It’s just a little thing, but.... 2020 Jeep Wrangler Rubicon
The new Jeep Wrangler may be “little” next to an SUV, but it is still an outsize vehicle. Modernizing it with seat heaters, LEDs and a Web-linked computer is putting lipstick on a pig. A rutted road will scramble your brain. Cutting a corner with any accuracy depends on luck. Tire roar and wind noise are deafening. And don’t even think about an emergency lane-change on the interstate.
A Jeep Wrangler is domestic fare like the Mustang, the 4X4 pickup and the H-D hog—machines from an earlier, simpler age, when free-range kids rode bicycles without helmets, our parents smoked cigarettes and drank whiskey, three permits weren’t required for sticking a shed on the back of the garage, and every male took a week off in deer season.
Europeans are mesmerized by these things, too — to them, a Wrangler is also a symbol of a bygone America, the one that came over to help win the war and then faced down the Commies.
The Land Rover Defender handles better than a Wrangler and a Mercedes G-wagen is much more posh. Sure, and a Yamaha Star beats a Harley-Davidson and Meryl Streep can out-Oscar Scarlett Johansson and everyone knows that double cheeseburgers are bad. Tell it to the target demographic and see if anyone cares.
—Silvio Calabi
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