The same could be said for Oldsmobile and Mercury. They were homogenized to the point where they were identical to Buick, Chevrolet, and Ford. In other words, they ceased to stand out amongst their peers.
@CJColvin Жыл бұрын
You can say the same thing for Plymouth as well.
@VictorySpeedway Жыл бұрын
@@CJColvin Yes. Forgot Plymouth. Thanks
@CJColvin Жыл бұрын
@VictorySpeedway Also not to mention Studebaker and Packard as well as Hudson and Nash (that formed AMC). Had both Studebaker and Packard merged together with Hudson and Nash along with Kaiser and Jeep to form AMC in 1954 then AMC would've not only become the Big 4 but also some of these Brands like Studebaker, Packard, Hudson, and Nash would've been around to this day as well and Jeep wouldn't be crappy built like they are when Chrysler bought em.
@VictorySpeedway Жыл бұрын
@@CJColvin The merging of all those brands would've provided a ready made hierarchy. Packard could've reemerged as the luxury line, with Hudson competing against Buick, Studebaker against Oldsmobile, and Nash vs. Chevrolet / Pontiac (and the Ford and Chrysler equivalents). The problem was that each of the independents was broke, and had insufficient funds for aggressive R&D. Not sure how that would've worked out as the Feds weren't in the business of bailing out corporations. Maybe a defense contract or two would've done the trick. I enjoy pondering the "what if's!"
@CJColvin Жыл бұрын
@VictorySpeedway Same here, also what if Studebaker and Packard have been bought by Ford and Ford puts em in they're line up instead of creating the Edsel Brand. I would've see Studebaker as Ford's Cheap budget brand to compete with Chevrolet and Plymouth and I see Packard above Lincoln to compete with Cadillac and Imperial.
@OscarGarcia-sk8px Жыл бұрын
Adam you can do a "what happened to" video on Oldsmobile, Mercury, and Plymouth. Your business insider knowledge is very interesting.
@johnkufeldt3564 Жыл бұрын
I second this motion. Love to see more like this to get more insight.
@djplonghead5403 Жыл бұрын
I third and final this motion
@NorlandBoxcar Жыл бұрын
As a Canadian, I was saddened to see Pontiac go. My father had a few of them. But I do agree with everything you said so astutely. Having myself been born and raised in Oshawa..I am happy Colonel McLaughlin can rest in peace with the fact his Buick brand is still alive and well. William Durant from Flint Michigan gave Samuel Mclaughlin an amazing opportunity to built these cars in Canada and its story in automotive Canadian history is paramount.
@BADASSxMONTExCARLOx1971 Жыл бұрын
My 73-77 cars have been sitting outdoors 25 years,the bumpers are amazing,whoever did the chrome process,should get an award.Imagine if the whole car got that process?
@rogersmith7396 Жыл бұрын
I thought they went all aluminum.
@BADASSxMONTExCARLOx1971 Жыл бұрын
@@rogersmith7396 GM spent millions designing bumpers to meet new safety standards,I find it funny,today cars with a 5 mph impact does $5000 damage,lmfao
@judgegixxer Жыл бұрын
I know where there is a 59' Caddy in the bush. Nothing left of it but those old bumpers could bolt on to a Ridler Award winning showcar today and no one would know. It's crazy how they last.
@anthonyangeli256 Жыл бұрын
Those chrome bumpers always took a great polish too. Loved them!
@rogersmith7396 Жыл бұрын
@@BADASSxMONTExCARLOx1971 I think the whole front end of my Jeep is plastic. My 85 Saab took a deer full on and only a turn signal lens was damaged. $30.00. Repop. Have'nt tried it with the 70 Eldo.
@Flies2FLL Жыл бұрын
Pontiac's demise was due to the GM bankruptcy in 2009. They declared bankruptcy largely to get out of dealership contracts that demanded that Pontiac and Oldsmobile cars be produced. Pontiac, Buick, and Oldsmobile basically competed with each other, but even with the platform sharing, the costs of building different body panels and marketing the different brands was too much. If they simply stopped producing the brands, then they would have been sued by dealership groups and would have lost in court. Instead, they declared bankruptcy, deleted the dealership contracts, and deleted the brands all together, including Saturn and Hummer. SAAB was sold off. Buick was going to be deleted as well, but since this brand is extremely popular in China and Korea for some reason, they kept the nameplate and the dealerships. At least this is what I understand, and why you don't see a hypothetical Chevrolet Pontiac [which would be a Camaro with a Pontiac nose and tail clips], since this could be the basis for a lawsuit. People show pictures of a Camaro turned into a Trans Am and the car looks GREAT!, but it can never be built by GM.
@scottgfx Жыл бұрын
I know they tried to sell off Saab, but I think they were unsuccessful in doing so.
@discerningmind Жыл бұрын
Oh yes, I remember that period. That's when Obama went into GM and threw his weight around even though a president has no business going into private enterprise. He forced internal changes, firings, and some of the causalities were Pontiac and Oldsmobile. Instead of just giving GM the loan! I'm sure a backroom profit deal was made for the benefit of himself and Mrs. Obama. Then he skipped over the recently returned to American ownership, Chrysler. Told them FU, no loan. Thus, forcing what was the joyous back-in-American-hands Chrysler to sell a major portion of that company to Fiat. Instead of just giving Chrysler the loan! Nice job Obama, for yourself.
@discerningmind Жыл бұрын
@@scottgfx As far as I know GM still holds that brand. I'm surprised that no one has picked up Saab. Like them or not, the brand is worth something and deserves to be manufactured again. There's also profit to made in parts, Saab's are still around as well as those in collector's garages.
@Flies2FLL Жыл бұрын
@@discerningmind You're full of crap. I wonder how many auto workers have a job today due to PRESIDENT Obama? If you want to see corruption just check out "president" donald trump's administration. That clown could care less what was going on in the country; All he wanted to do was watch Fox & Friends and wear the "crown". -Folks, it is a proven fact that the vast majority of Karens/Kevins are indeed, registered republicans. These people are all ENTITLED, they are insecure, they have persecution complexes, and feel the world owes them everything since they grew up rich. And they feel they are the only people "working for a living", and perceive everyone with darker skin than them to be living off the government. They want to impose THEIR personal religious beliefs on YOU, and if they cannot do these nefarious things? They EXPLODE in a child-like temper tantrum and invoke their disgusting orange-haired hero, Corporal Bone Spurs himself Donald Trump!
@LlyleHunter Жыл бұрын
Oldsmobile ceased production in Feb 2002.
@christopherkraft1327 Жыл бұрын
Hey Adam, yes Pontiac is near & dear to my heart. My grandfather would buy a new Bonneville every two or three years & my aunt had a beautiful 65 Grand Prix with the 8 lug wheels!!! Wouldn't it be nice to recapture Pontiac excitement!!! Sadly, we know that Pontiacs are gone forever, but there are still some great cars out there!!! 👍👍🙂
@wilsixone Жыл бұрын
Both of you: eww.
@andrethomas7096 Жыл бұрын
Smokey and the Bandit helped Pontiac sales in 78. Everyone wanted a Trans Am.
