These Stupid Trucks are Literally Killing Us

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  • Опубликовано: 5 мар 2023
  • Save $20 on an annual subscription to Nebula: go.nebula.tv/notjustbikes
    Engineers, planners, politicians, and advocates all around the world are trying to improve their cities and build more great walkable places with viable alternatives to driving. But there's a looming trend that could undo all of that hard work: the growth of SUVs and light trucks.
    This could all be solved if these pathetic suburbanites could just buy small cars, station wagons, or minivans instead.
    Patreon: / notjustbikes
    Reddit: / notjustbikes
    Mastodon: @notjustbikes@notjustbikes.com
    NJB Live (my bicycle livestream channel):
    / @njblive
    Script by Nicole Conlan and Jason Slaughter
    ---
    References and Further Reading
    Tell Automakers: Fix front-end blind zones - Consumer Reports Petition
    action.consumerreports.org/20...
    CityNerd: Problems with Pickup Trucks (Nebula)
    nebula.tv/videos/citynerd-pro...
    New Car Assessment Program
    www.federalregister.gov/docum...
    SUVs, pickup trucks more likely to hit pedestrians than cars, study finds
    eu.usatoday.com/story/money/2...
    The Ultimate List of Driving Statistics for 2023
    driving-tests.org/driving-sta...
    All history (including auto industry research of SUV buyers) is from:
    High and Mighty: SUVs-the World's Most Dangerous Vehicles and How They Got That Way
    Keith Bradsher
    [ISBN 9781586481230]
    / 832299
    Trucks And SUVs Are Now Over 80 Percent Of New Car Sales In The U.S.
    jalopnik.com/trucks-and-suvs-...
    Mindgames on wheels - How advertising sold false promises of safety and superiority with SUVs
    static1.squarespace.com/stati...
    Ford Expedition Eddie Bauer 1997 (modified)
    www.flickr.com/photos/juanelo...
    Sherman tank by Nyttend - Own work, Public Domain
    commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    Carsized.com
    carsized.com
    Global SUV sales set another record in 2021, setting back efforts to reduce emissions
    www.iea.org/data-and-statisti...
    Kids and Cars
    www.kidsandcars.org/
    www.kidsandcars.org/how-kids-...
    Experiment involving SUV reveals hidden danger for small children
    www.kmbc.com/article/experime...
    SUVs second biggest cause of emissions rise, figures reveal
    www.theguardian.com/environme...
    U.S. Pedestrian Fatalities Rise, While European Pedestrian Fatalities Fall
    www.planetizen.com/news/2019/...
    Cyclist and Pedestrian Deaths Skyrocket in 2018 as Motorists Stay Safe
    usa.streetsblog.org/2019/06/1...
    Why are US drivers killing so many pedestrians?
    cityobservatory.org/why-are-u...
    www.iihs.org/news/detail/suvs...
    National Survey on Distracted Driving Attitudes and Behaviors
    www.nhtsa.gov/sites/nhtsa.gov...
    The Car Cushion Hypothesis: Bigger Cars Lead to More Risk Taking-Evidence from Behavioural Data
    link.springer.com/article/10....
    You Don’t Need A Full-Size Pickup Truck, You Need a Cowboy Costume
    www.thedrive.com/news/26907/y...
    City drivers 'should think twice' before buying SUVs
    www.bbc.com/news/business-566...
    Pickup Trucks - From Workhorse to Joyride
    www.axios.com/ford-pickup-tru...
    Transportation Alternatives - The Problem with Bigger Cars
    www.transalt.org/newsletter/s...
    Unlicensed Driver Is Charged in Death of Baby in Stroller
    www.nytimes.com/2019/09/17/ny...
    Tyre Extinguishers
    www.tyreextinguishers.com/
    EUROPEAN VEHICLE MARKET STATISTICS
    eupocketbook.org/wp-content/u...
    European new car market starts 2021 with record market share for SUVs
    www.jato.com/european-new-car...
    Safety consequences of vehicle size & weight
    • Safety consequences of...
    This video contains content licensed from Getty Images

Комментарии • 4,7 тыс.

  • @NotJustBikes
    @NotJustBikes  Год назад +2916

    Get a year of Nebula for only $30: go.nebula.tv/notjustbikes
    Consumer Reports petition: action.consumerreports.org/20221116_stop_blindspots
    CityNerd on pickup trucks: ruclips.net/video/aIy5uv5-VrE/видео.html
    Truck babies can go cry somewhere else. I don't have time for losers.

    • @MaticTheProto
      @MaticTheProto Год назад +51

      I just wish carsized wasn‘t only for American cars. The new Smarts for example aren’t there at all

    • @aabaahgnaarbuulaajaadiijn744
      @aabaahgnaarbuulaajaadiijn744 Год назад +109

      The front end blind zone demonstrations were SHOCKING. But it might explain why some idiot in an SUV plowed into me head on when I was riding my bike in 2015!!! Fortunately I had the good sense and aforesight to mitigate the collision but had I not, she could have killed me.

    • @StethGarage
      @StethGarage Год назад +34

      Hi,
      A great sensible video!
      Can I translate it to Russian (voice over) and publish it on my Channel?

    • @N0Xa880iUL
      @N0Xa880iUL Год назад +30

      ​@@StethGarage Probably not. But it's good that you're asking.

    • @goatsareawesomeful
      @goatsareawesomeful Год назад +15

      You used to show us videos of your cat when you did your Nebula plug. Why did you stop?Best wishes Nebula kitty!

  • @jordanhamann9123
    @jordanhamann9123 Год назад +10306

    "the roads are too narrow" "cyclists take up too much space" "we need more parking"
    - people driving 15-foot-wide monstrosities

    • @kamiliadubuc6595
      @kamiliadubuc6595 Год назад +181

      🤣🤣so real !

    • @MustraOrdo
      @MustraOrdo Год назад +538

      Proof that not everyone is eligible for voting... or voicing an opinion.

    • @jangxx
      @jangxx Год назад +340

      Average carbrains

  • @TrashyDork
    @TrashyDork Год назад +2357

    “The real winning strategy was to make scared people feel safe”
    Ahh, the American advertising cheat code

    • @faheemabbas3965
      @faheemabbas3965 Год назад +167

      And unfortunately America is lost cause in terms of being pedestrian and bike friendly.
      Urbanism is dead in America. It’s a lost cause unless it’s NYC.

    • @OnlyForThePriceOf999
      @OnlyForThePriceOf999 Год назад +166

      bonus points if they make the people scared before then advertising to make them feel safe.

  • @City_Hunter
    @City_Hunter Год назад +22700

    One thing that really bothers me is that I'm blinded by headlights during nighttime driving because every car on the road is higher than mine.

  • @arachnophilia427
    @arachnophilia427 Год назад +8957

    fun fact from florida:
    alligators do in fact climb extremely well. not usually trees, but chain link fences do nothing to stop them.

    • @miketoronto8308
      @miketoronto8308 9 месяцев назад +569

      lol my friend had one in their pool one time and their suv did nothing to stop it

  • @certaindeath7776
    @certaindeath7776 Год назад +6139

    "one of this vehicles is designed to carry lots of stuff, while the other is designed to carry fragile egos"
    made my day

    • @gogogamemistress
      @gogogamemistress Год назад +554

      ​@@tsifsastsifsarotatos2495 Found the fragile ego.

    • @giantpedro
      @giantpedro Год назад +143

      I was sipping through my drink when this line came up and spilled it everywhere because I bursted out laughing!

    • @mr70camarors
      @mr70camarors Год назад +203

      ​@@gogogamemistressyou missed the point being made. Wether an SUV makes you and your family actually safer (to the detriment of others) is still debatable. So, the people buying these are mostly well meaning, yet still being hit with low effort insults. In fact, the fragile ego line kills most of the good will the logical and factual arguments that were made.

    • @HeelerHouse
      @HeelerHouse Год назад +331

      @@tsifsastsifsarotatos2495 SUVs are less safe. They flip over way easier.

    • @upshift_actual
      @upshift_actual Год назад +255

      @@tsifsastsifsarotatos2495 You ain't keeping anything safe in an SUV.

  • @lucilemasson1578
    @lucilemasson1578 Год назад +20573

    When I moved to Los Angeles (from Europe) and needed to rent a car for a week, the renter was super excited to tell me that I got an upgrade and could have a bigger car than the one I ordered. To which I said absolutely not, I wanted the smaller car because we're in a city and I want to be able to park easily. Never saw someone so confused!

    • @MirejeLenoir4670
      @MirejeLenoir4670 Год назад +2412

      I don't know in Europe but here in North America many car dealerships simply don't offer compact cars anymore, sometimes even a berline/sedan is hard to find and they don't like selling them because they give them less money than SUVs and Pick-Ups. Also, as they actually sell car-loans (and not cars per se) they want to sell bigger cars for which most drivers have to take a bigger loan instead of using cash. This is such a step behind.

    • @canorth
      @canorth Год назад +3338

      I had a Volkswagen Golf for years in the American south and people literally questioned my manhood for not driving a truck. It is ridiculous in the US.

    • @Antenox
      @Antenox Год назад +773

      And LA is one of the places where most people don’t mind smaller cars. Man, I miss my Miata.

