2nd June 2008

Tuner Special: Mugen Honda Freed

TOKYO — That’s quick! Mugen, the longtime Honda tuning house, has already turned out a take on the new Honda Freed, the compact eight-passenger people mover that was just released last week in the Japanese domestic market.

The Mugen edition sports the usual exterior add-ons: front airdam, sport grille, side skirts, rear airdam and massive rear wing.

Under the skin, the Mugen Freed features upgraded suspension, brakes and muffler. Customers can select from several different 16-inch alloy wheels.

What this means to you: Mazda might want to pull a few cues from this one for its North American Mazda 5. — Paul Lienert, Correspondent

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2nd June 2008

Honda sponsors the 10th Anniversary of Aquarium of the Pacific.

This year, Honda is not only celebrating the 10th anniversary of the Aquarium of the Pacific, but it’s also building ultimate garages, celebrating Little League Baseball® and sending high-school grads to Disneyland. Visit the Honda Events Page to find out more about Honda’s events in 2008.

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2nd June 2008

New Ford KA

Ford made public photos of its new Ka model. The new Ka will replace the 12-year-old Ka, and shares its underpinnings and engines with the Fiat 500.

The Ka expected arrive to dealerships towards the end of 2008. Ford says that its engineers are working hard to ensure that the new Ka can match the current model??

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2nd June 2008

Car Ownership Costs on the Rise

It’s not just gas — the cost of owning a car is going up across the board, from parking fees to new tires. Oh, and you can also add to that list oil changes, parts replacement and repair, car rentals, and body work. Basically, if it’s auto-related, count on it costing more.

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2nd June 2008

Two is good, but is one better?

It’s a mult-million dollar investment that, for many car makers, isn’t worth the money. What is it? Sydney and Melbourne motor shows. Increasingly, European brands are giving one or both shows the flick, and instead concentrating on other forms of marketing to reach their customers.

Audi won’t be at the Sydney show this year, but Audi spokeswoman Anna Burgdorf says that it’s not a Sydney versus Melbourne thing. “We think that one show a year is enough for a market the size of Australia, and that two is not necessary,” she said.

Ms Burgdorf said that they would like to see a single show in the middle of the year, so that it did not clash with any of the major international motor shows.

She also said that having a show in the middle of the year would give Audi a better opportunity to bring out some of the show cars and concept vehicles that are shown at the major international shows.

“There are also more targeted ways of reaching potential customers,” she said.
It’s a view that is echoed by Mercedes-Benz and BMW.

“Doing other events, such as sponsorships, delivers more sales,” says Mercedes-Benz spokesman David McCarthy.

“If there was one show, the costs would come down,” he says. “Doing the two shows in one year doesn’t make a lot of sense.”

BMW’s Toni Andreevski agrees. “We won’t be at Sydney this year,” he says. “We look at the relative merits of each show. Our preference is for one show that alternates between Sydney and Melbourne.

Having a show that alternates has precedent with the Frankfurt and Paris shows, which shift between the two cities.

So why shouldn’t Sydney and Melbourne follow suit? Surely one show, with all the major car makers, makes more sense than two shows with only some manufacturers.
Because BMW is skipping Sydney, BMW fans won’t get the opportunity to see the new X6. The same goes for Audi fans and the new A3 Cabrio.

What do you think? Should we stick with two shows, or would one show alternating between capitals be a better option?

Joshua Gliddon

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2nd June 2008

Alfa Romeo Mito: interior pics

Alfa Romeo is showing us the interior of its Mito supermini, prior to its formal unveiling next month. It’s black-upholstered, and it’s clearly Italian…

The Mito (’Milan/Torino’) has been developed from the Fiat Grande Punto, but is styled like the 8C Competizione super coupe. It will have a unique suspension system, and a driver preferences set-up allowing the driver to select different modes - Dynamic, Normal and All-Weather - for engine response, braking, steering, suspension and transmission.

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2nd June 2008

Winchup is V8 best and fairest

Jamie Whincup, who came second in the V8 Supercar Championship by 2 points, received a consolation prize recently.

JAMIE Whincup missed the 2007 V8 Supercar Championship by a hair’s-breadth two points but last night he got the best consolation a driver could want - being presented with the Barry Sheene Medal.

Whincup was runner-up to new champ Garth Tander - 623 points to 625 - in the nail-biting finish on Sunday to a season of 14 rounds that started at the Clipsal 500 in Adelaide back in March. At the V8 Supercars Australia annual awards at a gala dinner in Melbourne, Whincup gratefully accepted the Barry Sheene Medal.

In honour of the late Sheene, a former British world champion motorcycle racer who emigrated to Australia and came to love the V8 Supercar concept, the medal recognises the driver who best represents the sport on track and off track through the year.

