Name Game: The History of Car Model Names

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  • Опубликовано: 2 дек 2022
  • A classic car connaisseur tells the general history of various model names used by carmakers. How do these car brands come up with them? We also talk about general trends as well as mistakes, leading to rather long, strange, weird and inappropriate car names.
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    edsautoreviews@gmail.com
    Enjoy!
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Комментарии • 916

  • @EdsAutoReviews
    @EdsAutoReviews  Год назад +150

    What is the last time you bought a:
    BMW Individual M760Li xDrive Model V12 Excellence THE NEXT 100 YEARS ?

    • @bigwalter3274
      @bigwalter3274 Год назад +10

      i dunno, too long of a name to remember

    • @darracqboy
      @darracqboy Год назад +2

      Tru

    • @hifiteen49
      @hifiteen49 Год назад +13

      T O Y O T A C O R O L L A

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 Год назад +13

      I've got my "Happy, Happy, Joy Joy" on order from China now. Of course its the XLGLTDSTurbo ExtremeLuxo 2000 Brougham Cabriolet Model. I'm no fool.

    • @jimurrata6785
      @jimurrata6785 Год назад +5

      I really love the word soup that was Japanese car naming in the '80's & '90's.
      It seemed they threw the alphabet in a blender or were staring at tea leaves trying to read their fortune.

  • @nicolauslr9937
    @nicolauslr9937 Год назад +237

    Still hoping for a video about people 's cars around the world. Like comparison of VW Beetle, FIAT 500, Citroen 2CV etc..

    • @tarnin
      @tarnin Год назад +9

      I was going to reply something very similar to this. I think Ed would do justice to it.

    • @stanojevicnatasa2514
      @stanojevicnatasa2514 Год назад +12

      I agree. Don't forget Trabant, Srena 105 and Zastava 750.

    • @DavidBugea
      @DavidBugea Год назад +11

      What would be a good choice for the US? I guess most would agree on the Model T, with production of 15 million units.

    • @realcanadian96
      @realcanadian96 Год назад +2

      A true people's car is one like the Defender.

    • @mbryson2899
      @mbryson2899 Год назад +1

      @@realcanadian96 The Land Rover?

  • @horizonoftheeast
    @horizonoftheeast Год назад +100

    For the Shuanghuan S-CEO one, it's registered in the national products catalog as a "bus" (because passenger car production permits are harder to get at that time). Buses are required to show it's registered product catalog ID on the vehicle😂 that's why you see that long string of letter-numerics

  • @monsieurbrochant7528
    @monsieurbrochant7528 Год назад +30

    3:30 As a French, the worst example of this is the Audi Etron, which literally means "turd" in French XD

    • @gcfifthgear
      @gcfifthgear Год назад

      Zut alors!

    • @BMoney8600
      @BMoney8600 5 месяцев назад +1

      Haha that’s hilarious

    • @Psycandy
      @Psycandy 12 дней назад

      Nope. Toyota MR2.

    • @Dieubussy
      @Dieubussy 10 дней назад

      @@Psycandy Or the Marcos Mentula whose name is a very dirty word in italian, much used by the writer Stendhal for his excapades.

  • @isakjohansson7134
    @isakjohansson7134 Год назад +67

    The Honda Fit/Jazz was launched with the name F*tta in Sweden, Fi*ta means p*ssy in swedish and the promotional material described it as a small on the outside but a pleasure on the inside, and a daily joy to drive. They changed the name quite fast. 😬

    • @bossfan49
      @bossfan49 Год назад +15

      I don't see the problem. 😉

    • @emilyadams3228
      @emilyadams3228 Год назад +12

      @@bossfan49 I don't, either, but maybe a video could get deeper into it.

    • @bossfan49
      @bossfan49 Год назад +2

      @@emilyadams3228 Haha, nice!

    • @ForeverHorrorLover
      @ForeverHorrorLover Год назад +9

      Similar thing happened to Chevy. They were supposed to sell one of their models under the name Kalos here in Russia (can't remember which one it was tho, either Aveo or Lanos), but changed it since "kal" means "sh¡t" in Russian lol
      Also, as an ex owner of a VW Lupo, lemme share some of my pain: in Russian Lupo is pronounced as "lupa", which by itself is nothing weird and means "magnifying glass", but if you add "za" in the beginning you'll get "zalupa", which means "d¡ckhead" or "the end of d¡ck"
      So yeah... The amount of jokes I was getting while owning it was... Magnificent

    • @Jerry_Levon
      @Jerry_Levon Год назад +2

      @@ForeverHorrorLover also Renault changed car name capture to kapture because old word сартир means toilet in russian

  • @kailahmann1823
    @kailahmann1823 Год назад +95

    Citroën did this wording game a lot, resulting in totally random looking names like "DS", "ID", "Ami 6" or "LN", which only made sense if you spell them like a French word. A Language that eats half it's letters before speaking helps with this even more.
    And then in the early 1990s Toyota brought the "MR2" to France and wondered… Nop, it's not "MR Two" for them, it's "MR deu" or "merde" :)

    • @426baron
      @426baron Год назад +10

      Someone at Toyota had done their homework, we got the Toyota MR.

    • @andiheinrich2830
      @andiheinrich2830 Год назад +2

      just a typo: it's "deux"

    • @francoisbasquin6974
      @francoisbasquin6974 Год назад +5

      Citroën also had SM (essaime = swarm) and LNA (Helena).

    • @bobroberts2371
      @bobroberts2371 Год назад +3

      I thought that " Ami 6 " meant " Gay Parre "

    • @Retroelectronic
      @Retroelectronic Год назад

      Citroën loved to use letters in the 70s and 80s, for example. CX, BX, SM, AX, XM, GS, GSA. Despite the few exceptions such as the Visa, Axel. and the like. It was the 90s when they went full on word game with the Xsara, Xantia, Saxo, Synergie/Evasion. and don't forget the whole bigger version of one model being called the Picasso. Then they started putting 'C' in front of everything. C1, C2, C3, C4, C5, C6, C8, C-Crosser, etc.

  • @stevecritchley2506
    @stevecritchley2506 Год назад +75

    A little trivia for the Aussies: In the late 60s, Holden had designed a coupe version of their regular 4-door family saloon. The marketing department were brainstorming names, but hadn't come up with anything they liked. One of the other employees took a vacation at this time, and while touring the countryside he saw a sign that read "Monaro Shire Council" and thought "Hmm, sounds promising". When he returned to work and found they still hadn't chosen a name, he said "How about Monaro?" - and a legend was born.

    • @robertmorris6529
      @robertmorris6529 Год назад +2

      @ Steve Critchley some debate over that story for about 5 years after release , also about the meaning of ' TORANA ' apparently means ' to fly '

    • @stevecritchley2506
      @stevecritchley2506 Год назад +1

      @@robertmorris6529 Well, I heard it in an interview with the man himself - I guess it's possible he made it up, but I'd have thought GMH would've called him out if that was the case. Unless of course they liked the story - marketing people, y'know :D

    • @robertmorris6529
      @robertmorris6529 Год назад +1

      @@stevecritchley2506 I did not mean to say it is not true , just the circumstance of how it occurred . Not so much a ' Holiday ' as a weekend trip .

