Interest in cars with the younger generation, what happened?

Let me take a small detour, what happened to rock and roll? Seems to go hand in hand with cars not being popular.

Thoughts?

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Let me take a small detour, what happened to rock and roll? Seems to go hand in hand with cars not being popular.

Thoughts?

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I think this just has to do with the evolution of music in general. Rock music is still around, but there’s so many sub genres that exist within rock (or metal) that it’s impossible to find something that resembles the glory days of Motley Crue, Quiet Riot, The Scorpions, or any other insanely popular 80s bands.

That style of music also just doesn’t seem popular anymore, even if it is around. Which I think is a shame.

Now it’s all about digital drums, and uninspired, generic sounding singers that write songs about tragic relationships they’ve probably never experienced.


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I traded a cassette deck for a 1970 Chevy station wagon for my first car...350 4 bbl, straight pipes and glass packs. There were something like 7 million beer can pull tabs (remember those?!?) or bottle tops in the back end. My goodness my neighbors must have hated that thing parked out on the street, coming home at all hours of the night...aaaaah the memories. ;)
 
I traded a cassette deck for a 1970 Chevy station wagon for my first car...350 4 bbl, straight pipes and glass packs. There were something like 7 million beer can pull tabs (remember those?!?) or bottle tops in the back end. My goodness my neighbors must have hated that thing parked out on the street, coming home at all hours of the night...aaaaah the memories. ;)
This story right here is exactly what I'm talking about that the current generation is completely missing out on!

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I think this just has to do with the evolution of music in general. Rock music is still around, but there’s so many sub genres that exist within rock (or metal) that it’s impossible to find something that resembles the glory days of Motley Crue, Quiet Riot, The Scorpions, or any other insanely popular 80s bands.

That style of music also just doesn’t seem popular anymore, even if it is around. Which I think is a shame.

Now it’s all about digital drums, and uninspired, generic sounding singers that write songs about tragic relationships they’ve probably never experienced.


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There's plenty of rock n roll, you just have to get out and find it! Yeah all the dinosaurs are dying but there's lots of good new music.

Current bands that rock:

Foo Fighters
The Struts
Nothing But Thieves
Royal Blood
Cage The Elephant
Muse
AWOLNation
Night Riots
The Black Keys
Queens of the Stone Age
Ron Gallo

Check some of those out.
 
I like Royal Blood

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I'm not one for good music to be validated by radio because I'm sure local radio sucks where you live like it does in the 3rd largest city in America, all the hits that are tired, been tired since I was in High School in the late 80's. Noone needs to hear "The Joker" or "Don't stop believe in'" or "Tom Sawyer" anymore but what people DO need to hear is Royal Blood and Winery Dogs. I also feel they need to play more "slightly" deeper tracks from well know artists as well. The younger gen needs to find Royal Blood or Grete Van Fleet and start working on that late 90's GTP Grand Prix to get your feet wet, might even find a girl while your at it too:props:
 
I'm 47 years old, my buddy Hectour is 38 and we talk about cars all the time. I actually wish our conversations were recorded and/or were on a podcast because they seem to go everywhere. The other day we were talking about why there isn't more younger people at the cars and coffee shows? Also why there aren't more Japanese cars at the cars and coffee type shows? I can only speak for myself but when I was 19 I would attend a local cruise night with my 78' Caprice Classic 2 door. It certainly wasn't a fast car at that time but it was my pride and joy and I continued to build it up over the years. I took a year off of having a toy in 1994 but in 1995 I got behind a Cobra Mustang and it said "Have you been bitten lately" and I snapped, went to the bank that week and bought a used 1987 Grand National. I owned that car for 5 years and modded it every year I owned it, went to cruise nights and drove it everywhere, except during the winter, always had a winter beater with the toys, ofcoarse. A lot of people were really into having cars, it seemed like a right of passage, atleast to me, it was "cool", fast forward to today.

Today you've got teens not getting their drivers licenses, taking an Uber to get around and not being interested in cars in general, kinda like what's happened to rock and roll as well. I mean we attend cars and coffees all over the greater Chicagoland area, really nice areas as well as middle of the road areas and you just don't see the younger crowd. Its not about having the latest and greatest but rather what are YOU working on right now. It doesn't even have to be mainstream, I mean I modded a 78' Caprice Classic coupe and would always hear "why did you build a Grandpa car" or "why not a Monte Carlo or something lighter?" Since then I've always appreciated something "different", so there has to be others out there like this as well but cars and being into them has seemed to be relegated to a "thing of the past".

I brought up Japanese cars and here in the greater Chicagoland there are all types of people and import cars are very popular and there were even cruise nights that catered to them but they've literally dried up over night. I used to go to them when I had my CR-Z which was from 2011 to 2014, now they've gone away, like the big top was brought down and it left town. Where did these cars go? I should also note that at these shows ALL cars were welcomed too, unlike the classic car shows where people would always look down their noses at imports or newer cars, that "built, not bought" attitude or "Murica" tude. I look at it like this, there should be a movement to keep the flame alive with cars, now more than ever because we've got this "movement" to electrify cars and even take the steering wheel and pedals out of the car, forget about "save the manuals", how about save the cars and get back into them.

So I ask, to everyone here, do you notice the same waning interest in cars with the younger generation? Btw, I'm not yelling at anyone to get off my lawn either, LOL, just wanted to pick the brains of my fellow geeks out there, thank you!