@BillWilsonBG Жыл бұрын
I would imagine the 1978 sales were in part due to Smokey and the Bandit coming out the previous year in part boosting trans-am sales.
@travislostaglia8861 Жыл бұрын
They did. Pontiac was supposed to give Bert a new firebird anytime he wanted a new one for the rest of his life because of the cars that movie sold. They didn’t keep their end of the deal
@mikekokomomike Жыл бұрын
There was a guy around here that bought a new Smokey and the Bandit Trans AM. He tried to do a U turn under power like in the movie and managed to put it in the ditch, wrecking it. Wonder what his insurance company thought.
@manthony225 Жыл бұрын
I think the Sunbird was a strong seller too especially since they put a Firebird grill on it.
@ohioalphornmusicalsawman2474 Жыл бұрын
Good old Jackie Gleason as Sheriff Buford T. Justice😁 I was a kid when this movie came out, was accustomed to watching Honeymooners reruns with my Dad. I was wondering why Ralph Kramden was a Sheriff😁
@talis84 Жыл бұрын
A topic I'd like to see explored is how manufactures predict market changes. Example of getting things right, and wrong.
@RareClassicCars Жыл бұрын
Good idea
@jayweiss4378 Жыл бұрын
Labor was cheap in those days and now it’s not! The peak times for those automakers was the influx of immigrants after World War 1 and 2! Now it’s too costly to make a car here compared to Korea, Japan and Germany! But Even Germany now make cars in places like Slovakia where it’s cheap Labor as it’s own population now in Germany wants higher pay! Comes down to cheap Labor and that’s why so much industry has left US over the years and is made and fully moved to China
@pcno2832 Жыл бұрын
@@jayweiss4378 GM was particularly burdened by having to maintain a peaceful relationship with the UAW in Detroit. VW made the mistake of bringing in workers from Detroit when they opened their Westmoland, PA plant in the late 1970s; they closed it after 5 or 6 years of nothing but trouble. Honda, Toyota, Nissan and, I believe Hyundai all set up shops with the goal of remaining non-union and have done much better. The sad thing is that the threat of unionization makes places like Detroit and Chicago no-go zones for large manufacturing operations. It would be hard to calculate the damage that that has done to the economies of places dominated by unions.
@jayweiss4378 Жыл бұрын
@@pcno2832 interesting 🤔 I hope we can. Still keep GM and Ford for the future and not lose them like the other cool makes
@rogersmith7396 Жыл бұрын
@@jayweiss4378 And we all know how inexpensive German cars are. The Japanese just give them away. NOT. The cheap labor argument is BS. It affects profit not price.
@winthropthurlow3020 Жыл бұрын
When I was a kid, my dad had a '65 Starchief (dark blue body, white top with faux hinges on the C pillar). He called it a hardtop convertible! It was the coolest thing ever. Beautiful coke bottle shape, terrific interior with round, chrome-clad gauges and it handled like a dream. To my kid mind, the coolest feature was the Indian head that would light up on the dash when the high beams were activated. I'd kill to have that car today!
@pcno2832 Жыл бұрын
When I was 7, my next-door neighbor bought a new '69 Grand Prix as his "mid-life-crisis car". I had never noticed that vinyl roofs existed before and thought it might be some kind of space-age convertible that held its shape perfectly when not retracted. Cars can be really cool when you're young enough to make that kind of assumption.
@BADASSxMONTExCARLOx1971 Жыл бұрын
In my driveway,71 lemans,73 gran prix,76 trans am,96 trans am. Love them.
@msalvag Жыл бұрын
I miss the Trans Am. A friend of mine had one in the 90s and we used to call it the fire chicken. I'm in Canada and the Pontiac dealers were never standalone. It was always a Pontiac/Buick/GMC dealer.
@scooterp7009 Жыл бұрын
In my experience, it was only the MoPar and Ford guys that would call it the “Fire Chicken”, but they didn’t know what they were talking about.
@Streamer22 Жыл бұрын
Right. And Chevrolet was always sold alongside Oldsmobile. Only the biggest dealers - Pontiac-Buick and Chev-Olds - sold Cadillacs. And relatively few Chev-Olds dealers even sold Corvettes. GMC trucks were always sold by the Pontiac-Buick dealers. It made perfect sense at the time.
@kingkrimson8771 Жыл бұрын
One of those '78 sales was my first new car, a Trans Am with the T/A 6.6 engine and 4-speed
@eldo59 Жыл бұрын
I still want the two-tone green '79 Grand Prix SJ I saw on a Pontiac ad and in the Hunter with Steve McQueen. They are very hard to find nowadays.
@anthonym.cardali1875 Жыл бұрын
its in the Chicago River
@joes7968 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Adam for sharing your insight regarding the demise of Pontiac. My Dad sold Pontiacs from 1957 until 1990, so your love of the mid 60’s cars lies near and dear to my heart. The reviews of your Pontiacs bring back fond memories for me, especially the videos of their beautiful interiors.
@anthonyangeli256 Жыл бұрын
Loved those steering wheels too!
@discerningmind Жыл бұрын
One of my earliest memories was my aunt's then seven- to eight-year-old 1953 Pontiac Catalina coupe. Even though I was a little kid I was already a car guy and I had learned a lot because I was always asking questions. She bought it in 1955-56 when she was in the Navy stationed in San Diego. A fellow Navy man stationed there as well had completed his duty and was going back home. He didn't need the Pontiac any longer and my aunt bought it from him. That Pontiac had two-tone paint, light-yellow body with a white roof and the interior was a light greenish leather. I was fascinated by the steering wheel with its large diameter and three spokes, and Chief Pontiac's head in the center. The spoke on the bottom pointed straight down, and the side spokes were angled downward. One day I had the chance to turn the wheel a little and the weight of the spokes seemed heavy. I had noticed that the wheel always returned on its own to pointing straight ahead again after my aunt made a turn. I think it was designed to have those angled/weighted side spokes make it return to center. It had a straight-8 engine that my dad explained to me, and it was an automatic which I believe was a Hydro-Matic. And I seem to remember that when my aunt shut-down the engine, she would put the gear shift into reverse because that set a park pin so the car wouldn't roll away. 1953 was in the early years of automatic transmissions before the "P" position existed. The exhaust note was distinctively different than the other cars I was around, and it made that car sound special. And I knew that my little mouth could replicate that exhaust note perfectly. Besides, dad said so. I have to mention that, yes, it did have the amber Chief Pontiac head in the hood ornament, that lit up, and I loved that. Except when the bulb burnt-out my aunt didn't replace it because there was something about it that she didn't like. She was always one who worried about a cars' battery, so it was probably due to the electricity it used. The big deal about that Pontiac, unlike the cars of anyone's else we knew, is that it had power steering. I remember whenever my mom and I would go places with my aunt my mom would always say that didn't know how my aunt could drive it with steering that turned so easily. My mom said she was afraid of it. And mom was afraid of the brakes too. The brakes were the other thing unlike the cars of anyone else we knew, is that it had power brakes. My aunt didn't like the power steering and the power brakes either, but she got used to those and she was a very careful driver. She would get spooked easily. My aunt made the decision to leave the Navy after four years and she wanted to keep the Pontiac. She had another of my aunt's come out to San Diego and they shared driving the Pontiac back home to Connecticut. And that's where I learned all about it and learned that I loved it. She decided to replace the Pontiac around 1961. In those days it was considered a very old car. She bought a 1959 Rambler American. She didn't like it (neither did I) but she kept that for about three years. But her next car excited me. It was a two-year-old 1962 Ford falcon two-door in a bright aqua color that kids liked. The interior was a light gray with black. That had a six cylinder, but I don't which of the sixes it had. And it had a three-on-the-tree. Her next car came to her in an unusual way. One day in 1967 when my aunt was in work, a Chrysler rep had come into the business, and he told my aunt about a special that they were having on the new Dodge Dart. It had been redesigned for '67. I don't know the price of the special they were having, but she said it was a great price. However, the "special" had limitations. That being, it had to be a Dodge Dart base car, no power steering, no power brakes, no a/c, and the engine would be the 225 Slant-Six. The only no cost choice was the paint, but it had to be white, yellow, or beige. (light brown?) The special did allow paying extra for, four doors, automatic transmission, and a radio. My aunt picked a two door, yellow, and added the automatic trans and the radio. It must have been a great price because my aunt almost never listened to the radio in a car. The battery thing again. My aunt always took excellent care of her cars, and she had that '67 Dodge Dart for twenty-two years until the frame had rotted. I'll stop here, I was never intending to write that much but I went ahead with it because some people like the history that's connected with cars. As a side note, my aunt had always regretted not remaining in the Navy. She had four years in and could have retired in sixteen years with a retirement income. Instead, because it wasn't easy for women to have a career back then she always had to work very hard for little money as a bookkeeper. I know she missed that perfect San Diego weather too.