    • @nairsheasterling9457
      @nairsheasterling9457 Год назад +1005

      ​@@canorthYeah, well, "American South" explains that little bit there, bud.

    • @weggles
      @weggles Год назад +922

      The same thing happened to me (well, I didn't move to LA from Europe)! I rented a Sedan and the guy was like "it's your lucky day! you got a free upgrade" and gave me the keys to a giant JEEP instead. It was awful to drive, so ludicrously huge, and the interior was this giant echo-y box with horrible visibility. Just give me the Honda Accord next time :(

  • @StormFractured
    @StormFractured Год назад +40126

    The true irony is that full size SUV's are more common in a city then in the rural areas.

  • @maryjohnson9337
    @maryjohnson9337 Год назад +12952

    As one of those niche rural “light” truck drivers I don’t understand why anyone who doesn’t need one would want one. They don’t fit in garages, eat gas like a bottomless pit, and are so much harder to park and maneuver.

    • @wonttakemein272
      @wonttakemein272 Год назад +1201

      As someone that lives in a fairley rural area I agree. When i visit my family in Henderson i see people with trucks and yet they never need the bed or anything just weird.

  • @Quagmirian
    @Quagmirian Год назад +7401

    One thing I was waiting for you to say but never did: estate cars (station wagons) have another key advantage over SUVs. Their roofs are lower, so if you need to put something on the roof rack, like a kayak or a hang glider, it's possible for an average sized person. As an outdoors person myself and a station wagon owner I was so glad to hear someone sing their praises. I sleep in the back of mine when I'm out on an adventure sometimes. You actually get to use the extra space that comes with a long vehicle.

    • @MaticTheProto
      @MaticTheProto Год назад +249

      That’s very true. We recently drove to holidays in a GLE and while it’s a great car it’s just so big, you unironically need a step ladder to pack and unpack the roof box

    • @Piznos
      @Piznos Год назад +41

      He literally did @ around 19:35

    • @dr._breens_beard
      @dr._breens_beard Год назад +286

      its disgusting we dont get wagon-variants in the usa anymore. i used to love subaru but when they went for a cvt transmission they instantly became written off (an eco-car shouldnt have a 9000 dollar transmission that is guaranteed early failure in most cases) and sadly they are the only affordable option for a wagon

    • @frafraplanner9277
      @frafraplanner9277 Год назад +75

      ​@@dr._breens_beard At least the Subaru's from 5-10 years ago still had regular autos and standard transmissions

    • @Palmtop_User
      @Palmtop_User Год назад +156

      Hell snow removal is a big deal here as you need to see and not hurt other with the snow/ice that will eventually fly off if not removed. You can get a ticket for not removing snow but people still dont do it. Its much easier on a smaller car

  • @antirrhinum
    @antirrhinum Год назад +15817

    The point made about kids being hidden by the front bumpers of SUVs (9:40) ... it's not just kids. I'm a wheelchair user and going past an SUV is a TERRIFYING experience. More than once I've intentionally waited on the pavement before crossing in front of an SUV I think is about to pull into the road because I KNOW they can't see me. I've nearly been hit in supermarket car parks twice. The first time I went past a parked SUV and realised the bumper was over my head was sobering.
    I started using my chair a bit over two years ago because of chronic illness. Before I got sick, I cycled, so I've always had a healthy wariness of SUVs. But the sheer sense of vulnerability that comes from being so low to the ground a driver couldn't see me if I were RIGHT IN FRONT OF THEM... that's a whole different beast.
    I'm in the UK btw. Bigger cars are slightly less ubiquitous here than the States, but not by much. I can't drive for medical reasons. Thank goodness we have decent public transport - I would have absolutely no independence or autonomy if I were anywhere even slightly more car dependent.
    I'm not even anti car. I have a Blue Badge, that gives me access to disabled parking in whichever car I'm in. Cars are useful in a lot of cases. But my mum has a Renault Clio, which is wonderfully compact, and yet I can EASILY get my chair in and out of it without any assistance from the back seat. This would be challenging in a taller vehicle, and impossible in a flatbed or similar.
    Basically - SUVs are terrifying, horrifically dangerous for me, and would actively make my life harder if they were the only car available on the UK car market.

    • @hendman4083
      @hendman4083 Год назад +653

      In the Netlerlands kids bikes are often fitted with an orange (duh) flag on top of a orange flagpole, so you can see the flag when the bike itself is out of view due to parked cars and stuff. Every now and then I see mobility scooters with the same type of flag mounted to them....maybe it would be a good idea to mount them to wheelchairs as well.

    • @okok72277
      @okok72277 Год назад +89

      Check where you are, in a lot of councils blue badges mean 100% free parking in P&D bays as well as yellow lines without kerb marks

    • @LeafHuntress
      @LeafHuntress Год назад +324

      Oh f*******ck!
      I'm a small adult(think 12yo, which is really short for a grown person in NL) & i'm terrified of them. I been arguing against them on the basis of my height & the children. I didn't even think of people using wheelchairs...
      Have you seen the clips of the Englishman with a guide-dog? Sorry, forgot the name, but he films his walks & all the times that he's forced on the road because of badly parked cars etc. NJB's argument about parking these d*mn things hits harder now because it's obvious in hindsight that it's mostly chelsea tractors that cause this.
      Perhaps a ngo can argue against these deathtraps on the basis that it's bad for people with disabilities?

    • @fulconandroadcone9488
      @fulconandroadcone9488 Год назад +59

      I compared my opel corsa to escalade, about same size as clio, I'm not sure you can see those cars from escalde, anything that is under a ton in weight is all but guaranteed to not be seen. Those cares are joke of a design .

    • @SlurMaster9000
      @SlurMaster9000 Год назад +45

      Maybe install one of those stupid "lift kits" on your wheelchair

  • @madamgalen225
    @madamgalen225 Год назад +32562

    I am not immune to the appeal of an absolutely massive machine roaring down the line at impossible speeds. But like. That's why i'm into✨trains ✨

    • @chimitrash2966
      @chimitrash2966 Год назад +1430

      Trains are cool and if you think otherwise maybe you should try to have a good opinion next time

    • @asielsantana8259
      @asielsantana8259 Год назад +417

      This is so valid

    • @shocktrauma85
      @shocktrauma85 11 месяцев назад +331

      It's really sad that the only place in North America that has high-speed rail is Northeastern US between Washington DC and Boston (Amtrak's Acela Line).

    • @justinyang21114798
      @justinyang21114798 11 месяцев назад +183

      As a fellow train nerd, I 100% agree with you!!

    • @bettyunicorn6132
      @bettyunicorn6132 11 месяцев назад +153

      Yeah, trains! Trains are so epic!

  • @crisisOstrich
    @crisisOstrich Год назад +4970

    Another consequence of higher bumpers is higher headlights, few things are worse than driving at night with a truck or SUV behind you, its headlights at exactly the same height as your rear mirrors

  • @Felinius
    @Felinius Год назад +8514

    Most of my coworkers that buy these monstrosities, look down at my “small” car, and say they buy them so they can “drive over cars like mine”. And I find, locally at least, people do drive them like weapons, or at least with reckless abandon. It makes driving to work more anxiety inducing than it already was.

    • @georgobergfell
      @georgobergfell Год назад +1

      These people only have to make up for their tiny wiener

    • @thechappist
      @thechappist Год назад +1308

      Sounds like folks eager to commit crimes.. do you work in a prison? Or just with people who will eventually end up there?

    • @atay999
      @atay999 Год назад +361

      I feel the same. I drive a fiat

    • @ianvance1647
      @ianvance1647 Год назад

      small d!ck energy to the max

    • @davidpowell3347
      @davidpowell3347 Год назад +639

      I wonder if these larger private vehicles are driven more aggressively than other vehicles? However something I noticed when I drove a larger vehicle (for pay,on the job,had to haul mulch or dirt) I noticed a lot of vehicles obnoxiously doing things to get in front of mine,even passing on a dirt shoulder.
      In general a lot of people are driving aggressively.

  • @davidmurphy563
    @davidmurphy563 Год назад +980

    "Your freedom to swing your arms ends where my face begins"
    A lovely turn of phrase.

    • @jc_1337
      @jc_1337 Год назад +39

      It's a pretty common phrase when talking about "freedom" and "liberty" in the U.S.

    • @EmeralBookwise
      @EmeralBookwise Год назад +23

      A bare minim, really. I doubt there's anyone who would feel comfortably safe with someone swinging fists even a foot away from their face. Where safety is concerned, margins of error should always be accounted for.

    • @torzsmokus
      @torzsmokus Год назад +64

      @@Student0Toucher it totally does, just in this topic it is about a bumper and not a literal arm

    • @leDespicable
      @leDespicable Год назад +33

      @@Student0Toucher Keep telling yourself that

    • @DMZZ_DZDM
      @DMZZ_DZDM Год назад +10

      It's a perfect analogy

  • @kennethwang7045
    @kennethwang7045 Год назад +18505

    My old man actually ordered a single cab pickup to do pallet loads in his local area. You won't believe how many actual trades people asked about it when he got it delivered. Really shows how the intended audience of the pickup is getting ignored.

  • @314159vedic
    @314159vedic Год назад +19040

    We know someone who's 4 year old child was killed in a crosswalk. They were walking as a family and their daughter was walking just behind the dad. The SUV thought everyone was through the crosswalk and drove right over the child and killed her. She didn't see her. It's absolutely heartbreaking.