    • @robertmorris6529
      @robertmorris6529 Год назад +1

      @@stevecritchley2506 Have found brief interview on YT with Noel Bedford about that , also an article about a car called an ELFIN GTS that may have been mistakenly called the ' Original ' MONARO . However , it is linked to an old car business called MONARO MOTORS in Melbourne Vic Australia .

    • @steved3702
      @steved3702 Год назад +3

      My Holden-rlated thought was in response to Ed's comment about names becoming less utilitarian after WWII. Holden defied the trend with the Standard, the Special and the Premier!

  • @mintyprojects
    @mintyprojects Год назад +9

    Despite being a great-looking car, I remember the Ford Probe had problems in the UK. The name was meant to evoke thoughts of the future, shooting into space and all that. Unfortunately, here it just made people think of prostate exams.

    • @emilyadams3228
      @emilyadams3228 Год назад +5

      That's why they're gone now. Everyone rectum.

  • @robertsmith-zz7ot
    @robertsmith-zz7ot Год назад +67

    Through the years Toyota named their cars "crown".
    Carolla, Cressida, Corona, Celica & Tiara all mean crown in different languages. Camry is a play on the japanese word Kamamuri which also means crown.

    • @emilyadams3228
      @emilyadams3228 Год назад +3

      I always wondered where they got Camry from. Thanks for that.

    • @uncipaws7643
      @uncipaws7643 Год назад +11

      Likewise Porsche referred numerous times to the "Carrera Panamericana" (a race on the Mexican section of the Panamerican highway). A number of models (with a more powerful engine) have been called Carrera and there is also the Panamera.

    • @steved3702
      @steved3702 Год назад

      @@uncipaws7643 Oh, I thought the Camry was in reference to the engine part. Never knew it was another 'crown'!

    • @uncipaws7643
      @uncipaws7643 Год назад +2

      @@steved3702 The name "Camry" derives from the Japanese word kanmuri (ja:冠, かんむり), meaning "crown".

    • @WatanabeNoTsuna.
      @WatanabeNoTsuna. Год назад +1

      A fellow fan of Throtle House, I see! 😂

  • @darwinskeeper421
    @darwinskeeper421 Год назад +88

    Curiously the VW Golf was originally marketed in the US as the Rabbit. This was a follow on the well loved VW Beetle and hinted at the car being fast, which it was compared to other Malaise era American cars.

    • @stanwbaker
      @stanwbaker Год назад +8

      The American market in that time would have rioted or fallen to apoplexy about a car named after a faux bourgeois game that could not carry multiple sets of clubs.

    • @P_RO_
      @P_RO_ Год назад +4

      Fast? One of the slowest cars I've ever driven or ridden in was the VW Rabbit diesel with an automatic trans, an absolute slug for acceleration. The 4 speed was a little faster and if driven gently delivered 40+ MPG om the highway. Not too many wanted them back then but they're highly sought after now by the used-veggie-oil crowd because the conversion is so simple and easy. The engines wore out fairly quickly but you could get a ring-and-bearing kit for ~$80 back then and do the whole job in one day in your backyard with a minimum of tools needed.
      A LMAO story about the diesels: I can't remember the year, but at a National VW super-meet, a VW Rabbit diesel with an automatic won the drag race event even though it was the slowest car entered. How? They were "bracket racing" and the guy who owned it was perfectly consistent with his dial-in time. When the slowest car entered wins a race something is very wrong indeed- that ain't racing folks.

    • @darwinskeeper421
      @darwinskeeper421 Год назад +5

      @@P_RO_ I was thinking in terms of the gasoline powered Rabbit, which was fairly quick at the time, remember that this is when the V8 Mustang only put out 134 hp and weighed over 3000 lb. Gasoline powered, stick shift Rabbits were also faster than the VW Beetle was in its stock form.

    • @darwinskeeper421
      @darwinskeeper421 Год назад +1

      @@stanwbaker Really? Golf was fairly popular among the American middle class at the time, and I'd wager that the majority of the Beetle's fans were middle class Americans who didn't want to a large detroit chrome-barge, and not the counterculture types the car is popularly associated with. Also, with the Deutschmark/Dollar exchange rate being what it was, the Rabbit was forced to be a more upmarket car, so golf loving middle class drivers would have been its core market.

    • @stanwbaker
      @stanwbaker Год назад +1

      @@darwinskeeper421 The Rabbit was built to a price in Westmoreland Pennsylvania.

  • @Sharion.Inuyatt
    @Sharion.Inuyatt Год назад +55

    fun fact: the Chevrolet "Nova" in Portuguese means "New" this is kind of funny now that the car is almost 50 years old.

    • @jeffreysproul9110
      @jeffreysproul9110 Год назад +4

      @Kirk Wolfe - Indie Music Originally Nova was the top trim level of Chevy II in 1962 which came standard with a 4 cylinder as a 100 series. There were the 200 and then the 300 which was called the Nova. After 1968 the Chevy II name was dropped and they were all called Nova.

    • @5610winston
      @5610winston Год назад +1

      Sixty-one, but who's counting?

    • @Sharion.Inuyatt
      @Sharion.Inuyatt Год назад +2

      @trickdodge One more fun fact: "SuperNova" in Portuguese is the name of an event that happens in space that causes a star to explode in space.

    • @jeffreysproul9110
      @jeffreysproul9110 Год назад +1

      @@5610winston No 1962 was the first model year but it was released in the Fall of 1961. My parents ordered one of the very first Chevy IIs in September 1961 and took delivery November 1962. It was a Roman Red 1962 Chevy II 300 4 door with a red interior 194 cu in I6, Power Glide automatic, and Delco AM radio. My brothers and I drove that car thru high school and I drove it the first year of college. I did get the Nova model incorrect it was a 400 and there was no 200 just 100, 300, and 400 (Nova).

    • @kuhpfau
      @kuhpfau Год назад +1

      I also find it funny to see dirty white Peugeot 205 in the "New Style" trim.

  • @kylegellner8687
    @kylegellner8687 Год назад +49

    Cadillac's alphabit soup does make some sense. For example, 'DTS' was the Deville Touring Sedan, and 'ETC' took the place of the Eldorado Touring Coupe. Then again, having a name of 'ETC' probably did little to help sell those coupes, I'm sure! LOL

    • @pdennis93
      @pdennis93 Год назад +11

      Back in the 80s, Cadillac almost called the Cimarron the Caville to go along with Seville and Deville. That would have been super ironic because Cavillie sounds a lot like Cavalier 🤣🤣🤣

    • @john_barnett
      @john_barnett Год назад +1

      I always thought the D stood for Dinosaur

    • @vwestlife
      @vwestlife Год назад

      Also with Acura you can think of the RL as Replaced Legend.

    • @samiraperi467
      @samiraperi467 Год назад +4

      @@vwestlife I can't not think of RDX as the explosive.