@SuperJoes70 Жыл бұрын
I had Grand Lemans wagon a 1978 loaded to the gills and it was like having a Grand Prix wagon great handling car and love the way the dash was laid out
@CountryFarmBoyUSA Жыл бұрын
You forgot one of Pontiac's best Crossovers, the joint venture with Toyota NUMMI which was based on the Corolla and Matrix. It was probably GM's best union made car for reliability. The Vibe holds an incredible amount of cargo. I have three and my daily driver is at 285,000 miles. These cars consistently go over 300,000 miles.
@SomeOne_86 Жыл бұрын
It wasn't a joint venture. It's a Toyota with a Pontiac badge. GM didn't do ANYTHING in terms of designing and engineering that car. 100% Toyota vehicle.
@markchandler90 Жыл бұрын
My Matrix just achieved 300K mile. Same underpinnings as the Vibe and all were built in Canada
@CountryFarmBoyUSA Жыл бұрын
@@SomeOne_86 Wrong the Vibe included a GM designed HVAC system, Delco radio and totally different exterior body panels that had the Pontiac style cladding on the side which the Matrix did not. The Matrix was also built in Canada and the Vibe in California The Matrix had a totally different exterior with Toyota styling. They shared an almost identical interior with some minor changes and the same underbody / chassis.
@CountryFarmBoyUSA Жыл бұрын
@@markchandler90 What's interesting is the odometer stops workng at 299,999 miles on the 2003-2008 models. Who had that genius idea? I've noticed the Matrix leather interior was nicer than the Vibe leather interior.
@SomeOne_86 Жыл бұрын
@@CountryFarmBoyUSA Lmfao buddy I was talking about things that matter. HVAC system? Fucking radio? Completely unimportant.
@Victor-Lag Жыл бұрын
Adam, excellent as always. It is very important to give the financial insights. I think the problem got worse in the 90s, when GM brought Ronald Zarella from B&L glasses and Branding got confused, alienated old consumers and did not bring new ones. I remember in an interview he said that he had a chart- Excel?- with more than 150 lines with the positioning of each car and each brand. And G3,G6, G8 are what? Appliances? Remember the ad - The Caddy that Zigs? Happy new Year from a balmy beach In Brazil!
@garrettbenson7743 Жыл бұрын
I’ve got the identical Grand Prix from the cover of the 1965 motor trend car of the year issue. 36k miles. Original bluemist slate paint with the black top and 8 lugs it came with from the factory. Driving it tonight with 3 buddies doing a bar hop. Only odd thing is; it was ordered with a front bench and column shift. 389 4bbl sure is smooth!
@tonyelliott7734 Жыл бұрын
I had a 1971 Formula 350 Firebird 28 years ago. The only Pontiac I've ever owned. And I'll always miss it.
@rogersmith7396 Жыл бұрын
I was thinking you got a 400 or a 455 in the Formula.
@tonyelliott7734 Жыл бұрын
@@rogersmith7396 Mine was a 350. I don't know about the 400/455s.
@gybx4094 Жыл бұрын
We had a loss of about $1,500 per vehicle in the GM Small Car division (not including Saturn). It wasn't labor (read what Lee Iacoca said about selling small cars in the USA). An Opel version of the G6 sold for $40,000 US in Germany.
@pfrediv Жыл бұрын
If you're saying what I think you're saying about Lee Iacocca and small cars, it's CAFE to blame for the loss of $1500 per small car.....
@Bossrich6287 Жыл бұрын
i'm really a ford guy,but i hate that we lost pontiac and oldsmobile
@MackyG-2020 Жыл бұрын
My friend bought one of those torrents it was only like a year old and it was absolutely loaded I actually really like that thing in the way it handled. I also like the vibe.
@Scott_From_Maine Жыл бұрын
Yes, they got shut down because sales dropped, but why did sales drop? They lost their identity, their reason for being. That perception of excitement and daring was gone. When the ribbed styling ran its course, they had nothing to replace it.
@gregt8638 Жыл бұрын
I think the renaming of the cars by alphabet and numbers rather than glamorous names sank it too. American car companies were trying to copy Germans and Japanese by putting alpha numeric s. on the car instead of names. Cadillac unfortunately did the same...as did lincoln. I love American cars, but I felt the manufacturers for becoming followers of the Europeans in Japanese rather than the leaders which American cars were for most time.
@pfrediv Жыл бұрын
Totally agree. The problem IMO was the interiors of these vehicles with the "Fisher Price" buttons everywhere. Yes, the Pontiacs looked better than the Chevy's (and Oldsmobile's) from the era from the outside, but you spend most of your time inside the vehicle... why pay so much more for a Pontiac or an Olds?
@docpalazola491 Жыл бұрын
Owned a 1962 Pontiac Grand Prix with the 389 tri-power (318 hp) with a 4-speed. That car was awesome and would push you back in the seat when you had that tri-power kick in.
@craigjones2878 Жыл бұрын
I’ve got a black ‘62 Grand Prix with 8 lugs and tri power but mine has the dodgy slim jim automatic. I’ve got most of the parts needed to convert to a manual except for the console.