  • @richpate9436
    @richpate9436 Год назад +17261

    A friend's daughter, a school teacher, was "T-boned" by a 4x4 full-size pickup last week. The truck ran a stop sign and its high front bumper hit her at shoulder-height sitting in the driver's seat, sending her car across two lanes and into a field. She died instantly. The driver of the truck walked away claiming the sun was in his eyes.

  • @Dukenukem
    @Dukenukem Год назад +13146

    ok, now I get the Futurama joke about "registering a grosly polluting robot as a light truck"

  • @iamkrohn
    @iamkrohn Год назад +12648

    As a person who works in the trades and actually needs his truck for work, the amount of accountants buying trucks blows my mind. Less trucks on the road is a good thing

    • @sidneyboo9704
      @sidneyboo9704 Год назад +924

      My engineer who does nothing but sit in his office all day drives a Diesel lifted truck. He is extremely heavy set so I asked him if he uses it to haul horses or something. He said nope, he just wants to see the road better. ?????

    • @GuitarsAndSynths
      @GuitarsAndSynths 11 месяцев назад +572

      I fail to understand why people buy these massive trucks that cost more than luxury sedans when most have zero real need. I prefer a nice comfortable sedan with leather and wood interior for less that has smooth engine and nice comfort.

    • @youmukonpaku3168
      @youmukonpaku3168 10 месяцев назад +461

      as an accountant who primarily uses a bicycle and might upgrade to an e-bike, I'm as confused by my colleagues as you are. They should literally be able to grasp how much money they're wasting on a capacity they neither need nor use.

  • @dailyrider2975
    @dailyrider2975 Год назад +8606

    What's really annoying is how electric cars seem to be chasing the "bigger is better" model as well, at least in the USA. It's a known fact that lighter and smaller is far better for electric cars, especially if you want them to travel longer distances.

  • @AtzeHHouse
    @AtzeHHouse Год назад +3052

    As Someone who likes cars, I’ve been anti-SUV and Truck for a while now but one thing really pushed me over the edge: One of those giant Full-Size SUVs backed into my car on a parking lot because the driver literally couldn’t see me! My hatchback’s roofline doesn’t even reach that thing’s windows. Thankfully it was just a dent to my car but I don’t want to imagine what would’ve happened if my kid would have been standing there.
    We need to disincentivize these vehicles as much as possible to get them off city roads.

    • @Kittsuki
      @Kittsuki Год назад +398

      Holy crap, selling a truck so tall that AN ENTIRE CAR can fit under its sight line should be illegal!

    • @bcase5328
      @bcase5328 Год назад +117

      Tax SUV more?

    • @townhall05446
      @townhall05446 Год назад +46

      Which "giant" SUV these days doesn't have a backup camera? No way they couldn't see you if they had looked.

    • @alext3811
      @alext3811 Год назад +43

      That's probably why backup cameras are required.

    • @AtzeHHouse
      @AtzeHHouse Год назад +213

      @@townhall05446 It was an older GMC Yukon. No backup cameras

  • @MHammonds18
    @MHammonds18 Год назад +5998

    I talked to my Gen-X parents about why they didn’t like station wagons and they simply said: “they weren’t cool”. And then proceeded to try and convince me that a big-ass Escalade is safer than a Volvo v60 station wagon.

  • @J0E1L3
    @J0E1L3 Год назад +7941

    What annoys me with the “they are just responding to demand” argument is also that I highly doubt car manufacturers are recording all the clients who come in asking for a smaller car only to be told that it is not an option. Most people won’t try to import a car from overseas that works for them and will just get the cars available to them locally

    • @SilverDragonJay
      @SilverDragonJay Год назад +550

      Yeah, that's my thought process as well. Sure, they do focus groups and things, but those aren't usually representative of the general population and most people are just going to shrug and buy what's available. Which is really what these companies want. Its not as if they _want_ to have to change their entire design every 10 years because people's preferences suddenly changed.
      Also, even if you did get a representative sample of the country and asked them what they wanted, that's still not ideal because a lot of people don't even realize that there might be an alternative. If all you know is car dependence and don't realize that there _can_ be another option, you aren't going to ask for it. Similarly, if you've grown up hearing about how big car == safer car, then naturally, you're going to request that car be bigger. That's how I used to be. I too thought that big cars were safer and that having a car was just peek transportation because I didn't know any better, I didn't have the information needed to make a truly informed decision.

  • @seand9901
    @seand9901 Год назад +8910

    For me in Pittsburgh, it's the headlights on these vehicles that have driven me nuts at this point. We have a lot of winding, older, sometimes ambiguous road designs that don't mesh very well with this new trend of aggressively bright headlights. When these headlights get mounted 2-3ft higher compared to your typical car, you're bound to eat an eye-full of lumens that can seriously mess up your night vision!

  • @secondengineer9814
    @secondengineer9814 Год назад +12483

    I worry that if we started giving cars both a "safety" score (how dangerous it is to the driver) and a "danger" score (how dangerous it is to other drivers), truck drivers would brag about their danger score.

  • @stevend456
    @stevend456 Год назад +908

    Hi there! Dumb truck driver here who found your channel a few months after signing the papers for it. Having grown up in the southeast US, owning an F-150 was a bucket list item from when I was a kid growing up around them. Now, ever since watching the entirety of your channel in the span of a few months, it is one of my bigger regrets in life.
    I have intentions to sell it and get something different as soon as I am able. Unfortunately, the interest rates for vehicle loans even through my credit union are much higher than when I bought the monstrosity. I am locked in until I can save up enough to sell it and buy something else outright without a loan. I promise I am working towards it. The worst part? I traded in a fairly new Subaru Forester for it. What a fool I was.
    Love your videos, thank you for the fantastic content and helping me open my eyes to what is actually important.

    • @MrC0MPUT3R
      @MrC0MPUT3R Год назад +57

      Foresters are great. I'm in the market for a used Subaru but they retain the damned value so well they're all out of my budget at the moment.

    • @SAmaryllis
      @SAmaryllis Год назад +185

      Kudos to you for being open-minded & self-aware enough to question the culture you grew up in - it's hard to notice it when you're in it, like a fish swimming through water. Best wishes for you being able to financially get out of that situation sooner rather than later!

    • @MaticTheProto
      @MaticTheProto Год назад +34

      King!

    • @Malisteen
      @Malisteen Год назад +105

      Don't beat yourself up over it. We're all vulnerable to propaganda, corporations wouldn't spend so much on advertising if it didn't work. Best of luck getting into something more reasonable when you can!

    • @ee-ef8qr
      @ee-ef8qr Год назад +46

      Bro at least you're fixing a mistake which is much better than some other.

  • @_oe_o_e_
    @_oe_o_e_ Год назад +9282

    As someone who works in construction sites, you need a big car for the boss to sit in all day, yell at everyone and contribute nothing.

  • @marco1173
    @marco1173 Год назад +29537

    It's hard to stomach the fact that we now have more pedestrian fatalities than we did in 1990.

  • @FalconsTech
    @FalconsTech Год назад +3464

    As a truck owner, I couldn't agree more. My 20 year old heavy duty truck looks TINY compared to modern trucks. They're getting ABSURDLY large. The belt line on newer trucks is at shoulders height at this point. You need a ladder to do anything under the hood. In a vacuum I would like my next vehicle to be smaller, but like you said, if you're in a collision with a larger vehicle you're at a significant disadvantage. I really like the Ford Maverick. It's a cheap hybrid truck that's about the same length as a sedan.

    • @BladeoftheImmortal2005
      @BladeoftheImmortal2005 Год назад +216

      Maverick is the only truck I'll consider. Actually fuel efficient and not 10,000 pounds

    • @townhall05446
      @townhall05446 Год назад +68

      My new truck is larger, no doubt - but it also gets way better mpg's than the 21 year old smaller truck it replaced. And pollutes less.

    • @dragnflye3797
      @dragnflye3797 Год назад +119

      I used to drive a 1984 Ford F150. Imagine my shock when I saw a newer model. I thought my truck was a beast. The new model dwarfed it.

    • @WitchTrials92
      @WitchTrials92 Год назад +30

      Tell me about it my Friend has a 2022 Sierra HD Denali can't believe how massive it is

    • @1steelcobra
      @1steelcobra Год назад +167

      @@BladeoftheImmortal2005 Yep, and GM is reportedly looking into electric "party trucks" that are smaller and more practical for more users. The fact that the Maverick is selling well enough they had to halt custom orders and recall units being lent to employees to fill demand also indicates that there are plenty of people out there who want small, practical trucks.
      If they made a short cab version with a longer bed that'd be better, though.

  • @SamWickens
    @SamWickens Год назад +9477

    I remember when I first saw Back to the Future as a rural European kid, I was so confused by the car Marty got at the end. He was a 17-year-old boy living in middle-class suburbia, and close enough to school to go there on his skateboard every morning, and his parents got him this brand new shiny black pickup truck monstrosity that looked like it would be just as out of place at a farm or in the woods as it looked in that driveway. Since then I found out what product placement is, and I guess this in particular was part of that big marketing push to make these "light trucks" look cool to people who were teenagers in the mid 80s.

