Santa Fe, Tucson, Florida, Traverse, Montego, Monterey, Fairlane, Orlando, Daytona, Laguna, Torino, Cayenne, Cayman.....You could do this for hours! [Technically the Cayman was named after the reptile, not the island....But the reptile was named after the island so indirectly it is correct.]
Seat, the Spanish subsidiary of Vw, used Spanish cities as names of their cars: Marbella, Arosa,Ibiza,Cordoba, Malaga, Alhambra, Leon, Toledo..They are proud of their country and they know how to show it!
Boy there were so many out there, the list could have gone up to 50. The Monte Carlo came to mind immediately, the Park Avenue, the Dodge Daytona, etc. But still a pretty cool list.
Thank you for this nice idea 🎉👍 Spanish Brand SEAT has used the name „Cordoba“ for a Subcompact Sedan, almost forgotten even in Europe . The Ford Cortina was sold in Germany as the Ford „Taunus“ Taunus is the name of a hilly area, next to Rhine-Main-Airbase and Rammstein Airbase.
The '68 Pontiac LeMans was designed by Anatole Lapine, a Latvian immigrant to the United States. He later left GM and went to work for Porsche, where he designed the 924 and 928. If you look at a 928 carefully, you will see a tiny amount of '68 LeMans in the design, especially at the rear.
20 - thought about Alfa Romeo Milano (75 in Europe) at first, forgot about Mercury Milan, actually never saw it here, in Ukraine. Thanks for the video! Didn't know that Montego named after city in Jamaica or that Camry/Corolla means "crown" in different languages for example.
Another obscure one is the Austin Kimberley. Obscure even to UK Austin fans and even in Australia where it came from. Named after a remote Australian region where gold and diamond discoveries were in the news in the early seventies when the short lived car was launched. One of the few front wheel drive cars with a transverse straight six. To satisfy Australia's preference for straight sixes.
9:36 - that grille was an homage to Subaru's aircraft background. It's a head-on look at a plane. The middle is a fuselage, and the shapes to each side are wings.
I knew most of these as a car fan there are some famous ones missing Cadillac Seville Oldsmobile Aurora Lincoln Versailles Lincoln/Mercury Capri also a Ford in UK and Australia
I agree, but I hate ones like the pontiac lemans, which use them parasitically and disingenuously. Pontiac never raced at Le Mans (and pulled out of racing entirely) and contributed nothing to the storied name, yet capitalized on the fame of the racetrack built from marques like Porsche (and Ford for that matter), to put the name on their boat of a car. It was a brilliant car, but had nothing to do with the racer or racers, nor the city.
My dad bought a 1997 LHS brand new. I want to pick up a 2003 Concorde LXi when I get around to it (they're getting awfully hard to find)... My dad was an engineer at the plant that made them, and I worked on the line as a part-time job while I was in school. Lots of nostalgia for me.
Pleased to say i got the Cortina just from the bob sled intro. Sold well in Australia helped by the Cortina GT versiond winning the 1963, 64 and 65 Bathurst 500 mile race , even up against Studebaker V8 and much more poweful six cylinder cars. Also got the Monaco and Bonneville from the intro.
Enjoyed watching this and playing along waaay too much!!! Great idea/concept. Especially enjoyed the Schoolhouse Rock reference. 😂 Looking forward to part two. 😊
Confusedly, I laughed aloud at Joe Montana as the spokesman for “masculine itch powder”. Only to quickly realize the connection. Well played Sir, well played.
The Chrysler Cordoba was one of the cars I right away thought of at the very beginning of the video. A Pontiac that a lot of people probably aren't familiar with that was named after a place in the Western US is the Phoenix.
Whereas Australians, despite being pretty good at geography as a rule, will have had little idea of many of these. I got the Fairmont (AU), Le Mans, Montego, Monaco & Bentley Mulsanne right.
That was fun, and I enjoyed that clip from "Schoolhouse Rock!" Some others that come to mind are the Pontiac Phoenix, although I suspect it was named after the mythical creature, the Plymouth Sapporo and the Pontiac Ventura.
Lonsdale-A short lived car marque in the UK. Australian built Mitsubishi Sigmas were sold under this name to get around import quotas. Named after the suburb which was home to the Mitsubishi engine factory.
For 12 at 7:15 , I was thinking the Triumph Mayflower glossing over that you wanted a brand. As a kid seeing old ones still being driven, i thought they looked like a mini Rolls Royce.