@BullRunRoad30 Жыл бұрын
1986 saw the introduction of the four door Grand Am. That and the restyling of the Sunbird coupe likely accounted for the peak in sales that year.
@oldcarbear503 Жыл бұрын
1978 Grand Prix was also very popular, particularly with the 'landau' roof with the deeply inset opera windows
@Primus54 Жыл бұрын
I think it’s tragic that there was never a Firebird/TransAm revival when the new retro Camaro was launched. Unlikely it would have saved Pontiac, but it would have been a great way to go out!
@bobpierce115 Жыл бұрын
It had already been decided Pontiac was to cease WELL before the '09 Camaro came out. GM killed off the Camaro/Firebird with the '02 models and only brought back the Camaro because they were basically forced to by the Mustang, Challenger and (to a lesser extent) the Charger. Having said that, it wasn't out of any love of the Camaro by GM otherwise. The plants that made the C/F were retooled for what else, trucks and SUV's. The styling on the '09 Camaro was a fat, ugly take on the '69, nearly bordering on the grotesque, but it sold very well. The 6th gen with the smooth sleeker lower body is quite attractive except for that damn roofline it retained. What they got right with the 6th was a design that wasn't trying to "copy" the 1st gen. Instead they cleverly gave it a 1st gen flavor or essence, yes, but with an original look all its own. (cont.) The idea of a Firebird, T/A has been brought up before. It would have been the same body with familiar/expected Pontiac distinctions. I heard there was a company in the South doing such conversions of Camaros. Some guys complaining "but those aren't Pontiacs!" Sorry boys for the newsflash, but GM is and has been in survival mode for years, only doing as well as they are with trucks, SUV's, sedans and future hopes on electric vehicles. Pontiac's permanently in the grave along with Olds, Mercury, Plymouth since the turn of the century. Was watching a new video on Packard, and there were guys on there too bemoaning Packard and Studebaker's deaths and "if only they could come back today". I said if they could (they can't of course) they'd be indistinguishable SUV's, crossovers, sedans and trucks, with those names on them, and that's it. Camaro's going away again in less than a year, but may "be back" like the electric Mustang, or a four-door electric sedan.
@judgegixxer Жыл бұрын
@@bobpierce115 The 6th gen looks worse to me than the 5th gen. From 50 yards away you can hardly tell the difference between a Mustang and Camaro now. Especially side profile and rear 1/4 window. The LT1 or V6 6th gen front end is a bit better than that angular butcher job they put on the SS or 1LE/ZL1. They made it just as goofy looking as the Silverados.
@bobpierce115 Жыл бұрын
@@judgegixxer I know what you're saying about the 6th gen looking more like the Mustang, and agree. The thing (for me) is that the 5th gen Camaro was so hideous that as long as they re-did the car NOT to look like that anymore, I didn't care. If I had to pick my favorite-styled Camaros ever, they would be the sleek and sexy '67-'68, then skips ahead to the '82-'92 Z28 & IROCs with the beautiful ground effects.
@CJColvin Жыл бұрын
@bobpierce115 For me I prefer the 5th gen Camaro over the 6th gen anyday.
@pdennis93 Жыл бұрын
@@bobpierce115 actually the plant that built the 4th gen firebird/camaro was in St. Therese, Quebec just outside Montreal. It was torn down after production ended.
@wilsixone Жыл бұрын
Good one Adam. Interesting! And yeah, do Oldsmobile, although maybe it's the identical story(?)
@klwthe3rd Жыл бұрын
Maybe if GM didn't run Pontiac into the ground by allow it's designs to make such cheap and plastic feeling cars, they would still be around. They did the same thing with Oldsmobile. Near the end the cars were NOTHING like the one's from the 1980's or 1990's. Most Oldsmobiles and Pontiacs after 2000 were just not appealing to anyone let alone their devoted fan base.
@john1959ism Жыл бұрын
Sounds as though you're a wannabe industry expert....Far more went into their demise than cheap and plastic feeling.
@klwthe3rd Жыл бұрын
@@john1959ism ok? And you have any credibility with your statement? Wow what a winner you are. 🤣
@john1959ism Жыл бұрын
@@klwthe3rd you made a blanket statement about Oldsmobile and Pontiac quality that is highly subjective....You're the winner. He just explained why Pontiac went out of business and at no point did he discuss quality. And I believe Adam worked for GM.
@777jones Жыл бұрын
I agree the cars had poor look and feel. They were desperately worse than Honda for example. This guy explains that sales declined, but not really why.
@seiph80 Жыл бұрын
@@klwthe3rd I can attest totally, I remember the interiors were so cheap, plastic fantastic. A family member of mine had a late 90s model and I can vividly remember the power door locks buttons all coming off the plastic covers, the wiper stalk not working properly, and super rubbery-feeling buttons.
@patrickmasterson3848 Жыл бұрын
Very substantive discussion -- it recalls your Badge Engineering talk -- and might actually relate. Yes, badge engineering can work, but not if it fundamentally loses the thread of a brand. I suspect most of us discount the hard core, sober realities of an overall business model. Thx again.
@peterf4552 Жыл бұрын
I had a '66 GTO beater back in the 80s and a decent '67 Ventura (Catalina) 4 door hardtop in the late 90s and early 2000s. They were fun cars. The Ventura was a real freeway sled, and even got 18 mpg when I had to commute from ABQ to Los Alamos (200 mile round-trip with some serious elevation changes) for a short time. I would top off the gas tank every night on my way home. It was December, 1999, and regular unleaded gas was EIGHTY SEVEN CENTS PER GALLON.
@travislostaglia8861 Жыл бұрын
I had a 88 escort in the late 90’s and remember it being under 10 bucks to fill the tank
@danielboone72 Жыл бұрын
18 mpg is good on the highway. Must’ve had 2.56 gears in it.
@anthonyangeli256 Жыл бұрын
Love Pontiacs. Had four of them. My favorite being a '68 Catalina I had in the 70s. Wish I still had it. Nice heavy fun to drive cars. I miss that car every day. She was a real beauty! Still have the original 14'' wheel covers.
@Sal834 Жыл бұрын
Excellent video! Something I have always wondered and totally makes sense. As a suggestion for another video could you do the same for Saturn? That was the other brand I was curious about. Thank you for all you efforts and hard work on the videos!
@ajns746 Жыл бұрын
First off, love the channel. Wish I had the ability to buy all these nice cars, but I thank you for sharing with the community, but I have to say.. I get distracted by background things a lot - and this is no judgement but my brain needs to know - Does that outlet have a cover that is covered in wallpaper? When I zoom in I don't see an outlet cover and I'm super confused by it. But when I am zoomed out it seems like I see a outlet cover under wallpaper maybe? It's driving me crazy.
@darylrigney68728 ай бұрын
I was in sales for a Pontiac dealership in southern VA from 1985 through 2002. 1986 was a booming year for our dealership. We could not keep the Grand Am on the lot as they were very HOT sellers in both 2 door and 4 door. A good year indeed for Pontiac. Always loved Pontiacs as my parents always had driven them over the many years as I can recall. I have a 1967 Firebird convertible I've had since 1971. Always enjoy taking it out on nice days for a cruise around town and to cruise-ins.
