Bloomberg: "Baby Boomers Are Getting Too Old For Sports Cars"
#1
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Bloomberg: "Baby Boomers Are Getting Too Old For Sports Cars"
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10-21-2016, 03:22 PM
Le Mans Master
Bloomberg reporters put out a lot of brain dead Zombie Libitard propoganda. They really want try to pry my Vette Fob and my guns out of my cold dead hands. The millennials prefer Prius and Kia Souls because they were brain washed with the Global Warming BS. Or perhaps a more likely could it be that the folks out of college cannot get real jobs and afford $40-$60K cars? But Bloomberg and the rest of the media dare not blame their Obomination policies.
#2
Team Owner
Well, this PRE-baby boomer still manages to fit his creaky bones in his three Corvettes(well, maybe two out of the three, as I don't drive my 1956 Corvette anymore).
But, to be 100% truthful, it is easier to fit them in my 4 door sedan just to make a run to Walmart or Home Depot.
But, to be 100% truthful, it is easier to fit them in my 4 door sedan just to make a run to Walmart or Home Depot.
Last edited by JoesC5; 10-21-2016 at 03:12 PM.
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#3
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The Corvette stills sells better than any other sports car
#4
Le Mans Master
Bloomberg reporters put out a lot of brain dead Zombie Libitard propoganda. They really want try to pry my Vette Fob and my guns out of my cold dead hands. The millennials prefer Prius and Kia Souls because they were brain washed with the Global Warming BS. Or perhaps a more likely could it be that the folks out of college cannot get real jobs and afford $40-$60K cars? But Bloomberg and the rest of the media dare not blame their Obomination policies.
Last edited by Flame Red; 10-21-2016 at 03:28 PM.
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#5
Well, this PRE-baby boomer still manages to fit his creaky bones in his three Corvettes(well, maybe two out of the three, as I don't drive my 1956 Corvette anymore).
But, to be 100% truthful, it is easier to fit them in my 4 door sedan just to make a run to Walmart or Home Depot.
But, to be 100% truthful, it is easier to fit them in my 4 door sedan just to make a run to Walmart or Home Depot.
Pre-BB's are not as wussy as BB's!! The war was still ongoing as we came into the world and there were starving children in Europe - everything was rationed and we learned how to eat turnip greens, brussels sprouts, liver and spam. Getting a sports car like a C7 was a wild and crazy dream, so getting in and out of our prized car is NO PROBLEMA!! Let the accelerator and brakes do all the work. The car is literally a Dream Come True.
Anyone who can sit down on a stool can get in and out of a C7 with no problem!
#6
Team Owner
Bloomberg reporters are brain dead Zombie Libitards. They put out crap like this to try to pry my Vette Fob and my guns out of my cold dead hands. The millennials prefer Prius and Kia Souls because they were brain washed with the Global Warming BS. Or perhaps a more likely reason for touting this would be that the folks out of college cannot get real jobs and afford $40-$60K cars? But Bloomberg and the rest of the media dare not blame the Obomination policies.
Not fully across the board, but many older folks are not into the "transformer" styling, thus are holding onto their "obsolete" C5's and C6's instead of trading them in on new C7's. Those creaking bones seniors are still driving Corvettes, but just not the new generation.
We do agree about the disastrous Obama policies and the Global Warming crap.
Last edited by JoesC5; 10-21-2016 at 04:14 PM.
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#7
Team Owner
Pre-BB's are not as wussy as BB's!! The war was still ongoing as we came into the world and there were starving children in Europe - everything was rationed and we learned how to eat turnip greens, brussels sprouts, liver and spam. Getting a sports car like a C7 was a wild and crazy dream, so getting in and out of our prized car is NO PROBLEMA!! Let the accelerator and brakes do all the work. The car is literally a Dream Come True.
Anyone who can sit down on a stool can get in and out of a C7 with no problem!
Anyone who can sit down on a stool can get in and out of a C7 with no problem!
Last edited by JoesC5; 10-21-2016 at 03:44 PM.
#8
Instructor
Crap. I have no problem getting into or under or around any of my 3 corvettes (2, 1966 and 1, 2014) despite my almost 67 years . MILLENIALS and Gen Xers be damned most of them can't even drive standard .