    • @CordeliaWagner
      @CordeliaWagner Год назад +992

      Fun Fact:
      The actor who played the dad got fired because he didn't like the trope that sucess only means having luxury stuff...

    • @dwarftoad
      @dwarftoad Год назад +552

      That truck was a 1985 Toyota pickup, maybe a T100 or similar? With a bunch of "off roading" stuff. I don't think a truck that small/compact has been sold in the US since the 1990s! I have a rusted old Ford Ranger that I have kept repaired and running despite the cost since you can't really get a truck that small any more either, they're all bigger.

    • @DrBernon
      @DrBernon Год назад +400

      @@dwarftoad Yes, that bumper was lower than his shoulders. That is an absolute ant compared to what they make today.

    • @oscarosullivan4513
      @oscarosullivan4513 Год назад +136

      That jeep is small in comparison to the ones gracing seppo roads

  • @Npuritz10
    @Npuritz10 Год назад +3813

    Full disclosure, I have a work truck that I drive everyday, for work. The discussion about how trucks have changed over the years got to me. I have a standard cab, long bed truck. Typically I need to purchase a new one every 12 years. My current truck is 2008 and one of the main reasons I am holding onto it is because it is almost impossible to order a standard cab, long bed truck because most of the production goes towards "quad cabs" (or whatever they are calling them now). Also, the new pickups are so high off the ground they are a pain to load and unload. My 08 has 17" wheels and that bothered me then (and still does), I just had no choice. It's only gotten worse since...

    • @Frostynes
      @Frostynes 11 месяцев назад +184

      Yeah it’s why I quit working as a tire mechanic. Winter legit sucked with all these fools coming in on the first day of snow with their 17”+ rims caked with snow talking about their car is ruined 😂

    • @VulcanLogic
      @VulcanLogic 10 месяцев назад +196

      When I worked construction with my uncle, he had a Ford Transit cargo van. Held 4'x8' plywood and drywall and kept em dry, up to 6' high, and the unload was about 18 inches I think? Just around knee level instead of waist high. You can buy 'em new or used and they generally come in below truck cost. It might be your only option.

  • @nddragoon
    @nddragoon Год назад +3917

    no, you see, every single american adult is a rugged blue collar construction worker that tows 2 tons of cement and plywood every single day have you considered that

  • @Topgun232
    @Topgun232 Год назад +554

    The hood of these things are literally as tall as I am most of the time. If you get hit by this it's like getting hit by a wall and you go straight into the pavement instead of rolling over the hood.

    • @davidty2006
      @davidty2006 Год назад +42

      Funny part is vehicles that are way bigger aka vans and trucks have better visibility because the hoods slope down.
      Or are cab overs and just use a mirror to see directly infront of the bumper.

  • @shandorno6305
    @shandorno6305 Год назад +2960

    As someone who walks everywhere, I'd also like to point out that when these things are parked on the side of the road, I can't see over them, and therefore I have difficulty seeing when cars are approaching when trying to cross the road they're parked besides.
    And it's not like I'm short or anything, as I'm 6'1.

  • @terrykilo951
    @terrykilo951 11 месяцев назад +1991

    Retired truck driver here. Spent 35 years on the road driving a semi with a hood the size of a dinner table to look over, but I found it harder to drive and see over the hood of my HD GMC pick up. Finally ditched it and bought a station wagon (Ford Flex). Yes I am a baby boomer. This video isn't saying anything new and I agree with the tone of it.

  • @helenadurst5993
    @helenadurst5993 Год назад +5078

    "One of these vehicles is designed to efficiently carry lots of useful stuff, while the other is designed to carry fragile egos." PERFECT

  • @witmoreluke
    @witmoreluke Год назад +2070

    I was helping my mother in law move, and we found that my Honda Fit (or Honda Jazz depending on where you're from) actually held MORE CARGO than her Ford Escape SUV. We then looked up the numbers and sure enough, the tiny Fit actually did have more space on the inside than the comparatively massive Escape. Insanity.

  • @zestylobstertail4277
    @zestylobstertail4277 Год назад +5125

    the story with G-wagons is really interesting, they're basically trucks for the military, and a VIP client liked the way it looked and comissioned one with a nicer interior, and it then caught on as a sort of status symbol because they were rare but then they became cool when celebrities were seen in them. they only recently redesigned it as an actual "luxury SUV", as before it was basically a chassis from the seventies with updated engines and interior

  • @JohnJohnson-ej7qr
    @JohnJohnson-ej7qr Год назад +3313

    My mom keeps telling me walkable cities are apart of the “new world order” lol

    • @joiceraiana
      @joiceraiana Год назад

      Their evil agenda of saving humanity from climate change and obesity.

  • @gerdforster883
    @gerdforster883 Год назад +3993

    Small correction: the Dutch are not famous for going on vacation with their caravans. The correct word is "notorious".
    Sincerely,
    someone who lived the first 16 years of his life close to one of the main Autobahns our lovely neighbours take on their way to their holidays

    • @mizzmatrix
      @mizzmatrix Год назад +79

      As someone who travels and lives in Norway, I can confirm. So many dutchies on the road here during summertime 😂

  • @nassemthegreat9582
    @nassemthegreat9582 Год назад +5051

    It's extremely difficult to buy a micro-car in the US, It's annoying how the most economic choice is taken away from Americans.

  • @CZsWorld
    @CZsWorld Год назад +7197

    I almost always ride my bike, but would like to have a small 2 seat electric for highway travel. No such product exists in America.

    • @rockfire1669
      @rockfire1669 Год назад +73

      Same

    • @ringopaulusch
      @ringopaulusch Год назад +47

      What about the Arcimoto?

    • @hungsu
      @hungsu Год назад +262

      The Arcimoto mentioned by Ringo is promising, but it's a bit expensive, and in Washington state requires a Motorcycle endorsement to drive

    • @YounesLayachi
      @YounesLayachi Год назад +164

      that sounds awful compared to taking a train. a small 2 seat electric pipeframe with probably no doors, going 50 km/h in a 130 km/h highway

    • @dennismetzger9287
      @dennismetzger9287 Год назад +121

      Or how the smaller vehicles in this country are still expensive...

  • @DrBernon
    @DrBernon Год назад +4989

    I would totally put a stop on the car widths. Where I live (spain) we have a ton of old country roads, and it is just scary when you encounter one of these modern cars, because they don't fit in the lane, and invade part of yours. How they ever allowed to sell cars that are wider than the average lane of 40 years ago is beyond me. Because in rural areas those roads are still there. And honestly, they should stay as they are, as they go through some of the most beautiful natural sites. Those wide cars should just be banned to go on public roads.

    • @macaron3141592653
      @macaron3141592653 11 месяцев назад +56

      76" and that's it. It would shrink the width of every midsize SUV and pickup truck.

  • @schwarzwolfram7925
    @schwarzwolfram7925 Год назад +3561

    The term "Sport Utility Vehicle" is really bizarre to me from a linguistics standpoint; because they're too big to be sporty, too small to be utilitarian, and too poorly thought out to be much of a vehicle in the first place. I also get agitated whenever someone coins the term "compact SUV" because we already have a name for that; it's called a "hatchback".

  • @breadO0
    @breadO0 Год назад +1829

    Coming from a family of 6, I can't tell you how bad it feels to drive the minivan while seeing all the smaller vehicles around me. But then, when the whole family gets in, I look to the back and say to myself: yep. This is indeed needed. We once went to a vacation, and we borrowed a bunch of stuff from our friends and managed to carry it all in the van along the 6 of us. The items contained: 2 surfing boards, 3 surfing sails, a inflatable boat for 5 people, a tent for 7 people, food for the entire trip, beach toys, sleeping bags, and a load of clothing. To somehow think that a car bigger than that can carry 2 people at most is absurd and outrageous. I am sorry for Americans. :(

    • @breadO0
      @breadO0 Год назад +69

      @Not Just Bikes that was a fast heart, thanks a lot!

    • @Malisteen
      @Malisteen Год назад +308

      Vans and mini-vans, while large, at least have a purpose. SUVs & extended cab trucks can't even seat more people than a sedan or carry more stuff than a station wagon. & like the video points out, mini vans are designed so you can still see things in front of you.

    • @toddmansilver12
      @toddmansilver12 Год назад +51

      @@Malisteen if you think a pickup can't carry more stuff than a station wagon there's no helping you. It was designed for exactly one purpose and that is hauling the most stuff possible.

    • @bobbirdsong6825
      @bobbirdsong6825 Год назад +51

      Very True, if you need to haul a truck is likely the best option though if you don’t need a trailer or load a Station Wagon or van might be more versatile. Main issue is that most trucks are never used for hauling and when you do need a truck for work the kinds americans are used to are really overkill

    • @christianhumer3084
      @christianhumer3084 Год назад +171

      @@toddmansilver12 Have you seen the Video?

  • @CommanderVenkas
    @CommanderVenkas Год назад +317

    Being tall and still not being able to see over the hood of a vehicle always made me feel uncomfortable.
    I've been told "You get used to it."
    Dude, it's not just me I'm worried about. If I can't see, neither can any of you!
    But like you said, it's an Arms race to make sure your loved ones don't die because someone else decided to meet their bumper with your roof.