Very cool video idea. I wasn't sure about it at first. But I quickly got into it and enjoyed guessing. I didn't get a perfect score. But I did better than I thought I would.
Credit to you, ( I know doing stuff like that is time consuming, but worth the results) very good mix of global cars, time periods & dare I say it was educational. Shocked I got 17, looking forward to your next one.
That Cordoba looks like a Monte Carlo. I thought for sure you'd mention Monte Carlo and when you were talking about the Avalon, I thought you were going to say Catalina. And when you were talking about the Biscayne, I thought you'd say Daytona, though the Bay part took it out the running. And instead of 5th Avenue, I thought you were going to say Park Avenue. Would Fairlane have qualified, since that was Henry Ford's estate? You could have easily done this as models in the US, only.
Speaking of Bentley and Le Mans, there's also the Arnage, another car named after one of the circuit's sections. I expect Ferrari California to be featured on part 2 because the car's not produced anymore. And maybe something more popular like Chevy Bel Air, Dodge Aspen, Buick Riviera, Ford Torino Talladega, Dodge Daytona, Bentley Brooklands and Dodge Dakota.
Thank you for a fun video. That was quite interesting especially with the footage. What was interesting what you said about sedans falling out of favor suvs and crossovers. It is true. The other thing you said that was interesting was the fact they do not use names that mean something and use letters and numbers that are not good at all.
In Brazil we had our version of the GM J-Body car also called Chevrolet Monza. It was produced from 1982 until 1996 and it was a copy of Opel Ascona C (another car named after a place). GM didn't use this name in Brazil because it remembers the word "Asco", which means "disgust" in Portuguese.
Oh man, when I was in elementary school, my science teacher had a really nice looking and sporty Chevy Monza hatchback. Which made me want to buy one when I was old enough. Sadly, I never did.
Number 20: also the Alfa Romeo Milano (named 75 in Europe). Number 16: the Gran Prix of Monaco is better known as Gran Prix of Montecarlo. Monaco is also the name of a city in Germany (BMW has its home in Monaco). Number 2. Alfa Romeo was born in Milano, and for many years his principal home was in Arese (a little city near Milano), and a subsidiary home in Pomigliano d'Arco (near Napoli). Torino is out of games with Alfa Romeo.
17:35 US changed the way they rated horsepower in 1974. So it seemed like horsepower was down in many cars, while they often had the same or more power.
Very interesting, Here are a few you could use if you do a part two. Chrysler Newport, Saratoga. Chevrolet Belair. Ford Fairlane, Delrio. Mercury Monterey, Montclair, Parklane. Studebaker Deltona. Edsel Bermuda. Lincoln Capri.
My mom had a Chrysler Cordoba well into late 2000’s. She made the Montalbán leather comment every time I saw it 😂 It was fun to dive I gotta say, it’d pass anything on the highway like it was upset it was behind another car…
Where did you get that awesome aerial footage of the Piazza del Duomo in Milan? In my experience, the place always has more pigeons than it does air molecules so it was fascinating to see what it is really meant to look like.
What still came to my mind when mentioninv the Dodge Monaco is the Chevrolet Monte Carlo. And of cours Seat with naming its products after all the Spanish islands and citys. And the Ferrari 360 Modena, Alfa Romeo Montreal, Cadillac Calais, Chevy Bel Air, Opel Ascona, Renault Floride, Chrysler Aspen, Lincoln Versailles and I think many, many more…
I drove a lot of Mercury Milans (usually black with a cream interior) as rental cars when I was a traveling consultant between 2006 and 2013. They were not bad cars and I preferred them greatly to the Ford version. You didn't get Le Mans wrong. You pronounced it the same way the manufacturer sold it.
When you came to the Ford Cortina all I could think of was Opel Ascona, only Ascona is in Switzerland. SAAB made the 96 Monte Carlo in the early sixties. The Toyota was a tough one, in Europe it is a Camry.
Interesting that the US perception of the Pontiac LeMans is that it’s Korean. Its a European Astra/Kadett so very much a GM product through and through, not Korean. Also, in the UK we bizarrely got the Vauxhall Royale and Opel Monza competing against each other
I'm surprised on the last clip, you didn't include the point where "Elwood" states "The new Oldsmobiles are in early" 😀 Oldsmobile is, of course, another extinct American brand. I guessed maybe half of these, and there were a few I didn't know were named after a place.