    • @kepanoid
      @kepanoid Год назад +2

      And SLS - Seville Luxury Sedan. What's the difference between touring and luxury? Why can't you tour in luxury? Fortunately I didn't buy into the alphabetical soup. A year ago I bought a (95) Deville Concours, a nice full size car (enormous in Europe). The name fits. Concours, konkö(r)s, kind of resembles the Finnish word konkurssi, bankruptcy. I'm feeling it already. 😆

  • @scotttaylor4546
    @scotttaylor4546 Год назад +8

    The new Impact! You'll always be the first to the accident scene.

    • @emilyadams3228
      @emilyadams3228 Год назад

      Other cars take years to learn, but for that one, you just need a crash course.

  • @bruceselenka7181
    @bruceselenka7181 Год назад +37

    I think Ford really missed the boat with the Mustang MachE. They should have used the Maverick name (which had been a car name) for the E car and brought back the Ranger name (which had been a small truck) for the small truck. Just one man's opinion.

    • @mintyprojects
      @mintyprojects Год назад +3

      I was always disappointed with the Ford Maverick. A great-sounding name (memories of Top Gun) slapped on a rather pathetic 4x4 that was just a rebadged Nissan. Or vice versa.

    • @5610winston
      @5610winston Год назад +3

      @@mintyprojects You've apparently forgotten the 1970 Maverick, a popular compact (in the context of the time) replacement for the Ford Falcon.

    • @mintyprojects
      @mintyprojects Год назад

      @@5610winston It's not a car I am familiar with. I don't believe that model made it to the UK. We only had the Ford Maverick / Nissan Terrano.

    • @5610winston
      @5610winston Год назад

      @@mintyprojects The word _maverick_ meant (originally) a stray or orphaned calf, unbranded and up for grabs in the American old west.
      At some time it came to mean a rogue or nonconformist, and eventually a card sharp played by James Garner on television.
      The American Ford Maverick was a build-it-cheaper semi-fastback two-door sedan with a 170-cubic inch (200 optional) Ford Falcon six, respectively pitifully underpowered and woefully underpowered. Eventually Ford added the 250 cubic inch six as an option, bringing performance up to barely adequate and a 302 V8 which might even be considered "rousing" when compared to a Rambler American station wagon.
      After a year or two, Ford also offered a stretch-wheelbase four-door sedan version.
      The base models were decontented to the point of barely meeting minimum government standards for legal road use, with a standard three-on-the-tree manual transmission (floor shift was an extravagantly-priced option), I'm trying to remember if power steering and brakes were even available.
      There are videos on RUclips comparing the Maverick to the Plymouth Duster from Chrysler, and the Maverick takes the worst of it (as you would expect with Chrysler having produced the promotional film..

    • @robertmorris6529
      @robertmorris6529 Год назад

      @@mintyprojects or go back to late 60's , a compact 2 Door coupe or 4 Door sedan , smaller than Falcon .

  • @darwinskeeper421
    @darwinskeeper421 Год назад +26

    I like the name Funky Cat, it gives the impression of the car being cute and fun. It also matches the styling. This might not work well for a high end car, but it works well for an entry level EV.

    • @UberLummox
      @UberLummox Год назад +1

      No offence to you. but it seems utterly ridiculous to me! 😄 Very trite, even. Especially to US ears.

    • @RingDingPing
      @RingDingPing Год назад

      I agree, it sounds funny and dynamic

    • @enisra_bowman
      @enisra_bowman Год назад +1

      it is an unusual Name in the Sea of Numbers or Made up Names and better name it Funky cat than give a Name that come from a Cat that walked over a Keyboard

    • @bandombeviews6035
      @bandombeviews6035 Год назад +1

      I’d stick with the cat idea, but maybe something less obvious. Like call it the “Tabby” or the “Calico” or another breed of cat.

  • @brokenursa9986
    @brokenursa9986 Год назад +8

    I get a chuckle out of cars with people names. Sometimes I can take them seriously, like the Nissan Silvia or Volkswagen Karmann, but others are just hilarious and baffling to me, like the Nissan Cedric or my personal favorite, the Opel Karl.

    • @kailahmann1823
      @kailahmann1823 Год назад

      "Karmann" was just the coachbuilder for those cars. "Opel Karl" (and also "Opel Adam") sounds silly, but at least have some historic background. Those Nissan names however seam to be totally random.

    • @Romiman1
      @Romiman1 Год назад

      Yes, the Opel Adam indeed is named after Adam Opel, simply the founder of Opel...

    • @Psycandy
      @Psycandy 12 дней назад

      Subaru Touring Bruce - named after Bruce Willis

  • @robertmills3682
    @robertmills3682 Год назад +25

    Okay, I have decided, you are required to continue making videos forever. You are not allowed to stop 😊

  • @danhogan4093
    @danhogan4093 Год назад +12

    A bit off topic but in the sixties and seventies Hodaka made dirt motorcycles. One model was the Wombat, the racing version was the Combat Wombat. Very catchy as I remember it fifty years later.

    • @Dave_Sisson
      @Dave_Sisson Год назад +5

      Wombats are famous for being built like tanks, nothing can damage them. So a combat wombat must be extra tough?

    • @danhogan4093
      @danhogan4093 Год назад +1

      @@Dave_Sisson I don't know but I think it was ment to be funny, thanks for the comment.

  • @stanojevicnatasa2514
    @stanojevicnatasa2514 Год назад +6

    Best story about naming a car was with Edsel, when Ford executives hired poet Marianne Moore to name a car, she proposed stupid stuff like Utopian Turtletop, Resilient Bullet, Varcity Stroke, Mongoose Civique... They sent her some money, a bouquet of roses, a "thanks but no thanks" letter and she continued stalking Ford people with some 400 letters with more than 800 equally stupid ideas.

  • @billmcdonald4335
    @billmcdonald4335 Год назад +33

    The cheap Chinese drone market has taken it to another level. Two of my favourites:
    The King Kong [now LDARC - much better] ET100
    The Happymodel Snapper 7
    Gotta love it.

    • @vulekv93
      @vulekv93 Год назад +8

      There is a chinese shotgun shell holder called, I kid you not, an "Elite Spanker"!

    • @Boric78
      @Boric78 Год назад +1

      @@vulekv93 Brings a whole new meaning to getting spanked.

    • @yi_hou3092
      @yi_hou3092 Год назад

      I thought King Kong was public domain?