    • @0LoneTech
      @0LoneTech Год назад +16

      And yet... it's most likely your loved ones you won't see driving these things.

    • @Acquilla7
      @Acquilla7 Год назад +15

      Unless you can't drive, in which case it just feels like you're caught out in no man's land and everyone's aiming at you.

  • @charleahar
    @charleahar Год назад +1129

    My mom just bought the smallest hybrid she could find in our state in the US- a Kia Nero. It's still bigger than she wanted it to be, but there were literally no smaller options that were hybrids. It's crazy that someone who wants a small car literally cannot even buy one!

  • @mattrodgers1663
    @mattrodgers1663 Год назад +2223

    I live in streetcar suburb outside a major US city. When we bought the house, we knew upfront that we'd have to knock down the garage and replace it. When we went to get quotes for the job, it blew me away that a common sales tactic was to push for something "big enough to store an F150." The garage is off an alley. Who wants to drive an F150 down an alley every time you go somewhere?
    When our family grew beyond the size that our Mazda3 could handle, an unusual number of our non-city friends and family started pushing 3-row SUVs, extended cab trucks, etc. We bought a cargo bike and a minivan - both brand new - for less than their recommendations. No regrets.

  • @CordeliaWagner
    @CordeliaWagner Год назад +735

    The most scary thing for me is that SUV drivers ran over the fake animals.
    Toys that looked like a real living turtle or a snake to them .
    They went out of their way to kill an innocent being.
    They even riseked their SUV's stability for their sadistic joy.
    This is psychopathic.

  • @ICanUntieAnyKnot
    @ICanUntieAnyKnot Год назад +3557

    It's not just Europe that has to worry! I'm a canadian living in northern Japan now, and it is kind of scaring me how every year there are more and more idiotic north american SUVs (and G-Wagons especially) being imported. AWD kei cars are absolutely phenomenal in the snow and they are extremely robust and reliable as they are all made domestically. Who in their right mind would import an F150 raptor or Lincoln Navigator to Japan? Blows my mind.

  • @robolencca-0126
    @robolencca-0126 Год назад +1811

    You know this is a good video when it makes me, a 23 yo Indonesian dude who never drove anything 4-wheeled in his life, livid enough to pause the video and walk outside to calm down.

  • @williammcleod1496
    @williammcleod1496 Год назад +2470

    "There's been a surge in interest in older pickup models as ACTUAL contractors seek vehicles that are more practical" Oh my god, thank you.
    I was an HVAC contractor before the pandemic and one of the MOST COMMON conversations was "What the fuck happened to the pickup?"
    Everyone is looking at getting ahold of old pickup chassis, Nissans, Toyotas, old F-150s that actually have a lower-to-the-ground USABLE bed and putting a newer, more efficient engine in it. Sure you'll only get two-wheel drive out of the things after an engine swap but it's worth it not to blow your back out loading equipment into a bed that's way too high.

  • @eddieredmann3
    @eddieredmann3 Год назад +1393

    Now I'm laughing about a few experiences I've had:
    1) A former coworker who drove a lifted pickup with off-road tires was complaining that he was wearing out his tires super quickly. When I suggested to him that maybe off-road tires on a vehicle that was driven primarily on the interstate probably wasn't smart, he blew me off and asked me what I knew.
    2) The first time I saw a (now) 20 year old Corolla pulling a horse trailer on the interstate, just cruising at the speed limit. It literally wasn't struggling at all. Granted, it probably made more horsepower than a 50 year old Chevy pickup with three times the engine displacement.

    • @jasonreed7522
      @jasonreed7522 Год назад +264

      That former coworker in story 1 sounds like a poser, anyone with half a brain knows that specialty tires like winter, mud, and off-road shouldn't be left on all the time or you will wear the out quickly. (Because part of getting better grip is softer rubber)
      If he doesn't even know how off road tires work then he doesn't need them.

    • @yourhandlehere1
      @yourhandlehere1 Год назад +89

      hah. I've been driving a '68 Corolla for 35 years. 1100cc, 4 speed, 70-80ish hp, 4:22 gears in diff. Put a good hitch on back years ago. I've hauled a 70's model long wheelbase Chevy truck about 50 miles on a homemade iron trailer. They make bolt on helper springs for leaf spring rears. My only struggle was stopping...the trailer alone weighed more than the car. Once I pulled a big rollback wrecker across a parking lot that was broke down in a drive-thru. Pulled a Dodge Dart with an attached boat on a trailer up out of a lake when the Dodge couldn't make the hill. Hauled my mower and stuff around in my own little trailer.

  • @rusinsr
    @rusinsr Год назад +3167

    Given that what's needed to decrease the sale of SUVs is negative public perception, I actually appreciate you expressing your anger in this video like you did :D

  • @gatorsoneyea
    @gatorsoneyea Год назад +1174

    Lived in the city for 90% of my life and recently moved to the middle of no-where Kansas. Trucks/SUVS are everywhere, but you can tell they actually use them for farm work.
    Weird part is I saw more truck/suvs in the city, and out here in rural America people drive sedans to save gas on highways.

  • @thisisatestoftheemer
    @thisisatestoftheemer Год назад +2336

    Independent of all other issues you raised, road wear is based on weight (it scales at rougly axle weight to the fourth power). Significantly taxing vehicles based on this would be a great start to reshaping what the average car looks like.

  • @nickymaz05
    @nickymaz05 Год назад +431

    As a conservative American father of 4 who lives in car dependent suburbs I appreciate the food for thought. I recently downsized from a Ford Explorer to a VW Tiguan, cheaper, smaller and better fuel economy. One big factor is the social conditioning on men that says driving a big truck is a sign of manhood.

    • @RiveTheRat
      @RiveTheRat Год назад +212

      Which is extremely funny to me, because the joke around here is the opposite: the bigger the car, the smaller the guy's manhood

    • @codycody792
      @codycody792 Год назад

      It’s also a sign of a tiny pecker

    • @JesterRBLR
      @JesterRBLR Год назад +117

      Not trying to be an ass but it makes me laugh when someone gets a Tiguan and says they are downsizing. Please don't take my comment personally, for where you live that may be a small car but it is still much bigger than most of the cars where I live, it shows how insane it has got in some places.

    • @nickymaz05
      @nickymaz05 Год назад +65

      @@JesterRBLR oh I don't take it personally at all. I've traveled around and know in a lot of places something like a VW Golf is as big as it gets. For this area it's a smaller vehicle, plus remember I still have 4 kids to move around.

    • @LucinaMeow
      @LucinaMeow Год назад +16

      ​@@RiveTheRat bigger the car the smaller his ...

  • @elroy9186
    @elroy9186 Год назад +204

    As someone who works in construction, it is an extremely common trend that contractors get these 50-70k trucks as a business vehicle and write them off. They do NOT use them to haul things, they wouldn't dare get them dirty or risk scratching them. Materials get delivered. Tools can fit in a Honda Civic.

    • @victorquesada7530
      @victorquesada7530 Год назад +15

      heck, a Honda Fit can carry 2x4s and a Honda Odyssey can carry sheet goods if you take out the seats!

    • @zeuscasey
      @zeuscasey Год назад +23

      ​@@victorquesada7530 put 2x4s and other construction equipment in that Honda everyday and see how long it takes before it's destroyed. Trucks are built for a purpose, it's just the majority of people don't use the truck anymore like it should be

  • @fringelunatic
    @fringelunatic Год назад +1630

    As a pick up truck owner I realize that I could have bought a different car/wagon for my needs. We all think we will use it more than we think. If I am honest I use it for camping and 4x4 about 4/5 times a year. An awd wagon would have done the same thing. Thanks hitting so deep. I have always been cognizant of my waste, but failed to do so on what I drive. Thankfully I drive like a grandma. I am not into speed so my mpg isn't horrible. Great video and thank you for the education.

  • @Happymali10
    @Happymali10 Год назад +513

    In case you wondered how things are going elsewhere, in Germany VW just made Bentley annoy the traffic ministry until they decided to raise the 3.5 metric ton limit on total allowed weight.
    Reason: With the switch to electric cars the base weight of cars will climb.
    So....instead of making cars less stupidly big they made Germany change the law to make them heavier.

  • @bababababababa6124
    @bababababababa6124 Год назад +641

    Never forget that Phoenix, a city with a metro population of almost 5 million, has a “central station” the size of an average European village train station
    Here’s another good one, San Antonio, Dallas and Houston’s stations combined would all still be smaller than Nuneaton’s station, a random British town I assure you’ve never heard of 💀

    • @IHateStroads
      @IHateStroads Год назад

      Phoenix is a fraud city. It’s “downtown” is smaller than many cities with fewer than 500k people!

    • @nairsheasterling9457
      @nairsheasterling9457 Год назад +25

      Tbf, they are literally expanding it as we speak, but yeah.
      I'm more annoyed by the fact we didn't build the light rail as an elevated system.

    • @bababababababa6124
      @bababababababa6124 Год назад +20

      @@nairsheasterling9457 but at least you have all those lovely roads💀

    • @nairsheasterling9457
      @nairsheasterling9457 Год назад +14

      ​​​@@bababababababa6124half of which have an intersection with a light rail. The delays due to collision with cars on that damn thing is damn-near daily. As someone to poor for a car, it makes "having a job" a real impracticality.

