| Click here to view the embedded video. "It's nice to be liked," my future third wife Liz Phair sings, "but it's better by far to get paid." When your humble author began a vigorous program of auto-media meta-criticism under the guidance of the august Robert Farago a few years ago, I expected to be hated by my peers, and I was. I expected to be shunned by the industry PR people, and I was. I even feared I might be the subject of underhanded personal attacks designed to cost me my job, my home, and my ability to feed my son, and I wasn't disappointed in that, either. The only thing I didn't expect was to be emulated. Now we have the nice folks at FORTUNE doing their own meta-critical review-the-reviewers, complete with double helpings of cynicism and supposition. Their target: The new Chevrolet Malibu ECO. They credit TTAC's own Michael Karesh with being "an early sign that consensus was building" on the car. And the verdict?
The article title res ipsa loquitir and all that jazz: The Most Disliked Car Of The Year (so far). FORTUNE editor Alex Taylor charts the media's desperate, fawning attempts to like the underwhelming underAchieva even as the evidence for the vehicle's utter fecklessness stares them in the face. I won't bother to excerpt the article: you can go read it if you're interested, and the whole thing is worth reading. This article is important, because it points out three important facts:
I will repeat it, and I believe it. The good guys are going to win. The cream will rise to the top. Bad cars will be shamed. Good cars will be praised. The journosaurs will disappear as the comet of globally instant information strikes their dark little planet and snuffs out their lives. The good guys are going to win. What would Liz say? Hmm… how about "I believe we have things to do. I believe in myself, and I believe in you." from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com | |||
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