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#9
Le Mans Master
http://autoweek.com/article/car-news...y-boomers-grow
DETROIT -- Baby boomers in the U.S. are starting to outgrow their midlife crisis years, and that’s bad news for automakers who want to sell sports cars.
It was a sign of things to come this month when Ford Motor Co. idled its Mustang plant for a week as sales for the year fell 9 percent. Other sports cars have faded at a similar rate, and even stalwarts like the Chevrolet Corvette and most Porsche models are slumping.
DETROIT -- Baby boomers in the U.S. are starting to outgrow their midlife crisis years, and that’s bad news for automakers who want to sell sports cars.
It was a sign of things to come this month when Ford Motor Co. idled its Mustang plant for a week as sales for the year fell 9 percent. Other sports cars have faded at a similar rate, and even stalwarts like the Chevrolet Corvette and most Porsche models are slumping.
#10
Le Mans Master
http://autoweek.com/article/car-news...y-boomers-grow
DETROIT -- Baby boomers in the U.S. are starting to outgrow their midlife crisis years, and that’s bad news for automakers who want to sell sports cars.
It was a sign of things to come this month when Ford Motor Co. idled its Mustang plant for a week as sales for the year fell 9 percent. Other sports cars have faded at a similar rate, and even stalwarts like the Chevrolet Corvette and most Porsche models are slumping.
DETROIT -- Baby boomers in the U.S. are starting to outgrow their midlife crisis years, and that’s bad news for automakers who want to sell sports cars.
It was a sign of things to come this month when Ford Motor Co. idled its Mustang plant for a week as sales for the year fell 9 percent. Other sports cars have faded at a similar rate, and even stalwarts like the Chevrolet Corvette and most Porsche models are slumping.
Another is the goofy statement from the end of the article:
“Boomers are coming out of pure sports cars, but they’re not willing to sacrifice pure driving,” Cote said. “The idea of a sports SUV was incomprehensible 10 years ago” LOL... still incomprehensible as a sports car replacement offering "pure driving"...
Last edited by Kent1999; 10-21-2016 at 04:10 PM.
#11
Team Owner
http://autoweek.com/article/car-news...y-boomers-grow
DETROIT -- Baby boomers in the U.S. are starting to outgrow their midlife crisis years, and that’s bad news for automakers who want to sell sports cars.
It was a sign of things to come this month when Ford Motor Co. idled its Mustang plant for a week as sales for the year fell 9 percent. Other sports cars have faded at a similar rate, and even stalwarts like the Chevrolet Corvette and most Porsche models are slumping.
DETROIT -- Baby boomers in the U.S. are starting to outgrow their midlife crisis years, and that’s bad news for automakers who want to sell sports cars.
It was a sign of things to come this month when Ford Motor Co. idled its Mustang plant for a week as sales for the year fell 9 percent. Other sports cars have faded at a similar rate, and even stalwarts like the Chevrolet Corvette and most Porsche models are slumping.
Most of the Mustangs and Camaros I see are driven by people much, much younger than the "baby Boomer" generation, that don't have "creaking bones".
The fact is that a lot of the younger generation just can't afford to move out of their parent's basement and buy new Mustangs and Camaros when they are working part time at a convenience store for $10 an hour.
Mustangs and Camaros are not "sports cars" but are "sporty cars". Huge difference.
Things are not so different from 52 years ago. Back in 1964 I bought my first new car...a 1964 Malibu SS hardtop with the 327/4-speed/posi/F40 suspension. The reason I bought it was that I couldn't afford a new 1964 Corvette, as I was only 21 and in the Air Force(making way less than I deserved, LOL). But, at least I had a full time job, and a part time job on Saturday.
Other than a young guy I knew that used his recently deceased wife's $10,000 life insurance policy to buy a new 1964 Corvette, I only saw older(above 50) guys driving Corvettes. Even GM knew their market wasn't young kids, and their advertisements(for the most part) in the 50's and 60's showed older people driving Corvettes.
Last edited by JoesC5; 10-21-2016 at 04:28 PM.
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#13
Instructor
"Not fully across the board, but many older folks are not into the "transformer" styling, thus are holding onto their "obsolete" C5's and C6's instead of trading them in on new C7's. Those creaking bones seniors are still driving Corvettes, but just not the new generation."
Really, Joesc5????
The new styling is pulling in guys like me that wouldn't walk across the street to look at a Corvette built after 1967.