@greggc8088 Жыл бұрын
Pontiac always styled their cars on the edge of the extreme and that was what attracted certain people to them. "We build excitement" was a great definition. They messed up when they tried low keying things with the later GTO and G8 from Holden. Maybe the Aztec flop scared them into being too conservative but the GTO and G8 along with their other cars could have benefitted from some ideas from the old school designers. I mean, the people (some call gaudy) are still out there and these modern vehicles with lackluster styling isn't satisfying them. Thanks for breaking it down for us Adam.
@michaelmullard4292 Жыл бұрын
Hi Adam: I think that there is probably a similar story about Oldsmobile that could be told. At one time, when our family got together, we used to say that all of our cars together could almost make up an Olds dealership.
@Snowtruckdriver Жыл бұрын
I always enjoyed my Pontiac's. I had a 1964 Grand Prix, a 1965 Pontiac Catalina and a 1967 GTO Convertible 4peed. All three were home runs in the class.
@FLYEAL Жыл бұрын
Indoor porch talk is appreciated. Well done. Here’s how we immortalize Pontiac in our house (among many other marques): 1964 Grand Prix, 1983 J2000 Wagon and 1991 Lemans (Daewoo). The latter are 1 owner GM employee family heirlooms. Cost more to maintain and store properly than worth. But, that’s ok. Had a 1966 Catalina Conv and an 80 Phoenix but, sadly, sold both.
@gavinmclaren9416 Жыл бұрын
I owned a '70 GTO Judge Convertible that I bought on a whim in 1980. White, with red/orange teardrop stripes highlighting the bodywork on the fenders and quarter panels. It was a looker, and always attracted attention. However I found its performance to be quite pedestrian compared to other GM A-bodies I had driven, particularly an Olds 442 that a friend's brother owned. The 442 was much quicker than my GTO and inspired me to look for one of my own. Maybe it was my particular car, but I had the slowest of all my group of friend's musclecars, and at that age that mattered for me. So at the end of summer I sold it. I also had an '85 Trans Am, black, which was a great car that my mom bought new. The engine was a Chevy 305 with a Q-jet carb and I think about 150-160 net HP. The original 305 siezed for some reason, so I built a 350 with 10:1 compression, Dart 2.02/1.60 65 cc heads and a 327/350 camshaft. Initially the car was choked up with the stock exhaust, but I worked on that a bit and that really woke it up. In fact it was a phenominal car with the excellent T/A suspension and a good hot Chevy motor. Unfortunately it was stolen in the early 90's and wrecked beyond repair.
@mattskustomkreations Жыл бұрын
I owned a minty ‘72 Luxury LeMans 2-Dr Hardtop. Came from the factory with rear fender skirts! Had to sell it when the economy tanked in ‘08.
@joshuagibson2520 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for all you do and share Adam. You're very appreciated.
@bobpierce115 Жыл бұрын
Guys bemoaning the loss of Pontiac, Olds, Plymouth, Packard, Studebaker have visions in their minds of these cars back at mid-century. Wanting them back is ONLY a sweet sentiment and nothing more. Asking for a revival of these makes is like asking for the 4 Beatles to regroup, I Love Lucy again, the same cast of the Mary Tyler Moore Show, etc.
@aries8402 Жыл бұрын
1990-2010 was the most fascinating time in the auto industry from Pontiac to Plymouth to Daewoo. It was wild. The designs. The tech. My favorite though. The Plymouth Neon. That encapsulates my childhood, teens and high school days.
@gloriamaletta8667 Жыл бұрын
Back in the day Chevrolet Pontiac Oldsmobile Buick made quality cars that were appealing mostly cost effective with a better build quality than there competitors that were fairly simple to work on and maintain that were reliable and dependable when each GM division had there own engines l think was a key factor to GMs huge success you had 5 different engine options at every GM division Ford Mercury Lincoln and Chrysler Dodge Plymouth didn't
@stevevogelman3360 Жыл бұрын
Really good explanation of the dollar’s and cents side of these decisions that most of us don’t understand. Thank you. Do some more please.
@OLDS98 Жыл бұрын
Well stated Adam. You covered a lot. I was watching and saying yes.. he is right. I do agree with that whole turning Pontiac into a cheap BMW import fighter was a bad idea. That should have started back in the 1980's. They were headed in that direction as witnessed by the 6000 STE and Bonneville SSE. They had already failed with and tried that with Oldsmobile with the whole import fighter notion. Getting away from the names was another huge mistake too. Too many car brands made that mistake especially Oldsmobile. I sometimes think if Pontiac had lived it would had a Dodge Charger fighter. They did with the Holden based Pontiac G8, but it did not take off. If it had both Holden and Pontiac would have benefitted from that. I will always fondly remember and like Pontiac Bonneville, Parisienne, Grand Ville, Grand Prix, Grand Am and Firebird. Pontiac's issue is was not any different from Chevrolet at the end. Thank you for pointing the GM Canada information too. I know Chevrolet lives because it is bread and butter, Cadillac lives because it is luxury. Buick thrives in China, but it is not so good shape in the United States. It had to transition to a suv/crossover brand. GM let go of a lot of brands for many reasons. Great video and grand effort.
@vr4787 Жыл бұрын
My grandma had a 67 Pontiac Catalina with the 400. It could hit 120 mph very quickly and frame was so strong the previous owner used it tow a double axle trailer.
@jackdarbyshire5888 Жыл бұрын
I only owned one Pontiac in my lifetime, a 1973 Parisienne 2dr hardtop that i bought in 1986 and it was a great driver and very good when cruising on a long trip on the highway, I'd say solid to when a couple of years later my friend made a demolition car out of it and he won the derby 2 years in a row with it ✌👌
@jetsons101 Жыл бұрын
Smokey and the Bandit came out in 1977, that may have bumped the sales in 78.
@pcno2832 Жыл бұрын
Pontiac capitalized on that brilliantly with the 1979 Trans Am, making about 10,000 of "America's last muscle cars" with 250 HP 400s and selling many more with de-tuned 400s to buyers who probably thought they were getting the real thing.
@anthonym.cardali1875 Жыл бұрын
Grand Prix was re-designed in 78, and was a looker. Big Seller
@billybcgn25 Жыл бұрын
Well, I didn't "enjoy" it; but you're right, the halcyon days were the mid-60s. The only *new* car I purchased was an 85 Bonneville, with the Chevy 305. It lasted 340,000 miles, one Turbo Hydramatic 200 warranty repair (followed after some 250k miles where I always had to put it in neutral coming to a stop, as the lock-up wouldn't disengage), one head job, one timing chain/gears, and two overhauls of the Rochester E4ME carb--which I personally did. Quite a few shocks, lots of visits to Firestone for tires and their alignment policy, and a handful of ball joints and tie rod ends/idler arms. Bambi #2 totaled it. My favorite car! Even the heater core was easily accessible. Amazing! Oh, and one catalytic converter.