    • @schinkenspringer1081
      @schinkenspringer1081 Год назад

      Dick Ass is a chinese Break component Manufacturer

    • @Boric78
      @Boric78 Год назад

      @@schinkenspringer1081 LOL

  • @IAmAnAdowablePanto2190
    @IAmAnAdowablePanto2190 Год назад +5

    I get the feeling that after Edsel's failure, AMC, Chevrolet, and Plymouth decided to go borrow some of Edsel's cars's names. Some Edsel names AMC and Chevrolet used:
    Edsel Citation -> Chevrolet Citation
    Edsel Pacer -> AMC Pacer
    Edsel Villager -> Plymouth Villager
    I said this, because Chevrolet, AMC, and Plymouth aren't own by Ford. In the 21st century, Ford and Lincoln decided to use Edsel's cars's names, as well.
    Edsel Ranger -> Ford Ranger
    Edsel Corsair -> Lincoln Corsair

  • @andreasbenning
    @andreasbenning Год назад +54

    I remember when the Honda Jazz first launched, it was supposed to be named Fitta. An imaginary nonsense name? Well.... here in Sweden that means... eh.... lady garden.
    And while we're at it, about Ford Tudor. In the very southern part of Sweden tudor is a word for..... eh.... lady buns.
    Thanks for uploading!! You're always so entertaining and educational! :)

    • @andreasbenning
      @andreasbenning Год назад +6

      @Kirk Wolfe - Indie Music Haha, yeah, I never meant that they actually named their cars after southern swedish boobs! Just an example on how some words have other meanings in different languages. 🙂

    • @chiaraj1003
      @chiaraj1003 Год назад +10

      The Ford Kuga is also a good one. Kuga means "plague" in Croatian

    • @andreasbenning
      @andreasbenning Год назад +9

      @@chiaraj1003 "Hey, that's a sick looking car!" 😄

    • @TheInstructor66
      @TheInstructor66 Год назад +16

      In Norway too!
      I am a driving instructor. One of my students (girl), told me proudly she had bougth a Jazz. I told her the story about the Fitta-name. She replied: my Jazz is pink, so it fits that name. After that she refered to her car as Fitta mi (my Fitta). 🤣

    • @andreasbenning
      @andreasbenning Год назад +4

      @@TheInstructor66 Det er kjempegreit!! 🤣 Lots of girls I know also say that they'd buy one if they were called Fitta, fits them perfectly they say. 😂 My sister briefly had a Renault Clio, she called it Klittan. (The clit) 😁

  • @Arturino_Burachelini
    @Arturino_Burachelini Год назад +6

    I will forever remember the Gaylord Gladiator XD

  • @Zyndstoff
    @Zyndstoff Год назад +15

    The letter H in the German "Fahrt" sits between the a and the r, not as shown in your video between the F and the a.
    ;-)

    • @7cougar0
      @7cougar0 Год назад +1

      Came here to see if anyone else noticed.

  • @catriona_drummond
    @catriona_drummond Год назад +13

    Many German cars follow a numbers scheme that other brands have adopted, I call it the 3-5-7, because it kinda started with BMW. They have filled up the ranks between those numbers in the last decades but even Mercedes kinda runs with it C being the third, E being the fifth letter or the Alphabet. Yes, S is not the 7th, but every similiarity has to end as some point. Audi notched it up by a number, A4, A6, A8, but you still know what they are about.
    Even Mazda kinda uses it.

    • @Romiman1
      @Romiman1 Год назад +7

      The Mercedes class letters also have origins. C means compact, E means executive and S means "Sonderklasse" (special class). G is Geländewagen (offroad car), V is van, X is cross (for trail), A is a synonym for the class of cars, which the VW Golf belongs to (in Germany even really also named "Golfklasse").

    • @jacekstaszewskimdt4944
      @jacekstaszewskimdt4944 Год назад +1

      Indeed, back then, when Audi was just a rebranded Volkswagen, they used numbers like 50, 80 and 100. Then, they decided to join the ranks of premium - "let's get better than BMW, we'll number our cars one size higher!" That's how A4 is equivalent of three series, A6 of Fiver, etc...

    • @Romiman1
      @Romiman1 Год назад

      @@jacekstaszewskimdt4944 But back than, it was more the other way around. The 50 later was rebranded as Polo (Mk1) and the 80 as Passat. And there weren't any derivatives to the 100(200) and also from Audi to the Golf Mk1 ("rabbit") and of course to the air-cooled VW-models.
      But the issue with that Audi-numbers indeed make sense! :-O

  • @stvitalkid7981
    @stvitalkid7981 Год назад +28

    Let’s not forget about the Golf’s original name in North America, the VW Rabbit.

    • @williamrutkowski
      @williamrutkowski Год назад +8

      ... and to continue the animal theme, the Fox.

    • @kailahmann1823
      @kailahmann1823 Год назад +6

      which was the "Lupo" in Mexico because of then president Vincente Fox. In Europe however the "Fox" was the replacement for the "Lupo" (and a massive technical downgrade)…

    • @oscargustavoarcosruiz8793
      @oscargustavoarcosruiz8793 Год назад

      The Latin American version of Golf was for many years, and with very bright colors, El Caribe (the Caribbean), apparently they thought golf being such an unpopular sport in Latin America the name would be counterproductive

    • @THROTTLEPOWER
      @THROTTLEPOWER Год назад

      So true

    • @kimvibk9242
      @kimvibk9242 Год назад +1

      The Fiat Ritmo was sold in the UK as Fiat Strada - and the old rear-engined Skodas, which has utilitarian alfanumeric names in most of the world (105, 130) were sold as the Estelle in that market. If anybody has other examples, please comment - I would be interested to hear.

  • @danielulz1640
    @danielulz1640 Год назад +8

    Mercury also offered the Turnpike Cruiser for the 1958 model year. I love how the failed Edsel model names were reused. Ranger, Ford pickup trim package then small pickup truck; Pacer, AMC wide compact car; Corsair, Lincoln crossover SUV and Citation, Chevrolet compact car line.

    • @5610winston
      @5610winston Год назад +1

      Edsel may have overlooked the Henry J Corsair from Kaiser-Frazer.

    • @danielulz1640
      @danielulz1640 Год назад

      @@5610winston seems like they did. Although, I think the Henry J Corsair was only available for one model year or less. Let us not forget the Chevrolet Suburban Carryall (later just Suburban) versus the Plymouth Suburban, Custom Suburban and Sport Suburban and they were contemporary models for years. And, what about the 1956 Desoto Fireflite Seville two door hardtop and the 1956 Cadillac Eldorado Seville two door hardtop!

    • @ForeverHorrorLover
      @ForeverHorrorLover Год назад

      Imo Edsel is such a nice name itself as well, but it makes perfect sense why it wasn't reused by anybody
      Such a shame :(

    • @5610winston
      @5610winston Год назад

      @@ForeverHorrorLover It could have been, but there were more issues than just the gilded nutmeg rep of the car. Edsel was not particularly popular on the production floor, not unlike Henry senior's attitudes toward labor unions.

  • @arnbo88
    @arnbo88 Год назад +2

    I like the editing in this video @9:35. It goes from pre-war black and white...fade to black (WW2) and then emerges in colour for the awakening of the new car era.

  • @georgeh6856
    @georgeh6856 Год назад +12

    When Acura was launched, at least in the USA, they had great model names like Legend and Integra. Then at some point they came out with the Acura Vigor. Ugh. Shortly after that, Acura switched to using letters instead of model names. (Yes, they are now bringing back the Integra name.) When car makers turned model names into alphabet soup, it was all just a bunch of BS to me.

    • @railtrolley
      @railtrolley Год назад +1

      The Acura brand was never sold in Australia. The Honda models used the Legend and Integra names.

    • @christopherconard2831
      @christopherconard2831 Год назад +1

      I got the impression they were going for the BMW and Mercedes market. They each have a long history of alpha numeric naming.

