confirm, can't tell you all the times I've seen lifted pickups being pulled out of snow by a subie lol
@@TheHDInstinct yep, great vehicles for the snow!!
You're decades behind on the horrors of minivans. My grade school teachers' shell-shocked husbands would drive us around in them, looking like terminal patients hoping for euthanasia. I'm incredibly sorry how much we laughed at them.
I thought the most popular car in Oregon would be the IT Bike from South Park.
In Toronto, everybody and their uncle drives a fucking range rover. 😂😂
The Tesla engine is nice. You can use petroleum or electric. Drives smooth by itself on the highway
On the artificial sound thing. With my C-Max hybrid in battery mode is silent especially in parking lots and city driving. People don't realize how much they rely on all of their senses walking about. I have to be careful because people just step out in front of me because they can't hear me. I think they see the car, but because it is nearly silent they think it is parked or stopped.
Yeah, that is why in California they mandated all EVs have to have engine noise. People were getting hit at night because they did not hear the car coming.
In Hawaii you can have passengers in the bed of a pickup truck on the freeway.
I can't imagine getting stuck in traffic with a Tesla and the battery running out. Honda Civic Sedans are not $19,000 MSRP in NY they were more than that in 2019. You see a lot of different Honda's, Toyota's, Subaru's and Chevrolet's around in NY State and you see a lot of pickup trucks/SUV'S.
Their so full of crap on the MSRP prices. They have them listed cheaper. Even listed for 5 years ago.
Kia assembly plant is on the boarder of Alabama … there are things like that impacting this list I’m sure
13:40 you haven’t tried buying a car here after Covid, and the chip shortage
Electric vehicles are so much more dangerous from a firefighter's perspective regarding fighting car fires.
It's easier to get a vehicle loan for a new vehicle than a used one.
If it's repossessed the bank can sell a new car with lower miles for more money.
Chrysler and Jeep are American by now are of an international group that also owns Fiat. It's one of the reasons that j at Fiats are so popular here.
I happen to agree with you guys about minivans! Lmao!
Connecticut's car wasn't a van. It was an SUV. Nissan Rouge.
It sucks that the source video is misleading. Especially for the pickup trucks, those prices DO NOT reflect the model shown. There are numerous trim packages, ranging from work truck with hand crank windows and manual locks to fully loaded with all the bells and whistles. Fully loaded ones are approaching the 100K mark brand new these days but are equipped extremely well.
it is called auto plant all the foreign cars we build in us so you get tax breaks and the a plan where if you work for auto you family gets discounts
I live in Arizona and I don't see a lot of Fiat 500s, at least not in my city of Tucson, I do see a shit load of trucks and trucks of all models I wonder if he was just doing the most popular cars in the biggest cities of each state.
I've seen waayyy more Honda CR-Vs in Minnesota than Ford Tauruses
This is old. The leaf was basically free for a while in GA because of National and GA tax breaks.
Nissan Altima is the official car of the city of Memphis Tennessee
Surprised KY wasn't the Camry or Ford F-150 since so many are made there.
You guys aren't paying attention. Some of these could be 10th, or even 20th most popular in that states sales.
Coming from someone from Georgia, I’ve never seen a fucking Nissan leaf in my life….
Nevada = Strippers and dancers and all that...Fiat fits that stereotype
Not there yet….But i would think Corvette or mustang In Indiana.
This may be a stupid question but did Mike ever talk about his New York trip on the podcast or on video
The Brits really like Aston Martin. Go figure 😆
I'm surprised there are so many rolls in this country. I love them, but who can afford them.
I live in Indiana and my mom drive a Buick Encore
Honda civic, Toyota Camry, Chevy Impala. CHICAGO
Hey, I’m from Chicago, don’t hate on my Impala 😢
@@andirandolph8830 I'm right there with my Camry
What car was that with the green in the front that they paused on?
7+ seat SUVs have largely killed off the minivan market IMO.
I don’t know where these figures come from but I know this is bullshit.
I can personally attest to the fact that Fiat anything is a fraction of total cars on the road in Las Vegas where most of the population lives.
In NC full size pickups and SUV’s have to be at least 50% of what’s on the road in most counties. If General Motors quit selling pick ups and SUV’s, they’d go out of business in one year.
These prices are probably closer to double or triple the $$$ now. This video has OLD DATA.
Donut did the most popular cars in the World 🌎 by Country
OK, now Volvo is owned by a Chinese company. Let's see how that goes moving forward...
Cadillac didnt even show up once
I live in Ohio, I don't see many Chevy Cruises on the road. I'm not buying this .
21,000 usd is 17,426 gbp
Right now, maybe, but it varies. Just a month or two ago the dollar and pound were very near parity. The dollar was briefly worth more than the Euro.
Based on some of the prices that video must be old
Hello everyone!
look at pictures of volvo crashes and tell me what you think lol..
I call 🐂 💩, Minnesota is DEFINITELY Subaru
Not sure where this guy gets his info from but definitely far off from the truth. Arizona resident here and we drive supposedly drive Nissan Leafs....Actually havent seen one out here at all...maybe 1 out of every few thousand is a leaf. We drive big trucks and SUV.s. F150 and Silverados everywhere. Toyota Tundras also. As far as cars go, lots of Teslas and depend what part of town youre in, wego from German to American muscle...lots and lots of American Muscle. And no, Americam Muscle is for teenagers, its for us older guys still living that childhood dream and the need for power and speed. I personally always had a truck and my fun car is the Dodge Charger V8 Hemo RT
The data in this video is clearly out-dated. I wonder what the current data would be.
What an odd and confusing way to rank "most popular" cars.
Can y’all please react to all def roast me season 5 episode 9
This list is bs. It goes against what other states buy. So if your state buys 2 and every other state buys 1 it’s 100% above national average
This list is dumb. Honda Civics and pick up trucks are the best selling cars in every state
They stopped making the Nissan Xterra in 2015 🤔🤔🤔
Alabama is a poor state and Kia is a cheap car.
March madness best moments reaction please
Alabama is a poor state
This video is old and outdated. It’s at least four or five years old, so not relevant anymore.