Theres an spanish brand (own by VW and sold in most places but the US) called Seat that all of theyre cars are named as of spanish cities (Arona, Ibiza, Ateca...)
Ford Capri, Dodge Durango, Chevrolet Cheyenne, Chevrolet Bel-Air, Chevrolet Tahoe, Hyundai Santa Fe, Dodge/Chrysler Aspen, Ford Granada, Lincoln Versailles, Pontiac Catalina, Toyota Tacoma, Chevy Colorado, Kia Sedona. Unpopular opinion: If the Mercury Milan and Buick Lacrosse made it to the list, then the contemporary Hyundai Tucson was also a candidate as it debuted for 2005MY
Dodge Aspen and SAAB Talladega also comes to mind!
Santa Fe, Tucson, Florida, Traverse, Montego, Monterey, Fairlane, Orlando, Daytona, Laguna, Torino, Cayenne, Cayman.....You could do this for hours!
[Technically the Cayman was named after the reptile, not the island....But the reptile was named after the island so indirectly it is correct.]
The Talladega was a special version of the Saab 9000.
There was also a brief chrysler aspen- a 'luxury' version of the Durango
@@nothanksguy Yes, and Durango is of course a state in Mexico so we can start yet another countdown clock...
ANNNND, the Aspen Police are famous for using the Saab 99 as patrol cars in the '70s.
Seat, the Spanish subsidiary of Vw, used Spanish cities as names of their cars: Marbella, Arosa,Ibiza,Cordoba, Malaga, Alhambra, Leon, Toledo..They are proud of their country and they know how to show it!
Well, Ibiza is an island, and Leon is a province.
At a time, most SEATs were using geographic terms: Toleda, Marbella, Leon, Ibiza, Alhambra, Malaga, Arosa.
Justamente iba a comentar eso
Cordoba as well
El Malaga se llamó Gredos en Grecia
They still are, the Leon at least still exists I am driving one
They still are. All current models are named after places in Spain.
Looking forward to part two.
Oxford
Cambridge
Capri
Most Seats
Honorable mentions!
Chevy Monte Carlo
Buick Park Avenue
Cadillac Seville
Dodge Daytona
Triumph Toledo
Could I add Pontiac Catalina?
@@christopherdouglas8471I know Monza was mentioned but not as a Corvair model.
Buick Riviera
Adding Chevy Corsica
Boy there were so many out there, the list could have gone up to 50. The Monte Carlo came to mind immediately, the Park Avenue, the Dodge Daytona, etc.
But still a pretty cool list.
Lacrosse is one of Canada's official sports though. Renaming it was one of those bizarre corporate decisions
you're probaly unaware of the meanings of this in Québec slang ( both of them doesn't make a good sale point )
Thank you for this nice idea 🎉👍
Spanish Brand SEAT has used the name „Cordoba“ for a Subcompact Sedan, almost forgotten even in Europe . The Ford Cortina was sold in Germany as the Ford „Taunus“ Taunus is the name of a hilly area, next to Rhine-Main-Airbase and Rammstein Airbase.
The '68 Pontiac LeMans was designed by Anatole Lapine, a Latvian immigrant to the United States. He later left GM and went to work for Porsche, where he designed the 924 and 928. If you look at a 928 carefully, you will see a tiny amount of '68 LeMans in the design, especially at the rear.
Here's some other good ones: Kia Sedona, Alfa Romeo Montreal, Mercury(Ford) Capri and Monterey, Chevrolet Monte Carlo, Malibu, and Bel Air.
Chevy Malibu, Alfa Romeo Milano - since I have. Great video as always!
The Milano name was only used in the US and was the 75 everywhere else.
Technically, Mulsanne is the corner at the end of the the Hunaudières Straight, but, a lot of English speakers call it the Mulsanne Straight
Actually Mulsanne is a village near the Mulsanne corner of the race track.
@@xuser48 yes, but the Bentley is named after the corner, the corner is named after the village.
I didn't realize the Mulsanne had been discontinued in 2020 until he said so. I thought he was breaking his own rule 2 minutes in.
Corinthian leather does mean something. It means vinyl made in New Jersey!!! 🤣🤣
20 - thought about Alfa Romeo Milano (75 in Europe) at first, forgot about Mercury Milan, actually never saw it here, in Ukraine. Thanks for the video! Didn't know that Montego named after city in Jamaica or that Camry/Corolla means "crown" in different languages for example.
i thought #20 was the Milano, too!