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Reset?

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When I was a kid, I could get a summer job paying 15-20/hr in a warehouse, factory or construction. There are no jobs like that for kids anymore. The temp companies have grabbed them up, the factories closed and moved to China and the construction jobs are all migrant/immigrant workers. Fast food jobs have grown ass adults applying for any open position.

Things aren't like they used to be for this generation coming up. For the first time, their lives will not be better than their parents (ours.)

This is exactly right. And to add to this, kids can't even afford to live on their own nowadays.

When I was in my late teens, early 20's, I could grab any apartment around town for 400-450 bucks a month. And like you mentioned Kirk, the pay was about 18-25 an hour.

Fast-forward 25 years, and the good jobs are all gone (as you explained), the kids are offered 11 bucks an hour, and an apartment here is between 2-3 grand a month.

If a young person here does happen to attain a vehicle, it's just an old beater that barely runs for 500 bucks. Certainly nothing to be proud of.

Quite a shame.
 
I'm not one for good music to be validated by radio because I'm sure local radio sucks where you live like it does in the 3rd largest city in America, all the hits that are tired, been tired since I was in High School in the late 80's. Noone needs to hear "The Joker" or "Don't stop believe in'" or "Tom Sawyer" anymore but what people DO need to hear is Royal Blood and Winery Dogs. I also feel they need to play more "slightly" deeper tracks from well know artists as well. The younger gen needs to find Royal Blood or Grete Van Fleet and start working on that late 90's GTP Grand Prix to get your feet wet, might even find a girl while your at it too:props:

Even the “deep tracks” station on Sirius doesn’t play real deep tracks. And for this reason I don’t even bother paying for satellite after the trial period is over. Rather listen to my own music anyway, can choose what I want depending on how I feel. Plus who likes commercials.


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Cars, music and the young generation

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I'm not one for good music to be validated by radio because I'm sure local radio sucks where you live like it does in the 3rd largest city in America, all the hits that are tired, been tired since I was in High School in the late 80's. Noone needs to hear "The Joker" or "Don't stop believe in'" or "Tom Sawyer" anymore but what people DO need to hear is Royal Blood and Winery Dogs. I also feel they need to play more "slightly" deeper tracks from well know artists as well. The younger gen needs to find Royal Blood or Grete Van Fleet and start working on that late 90's GTP Grand Prix to get your feet wet, might even find a girl while your at it too:props:

Agree 100% Roger.

FM "Classic rock" stations all over seem like they have 45-50 songs they play, and that's it.

I'm 47 like you, and I was tired of these stations back in 1990. Lol
 
I will be talking to my buddy Hectour tonight and bringing the info here and see where we go with it

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Let me take a small detour,

what happened to rock and roll? Seems to
go hand in hand with cars not being popular.

Thoughts?
“Rock & Roll”?: I’m glad I was there;
so near to its very beginnings...and I
have been indubitably, nay: indomitably,
hooked ever since.

•Sure, since then, it has occasionally ebbed,
(and then, again, flowed). Yet: I don’t ever
worry about the fate of Rock “n” Roll.

-Appears that:
Lucifer; Aleister Crowley; Alan Freed;
The Illuminati; et al...has kept it in
a perpetual state of:
“Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On!”...

•And, IMO:
-R&R will remain that way, at least until
“The End of the Age” is ushered in, that is.


Bob
 
I'm not one for good music to be validated by radio because I'm sure local radio sucks where you live like it does in the 3rd largest city in America, all the hits that are tired, been tired since I was in High School in the late 80's. Noone needs to hear "The Joker" or "Don't stop believe in'" or "Tom Sawyer" anymore but what people DO need to hear is Royal Blood and Winery Dogs. I also feel they need to play more "slightly" deeper tracks from well know artists as well. The younger gen needs to find Royal Blood or Grete Van Fleet and start working on that late 90's GTP Grand Prix to get your feet wet, might even find a girl while your at it too:props:

Even the “deep tracks” station on Sirius doesn’t play real deep tracks. And for this reason I don’t even bother paying for satellite after the trial period is over. Rather listen to my own music anyway, can choose what I want depending on how I feel. Plus who likes commercials.


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Wow, it's been a long while since I've posted anything on here!

Klasse Act, I can empathize with you. I dearly miss the old Chicagoland car scene of 10-15 years ago. There were a lot of gearheads cruising the streets back then, and there was always some place to be/something going on.

I think some very valid points have been brought up already, in that there aren't really any good paying blue collar jobs for the average young person around anymore. Along with this, there are even more new/newer cars with performance potential now than there ever were, but the cost of buying them has gone way out of the reach of the true target market. I mean, if anyone told me 10 years ago that there would be a Ford Focus with 350 HP and AWD stock on the showroom floor today, I would have thought they were nuts! Same goes with the Hellcat/Demon.

This said, there are still young gearheads out there, but they're not very likely to go to car meets/shows, and I think social media has a lot to do with it. In their minds- why go to a parking lot and stand around for a few hours to show off their ride and talk shop, when they could just jump on Facebook or Instagram and post a couple pictures and talk to people without leaving the house? I could also see where progress on the actual cars would be inhibited by social media- take a 1 hour task, then spend 2 hours to make a nice picture to post online. Tie that together over a whole build, and you're talking a good chunk of time.

While we're on technology, I'll post a Billy Gardell clip- good phrase @ 1:07 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o4kvzy8xN5E
 
Another BAM

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