    • @P_RO_
      @P_RO_ Год назад

      Acura was sold exclusively in Japan for 2 years as a model by Honda; it wasn't a separate marque. Wanting to put it in the US and world market Honda made it a brand name to distance it from the small cheap cars they were known for. The ploy worked...

    • @peacefrog0521
      @peacefrog0521 Год назад

      I remember the Acura Vigor, a 5-cylinder if I’m not mistaken. Every time I heard the name, in my head I heard it with a Kennedy-esque Massachusetts accent (I.e., “VIG-aah”). Because I always thought of the word Vigor as a word JFK would have used (I don’t recall if he ever actually did).

  • @crusinscamp
    @crusinscamp Год назад +14

    Enjoy your videos.
    A favorite of mine was "Scamp". Now the first Scamps were a trim level of the Plymouth Valiant (another name I liked). They weren't so much a scamp as a grocery-getter. The name was recycled, along with the exact same badge in 1983 by Plymouth on their pick-up truck variant of the Dodge Rampage. As a Mopar guy I noticed the badge was literally the same badge used on the Plymouth Valiant Scamps of the '70s (Chrysler was going through some financial difficulties at the time, I always imagined them reaching into some dusty parts bin for the badges). I noticed because I had two '83 Plymouth Scamps at one time. They were a reasonably fun little car/pick-up truck and the Plymouth Scamp only had a one-year model run.
    Not a car name, but who could forget "fine Corinthian leather".

    • @flipflopthong2
      @flipflopthong2 Год назад +3

      The Scamp name appeared in Australia as a tiny Honda in the late 60s

    • @stevecritchley2506
      @stevecritchley2506 Год назад +2

      @@flipflopthong2 Yes, if I remember correctly it had a 360cc motorbike motor and chain drive, and an aluminium body.

    • @fireballfireball1067
      @fireballfireball1067 Год назад +3

      @@stevecritchley2506 I had one of those, they were 360 then 600cc. chain drive was the tiny sports car before the Scamp

    • @stevecritchley2506
      @stevecritchley2506 Год назад

      @@fireballfireball1067 Thanks for the correction. Was that sports car the S600?

    • @robertmorris6529
      @robertmorris6529 Год назад +2

      @@fireballfireball1067 Honda Z , I called them ZOT ' s , looked like a girl's ankle high boot

  • @dankananga
    @dankananga Год назад +3

    In the mid-2000s, a Chinese car brand called Chana came to Brazil.
    Here, "chana" is one of our several slangs which we use for the female reproductive organ.

    • @peacefrog0521
      @peacefrog0521 Год назад

      In India, “Chana” is basically chickpeas.
      And yes I enjoy eating Chana very much 😅 😊 ;-)

  • @CoimbraBertone
    @CoimbraBertone Год назад +4

    one thing that Ed didn't mention in the sporty side of thing is naming cars after racing/race tracks. Chevy Monza, Bentley Mulsanne, Ferrari Daytona, hell Pontiac decided just to confuse everyone by naming cars Le Mans and Grand Prix...and then using them in NASCAR

    • @nickmaxfracasso8376
      @nickmaxfracasso8376 2 месяца назад

      Although the Ferrari Daytona wasn't actually called that, it was called 365

  • @lucallegra
    @lucallegra Год назад +9

    Great video, names also show how car industry is attacched to local culture. I think Lancia should have been mentioned. They named cars after Roman roads in the 50s and 60s (Appia, Ardea, Flavia and so on). Something premium brand at the time did not do.

  • @valentinomanontroppo4675
    @valentinomanontroppo4675 Год назад +7

    Croma was a pretty cool name (to us Italians) (for a mediocre car). It recalls the chromatic scale, rather than chrome.
    Fiat really nailed most of their names. The iconic commercial vehicles named after ancient coins.. the cars of the unique name series (tipo, uno, punto..).. the evergreen panda! And I always loved the name ritmo
    Cheers.

    • @Jeroen74
      @Jeroen74 Год назад

      In The Netherlands, Croma is a brand of cooking butter. Allegedly the Dutch importer begged Fiat to the change the name, but they wouldn't budge.

    • @valentinomanontroppo4675
      @valentinomanontroppo4675 Год назад +1

      @@Jeroen74 the bossman Agnelli himself decided on that name, there was no way they'd ever change it

  • @GSimpsonOAM
    @GSimpsonOAM Год назад +3

    There was the Mazda Bongo Brownie Birdwatcher.
    There was some logic to it though
    Bongo - Van
    Brownie - Has seats (people mover)
    Birdwatcher - Has windows in roof (to see birds?)

  • @uncinarynin
    @uncinarynin Год назад +4

    VW used number codes but the nickname "Käfer"/"Bug"/"Beetle" stuck ...
    In F(H)ART you put the H in the wrong place, it would be FAHRT.
    Golf can be a multitude of things; apparently they thought about the gulfstream but of course it is also a sport and with the Polo they continued with that sports theme.
    In their SUV line they seem to prefer T-names (T-cross, Taigo, Tiguan, Touareg). Taigo might refer to Taiga, a type of landscape. Tiguan, a hybrid of tiger and iguana? Touareg, desert people of north Africa.
    As I'm actually a car-less railway nut, let me add that only recently the rolling stock manufacturers have started giving their products names, like the Siemens Vectron, Desiro, Mireo and Velaro, the Bombardier (then Alstom) Traxx and Talent. A series of unit trains by Alstom is named Coradia (not sure that means anything in any language). Stadler has a number of products with names like Flirt, Kiss, Smile, Wink, Tina, Tango, Butler, all designed to be acronyms (Flirt = Flinker leichter Intercity- und Regional-Triebzug). All those names came up roughly in the last 20-25 years, before that it was often just the class number of the railway mostly ordering them in the first place ... but that also has to do with the transformation of the railway industry, which no longer is just building products designed by the engineering departments of the state railways, but sell a standardized product to a multitude of customers.

  • @jetsons101
    @jetsons101 Год назад +3

    The longest American car name that I can think of is the "Rambler American Cross Country Super Deluxe." A neighbor has a 1960 sitting in his backyard, and it still runs.

    • @gcfifthgear
      @gcfifthgear Год назад +2

      How about the Chevrolet Caprice Classic Brougham LS? Circa 1986

  • @studebricker2845
    @studebricker2845 Год назад +8

    I shouldn't have been surprised that Studebaker was the first manufacturer to give cars unique names, since they were the oldest, if not the most preeminent, car company of the early 1900s. And yes, I am a fan, and Commander owner.

  • @vwestlife
    @vwestlife Год назад +2

    That story about the Chevy Nova is purely mythical. It was probably made up by someone who took one year of Spanish in school and thought they knew more about naming cars that the entire marketing department of the Latin American division of General Motors.
    But the prevalence of the myth might have caused GM to initially avoid using the name Buick LaCrosse in Canada, because of its similarity to Québécois slang for "masturbation" or "scam". However, beginning with the car's second generation, Buick began using the name LaCrosse in Canada as well, because they realized that people are perfectly capable of differentiating between local Quebec slang and the internationally known sport of lacrosse, which is played in Canada.
    Plus there are marketing advantages to using the same name internationally, especially since the majority of Canadians live near the U.S. border, so they would've heard and seen the LaCrosse name used in U.S. media anyway.