I would like to add the Chevrolet Corsica to this list. It was named after Corsica Island in France.
There is also the Ford Granada both the European and US versions.
Tis' but a flesh wound.... LOVED that clip 🤣
Dodge Durango, as in Durango Colorado, Pontiac Aztek as Aztek New Mexico,Toyota Tacoma as in Tacoma Washington those come to mind
Another obscure one is the Austin Kimberley. Obscure even to UK Austin fans and even in Australia where it came from. Named after a remote Australian region where gold and diamond discoveries were in the news in the early seventies when the short lived car was launched.
One of the few front wheel drive cars with a transverse straight six. To satisfy Australia's preference for straight sixes.
9:36 - that grille was an homage to Subaru's aircraft background. It's a head-on look at a plane. The middle is a fuselage, and the shapes to each side are wings.
Looks more like a stylized toilet seat.
I knew most of these as a car fan there are some famous ones missing Cadillac Seville Oldsmobile Aurora Lincoln Versailles Lincoln/Mercury Capri also a Ford in UK and Australia
i always prefer cars that named after a place instead of a bunch of random numbers and letters, it felt more memorable
I agree, but I hate ones like the pontiac lemans, which use them parasitically and disingenuously. Pontiac never raced at Le Mans (and pulled out of racing entirely) and contributed nothing to the storied name, yet capitalized on the fame of the racetrack built from marques like Porsche (and Ford for that matter), to put the name on their boat of a car. It was a brilliant car, but had nothing to do with the racer or racers, nor the city.
Missed the Alfa Romeo Montreal, how many different Daytonas? Aspen. Many interesting cars.
2:58 I absolutely love the New Yorker / LHS, looking forward to possibly getting one.
My dad bought a 1997 LHS brand new. I want to pick up a 2003 Concorde LXi when I get around to it (they're getting awfully hard to find)... My dad was an engineer at the plant that made them, and I worked on the line as a part-time job while I was in school. Lots of nostalgia for me.
original idea! This was awesome!
You did well to see it all in 10 minutes 😂
Pleased to say i got the Cortina just from the bob sled intro.
Sold well in Australia helped by the Cortina GT versiond winning the 1963, 64 and 65 Bathurst 500 mile race , even up against Studebaker V8 and much more poweful six cylinder cars.
Also got the Monaco and Bonneville from the intro.
Rolls Royce is owned by BMW 😉 Great video!
Keep these well done quizzes coming!
My 1988 Bonneville SSE was by far my favorite car i have ever owned. The GM 3800 engine was a dream
Seeing these old car ads are honestly the best part .+ the lesson ❤
Enjoyed watching this and playing along waaay too much!!! Great idea/concept. Especially enjoyed the Schoolhouse Rock reference. 😂
Looking forward to part two. 😊
Confusedly, I laughed aloud at Joe Montana as the spokesman for “masculine itch powder”. Only to quickly realize the connection. Well played Sir, well played.
The Chrysler Cordoba was one of the cars I right away thought of at the very beginning of the video.
A Pontiac that a lot of people probably aren't familiar with that was named after a place in the Western US is the Phoenix.
Whereas Australians, despite being pretty good at geography as a rule, will have had little idea of many of these.
I got the Fairmont (AU), Le Mans, Montego, Monaco & Bentley Mulsanne right.
They just didn't sell here though? I have read many car books so I'm aware of a lot of them.
Cool video, and what a great idea!
Besides Cortina there are other ski resort names like Aspen, Telluride, or Arosa (this shared name with Arosa/Arousa Island in Galicia)...
The 78 Ford Fairmont with the 302 (5.0L) V8 was a fast car. It also had an in-line 6cyl and a 2.3L 4cyl engine’s.
This was an interesting spin on a cool topic. Well done, Pat.
Good video. Perfect test for early onset dementia!
Love this. It's like a pub quiz, but with My Old Car. Wish my old 1997 Neon was named after someplace cool, not a noble gas.
Wow! Excellent video. 👍
This was GREAT!
I like the theme of this video. Keep the content coming!
That was fun, and I enjoyed that clip from "Schoolhouse Rock!" Some others that come to mind are the Pontiac Phoenix, although I suspect it was named after the mythical creature, the Plymouth Sapporo and the Pontiac Ventura.
Thanks for doing this, it was fun.
Lonsdale-A short lived car marque in the UK. Australian built Mitsubishi Sigmas were sold under this name to get around import quotas. Named after the suburb which was home to the Mitsubishi engine factory.