@johnh2514 Жыл бұрын
Spot on analysis Adam. As much as I’d love to see Pontiac back, there simply isn’t a place for the “Excitement” division when you’re peddling a fleet of crossovers. And those crossovers would likely be little more than warmed-over Chevys, so essentially a repeat of the sad old days of badge engineering. That said I really wish Pontiac was kept in 2009 and Buick was put to pasture instead…but understandable that this didn’t happen considering Buick’s profitability overseas.
@BLACKAAROW Жыл бұрын
apparently for some reason Buick is insanely popular in China, so you bet GM isn't gonna get rid of that cash cow, even if Buick were discontinued in the US , the amount of cars that GM sells in China would be more than enough to sustain the Buick brand and be profitable
@Drmcclung Жыл бұрын
I don't think Pontiac ever really fully recovered from the Fiero fiasco and stupid Asstec I mean Aztec. People hated on the last 2 Grand Am models but I disagree and think they were fantastic cars, especially the last one with a 3800 in it (holy sh*t a 2001 Grand Am wad fast!)
@Dog.soldier1950 Жыл бұрын
Ha ha I have a fried with a Aztec now-people leave notes to buy it its so ugly cool
@Drmcclung Жыл бұрын
@@Dog.soldier1950 Yeah.. I don't understand ironic hipster comedy
@williamscoggin1509 Жыл бұрын
The last time I thought Mercury had their own beautiful thing going which when I was in high school in about 1973 the best I can remember. One of our coaches sold his 65 mustang and got a new Cougar XR7. Everyone was starting to manufacture midsize luxury cruisers such as the Cutlass and the Cordoba. And along with the others the Cougar XR7 also grew to be a little bit longer, more cushiony seats, smoother ride but still sporty enough to have fun. His was Ford green with a black half vinyl top, with tan leather interior. And for the time that car was damn well beautiful. I remember when it was a rainy day or bad weather instead of hanging out in the fieldhouse him and two or three of us students would go sit in the car running the air conditioner and listening to the radio. After that styling change from then on Mercury was dead but just didn't realize it.
@heywoodclaxton988 Жыл бұрын
I love these type of videos explaining the nitty gritty of why a car company died. Definitely want to see more videos like this!
@HarleyHawk1 Жыл бұрын
I miss Pontiac but at least the name isn't being continued with all the new junk GM puts out. Let it rest as the legend it was
@liddlebopeep Жыл бұрын
The last Pontiacs built were the G3 and G6. So much for going out with a bang.
@HarleyHawk1 Жыл бұрын
@@liddlebopeep At least it died with some dignity. Not the overly complex garbage they have now.
@averyparticularsetofskills Жыл бұрын
I hit play planning to only partake in a "couple few minutes" b4 moving on and ended up not only watching every second but skipping back a few times to re absorb some good thoughts and strong points. "Rare and Classic Cars" Always = Good N Plenty Content
@vintageflatulence150 Жыл бұрын
I had a 1978 Grand LeMans (which later became the downsized Bonneville) and I absolutely loved that car.
@brianhdueck3372 Жыл бұрын
Another really great video Adam. I couldn’t agree more. The nostalgia of Pontiac will always remain high for me as I had a number of early 60’s to early 70’s Pontiacs back in the day. I bought the tired ones if they had 283 or 327 (Canadian) and swapped them into the better bodies. Back then only the 2 doors were worth fixing. I liked the Pontiacs but by 1980 there wasn’t much attraction for me. But I would love to do another early mid sixties full size but A Pontiac badged new aero body anything would be a disgrace to that worthy name IMHO.
@tonyflorio3269 Жыл бұрын
Pontiac concepts like the beach buggy inspired Stinger and rally-inspired Rev pointed the way forward: sporty crossovers inspired not by Jeeps, but by fun, performance oriented vehicles, which was on-brand. They could have used GM platforms but would have required more investment than slapping new facias on Cobalts (G5) or on Aussie sedans (G8) which GM wasn't in a position to do. Perhaps the Aztec experience -- which was the right crossover idea poorly executed -- scared them off.
@wattsnottherms Жыл бұрын
Agree entirely. The cost-cut approach to the execution of the Aztek turned it into a dog compared to the very attractive concept car. Pontiac had so many awesome concepts in the 80s and 90s and they had a strong positive brand image among younger buyers, but that brand image was based on cars. Trans Am, Grand Am, Grand Prix. They would have needed to do the Buick pivot (to all crossovers) and had a bunch of concepts in the 90s showing that product direction. If there had been some way to rationalize (shrink) the dealer network, Pontiac could have occupied the exact niche Mazda occupies now-sporty and slightly premium.
@volktales7005 Жыл бұрын
As a Canadian kid growing up in the 1970's, Pontiacs were truly everywhere. Mom had a '71 Lemans Sport. then later an '84 TransAm. I was sad to see them go, but by then Canada's favourite cars had been Honda Civics for some time, and they still are... I still wish I had the money and room for a '65 Parisienne...
@markdc1145 Жыл бұрын
Great video and explanation of this long-gone brand. I remember seeing a surprisingly large amount of Pontiacs on trips to Canada but never knew why until now.
@rpsmith2990 Жыл бұрын
I remember seeing Canadian Pontiacs on trips to Virginia Beach, as well as the odd BelAir 2 door hardtop, meaning a '73 and '75.
@jamesterakazis6624 Жыл бұрын
65 - 66 Grand Prix...beautiful inside and out...bucket seat option A MUST !!
@RC-gf8cs Жыл бұрын
I had 69 grand prix .4bbl.hi rise manfold..great cars.....also 83 lemans 4dr...
@MackyG-2020 Жыл бұрын
I miss Oldsmobile I felt like their lineup before they got the ax wasn't too bad I really like the intrigues & the Delta 88. My grandparents good friends liked their Alero so much when they found out that olds was going out of business they went and bought four of them and put two in storage and they each drove one. I still see the Cars during the summer I live in a little lake town in Southern Illlinois.
@pcno2832 Жыл бұрын
My theory has been that GM didn't need 5 divisions even in the 50s-70s when they were selling half the cars Americans bought; they just happened to be stuck with the dealer franchises, factory toolings and brand loyalties that came from taking over 5 companies. They did find a way to ditch Oakland early and maybe they would have been well advised to consolidate earlier, when it would have looked like a move of common sense rather than desparation. Sure, they needed some segmentation, so that the Cadillac buyers were sitting in different waiting rooms than Chevy buyers. It's also good to have a division that can launch more daring products as trial balloons, as Oldmobile did with automatic transmissions and Olds, then Buick did with turbochargers. But once GM had cleared out dead-end technologies like Buick's torque-tube suspensions and Dynaflows, ditched the clunky Hydramatic, and later started putting the best engines and transmissions they could build in cars of all 5 brands, there was no reason to go back to anything like that clutter, so it's only natural that some divisions had to go. Though, I'll admit that I miss Pontiac more than I miss Oldsmobile.
@timricklefs2342 Жыл бұрын
Great Content Adam being onetime 83 Trans Am owner I have a nostalgic feeling for the Brand. I agree there is no Place for Pontiac today. Pontiac had its day in the sun and like you said you can still find some classics out there.