After 60 years of playing with sports cars the styling and engineering of the C7 connected with my definition of a great car and I have one and love it
It is not a garage Queen, I have had plenty of those and this machine is is going to get 10k+/year as long as I can wrap my knarley hand around the M7 stir stick.
And as far a comfort, Wow, it fits my 6'2"ness very well and much prefer it to my Mercedes for long distance touring.
I would say to anyone who is thinking that a C5 or 6 is the answer spend some miles in a C7 and you will park your old car on the street!
Just a hard core guy that loves his C7, didn't mean to rant but sometimes it just comes out
Really, Joesc5????
The new styling is pulling in guys like me that wouldn't walk across the street to look at a Corvette built after 1967.
After 60 years of playing with sports cars the styling and engineering of the C7 connected with my definition of a great car and I have one and love it
It is not a garage Queen, I have had plenty of those and this machine is is going to get 10k+/year as long as I can wrap my knarley hand around the M7 stir stick.
And as far a comfort, Wow, it fits my 6'2"ness very well and much prefer it to my Mercedes for long distance touring.
I would say to anyone who is thinking that a C5 or 6 is the answer spend some miles in a C7 and you will park your old car on the street!
Just a hard core guy that loves his C7, didn't mean to rant but sometimes it just comes out
#14
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St. Jude Donor '16-'17,'22,'24
That Bloomberg article doesn't ring true.
Difficult to get in and out of a C7? Seriously? The folks at Bloomberg must be living in a nursing home. The C4, that was difficult to get in and out of. But from the C5 and newer, no problem. I find the C7 is slightly easier to get in and out of than the C5, but all of the C5, C6, C7 generation are not difficult to enter and exit. Is it easier to get in and out of a SUV, of course. But its easier to get in and out of a SUV than it is to enter and exit a Prius or a Cruze. So what!
As for economics, that's hard to argue with. The Corvette C7 is for those who are well healed. Low paying jobs don't go well with new car sales period and the Vette is a pricey car, but still a bargain in the super car market.
As for the global warming argument, I seriously doubt anyone who might be a Corvette buyer would pass on one because of that issue, especially those considering a SUV. Actually, the C7 gets pretty good mileage. My C7 gets way better mileage than our older Highlander and slightly better than our other SUV.
I have a serious problem with someone buying a "sport" SUV instead of a high powered, sports car like a Vette. That one just doesn't compute. Anyone claiming that just isn't a true sports car aficionado.
Difficult to get in and out of a C7? Seriously? The folks at Bloomberg must be living in a nursing home. The C4, that was difficult to get in and out of. But from the C5 and newer, no problem. I find the C7 is slightly easier to get in and out of than the C5, but all of the C5, C6, C7 generation are not difficult to enter and exit. Is it easier to get in and out of a SUV, of course. But its easier to get in and out of a SUV than it is to enter and exit a Prius or a Cruze. So what!
As for economics, that's hard to argue with. The Corvette C7 is for those who are well healed. Low paying jobs don't go well with new car sales period and the Vette is a pricey car, but still a bargain in the super car market.
As for the global warming argument, I seriously doubt anyone who might be a Corvette buyer would pass on one because of that issue, especially those considering a SUV. Actually, the C7 gets pretty good mileage. My C7 gets way better mileage than our older Highlander and slightly better than our other SUV.
I have a serious problem with someone buying a "sport" SUV instead of a high powered, sports car like a Vette. That one just doesn't compute. Anyone claiming that just isn't a true sports car aficionado.
#15
I think the drop in sales is a factor of several things: first, there is a record number of people who are unemployed (if you don't have a job chances are you're not car shopping unless you're a trust fund kid); second, cars are ridiculously expensive these days; and third, what now passes as entertainment is held in one hand six inches from your nose and those people seldom know what's going on in their immediate surroundings.
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#16
Nothing to do with brain dead reporters. GM has long recognized that the average age of new Corvette buyers are getting older, and that's why the design of the C7 was radically changed from the Corvette generations before it. GM has been trying to increase it's sales of Corvettes in Europe(lost cause) and has tried to lower the average age of people buying new Corvettes today by offering "transformer" styling etc that appeals to younger people. Hasn't worked that well as sales of the C7 Corvette are down, even though the overall car market has been very strong.