Car colors would be fun too! There were some great racing names
This was really interesting. Thanks.
I really liked this quiz format. Of course the normal episodes are good. But definitely would love to see another one.
Milan actually had two cars by two manufacturers, Alfa Romeo Milano and Mercury Milan.
For 12 at 7:15 , I was thinking the Triumph Mayflower glossing over that you wanted a brand. As a kid seeing old ones still being driven, i thought they looked like a mini Rolls Royce.
Wow, great job giving us a automotive history lesson who knew well all those car names, me and pronounced
🥴💯
Very cool video idea. I wasn't sure about it at first. But I quickly got into it and enjoyed guessing. I didn't get a perfect score. But I did better than I thought I would.
We had in 90's Europe a GM vehicle using the name of a historic Portuguese city. Based on the last gen Pontiac Transport, it was the Opel Sintra.
You should do a video about car names based on animals
Monza was also the most popular Chevrolet Corvair. Got all of these except the Jarama, (even the Florida!) mostly due to your excellent hints.
Credit to you, ( I know doing stuff like that is time consuming, but worth the results) very good mix of global cars, time periods & dare I say it was educational. Shocked I got 17, looking forward to your next one.
That Cordoba looks like a Monte Carlo. I thought for sure you'd mention Monte Carlo and when you were talking about the Avalon, I thought you were going to say Catalina. And when you were talking about the Biscayne, I thought you'd say Daytona, though the Bay part took it out the running. And instead of 5th Avenue, I thought you were going to say Park Avenue. Would Fairlane have qualified, since that was Henry Ford's estate? You could have easily done this as models in the US, only.
The Fairmont was close to Fairlane in name. And Ford Australia for run it from 1965-2007.
Great video, but I was a bit surprised that the Chevrolet Monte Carlo wasn’t in this one. Like you said, maybe the next one in the “location” series
Speaking of Bentley and Le Mans, there's also the Arnage, another car named after one of the circuit's sections.
I expect Ferrari California to be featured on part 2 because the car's not produced anymore. And maybe something more popular like Chevy Bel Air, Dodge Aspen, Buick Riviera, Ford Torino Talladega, Dodge Daytona, Bentley Brooklands and Dodge Dakota.
Thank you for a fun video. That was quite interesting especially with the footage. What was interesting what you said about sedans falling out of favor suvs and crossovers. It is true. The other thing you said that was interesting was the fact they do not use names that mean something and use letters and numbers that are not good at all.
In Brazil we had our version of the GM J-Body car also called Chevrolet Monza. It was produced from 1982 until 1996 and it was a copy of Opel Ascona C (another car named after a place). GM didn't use this name in Brazil because it remembers the word "Asco", which means "disgust" in Portuguese.
Oh man, when I was in elementary school, my science teacher had a really nice looking and sporty Chevy Monza hatchback. Which made me want to buy one when I was old enough. Sadly, I never did.
Even just limited to US cities and states there are dozens named after them
True and excellent 👌 video
Good work 👍🎉❤
Haha it just started you haven't watched any of it How do you know it's excellent or good?
Simple just the fact to think about doing this is already a win/win
Making an ambulance out of a Yugo seems like a very bad idea. No matter what your ailment, you could walk to the hospital faster.
Here in Canada we had the Pontiac Montana right until the end.
Number 20: also the Alfa Romeo Milano (named 75 in Europe).
Number 16: the Gran Prix of Monaco is better known as Gran Prix of Montecarlo. Monaco is also the name of a city in Germany (BMW has its home in Monaco).
Number 2. Alfa Romeo was born in Milano, and for many years his principal home was in Arese (a little city near Milano), and a subsidiary home in Pomigliano d'Arco (near Napoli). Torino is out of games with Alfa Romeo.
Isn't BMW in Munich?
I showed this to my kids, (14 yr & 12 yr) they had a blast throwing names out there. Was shocked they number 16....
Awe darn I was so excited looking st the thumbnail. I thought this was gonna be a video on the Montana 😭
17:35 US changed the way they rated horsepower in 1974. So it seemed like horsepower was down in many cars, while they often had the same or more power.
No they didn’t, it was the malaise era, they had less, much less.
However most big engines from the '60s had already had compression reduced by 1972.