@scottsardinha1360 Жыл бұрын
Great chat!! Definitely a good way to deal with the winter months. We had heavy rain last week in New England and thought I'd be able to take a few cars out for a quick run around to get them moving. The next night the temperature dropped and trucks started pretreating the streets. Settling with the driveway for now. Definitely keep the chats going. Maybe you can do the carb rebuild and brakes on the LTD? Maybe a motorcycle video in the garage if the weather isn't horrible out. Great content and I always look forward to seeing your videos. Great work Adam!
@discerningmind Жыл бұрын
I'm in Connecticut and I thought that totally destructive pretreating was discontinued. Which New England state are you in? Do you know if it's the same nasty stuff?
@scottsardinha1360 Жыл бұрын
@@discerningmind liquid salt. I'm in Massachusetts.
@millionmilegarage9587 Жыл бұрын
Great insight into Pontiac’s demise. I bought one of the last GTO’s ever made and do recall the sales staff calling them BMW killers! I really thought that was the start of good things to come not realizing the plan to ax the brand was probably already in place! I got a letter from GM stating they would continue to support my GTO with a Buick brochure enclosed. They tripled the cost of replacement parts overnight. My GTO suffered several issues under warranty and required substantial repairs out of warranty before it had 30k miles on it. Last GM car I ever purchased.
@michaellinner7772 Жыл бұрын
Of all the now defunct brands I think Pontiac is the one most deserving of resurrection. I always found the Firebird to be better looking than the Camaro and the GTO better looking than the Chevelle, etc. Let's not forget that it was Pontiac that started the whole muscle car phenomenon back in the 60s. I used to have a Cutlass but always wished it had been a GTO.
@Low760 Жыл бұрын
That's interesting, 500,000 cars a year isn't enough in the states, yet Holden sold max 130,000 cars in the early 00's iirc, but the Australian car market is around 900,000 vehicles a year total sold.
@SomeOne_86 Жыл бұрын
Damn, I thought there was more people living in Australia.
@markbehr88 Жыл бұрын
General Motors should leverage it’s history to release so e special edition series vehicles that are limited in number and would be high gross for them and their dealers. Sold through either Chevrolet or Buick/GMC dealers they could do a special edition Pontiac Trans Am based on the Camaro architecture (so relatively low cost). Offer 10,000 only per series all numbered or a series of special editions within ie 5,000 Bandit edition in black and gold, maybe 2,000 white with blue stripe 69 Anniversary editions and maybe 3,000 Silver Anniversary inspired silver and grey editions. These would sell out and be highly prized. The name Pontiac becomes a model name rather than brand - so the model is Pontiac Trans Am sold via xxx GM dealer. Chrysler should do the same. Release 10,000 Plymouth Barracuda editions based off the Challenger. You could have AAR and other special releases. I would also only ever release all future GM models at the Technical Centre and really leverage the spectacular facilities that were futuristic in the 1950’s but still look very retro cool today. No other car company could do that. Leverage the power of your branded assets GM.
@TA_Plus_Hemi Жыл бұрын
Pontiac was an awesome brand in the late 80s through to about 02 in my book. At least the last one I drove was an 02 Grand Prix, rental LOL. Seriously though always a pleasure to drive and not bad styling either. Edit: I didn't realize we were bringing up the 60s models. Those were just spectacular. All the cars back then were pretty darn honest. Not like that fastback 4-door BMW or Honda.
@meowymeowerton2820 Жыл бұрын
I can’t stop staring at the outlet without the wall plate lol. Great vid!
@polandharr Жыл бұрын
That caught my attention also; however, I believe there's a wall plate and it's perfectly color matched to the wall.
@mikepate6404 Жыл бұрын
Do a segment on Oldsmobile if you haven’t already
@flyonbyya Жыл бұрын
Be hard to make a case against Adam’s mid-to-late 60’s big Ponchos design and execution. Truly stunning looks !
@mitchellbarnow1709 Жыл бұрын
My 1989 Bonneville was a great car! I took all of the nameplates off of the truck and people thought that it was some type of imported car. It had a maroon exterior with a grey multicolor cloth interior. I ordered the package that included honeycombed alloy wheels and the 60/40 front contoured bench seats. Unfortunately it was my company car and if I wanted to spend more I would have to pay for the options out of my own money, but the company would own the lease. I didn’t even have a trip meter or cruise, but I was able to make a base LE look like an SE!
@billh4477 Жыл бұрын
Adam, thanks for this kind of thoughtful and in-the-industry perspectives that you bring to this channel. I enjoy hearing about how things are viewed from the auto business and the structures it employs. While I have a fondness for the Grand Ville and Grand Am that my Dad owned in my early driving years, I agree that a set of Pontiac crossovers would be an uninteresting use of that brand. Thinking about it some, it seems Cadillac was the better choice to be based on more expensive platforms and stretch it's appeal to become more of a BMW competitor with some of its models, while aiming others at more expensive German targets. That's sort of where we've ended up, with the new electric Cadillac crossover models occupying the upscale space of MB and BMW, seemingly finally moving beyond being exclusively "soft and quiet" vehicles that didn't directly take on the German brands competitively n the 70s-90s, with a few exceptions. I find it interesting that Buick was saved, seemingly due to its great success in China. There must have been someone or some group at Buick to drive that focus, and wasn't as prominent in Olds or Pontiac. Any insights you can share in a future porch chat about that part of GM's recent history?
@mattharwood4413 Жыл бұрын
Adam - First, I've been a Pontiac fan since I was a kid in the 60's. Our next door neighbor had a new 66 GTO, Gold with a black vinyl top. I have a 72. Need I say more? Next, glad to see you took the glasses off. I've been on here since you wouldn't even show that handsome face. You're young James Garner handsome. Glad to see you are opening up (an letting us look at those amazing eyes!).
@Jeff_Pendleton Жыл бұрын
I have thought GM could produce a vehicle badged Pontiac. Ideally a minimally rengineered Camaro badged as a Trans Am. They could sell it through Buick dealers, so no cost there. This could be profitable at pretty low volume. Yes, it could cannibalize the Camaro but I believe it would be a net sales gain, at least increasing traffic at the dealerships. Same with Oldsmobile, produce an electric 4-4-2 or something. It could be just occasional rebadging of another GM vehicle. But with minimal cost they could capitalize on brands that still bear considerable goodwill.
@RareClassicCars Жыл бұрын
No dealer would focus on it. They have no call list of existing customers to mine.
@Primus54 Жыл бұрын
@Dennis Wilson I don’t know if I fully agree with you. I see many, many young people driving contemporary Mustangs, Camaros, Challengers, and Chargers.