Whincup, 24, winner of last year’s Clipsal 500 in Adelaide, races for the Triple Eight outfit in the Vodafone Falcon as a team-mate to Craig Lowndes, who won this award last year. Whincup, from Melbourne but now living on the Gold Coast to be near the team headquarters, has driven with Lowndes to win the Bathurst 1000 races last year and this year, as well as this year’s Sandown 500.

Had he not been beaten by .8sec on Sunday in the final race of the final round at PhillipIsland he would have taken the V8 Supercar Championship from Tander (Toll-HSV, Commodore).

“Jamie has shown character this year in bouncing back with real guts and determination,” chairman of V8 Supercars Australia, Tony Cochrane, said last night.

The Mike Kable Young Gun award went to another 24-year-old, Dale Wood, who races a Holden Commodore VZ run by Greg Murphy Racing in the Fujitsu Series.

Harry Firth, former Holden team manager and the first winner of the Bathurst 1000 race - with Bob Jane in a Ford Cortina in 1963 - was inducted into the sport’s Hall of Fame.

The Clipsal 500 race already is in the Hall of Fame for best event, allowing the 2007 best event award to go to the Bahrain round.

The Clipsal 500 was named as having the best volunteers.

Mark Winterbottom (FPR, Orrcon Falcon) won the award for most pole positions and Jim Beam Racing (Dick Johnson’s outfit) the prize for best-presented team. Holden is manufacturer of the year.

Meanwhile, Tander has denied that he has signed to drive for the Holden Racing Team next year.

But he hasn’t ruled out such a deal.

“I certainly haven’t had any discussions in the lead-up to PhillipIsland, we were very focused on that,” Tander said yesterday. “This week we’ll celebrate our championship victory and the year. If there is a discussion I guess it will happen some time after that.”

- Herald Sun

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2nd June 2008

Landmark win for Briscoe

Australia’s Ryan Briscoe scored a landmark win at Milwaukee in the USA overnight.

Briscoe rebounded from a troubled run in the classic Indianapolis 500, when he clashed with glamour girl Danica Patrick late in the race, to take a confident win on the Milwaukee Mile.

It was his first win in the Indy Racing League but the 300th for his legendary team owner, Roger Penske. And it also marked the 30th anniversary of the first win by another of Penske’s all-time champions, Rick Mears, who also scored his first major win on the Milwaukee Mile.

Briscoe only qualified 14th for the race in his Dallara-Honda and fell back to 14th during the opening laps after a slippery run through the first lap and an upset caused when Oriel Servia ducked into the pits.

But then he drove through the field and hit the front after 176 laps, before fending off New Zealander Scott Dixon - who won the Indy 500 - who finished second ahead of veteran Tony Kanaan.

“It’s been 30 years since Roger’s first IndyCar win,” Briscoe said. “I can’t tell you how important it is to me to get my first IndyCar victory for him in this race.”

The win comes in Briscoe’s first IRL season with Team Penske, following a near-fatal crash during his first attempt on the series with Chip Ganassi’s team in 2005.

He was forced to rebuild his career with a series of one-off starts through 2006, including a sensational run with the Holden Racing Team when he was the quickest qualifier at the Sandown 500 in a Commodore, before joining the Penske Porsche team in the USA last year.

 

- Herald Sun

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2nd June 2008

GM Blog Cop: “I’m not saying we haven’t made some mistakes”

By Robert Farago

June 1, 2008 - 28 Views







As readers of our General Motors Death Watch know, GM e-rotweiler and junket dispenser Christopher Barger thinks TTAC is WAY too negative. At least we’re not double negative. Check out the Director of GM Global Communications Technology’s response to a CNBC poll. Phil LeBeau asked readers to choose one of four culprits– management, unions, SUVaphilia or Toyondissan– for GM’s sagging stock price and rapidly declining fortunes. Barger sent a “now hold on a god damn minute” email to LeBeau which tells us exactly how GM’s spinning their [death] spiral: it’s the economy, stupid. “In fact, these economic headwinds are taking their toll on virtually every American business and industry — and consumers from all walks of life too. Singling out one company for criticism when the entire economy is struggling seems a bit unfair, don’t you think? It’s kind of like blaming one person for being out of work when unemployment is on the rise.” (Tell that to Honda.) There’s a lot of B.S. to wade through, from GM strengthening its brands, to the fact that the automaker sells eight (count ‘em eight) hybrids, to “our products can go toe-to-toe with anything on the market today.” Barger’s central message: fuck the past. “I think it’s more constructive to look forward and to try to continue improving things, don’t you?” As the old saying goes, those who don’t learn from history have a bright future in corporate PR.


CNBC Âť

 





7 Responses to “
GM Blog Cop: “I’m not saying we haven’t made some mistakes” ”

  • Nemphre :


    June 1st, 2008 at
    10:37 pm

    No surprise here. Barger is a PR man. This means he deals in bullshit. Bullshit is his life. It’s his way of living. It also means that to any legitimate news medium or rational human being, whatever he says has zero value.