    • @bababababababa6124
      @bababababababa6124 Год назад +8

      @@nairsheasterling9457 I’d say that’s better than nothing 🤷‍♂️ but your city needs a crap ton more transit in general

  • @magictoffee7066
    @magictoffee7066 Год назад +519

    Although I am a Car-Enthusiast I completely agree with you, smaller cars are just better in every single way. There is a reason why all good sports cars like the Mx-5 Na are small and relatively low power, it's because it's more fun, and that's what being a good sports car is ultimately about, fun.

    • @torzsmokus
      @torzsmokus Год назад +34

      now imagine sitting in an Mx-5 before/behind such a monster :(

    • @KensaiProductions
      @KensaiProductions Год назад +43

      @@torzsmokus Don't have to. I used to have an Miata as my daily driver, it is microscopic compared to most of these behemoths.

    • @mworld2611
      @mworld2611 Год назад +11

      ​@András Rácz I actually drive an NA MX5 and a lot of truck's wheels are higher than my hood

    • @wowgabber123
      @wowgabber123 Год назад +3

      I once was parked in a T (in my Mx5) with a buddy's audi q7. I was pretty scared to learn that if that was a crash situation the audi logo would have been stamped on my forehead.

    • @JustinSeara
      @JustinSeara Год назад +20

      @@mworld2611 driving an NA Miata, with the top down, at freeway speeds, next to a semi truck is absolutely terrifying. Semi truck tires are taller than a whole NA Miata haha

  • @RevolutionaryLiger
    @RevolutionaryLiger Год назад +212

    When my sisters '92 pickup finally broke, she replaced it with a mini-van because ironically it towed better then any of the pickups and SUVs she could find for you know, actual job calls. I feel like that's the most damning thing about how useless these SUVs have gotten.

  • @DansTravels5823
    @DansTravels5823 Год назад +1498

    As a Texan I had a pickup for many years. I mostly used it to take my bicycle to places to ride. I won't say how annoying it was having to take my bike somewhere to ride rather than just being able to hop on it and go. Since then I have had smaller and smaller cars. We definitely need to get rid of the light truck exemption.

  • @BeirutBallin
    @BeirutBallin Год назад +508

    Having grown up in a household that used SUVs, I can’t even begin to thank you for expressing the same sentiment that I’ve had for years. A bigger car doesn’t make you safe, it makes you feel in control. There’s a difference!

    • @MustraOrdo
      @MustraOrdo Год назад +56

      Key word: feel, because SUV drivers are far from being in control especially in urban and suburban settings.

    • @shortForPychael
      @shortForPychael Год назад +21

      Coming from me driving an suv to driving a hatchback, I definitely feel like I’m safer and more in control now… so long as suvs don’t get too big to dodge…

    • @lainiwakura1776
      @lainiwakura1776 Год назад +33

      @@tsifsastsifsarotatos2495 You're more likely to roll over in one though because they have a higher center of gravity. The lower to the ground you are, the less likely you are to roll over.

    • @AlifLamMiim
      @AlifLamMiim Год назад +30

      @@tsifsastsifsarotatos2495 My parents have a Cadillac Escalade which I used to drive fairly often. They also had a Mercedes that was a sedan, making it way lower to the ground. I can tell you that driving the Mercedes was always better than the Escalade, because it’s significantly easier to drive than an Escalade, it’s much easier to see everything, speed is easier to control, and everything related to parking and turning is easier.
      Just because you’re in a big car doesn’t mean you’re safer my friend. The most important is the road/weather conditions, the state of the driver and how experienced they are. A big car can be even more dangerous depending on how it’s frame is built, it can be easier to roll over, and all the other inhibitions i mentioned (visibility, movement, etc) make you more likely to crash than in a smaller car. The video literally gives statistics specific to this problem, so maybe check them out.

  • @JimmyB823
    @JimmyB823 Год назад +173

    In New Zealand, "light trucks" (a.k.a. utes) are incredibly popular. People use them because they actually live on farms or lifestyle blocks, and they are less prevalent in urban areas and cities. The SUVs there are much smaller, and people can easily be seen. I think you're absolutely right about the problem being that the wrong people have the wrong cars, and all of those trucks are just far to big.

    • @faheemabbas3965
      @faheemabbas3965 Год назад

      American corporate materialistic soul at its finest, showing in its people.
      I’m American and I want to move to the Netherlands.

    • @samdouglas32
      @samdouglas32 Год назад +20

      It's happening here too. The T6 platform Ford Ranger follows the US trend and styling for wider, longer and taller. Much larger than earlier generations.
      Ford is selling the F-150 in Australia next year, so I wouldn't be surprised to see some here in future.

  • @ericwright8592
    @ericwright8592 Год назад +1024

    Marketing is strong. When I was a teenager I thought I would die if I didn't have a shiny new truck. My dad always drove trucks. It's what men drive. Obviously. Then I went to a college where no parking was offered to freshmen, because freshman were required to live in dorms on campus so no car necessary. After a while I didn't just forget about wanting a truck but I started to realize how dumb cars were in general. I wondered why all places couldn't be like college campuses. I didn't understand what I meant was, why can't all places be mixed use and walkable. I was told, "you'll understand once you get into the real world, commuting is just a fact of being an adult"
    I've since visited numerous places in Europe and I get it now. Americans don't seem to remember what the real world is. It's not living in isolation and only venturing out into the world in a private metal and glass box.

  • @dialoragardon2033
    @dialoragardon2033 Год назад +432

    "The freedom to swing your arm ends where my face begins", is such a good line that I had to draw attention to it.

  • @salticus
    @salticus Год назад +99

    I think another factor of SUVs and Trucks being less safe is how isolated you feel in them. I live in Austria, and while American Trucks and SUVs sadly are becoming more popular constantly, it's not as bad as in the US yet. I don't drive, but obviously still ride in cars sometimes, mostly small cars or at most station wagons. However, last year I once got a ride in a Cadillac Escalade when I was in the UK, and I was really surprised by how safe you *feel* in the car (Despite the car being less safe for basically everyone). You feel completely isolated from the rest of the road, being so high up and taking up so much space. It's really hard to describe the feeling, but it can't be good for safety. It's the same reason why cycling is comparably safe in shared pedestrian and cyclist zones. You are just so much more aware of your surroundings on a bike than in a car, especially a giant SUV with poor visibility.

    • @shamefuldisplay9692
      @shamefuldisplay9692 Год назад +19

      ​@@tsifsastsifsarotatos2495 Safe compared to the tiny Honda you'll crush in a crash and safe compared to the child you can't see.

    • @ferdypl322
      @ferdypl322 Год назад +1

      ​@Tsifsas Tsifsarotatos wrong again fuckwit, the likelihood of your SUV rolling over and killing you is much higher than for a normal car. The sheer size of the car means there is less visibility in all directions, as that is how sightlines work.

    • @frafraplanner9277
      @frafraplanner9277 Год назад +16

      @@tsifsastsifsarotatos2495 He's not trying to deny the undeniable fact that SUVs are safer for the people inside of them when they crash. He's just pointing out that people ignore the dangers SUVs have on smaller cars and on cyclists and pedestrians in collisions

    • @arnaudmenard5114
      @arnaudmenard5114 Год назад +5

      cocooned, is the word i would use to describe the feeling.
      the sounds are muted, the interior is mat and dark, windows tinted, maneuvers like a boat...smothered almost.

    • @torstikinnunen3801
      @torstikinnunen3801 Год назад +14

      @@tsifsastsifsarotatos2495 The video mentions that SUVs don't need to follow passenger safety regulations of cars and shows crash test footage of SUV passengers getting jerked around by the impact a lot more than those in a car. Passengers are not in better safe in SUVs than in cars.

  • @nopenopenobody2971
    @nopenopenobody2971 Год назад +554

    I have never been in the US, but I am from Basel, Switzerland and here you find so god damn many SUV now. It wasn't so 10 Years ago. For me, who uses a bike every day to do my things, these SUVs evolved to my biggest fear.

    • @bumpsy
      @bumpsy Год назад +59

      same in Germany. While smaller cars are still popular in cities, SUVs have been taking over for the last 10 years or so and if we don't get our shit together with public transport and bicycle infrastructure, I'm afraid the trend will only continue in that direction. (those two things are in horrible conditions, btw)

    • @GimpyMR2
      @GimpyMR2 Год назад +17

      @@bumpsy I'm an American, I have visited Germany a fair bit but hadn't for a while until December 2022. I was frankly shocked at the amount of CUV/SUV's on the road there now vs. our last trip.

    • @joey4ever444
      @joey4ever444 Год назад +36

      Same in the Netherlands. We live in one of the flattest, most densely populated countries in the world. If even 5% of those cars ever, ever offroad in their lifetime I'd be surprised.

    • @mandan8945
      @mandan8945 Год назад

      God damn? 🤮🤮🤮🤮🤮

    • @anonym3017
      @anonym3017 Год назад +7

      and now the EU wants to raise the weight limit of a b class drivers license to 4.25 tonnes cause EU carmakers just can't build good EVs.