@jayweiss4378 Жыл бұрын
@@Primus54 I agree the kids these days do like some classic muscle cars too! Could be those cars have been passed down within the family or those kids grew up with those cars around? The Mustang/Camaro/Charger today is a great example of getting it right
@SomeOne_86 Жыл бұрын
@denniswilson8013 I'm a kid, barely 20, and I love classic cars. I would never buy a new car with electronic powersteering, ugly touchscreens with no physical buttons, tall doorlines, stupid SUV styling on everything etc... My first car is a '93, my project car is an '87 and the car I use to drive every day to work and back is from '03. At the current prices, and with the current designs I am disinterested in 95% of new cars coming out, and those which do interest me cost so much that I would much rather buy an awesome rare classic car for the same price. For example, the new Mustang looks pretty cool, but looking at the hefty price+dealer markups, I would much rather get a classic fastback roller and fix it up. 1960s American and 1990s Japanese cars are the best cars ever made in my opinion.
@mikee2923 Жыл бұрын
I think there are 2 fallacies being discussed. There are more (but still a minority) of younger people interested in performance cars. Enough to support the market, probably not. Then again most of the younger generation glued to their devices don’t place vehicles nearly as high on the priority list than previous generations. Also does it really matter? While we hear about how financially disadvantaged Gen Z is, why do the car manufacturers try to cater to them when they have very little interest to begin with? The car makers need to throw out the old outdated ideology of marketing to the youth and focus on the people more likely to actually buy something.
@liam9307 Жыл бұрын
"I'm trying to decide between the Grand Am and the 3-Series" said no one ever.
@brianbrinkman7964 Жыл бұрын
Great talk. Reminds me of the though-provoking columns in Automobile magazine during David E’s reign.
@kclefthanded427 Жыл бұрын
Since we're in a crossover craze, I really don't see Pontiac coming back anytime soon, just ask Buick
@michaelwitas9482 Жыл бұрын
I remember driving a Pontiac G6 loaner car given to me when I took my Volkswagen in for service as a multi-line dealer. The car was just unexciting even though it was built on a modern (for then) international GM platform. It just didn't feel like a high quality or nice car. Not the worst, but nothing special. With all cars generally becoming more powerful and better handling, I think there was less to differentiate Pontiac from its stablemates towards the end. I once worked as a stringer, writing automotive stories for various Milwaukee area newspapers. I attended the 1988 Pontiac national press introduction in Lake Geneva WI. I remember there being a sense of excitement with the Grand Prix being new and other turbo powered cars being introduced. It was neat talking with the designers and marketing people.
@stevesmith6554 Жыл бұрын
Sad but true. I couldnt imagine anyone being reconnected to Pontiac and being nostalgic over the Aztec....
@SeaTravelr123 Жыл бұрын
Inside is great!! Keep warm. Merry Christmas. The 78 with the full size and the new Grand Prix were beautiful cars. Love this video.
@fomfom9779 Жыл бұрын
I always liked Pontiacs. I had two of badge-engineered Pontiac Novas. I think my personal favorite Pontiac was the 1962 Grand Prix. (1965 Grand Prix, gets honorable mention - reminds me of my Coke bottle-era '65 Impala in the haunches.)
@gene978 Жыл бұрын
You and your Bad News Adam! 😢. That makes me so Sad I loved Pontiac and was Heart broken when I heard the news. I grew up late 60’s and 70’s. Grandfather had the ‘67 Bonneville in a Med Blue and loaded. I loved watching him pull up and going for rides often. One of my first new Cars was a Maroon Bonneville Sport Coupe Pontiac. And a ‘86 Red TRAN AM w/ T -TOPS with Black and Chrome Turbine wheels. Now I am depressed. Lol
@mrluckyuncle Жыл бұрын
How timely. I just saw a Pontiac Solstice in Torreón, Mexico 🙂
@markchandler90 Жыл бұрын
Eventually the Parisienne received 1980-81 Bonneville quarter panels.
@futon02 Жыл бұрын
Loved Pontiac. I had 5 of them between 1990 and 2003. Wanted to get the GTO but had just gotten a Cadillac
@roberttaylor8595 Жыл бұрын
I always loved Pontiacs even though we drove Buicks in my family.My aunt had bought a new 1957 StarChief which was a fantastic car.Our neighbor had a red 1967 GTO with a 4speed in red I wished I had owned one but it did not happen. It was sad when GM pulled the plug on Pontiac.I watched the video where you say it will never come Back I was wondering if they could come back as a performance division maybe linked with Buick or GMC? Turning out electric sports cars like a Rivian or Tesla. Adam I always enjoy your videos. Thanks Robert Taylor
@rolandcharriez7631 Жыл бұрын
I still have a 2006 awd vibe and it still runs well. I felt it was the last nice pontiac/toyota collaboration (nummi). Nicely styled, practical, fun to drive and great on gas. I agree this brand will never come back. I think Pontiac unfortunately blew it with the aztek. Conceptually the car was great, but the final execution was not the greatest. The brand is always be a nice memory for me.
@nathanexplosion5478 Жыл бұрын
Pontiac, along with the other major domestic brands that got culled (Olds, Plymouth, Mercury) were simply the end result of the long decline in market share the domestics started giving up in the early 70’s. Great points Adam makes about the massive dealer network that was once both necessary and highly profitable becoming another one of the nooses around the neck of Pontiac once enough market share was lost to foreign brands. The truck/SUV craze brought on by the cheap gas in mid 90’s through early 2000’s also added to pressure of the vice Pontiac was in. Would have been interesting to see what would have happened if there was no Great Recession and the resulting bankruptcy path. The death would have been inevitable, but likely there would have been some fun RWD cars that would have been made first.
@ralphl7643 Жыл бұрын
In its last years, Pontiac had more non-Chevy based models than ever before, while their sales were plummeting. Badge Engineering worked! GM needed to move Cadillac into the Benz-BMW price range earlier, so BOP had more room to differentiate their lines.
@loumontcalm3500 Жыл бұрын
As soon as they bring back the Oakland and LaSalle😉
@AB-pl1ko Жыл бұрын
@Dennis Wilson - don't forget the Essex, Graham and Hupmobile reboots.. LOL
@knowbodiesfull576810 ай бұрын
@@AB-pl1koWhile we're at it, let's throw in Hudson, Nash, Studebaker, Packard, and Kaiser. 😉
@dalebelseth3058 Жыл бұрын
Have you done the Dust Buster vans? I’ll be checking
@jeffstonecipher1594 Жыл бұрын
Great discussion that sounds like its leading to a conversation about the death of CARS altogether in today's market -unfortunate for people who still love cars. And loath the taking over of the market with inefficient, clumsy, tall sitting highchairs for adults masquerading as cars. Or trucks? SUVs and cross-overs killed great CAR brands like Pontiac, Olds, and Mercury. Period. So now customers who want any kind of a luxury/sport cruiser-sedans have to shop either European, South Korean brands or Japanese makers, which I think is a real shame. Pontiac would never be able re-emerge as a business case to survive in this kind of environment. Nice job Adam -keep up the good work🙂
@genearoth3970 Жыл бұрын
Hi Adam , I enjoy your channel . You have a Wonderful collection !" You are a lucky man to have so many different model's from the Big Three . I have a 78 Oldsmoblie Delta 88 Royal two door coup . There is along but cool story behind my Oldsmoblie. Have a Happy and Healthy New Year !" Gene ,