  • holydonut :


    June 1st, 2008 at
    10:39 pm

    This gets me thinking… I remember a time when Mazda blamed their misfortunes on the Japanese Financial Crisis and weak markets during the 90s.

    If this site were around then; imagine the “Mazda Deathwatch” pieces that would have been batted around. Mazda had a few low volume niche cars, a lot of low margin and uninspiring pedestrian cars, and a slew of mismanaged sub-brand s. From 1995 on the company just got hammered with one bad decision after another. It took Ford coming in to save them.

    Imagine what would have happened if the PR folks for Mazda weren’t around in the late 90s. Somebody had to still perceive value in the company… so it’s important for PR to continue its role even if it is a load of fluff. Their goal isn’t to tell you the truth; their goal is to keep their company going. In the 90s, these guys proclaimed Mazda’s excellence at powertrain and chassis development, and they’d vocally blamed externalities beyond the company’s control.

    So who’s going to come in and save Ford? Anyway, I think it’d be fun to do a what-if time machine where ya’ll write about how bad Mazda was as a business and how stupid their management was back in the 90s.

  • Robert Farago :


    June 1st, 2008 at
    10:46 pm

    holydonut:

    Imagine what would have happened if the PR folks for Mazda weren’t around in the late 90s. Somebody had to still perceive value in the company… so it’s important for PR to continue its role even if it is a load of fluff.

    Spoken like a true spinmeister. You WANT me to lie! You NEED me to lie! If I don’t lie, hundreds of thousands of people can’t put food on their table.

    A company that tells the truth– both internally and externally– avoid dangerous self-delusion AND earns credibility/loyalty it can use when times are tough. Ford MAY be learning that lesson. GM? No.

  • Dan8000rpm :


    June 1st, 2008 at
    10:49 pm

    Read the first sentence from RF then Nemphre’s post. He may have a point….

  • holydonut :


    June 1st, 2008 at
    10:56 pm

    RF: Yes, Ford needs people to lie on their behalf and they pay out the nose to get that service. It’s all about maintaining the notion the company isn’t going to go tits up next week. At a basic level, it makes sure on-the-fence consumers somewhat confident that the company isn’t going to leave them with a Merkur or Renault that cannot get warranty work.

    At a more important business level, it makes sure banks continue to lend them money; that their employees actually still try; and that investors still perceive some value in Ford’s assets.

    If you ran a business that relied on delivering consumer goods, you’d need a pretty fluff-filled PR staff as well. If your business relies on the failure of other businesses - well - your PR staff is probably less important.

  • Robert Farago :


    June 1st, 2008 at
    11:01 pm

    holydonut:

    If your business relies on the failure of other businesses - well - your PR staff is probably less important.

    My business depends on telling the truth about cars.

    I do NOT accept that lies/outrageous spin are an acceptable part of doing business. They may be normal and predictable, but that does not make them right, or even tolerable.

    While you’re free to disagree, this being America and all, I believe consumers deserve the truth. Besides, a sense of morality– fairness, honesty, integrity– makes good business sense in this country. And thank God for that.

  • holydonut :


    June 1st, 2008 at
    11:20 pm

    Personally, I believe 100% truth is a bit idealistic. And adhering to this ideal will result in a situation where you become a martyr to prove a point that is exposes a weakness of the human condition.

    Even if deep down in your heart feel that your company’s pizza is merely average, would you have a slogan that says “we make average pizza” in place of “world’s tastiest pizza?” A advertising campaign with th message “we’re #4 in the industry and damn proud” really doesn’t get the right point across to the audience. Sure, some people will value your honesty - but most will just think you’re stupid.

    I’ve said it a few times in comments before, but I think there’s a huge amount of value to be had with industry and business experience. I find it repeated numerous times that the “truth” is what is intuitively correct and rationalized. But there is almost impossible to operate a business by telling truths all the time. While I believe a Utopian ideal would allow creditability to offset a default on debt, the real world thus far doesn’t allow it.

    And besides - no matter how much you believe in your message, somebody will label you as a liar. How many times has Toyota verbalized a commitment to the environment only to have people accuse them of touting inefficient technologies with negative externalities in order to get credit for for some HOV exemptions in California? Same goes with Nissan believing they have the best sports car under 100K only to have ‘Vette vans decrying all the electronics on the car.

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2nd June 2008

2009 Mercedes Benz E/C Class Spy Shots

Our Friend ’DerTuner’ just sent us some pictures of what is likely to be an E-Class mule testing on the autobahn in Germany. The Mercedes is highly disguised under a C-Class body. But the larger proportion leave us to think there is an E-Class heart under it. Have fun trying to decode the camouflage and find out clues of what the future E-Class will look like, or is it just a bigger C-class facelift coming up already…

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