  • @RichaadEB
    @RichaadEB Год назад +152

    "yeah my ABSOLUTE TANK of a vehicle (aka the Chevy Child-Pulverizer 5000™) might be a needlessly massive, unwieldy, inefficient, contradictory, expensive, dirty, ugly, and inconvenient marketing gimmick for literally everyone that isn't me, mostly so I can LARP as an outdoorsy cowboy - but I really dislike your tone; plus I've already made it my personality."
    *plows through an elementary school playground while typing this comment

  • @TheMusicManiac1997
    @TheMusicManiac1997 Год назад +142

    I loved my 2005 Subaru forester because it was the size of a normal car but had just as much space as a small truck and I could see EVERYTHING

  • @sqeesqad1410
    @sqeesqad1410 Год назад +73

    I love that line "Your freedom to swing your arm ends where my face begins"

  • @coreysimmerer
    @coreysimmerer Год назад +82

    “Your freedom to swing your arm ends where my face begins” phenomenal way to frame the harm SUVs cause everyone else

    • @NotJustBikes
      @NotJustBikes  Год назад +46

      You can lump "freedom" into two big categories: freedom _to_ and freedom _from._
      Freedom to is the freedom to do what you want, when you way. Say what you want, etc..
      Freedom from is the freedom not to be inhibited by things that prevent you from doing what you want, like strict control over your behaviour, government censorship, and other people's actions limiting your own freedom.
      The American conversation around Freedom is very heavily slanted towards "freedom to", and if "freedom from" is mentioned at all, it's only in the context of "get the government out of my business". There is absolutely no acknowledgement at all that the actions of one group can restrict the freedoms of another group.
      That's why the American discussion about SUV is so lopsided, focusing only the freedom of people to drive whatever they want. There is absolutely zero acknowledgement of the impact of that "freedom" as it restricts the freedoms of others, and that's what pisses me off the most.

  • @richardhill194
    @richardhill194 Год назад +722

    Its interesting to see kei trucks/vans recently imported into the US from Japan, apparently we (US residents) are so desperate for lighter trucks, that some people will pay extra to import a 20+ year old(old enough ignore chicken tax) vehicle from half way around the world because nobody makes them like that around here.

  • @sageoz9886
    @sageoz9886 Год назад +80

    I'm a tattoo artist and I once did two memorial tattoos in one week for children run over by their dads while backing out the driveway, both SUVs.

  • @evboto.5597
    @evboto.5597 Год назад +112

    As someone from TX who drives an SUV, I agree with everything you said and I’m getting fed up with even having it. The only reason why I’m still driving that was because it was basically given to me, and as soon as that car dies I’m getting a Prius Prime (which can easily fit just as much cargo if not more in the back and can seat 5) that will be used for everything up to and including the rugged stuff (which they do just fine at).

    • @K0nst4nt1n96
      @K0nst4nt1n96 Год назад +2

      I am curious in what made you buy it at first? :)

    • @Trace_AlChrom
      @Trace_AlChrom Год назад

      @@K0nst4nt1n96 They tend to sell cheep on the used markets before car prices went dumb at the end of 2019.

  • @akarayan
    @akarayan Год назад +619

    Something you missed is the significantly higher wear and tear on our roads that these larger vehicles cause. Ever municipality is bankrupt and can’t keep up with repairs and these vehicles exacerbate the problem by an order of magnitude

    • @AntonEMaes
      @AntonEMaes Год назад +141

      Ironically a lot of people choose SUVs because of bad roads
      And then opt for low profile tires completely defeating the purpose

    • @NotJustBikes
      @NotJustBikes  Год назад +478

      I didn't miss it, I purposefully did not include it. The truth is that while SUVs do tear up the road more than cars, this effect is dwarfed by transport trucks. The effect of an SUV is nothing compared to an 18 wheeler, so talking about it is a distraction. There are bigger issues with SUVs than road wear.

    • @DunkinDonutGoesFast
      @DunkinDonutGoesFast Год назад +79

      ​@@NotJustBikes very insightful decision, thanks for telling us about your process a bit! ☺️

    • @townhall05446
      @townhall05446 Год назад +25

      Tesla and other electric vehicles are a lot worse on roads than the gas engine vehicles they replace. And worst of ALL so far, GM's electric Hummer which weighs 9000 lbs! Insane.

    • @JanDoggen
      @JanDoggen Год назад +8

      @@NotJustBikes Parking space! Just look at the change in size of one parking space when a neighborhood or parking garage is redone.

  • @hexstudios
    @hexstudios Год назад +663

    As someone who lives in the rural south, I'll admit, I came into this video thinking I was going to disagree, but I gave it a shot and I am inclined to agree with a lot of what you have to say.
    I drive a rear-wheel V6 1998 Dodge Dakota SLT crew cab (the one with only two doors, but still has a small bench seat in the back). It's MUCH smaller than all these huge trucks around me, but my truck bed is nearly double the size. It's longer, and even wider, while the truck itself is very slim, and not even as long as new trucks with their extended cabs. I even have back seats (it only fits short people or children, but they're still there, right?) I also do not daily drive this truck very often. I drive a compact little dodge dart. My truck gets used for truck things like hauling animal feed and material for our construction projects around the farm. It's beaten up, scratched, paint peeling. But I am comfortable driving this thing into the city because it's HALF THE SIZE of a modern SUV or pickup. (I also daily a 1985 Honda Rebel 250 when it's not raining and I just need to run somewhere and not haul anything). Even here, parking lots are riddled with oversized SUV's and truck that jut out and make it impossible to navigate.
    I live in a rural area mostly by choice, but also the lower overall price of homes and far better privacy. As such, I do a LOT of driving, I mean the nearest walmart is a nearly 18 minute drive. I love cars, I am a major enthusiast, but I hate SUVs and these oversized trucks that absolutely nobody needs, and these people are paying half their mortgage for. Don't even get me started on the pandemic of bright white LED headlights on theses tall SUVs. Its impossible to drive at night without being blinded by an SUV because they are so much higher off the ground.
    I hate the sprawl of urban cities and the insurgence of ugly expensive subdivisions, and I will always prefer to live in the backwoods country, but that being said, I see the appeal of city life, and I know some prefer that lifestyle and want to be able to do so safely and effectively. I agree that cities need far better infrastructure for public transport, etc.
    Thank you for the informative video.
    (Side note: one of my dream cars has always been an old boxy volvo wagon lol)

  • @ivo215
    @ivo215 Год назад +394

    I remember, around the year 2000 in the Netherlands, while on a bicycle or motorcycle you had a clear view OVER the roofs of the cars in traffic. Today, all you see is the back of the car in front of you. They have gotten that much larger. I also remember the first Porsche Cayenne. A customer had it, a stupidly large car. And I was helping him load his things. The boot of the first Cayenne, I kid you not, was exactly golf set shaped and sized. It was hilarious.

  • @44jimcordell31
    @44jimcordell31 Год назад +104

    At 24:10 you showed a pickup truck being efficiently used to move 4 by 8 sheets of plywood. The thing I liked most about my Oldsmobile custom cruiser station wagon was that with the rear seat down it was designed perfectly to hold 4 by 8 sheets Of plywood or paneling or press board and kept everything inside the car with nothing sticking out the back. I was so sad to lose that station wagon about 4 years ago.

  • @ernesttse
    @ernesttse Год назад +289

    Another issue with SUV's is that with their bright LED headlight mounted high, they blind everyone at night making things more dangerous for everyone.

    • @roy1299
      @roy1299 Год назад +4

      True

    • @rhetorical1488
      @rhetorical1488 Год назад +30

      That is more an issue with lax regulations of headlights in north america. Teslas regularly blind me in my pickup.

  • @DrBernon
    @DrBernon Год назад +947

    I live in Spain, and the large car craze is slowly growing here as well. But I was absolutely flabbergasted when I went to a car exposition/fair, and saw a full size pickup truck. It was just crazy! The wheels were larger than some tractor's, and definitely higher than my whole car hood. I just hope I never encounter one of those on the old rural roads. That thing was also so wide it would take up both lanes.

  • @BaiZhijie
    @BaiZhijie Год назад +171

    I learned to drive on my mom's 1994 Volvo Station Wagon, then I went down to visit my relatives in Texas and I had to drive their big SUV and large pickup trucks, and the turning radius on those things was awful, I felt blind and clumsy compared to the more nimble station wagon I'd gotten used to. Making a K-turn in a suburban residential street felt really hard without accidentally going up off the curb. In my station wagon it would've been a piece of cake.

  • @allanjmcpherson
    @allanjmcpherson Год назад +189

    My parents live in truck country and recently sold their old car. The kid who ended up buying it was an apprentice carpenter. His father was convinced he *needed* a truck, but the only ones he could afford were absolutely worn out rust buckets. His mother took him to see this car, and he absolutely fell in love with it because it was practical, in good shape, and within his price range.

  • @DreadfulUtopia
    @DreadfulUtopia Год назад +60

    I live in London (Real London) and in the last few years I have noticed a growing trend in SUV's. Our city was never built to accommodate vehicles of this size and it shows. In the town I live, these huge SUV's are so big, they often spill out onto the pavement because they don't fit in every driveway. And since most people don't have dropped curbs, a lot of these giant things just sit on the road, making it difficult for cars to pass each other down narrow residential streets. One of my neighbours uses his SUV to get groceries from a store that's literally a 10 minute walk from where we live. Car culture is literally insane and yet so many people engage in it.