  • @leonb2637
    @leonb2637 Год назад +13

    Yea ! Another fine video from our favorite car history commentator. Car model naming is an interesting subject.
    You brought up the Ford model Probe. That had its roots in the naming of Ford's show cars in the 1960's and the 1980's. The Ford Probe was going to be the replacement of the Mustang using that name in the late 1980's. Traditional Mustang fans ended that idea, with the traditional RWD Mustang retained and continued to this day. With limited time to rename, they used the name for the show cars that led up to the Probe design in both generations.

  • @bobtepedino5661
    @bobtepedino5661 Год назад +5

    The 1926 Chrysler Imperial is the oldest image-descriptive car name I can think of.

    • @strawberryhellcat4738
      @strawberryhellcat4738 Год назад +2

      Would the Rolls Royce Silver Ghost count? Produced 1906-1926 (officially given the name in 1925 when it's successor, the Phantom series was released).

    • @bobtepedino5661
      @bobtepedino5661 Год назад

      @@strawberryhellcat4738 You're right!

  • @tolkien777
    @tolkien777 Год назад +10

    You know I've always loved Japanese car naming schemes , as odd they can be
    Some commonalities within Toyotas schemes , Crown , Carina , Corolla , Cresta , Corona , that being things related to helms or headwear and the Soarers sporty marque, iconic names like the Skyline and Silvia, and even the underrated name- the Nissan Cedric (which means dearly loved), aswell as sporty names like Leopard and luxury like Cefiro (soft gentle wind) on Nissans behalf and even realted to the Space race , the Mazda Cosmo
    Over the years there have been some odd choices for Japanese car names , Charade (didn't go well in the US because it brought imagery of a lie, or "charade"), Carina ED (the ED stands for Exciting Dressy ??? 💀) And the Autozam Clef ...an odd choice aswell as Naked , Scrum , Tank , Elf or even one of the weirdest - Isuzu Mysterious Utility Wizard ???
    Aswell Japan has had more practical names , of the likes of Eunos 300, Toyota Mark II , Autozam AZ3 , Nissan-Infinity Q45 and so on
    And that's why I like Japanese naming practices , some are goofy , some are good representations of the car or period of themes the car is made to portray...and some are just practical plain names but there's a balanced preportion of all

    • @shaunw9270
      @shaunw9270 Год назад +2

      Always wondered why the hell Nissan named a car Cedric!

    • @shaunw9270
      @shaunw9270 Год назад +1

      Funniest thing I remember growing up were the wheezy asthmatic rust buckets that Austin had the bright idea to name Allegro.

    • @tolkien777
      @tolkien777 Год назад

      @@shaunw9270 Allegro, "a movement in brisk speed" , a definite false advertisement 😂

    • @shaunw9270
      @shaunw9270 Год назад

      @@tolkien777 Indeed ! 😅

    • @stanwbaker
      @stanwbaker Год назад

      @@shaunw9270 It was after literary character Cedric Errol., aka Little Lord Fauntleroy.

  • @heide_witzka2861
    @heide_witzka2861 Год назад +2

    It should be noted that Citroën was slow to notice the double meaning of DS. Similar puns were subsequently made with the model designation of other Citroën models as well: In French as in German, the economy model "ID" associates the word Idee/Idea ("idée"); the letter combination of the DS successor "CX" stands in French for the flow resistance coefficient (German: cw). Thanks for the great video!

  • @fluttzkrieg4392
    @fluttzkrieg4392 Год назад +2

    Here in Brazil, we had the VW Gol, which was a domestically produced design based on the Golf and the most sold car model ever in the country, more than even the Fusca (Beetle). They literally just took one letter out and yet it's one of the most favorite words in our language: It's what we say when the team were rooting for scores in a soccer game.

  • @alexanderboulton2123
    @alexanderboulton2123 Год назад +3

    When I think of naming puns I think of the Geo Metro, whose name is the most interesting thing about it

  • @paulmclaughlin4092
    @paulmclaughlin4092 Год назад +4

    An honorable mention should have gone to the crazy lengths Ford went to try and get a name for what ended up as the Edsel model, and maybe the Ostentatienne Opera Sedan from MOHS

    • @themoviedealers
      @themoviedealers Год назад

      The MOHS vehicles deserve a video of their own. I used to love seeing the MOHS Safarikar on display at the auto collection at the Imperial Palace Hotel in Vegas. I went there many times. Long gone I think.

  • @mbryson2899
    @mbryson2899 Год назад +2

    Trim names can often augment the name, e.g. Mercury Gran Marquis de Sade, with its all leather accommodations and all those special seatbelts.

  • @jcumpston7449
    @jcumpston7449 Год назад +3

    Ford Tudor, there was also the Fordor. I wonder if the FORDor came first?

  • @firstsmoofy
    @firstsmoofy Год назад +14

    Ed, I've followed you from the beginning. I always enjoy your informative, well researched presentations.

  • @esteban1487
    @esteban1487 Год назад +4

    Great episode, Ed!

  • @michaelcroos4713
    @michaelcroos4713 Год назад +1

    You will love this... Back in the early 50's, America was making inroads in the Caribbean with their retail markets. One product was SANKA, an instant coffee by Nestle's. Unfortunately, the brand had a name that did not work out on many islands of the Caribbean, including Aruba, Bonaire, and Curacao... On those islands, SANKA means "butthole".

  • @kimallen4132
    @kimallen4132 Год назад +2

    I used to have a Starion and would get the giggles every time I drove it! 😂

  • @kevinbarry71
    @kevinbarry71 Год назад +3

    My favorite name for a car ever was the Daihatsu Charade. The name literally means, absurd pretense.

  • @Prairieshutterbug64
    @Prairieshutterbug64 Год назад +2

    Another great video Ed. Thanks!

  • @Donald_Shaw
    @Donald_Shaw Год назад

    Excellent Ed... simply excellent video. Thanks so much for posting your great videos.

  • @SiqueScarface
    @SiqueScarface Год назад +3

    Russian car names can also be quite cryptic, so cryptic, that their importers in other countries abandoned the name of the car altogether and came up with completely new names. That's why the VAZ-21043-02 was sold as Lada Nova abroad.

  • @AtheistOrphan
    @AtheistOrphan Год назад +12

    The Austin (BL/Rover) Metro was initially called the ‘MiniMetro’ because train manufacturer Metro-cammell objected to the name. (Just in case people confused a tiny hatchback car with a bloody great train!)

    • @glen1555
      @glen1555 Год назад +4

      Granada Television (original slogan "from the North - Granada Television "), wanted Ford of England to change the name of its Zodiac replacement from Granada to something else. As though car buyers are going to confuse a big Ford with a company that rented out colour tellies and made a popular long running half hour drama series

  • @Blaklege63
    @Blaklege63 Год назад +1

    Ed. You are a greatly under appreciated channel.

  • @mythosallen32
    @mythosallen32 Год назад +2

    I always thought that the golf was named after the game. The GTI seats are usually a plaid pattern and the shift knob resembles a golf ball.