Not fully across the board, but many older folks are not into the "transformer" styling, thus are holding onto their "obsolete" C5's and C6's instead of trading them in on new C7's. Those creaking bones seniors are still driving Corvettes, but just not the new generation.
We do agree about the disastrous Obama policies and the Global Warming crap.
Not fully across the board, but many older folks are not into the "transformer" styling, thus are holding onto their "obsolete" C5's and C6's instead of trading them in on new C7's. Those creaking bones seniors are still driving Corvettes, but just not the new generation.
We do agree about the disastrous Obama policies and the Global Warming crap.
#17
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http://autoweek.com/article/car-news...y-boomers-grow
DETROIT -- Baby boomers in the U.S. are starting to outgrow their midlife crisis years, and that’s bad news for automakers who want to sell sports cars.
It was a sign of things to come this month when Ford Motor Co. idled its Mustang plant for a week as sales for the year fell 9 percent. Other sports cars have faded at a similar rate, and even stalwarts like the Chevrolet Corvette and most Porsche models are slumping.
DETROIT -- Baby boomers in the U.S. are starting to outgrow their midlife crisis years, and that’s bad news for automakers who want to sell sports cars.
It was a sign of things to come this month when Ford Motor Co. idled its Mustang plant for a week as sales for the year fell 9 percent. Other sports cars have faded at a similar rate, and even stalwarts like the Chevrolet Corvette and most Porsche models are slumping.
Baby boomers are starting to outgrow their midlife crisis years, and that’s bad news for automakers who want to sell sports cars.
It was a sign of things to come this month when Ford Motor Co. idled its Mustang plant for a week as sales for the year fell 9 percent. Other sports cars have faded at a similar rate, and even stalwarts like the Chevrolet Corvette and most Porsche models are slumping.
It was a sign of things to come this month when Ford Motor Co. idled its Mustang plant for a week as sales for the year fell 9 percent. Other sports cars have faded at a similar rate, and even stalwarts like the Chevrolet Corvette and most Porsche models are slumping.
Same exact words. The fact that they have been repeated doesn't make them more or less true. In fact Autoweek claims the article was originally in Automotive News. Neither article attributes Bloomberg as the original source. So we have the exact same article THREE TIMES verbatim.
SOMEBODY is plagarizing and they are all 'spreading the meme.'
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#18
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"Automotive News" attributes David Welch from "Bloomberg."
The interesting thing is it was considered a big enough story to be picked up by two other publications.
The interesting thing is it was considered a big enough story to be picked up by two other publications.
#19
Team Owner
Ford also idled their truck plant because of slow sales and the slow sales were not due to baby boomers with creaky bones getting to old to get in and out of a pickup truck. http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articl...o-slack-demand
News about the slump in "sporty cars" is just BS from a reporter with an agenda. I wonder why he didn't write an article about how last months sales of the ERL was 6 cars, down 83.3%(LOL) from September of 2015. I'm sure that that drop in sales was due to grey haired old farts thinking the ERL is to sporty for them and too hard to get in and out of. LOL
News about the slump in "sporty cars" is just BS from a reporter with an agenda. I wonder why he didn't write an article about how last months sales of the ERL was 6 cars, down 83.3%(LOL) from September of 2015. I'm sure that that drop in sales was due to grey haired old farts thinking the ERL is to sporty for them and too hard to get in and out of. LOL
Last edited by JoesC5; 10-21-2016 at 10:36 PM.
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St. Jude Donor '15
"In honor of jpee"
The Mustang has also been idled from production per an announcement I heard earlier in the week.
I happen to think boomers are getting older, and possibly not going for C7 Corvettes to buy/replace their current rides. I also think the design was changed for good reason. Whether it works in the longer term (not just a few years but say, 10 down the road), time will tell. It could be the Corvette goes the way of Pontiac or Olds. Or, it could be it makes it into the 2025-2030 era. Many great looking and high perf cars have gone away over the last 120 years.
I happen to think boomers are getting older, and possibly not going for C7 Corvettes to buy/replace their current rides. I also think the design was changed for good reason. Whether it works in the longer term (not just a few years but say, 10 down the road), time will tell. It could be the Corvette goes the way of Pontiac or Olds. Or, it could be it makes it into the 2025-2030 era. Many great looking and high perf cars have gone away over the last 120 years.