I figured this car once it got to even lower prices than now would fall into hands of interesting and young people... but NOT hipsters


http://www.autoguide.com/auto-news/2015 ... -cars.html
The better question is whether there will be hipsters in 20 years or even less. My guess is no, much like how greasers and more recent emos have faded from popularity.Sluggo wrote:Wait a minute, the article didn't say the Kizashi was a hipster vehicle now but that it may/ would become one in the future . Like 20 years in the future. The article also states the car has unique engineering and was well built.
So the question is will these future hipsters have money.
Yeah, I'm sure you are right the hipsters will be gone and I don't even know what a emos are. I thought it was a big bird.KuroNekko wrote:The better question is whether there will be hipsters in 20 years or even less. My guess is no, much like how greasers and moreSluggo wrote:Wait a minute, the article didn't say the Kizashi was a hipster vehicle now but that it may/ would become one in the future . Like 20 years in the future. The article also states the car has unique engineering and was well built.
So the question is will these future hipsters have money.
recent emos have faded from popularity.
To start, these are emos. I am sure you saw them around several years ago. I think a lot of them became hipsters as the pop culture evolved.Sluggo wrote:
Yeah, I'm sure you are right the hipsters will be gone and I don't even know what a emos are. I thought it was a big bird.
I think it would be hard to pick a car that has lost as must value as the Kizashi. As much as I like mine I regret buying it.
As dependable as it has been I'm concerned when I take it on a trip. No matter how reliable a car is it can always break down.
What happens if that break down is in a state that had very few Suzuki dealers and no real service now.
I'm afraid the Kizashi is a car with the draw backs of an exotic but the prestige of an economy car.