    • @razorwireclouds5708
      @razorwireclouds5708 Год назад +2

      The average European-built SUV is not usually longer or wider than a family estate like a 5-series or Audi A6.

    • @davidhillman1257
      @davidhillman1257 Год назад +1

      Regarding fetching groceries -- how many of those 10 minute trips are required to fetch a trunkful of groceries? A half-dozen? It isn't the distance to the store that causes people to use motor vehicles for grocery trips, it is the time efficiency of making one trip versus many. It also tends to save money buying items in bulk, which is far easier when one has a motor vehicle with which to bring them home.
      I bike to grocery stores at times, just because I like to ride my bikes -- but it is insane not to recognize that a motor vehicle is superior for that task, compared to walking or biking.

    • @franciscoacevedo3036
      @franciscoacevedo3036 Год назад

      How many times have you heard him dislike his hometown of fake London

  • @RevCraigD
    @RevCraigD Год назад +334

    This is why in Toronto we had 197 "interactions" between Motor Vehicles and pedestrians in the first 45 days of 2023. I walk to work, about a half hour each way, and daily see close calls. So much for Toronto's Vision Zero plan.

  • @wongkst25419
    @wongkst25419 Год назад +210

    I read a book called "the hidden persuaders" by Vance Packard, which talks exactly about the issue of status and superiority in our purchasing decisions. It's amazing how people can be so manipulable when it comes to making a decision, and SUVs are really great example

  • @1020percent
    @1020percent Год назад +57

    Literally got a pick up truck ad before and after this video. I really enjoy that your content is always thinking of these issues in a systemic manner and really highlights why these issues matter, it’s super frustrating for me because it seems an overwhelming amount of people don’t ever think of anything in an in depth manner.

    • @lws7394
      @lws7394 Год назад

      Fuck yeah! I am looking at a range rover ad .👎

  • @davitdavid7165
    @davitdavid7165 Год назад +187

    When I came to America and saw these in person for the first time I was shocked by their size.

    • @L9ie
      @L9ie Год назад +5

      That's the american dream for ya

    • @user-sg2yt6nc1z
      @user-sg2yt6nc1z Год назад +1

      That's what ur mom said when my pants were down

    • @willekevanderham5326
      @willekevanderham5326 Год назад +1

      Now you also find them in Dutch (and other European) cities, if not as many yet.

    • @user-ri9tt2ip4m
      @user-ri9tt2ip4m Год назад +1

      Imagine my shock when I saw a dodge truck with 8 wheels instead of regular 4! Enormous car

  • @scaredofghosts6813
    @scaredofghosts6813 Год назад +89

    I hate the term "light truck"
    Because it does not differentiate between a 4-cylinder chevy s10 or a diesel ford F450😠
    I love lil trucks, ive put more loads of firewood, camping gear, and paddlesboards than i can count on the life of my '03 didge dakota..lol i dont even drive it to work😅 i bicycle to work in denver

  • @skadi6750
    @skadi6750 Год назад +816

    I did my riding lessons in an SUV. I was forced to park "by memory", because I am a small woman and didnt have a tiniest chance to actually see jack shit. Which definitely didnt teach me much except being afraid. No, SUVs are not safe.

  • @VitaliyCD
    @VitaliyCD Год назад +715

    Thanks to your videos over the past year, I have become a bit too vocal about infrastructure.. so my company is relocating me to Amsterdam.

    • @NotJustBikes
      @NotJustBikes  Год назад +162

      Wow! Thanks so much!
      I'm really glad to hear that you're able to make the move. I hope you love it as much as we do! 👍

    • @SwirlingSoul
      @SwirlingSoul Год назад +40

      You lucky duck! ;-))
      Welcome to NL. Make sure you get a bank account with debit card, or you'll have a difficult start here!

    • @DMZZ_DZDM
      @DMZZ_DZDM Год назад +28

      I want to be relocated to a city where I don't have to worry about getting flattened by Tom from across the block :(

    • @alexnoman1498
      @alexnoman1498 Год назад +10

      The best outcome possible, right? xD
      Payed to be in Utopia! :D

    • @Fred_the_1996
      @Fred_the_1996 Год назад +11

      I see this as an absolute win😅

  • @RMTransit
    @RMTransit Год назад +94

    As someone who grew up in a rural area this really hits home. The vast majority of people will *never* need a truck - and even out on the farm I still see a lot of older (read smaller) trucks doing just fine - new ones feel like more of a fashion statement than anything.
    Random fact about me, I love skiing. What's funny is you could always tell the most serious skiers by their car - so many I knew would drive a small Subaru hatch as opposed to needing to compensate with a truck. It does everything you need and modestly tries to make sure ones kids can also ski on real snow.
    We need a world where people reflect on their mobility as more than just how they get around but, also as their social and environmental impact. Thank you for making this!

    • @NotJustBikes
      @NotJustBikes  Год назад +31

      Absolute Reece. This is so true.
      I don't get the knee-jerk reaction of people to this when they say, "but what about rural people?!" Have these people even been to a farm? My grandfather grew up on a farm and lived in a rural area his whole life. The hard work was done by a tractor. When they went into the city they drove a tiny Toyota hatchback.
      I really think the people who say this are really just playing a role and have no idea what it means to actually live rural. They don't need a pickup truck, they need a cowboy costume, so they can play their "tough rural guy" games without killing anybody in the process.

    • @jtsholtod.79
      @jtsholtod.79 Год назад +2

      Friends of our family had a huge farm up in Lakefield, ON. They had a tractor and quad cycle to work the fields, but drove an '82 Toyota Starlet to and from town, pulling a trailer when needed. Respect.

    • @willekevanderham5326
      @willekevanderham5326 Год назад

      And then you hear ads for E-SUV with the claim that this is good for the future of the planet. (There are several around in the Netherlands at this time but they do not say is outright as that will be against the advertisement code, but the meaning is clear from what they do say.) E-cars may be less bad than non-E, but it is now way good for nature.

    • @inund8
      @inund8 Год назад

      Totally true. Real skiers can get up the hill in a '97 Corolla, and do so before the sun comes up. Compensators show up at around noon, in a brand new ford f150.

  • @cassinipanini
    @cassinipanini Год назад +87

    Something tangentially related is that more and more cars visually look aggressive. I just want a cute little car but they all look like they're gonna k word my parents and call me a crybaby

  • @maxguy9623
    @maxguy9623 Год назад +236

    Don't forget about hatchbacks! I feel like every time I see someone driving a crossover I think the person just wants a lifted hatch. I hope at some point we swing back around and suddenly sedans are back in business and cool again. I'd also love to see more wagons in the states but the price point for most of them is really high 😢

  • @nmtrules96
    @nmtrules96 Год назад +640

    As a small sized human who is terrified of trucks with the front as tall as my face, i approve this message.

    • @LeafHuntress
      @LeafHuntress Год назад +22

      I hear you & fully agree. 1,58m
      These things are utterly terrifying.

    • @Kristina-ek8yt
      @Kristina-ek8yt Год назад +13

      Same here. And with that in mind, I'm writing an email to my representatives right now.

    • @eli_rook
      @eli_rook Год назад +33

      I’m 5’2, so I fully understand. I hate going to the store on a good day cause my area is flooded with oversized Trucks and SUVs and I’ve almost been hit on multiple occasions.

    • @andersdenkend
      @andersdenkend Год назад +26

      I'm 174 cm and these things scare even me.

  • @Pancakegr8
    @Pancakegr8 Год назад +199

    My sibling lost their car and tried biking to work. Only 2 days in and we both agreed to sharing my car because of how inefficient and dangerous biking was. It really breaks my heart that people who are down on their luck and don't have a car get put at such a significant disadvantage. Edit: We're in CO btw.

    • @Rejistania
      @Rejistania Год назад +9

      I hope that the situation in Comoros improves!

    • @YounesLayachi
      @YounesLayachi Год назад +2

      tried an electric assisted bike ? or even a motorbike ?

    • @MaticTheProto
      @MaticTheProto Год назад +11

      @@YounesLayachi that wasn’t his problem

    • @gurratell7326
      @gurratell7326 Год назад +2

      I found the USAnian! The guy that feels sorry for people without a car and also writes abbreviation for places that only themselves understand.

    • @FeedMeSalt
      @FeedMeSalt Год назад +15

      I'm in Nova Scotia Canada. I biked all year round for four years with my first job.
      I was struck twice rear ended at a stop sign once and had countless road rage incidents.
      My mother told me if I don't stop biking to work I have to leave home because she doesn't even want to get the call I'm gone.
      My bike hasn't seen real use since I was 21. I'm 25 now. It's shameful.

  • @b1g_m00n
    @b1g_m00n Год назад +69

    little story about kindness and european vans: I went to Paris with my mom in 2017 and as we were going from the airport to the hotel, sb lifted all of our money from my mom's pack. so we found ourselves bordering on panic on a deserted subway station, late at night, w/o means to pay a taxi to take us and our humongous luggage to the hotel. we didn't even really know where it was and we didn't have local SIM cards yet to search it online. we finally found a man in a little delivery van who agreed to look it up on his phone and then, seeing how frantic my mom was, agreed to drive us there. three adults and all of the luggage we had fit just right on that tiny van's cockpit. imagine what you could do with the cargo space.