Very interesting, Here are a few you could use if you do a part two. Chrysler Newport, Saratoga. Chevrolet Belair. Ford Fairlane, Delrio. Mercury Monterey, Montclair, Parklane. Studebaker Deltona. Edsel Bermuda. Lincoln Capri.
Saturn and Mercury 😃
In that case Jowett Jupiter😂
There is an Avalon in New Jersey.
Cooler by the mile.
In Australia the Toyota Camry and Avalon were built at Altona, just half an hour away from Avalon in VIC, Australia.
My mom had a Chrysler Cordoba well into late 2000’s. She made the Montalbán leather comment every time I saw it 😂
It was fun to dive I gotta say, it’d pass anything on the highway like it was upset it was behind another car…
Where did you get that awesome aerial footage of the Piazza del Duomo in Milan? In my experience, the place always has more pigeons than it does air molecules so it was fascinating to see what it is really meant to look like.
In Germany, the Cortina Mk III/IV/V was sold as another long-standing toponym, the Taunus, a mountain range NW of Frankfurt.
flawless video
Bel air is in Maryland.
Industrias Kaiser Argentina was the first to name one of its model “Torino” : IKA/Renault Torino (1966-1981).
Don't forget the Seat Cordoba, a sedan version of the Seat Ibiza from the Mid 90s to early 2000's.
What still came to my mind when mentioninv the Dodge Monaco is the Chevrolet Monte Carlo. And of cours Seat with naming its products after all the Spanish islands and citys. And the Ferrari 360 Modena, Alfa Romeo Montreal, Cadillac Calais, Chevy Bel Air, Opel Ascona, Renault Floride, Chrysler Aspen, Lincoln Versailles and I think many, many more…
I drove a lot of Mercury Milans (usually black with a cream interior) as rental cars when I was a traveling consultant between 2006 and 2013. They were not bad cars and I preferred them greatly to the Ford version.
You didn't get Le Mans wrong. You pronounced it the same way the manufacturer sold it.
In 60" there was a very popular car named Warszawa - after capital of Poland Warszawa (Warsaw) ...
When you came to the Ford Cortina all I could think of was Opel Ascona, only Ascona is in Switzerland. SAAB made the 96 Monte Carlo in the early sixties. The Toyota was a tough one, in Europe it is a Camry.
I hope you can do a part 2 as I can give you some suggestions from OZ . Tasman, Kimberley and Tarago which is a town in NSW Australia by Toyota.
Interesting that the US perception of the Pontiac LeMans is that it’s Korean. Its a European Astra/Kadett so very much a GM product through and through, not Korean.
Also, in the UK we bizarrely got the Vauxhall Royale and Opel Monza competing against each other
this limey enjoyed this
I got 15/20, I really enjoyed this. It was fun❤
I was thinking about Chevy Monte Carlo the whole video.
Honorable mentions , Ventura & Malibu, durango
I'm surprised on the last clip, you didn't include the point where "Elwood" states "The new Oldsmobiles are in early" 😀 Oldsmobile is, of course, another extinct American brand. I guessed maybe half of these, and there were a few I didn't know were named after a place.
The only Olds I can think of with place names are Calais and Aurora (a town in Indiana, probably amongst others).
Lancia Monte Carlo.
Blues Brothers 😎
Holden Calais from 1984-2017
Oldsmobile Cutlass Calais
@@GeeEm1313 there's a Caddilac too. But Holden ran it as the main name for longer.
The Monte Carlo, the Monaco, the Malibu, the list goes on the floor, down the corr, and out the door…
My favorites are the Montego & Torino of the ones that come to mind...oh & Daytona & Talladega, let's see if they make the list...
Theres an spanish brand (own by VW and sold in most places but the US) called Seat that all of theyre cars are named as of spanish cities (Arona, Ibiza, Ateca...)
Ford Capri, Dodge Durango, Chevrolet Cheyenne, Chevrolet Bel-Air, Chevrolet Tahoe, Hyundai Santa Fe, Dodge/Chrysler Aspen, Ford Granada, Lincoln Versailles, Pontiac Catalina, Toyota Tacoma, Chevy Colorado, Kia Sedona.
Unpopular opinion: If the Mercury Milan and Buick Lacrosse made it to the list, then the contemporary Hyundai Tucson was also a candidate as it debuted for 2005MY
9:05 the 80's Pontiac LeMans i think had a cousin car from Opel/Vauxhall
Great list, but one obvious vehicle is missing, or probably not: the Chevrolet Monte Carlo, named after a race circuit and city in Spain.