    • @0cer0
      @0cer0 Год назад

      They developed the line in both directions: Golf and Polo are lawn sports, Golf, Passat, Bora, and Scirocco are strong winds.

    • @michelmartin3064
      @michelmartin3064 Год назад

      They started with wind names : Passat, Scirocco,and Golf, wich is altogether a wind and a sport, but with the success of the Golf, they stuck to the sports theme with the Polo. But later models came back to winds : Bora, Vento, Corrado. Today, except for the « historic » names (Golf and Passat) they have forgotten the idea to name their cars with wind names.

  • @FunctionalHistories
    @FunctionalHistories Год назад +3

    Best moment...made me giggle. 15:32 Great video, Ed! Thank you so much for the EDucation! -Vic

  • @esteban1487
    @esteban1487 Год назад +4

    A lot of alliteration by anxious announcers placed in powerful posts!

  • @gerardoguerrero2471
    @gerardoguerrero2471 Год назад

    History episodes aré simply the best, making the wait worth It!!!! Perhaps the best car channel ever!!!! Congrats

  • @peterbockholm3176
    @peterbockholm3176 Год назад

    I'm glad to se your channel grow, great videos that are interesting and have great humor. 👍

  • @digitalrailroader
    @digitalrailroader Год назад +7

    You mentioned the Cadillac DTS, and yet you didn’t mention it’s platform mate that was named after a beautiful alpine city in Switzerland! (I am of course talking about the Buick Lucerne!)
    EDIT: you might not see it, but a few of the Cadillac names actually have a hidden meaning: DTS=Deville Touring Sedan, STS=Seville Touring Sedan, CTS=Catera Touring Sedan

    • @TheAllMightyGodofCod
      @TheAllMightyGodofCod Год назад +2

      Talking about the DTS... That would make for an amazing name in Portuguese (and other Latin languages) as it is the acronym for.... Sexually Transmitted Disease.

    • @emilyadams3228
      @emilyadams3228 Год назад +2

      @@TheAllMightyGodofCod It would go viral.

    • @TheAllMightyGodofCod
      @TheAllMightyGodofCod Год назад +2

      @@emilyadams3228 for sure!

  • @gringov625
    @gringov625 Год назад +4

    Excellent episode 👍🏼

  • @paulsemeraro
    @paulsemeraro Год назад +2

    What a great video! Thanks EAR! Very cool, very funny 🙂

  • @freetolook3727
    @freetolook3727 Год назад +1

    Lumanca: Either a vitamin B complex syrup or a scientific family of slugs (snails without shells).
    😂😂😂

  • @joermnyc
    @joermnyc Год назад +3

    Nothing bests “The Excellent” for a car name.

  • @LuckysMotorcycles
    @LuckysMotorcycles Год назад +3

    I’m expecting the “Kia 4Q “, any day now .

  • @captlazer5509
    @captlazer5509 Год назад +2

    The Chinese car names are the most original thing about the vehicles, as the designs look very familiar.

  • @jaycarlson927
    @jaycarlson927 Год назад

    Your research for your videos is top notch!

  • @kellingtonlink956
    @kellingtonlink956 Год назад +3

    The last car certainly is a mouthful. Congratulations on taking on quite an exhausting topic…. Where to begin (good job) or where to stop (good ending). You did great. Thanks for the video.

  • @calebw8673
    @calebw8673 Год назад +3

    One interesting thing I see when it comes to car names is the Buick Electra, which could be used for future EVs.

    • @gcfifthgear
      @gcfifthgear Год назад

      Buick has in fact registered "Electra" as a trademark for its future S(YOU)Vs

  • @Brickyard4738
    @Brickyard4738 Год назад +1

    Haha this one was funny! Great video. The LaPuta had me cracking up.

  • @coffeebert6644
    @coffeebert6644 Год назад +2

    As always - great video

  • @YeeSoest
    @YeeSoest Год назад +3

    My entire life I wanted to make and design my own sportscar and name it XLR-8
    Only sold in english speaking markets
    When Cadillac built the XLR and from the sides at least it looked dramatically like my XLR-8 sketch I was CONVINCED they had stolen my sketches... From the scribble pages I still had in my backpack. Sneaky fu...

  • @darwinskeeper421
    @darwinskeeper421 Год назад +6

    I didn't know that Laputa meant prostitution in Spanish, my mind was going to the Miyazaki film "Castle in the Sky" which involved the search for the flying city of Laputa.

    • @estebanmorales6487
      @estebanmorales6487 Год назад +2

      Oh, it's funnier than that, actually. "La puta" is quite the swear, somthing you would exclamate when you whack your thumb with a hammer while trying to drive in a nail. Not quite promissing for a car...

    • @jon-paulfilkins7820
      @jon-paulfilkins7820 Год назад +2

      The Name Laputa was taken from a Jonathan Swift story in his Gulliver's Travels series.

    • @freeculture
      @freeculture Год назад

      "The Bitch" or "The Whore".

    • @overkill9_83
      @overkill9_83 2 месяца назад

      That movie is kind of a joke in Spanish speaking countries. Even Ghibli fans consider it "The movie you can not take seriously"

  • @christopherkraft1327
    @christopherkraft1327 Год назад

    Hey Ed, thanks for sharing this fun video about car names!!! 👍👍🌲

  • @nicholaskajfasz9558
    @nicholaskajfasz9558 Год назад

    Great video and well done. Great explanations and I like your commentary.

  • @andoletube
    @andoletube Год назад +7

    It should be mentioned that a lot of cars had different names in different regions of the world - this was to avoid the problem of trying to find a name that sounds good in every language.

    • @benjaminrobinson3842
      @benjaminrobinson3842 Год назад +2

      Interesting fact: What North Americans know as the "Z car" was sold as the "Fairlady" in Japan. The executive who named it supposedly happened to be a fan of the musical "My Fair Lady."

    • @althejazzman
      @althejazzman Год назад

      @@benjaminrobinson3842 You've been watching Big Car, right?

    • @steved3702
      @steved3702 Год назад +1

      @@benjaminrobinson3842 The Cedric got a lot of flak for using such a dowdy name. Probably why they went to numbers and letters. Interestingly the letters often related to the Japanese names: Cedric became the xxxC, Bluebird the xxxB, Silvia the xxxSX and Sunny the xxxY (presumably since S was used by the Silvia, so they went to the other end of the word).

  • @OLDS98
    @OLDS98 Год назад +4

    Ed: you do such a great job on your videos. I always get so caught up in your videos because you spend time on the videos and do extensive research. I smile a lot watching your videos when you talk about GM and Ford( Lincoln and Mercury ) and share what you have learned. As we know sadly the Alero and Intrigue failed. Oldsmobile should have used more well known Oldsmobile names for their new models. Intrigue should have been Cutlass and Alero should have been Omega or Calais and Aurora should have been Toronado. Those are just my thoughts. Thank you for another good video. I enjoy especially when you mention global brands and names too. You know there were two Caprices at one time? The Holden and Chevrolet versions. Both are GM brands.

    • @gcfifthgear
      @gcfifthgear Год назад

      As you no doubt know, Oldsmobile dumped its old names for new as part of the "Not Your Father's Oldsmobile" image change. The Alero, in fact, replaced the last Cutlass, which was a clone of the 1997 Chevy Malibu. Some even considered renaming the Oldsmobile division "Aurora"--you may recall that the name "Oldsmobile" appeared on the 1995 Aurora only on the car's radio dial...

    • @OLDS98
      @OLDS98 Год назад

      @@gcfifthgear I understand your response and appreciate your comments. I need to clarify a few things. Intrigue was supposed to be the Cutlass Supreme, but they decided on Intrigue as a change of direction. That car was on the W Body platform. The Cutlass you refer to was based on the Chevrolet Malibu as you stated. That Cutlass that ran from 1997-1999 was to replace Cutlass Ciera. The Alero filled the segment that was held by the: Oldsmobile Calais, Oldsmobile Cutlass Calais and the Oldsmobile Achieva. The Alero was on the same platform as Pontiac Grand Am. The Alero replaced all of those models in the same segment not the Cutlass Supreme or Cutlass name. The 1997-1999 Cutlass was a place holder until the Alero arrived. They did consider renaming the Oldsmobile division as Aurora, but that did not happen thankfully. The second generation Aurora was not supposed to be the Aurora. It was supposed to be a car called Antares or Anthem. It was supposed to replace the Eighty Eight. The 1995-2000 Oldsmobile Aurora they said replaced the Toronado and Ninety Eight. I do not think it did personally. I could see the Toronado. That plan that changed Oldsmobile was not the this is not your father's Oldsmobile campaign. The plan to update the brand was called the " Centennial plan" to celebrate Oldsmobile's 100 years in 1997. As far as the radio in the Aurora, it was not on the dial, but on the radio face plate. I know because I own a 1996 Oldsmobile 98 and a 1992 Oldsmobile Toronado. The Aurora shared parts with the Ninety Eight and Eighty Eight and LSS in the 1995-1999 time frame.

  • @kc1423
    @kc1423 Год назад +1

    "...the jungle, that are trim levels."
    This is a damn good metaphor. Ed, you are VERY good at writing. and this isn't even your first language!

  • @TonyLasagna
    @TonyLasagna Год назад

    Not sure how I missed this one, but it’s a banger as always. F**k yeah, Ed!

  • @muznick
    @muznick Год назад +3

    The best Chinese names can be found on Amazon. They seem to grab a handful of letters out of a bag and arrange them in random to create their product names.

  • @themoviedealers
    @themoviedealers Год назад +3

    Look up the list of potential names for the (Ford) Edsel. There were some real head scratchers on there. The one I remember is the Utopian Turtletop.

  • @abbeyhall4624
    @abbeyhall4624 Год назад

    Nice one Ed! Very entertaining of you

  • @dsdonovan
    @dsdonovan Год назад +2

    Another great video!

  • @rogersmith7396
    @rogersmith7396 Год назад +3

    They called the P 47 "the Jug". I could see a car named Jugs.

    • @brokenursa9986
      @brokenursa9986 Год назад

      Sadly, they decided to actually take the name seriously, and used the P-47’s official nickname, Thunderbolt, for the muscle variant of the Ford Fairlane.

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 Год назад +1

      @@brokenursa9986 Unfortunate as my favorite movie is "Mother, Jugs, and Speed".

  • @leecrt967
    @leecrt967 Год назад +3

    Don't forget the Buick Reatta. A name that sounds like a cross between a yachting event and some Sub-Saharan gastrointestinal disease.

  • @1_Papa
    @1_Papa Год назад

    The most fun of all of your videos so far! I love how the extra-helpings of Alphabet Soup begin @ 14:19, but don't stop until you choke from laughing at the big surprise finish! I should have popped popcorn before I watched this one! 🍿!
    🐰!

  • @DSP1968
    @DSP1968 Год назад

    A great history and summary, Ed.

  • @rwall514
    @rwall514 Год назад +5

    I want a Daihatsu N A K E D.

  • @334578x
    @334578x Год назад +6

    Ed, we want to see more of YOU in the videos!

  • @unclemarksdiyauto
    @unclemarksdiyauto Год назад +2

    Of all the carmakers models, I think the S-CEO HBJ6474Y has a nice ring to it! (Not!) Weird names. Thanks for your research into this topic! As always, a great video Ed.

  • @ronaldmiller2740
    @ronaldmiller2740 Год назад

    HI ED'S,, GREAT VIDEO!!! WHAT A CLASS LESSON ON CARS I DID'NT KNOW.. THE WORLD NOW KNOWS THANK'S TO YOU!!! PEACE...

  • @adidragan
    @adidragan Год назад +5

    If you want to talk pretentious names, have a look at caravans, they are king of pretentious and ostentatious names, stuff like Premier Adventurer ExcelsiorLine XL, so some crappy small plastic fantastic 2-person towed caravan...

  • @mbryson2899
    @mbryson2899 Год назад +1

    A family a few doors down once owned both a Probe and a Vibe. We chuckled, they grinned.

  • @L4sleeko
    @L4sleeko Год назад +2

    I've always been intrigued by the name Biscayne. Though a low model Chevrolet, it always sounded so exotic to me.

    • @gcfifthgear
      @gcfifthgear Год назад +1

      At the time the Biscayne was introduced, it was one of Chevy's "resort" names. Delray, Biscayne and Bel Air were glamorous names (a beach and a bay in Florida and a suburb of Los Angeles, respectively). You may remember former President Richard Nixon's summer home was at Key Biscayne, Florida

  • @AtheistOrphan
    @AtheistOrphan Год назад +6

    Couple of car name titbits:
    The original name for the Austin Champ was ‘Nuffield Mechanisations Gutty’
    Rolls-Royce were going to name a car ‘Silver Mist’, which sounds delightful, but unfortunately Mist means ‘Dung’ in German.

  • @JackBWatkins
    @JackBWatkins Год назад +4

    I don’t know which is harder, naming rock bands or naming cars. Maybe it’s time to switch band names and car names. Would you drive a car named “Kiss” or “The Who?”

    • @brokenursa9986
      @brokenursa9986 Год назад +2

      I would absolutely drive a car called the “Destiny Potato”.

    • @JMFuller
      @JMFuller Год назад +3

      I like this idea. Porno for Pyros, Suicidal Tendencies, Anthrax, Garbage, Orgy, Slayer. I guess we would have to choose names more carefully. Although, Scorpions would be a cool name. We could use some names as paint colors. Black Sabbath, White Zombie, Pink Floyd, Green Day, Deep Purple, Red Hot Chili Peppers.😆😆

    • @jimurrata6785
      @jimurrata6785 Год назад +2

      ​@@JMFuller there was the short lived Merkur Scorpio here in the States. (late '80's)

    • @JackBWatkins
      @JackBWatkins Год назад

      @@jimurrata6785 was Sting the lead singer?

    • @jimurrata6785
      @jimurrata6785 Год назад

      @@JackBWatkins he _was_ when I saw the Police at MSG in the '80's