Women’s Chick Car Stories

Since I began talking with women about their cars more than a decade ago, I’ve collected countless automotive stories. What has struck me most is how widely those stories vary, reflecting not only the women who owned the vehicles but also the types of cars they drove. The stories attached to classic muscle cars, as I noted in an earlier post, tend to be nostalgic. Many of the women I interviewed associated these cars with a significant person, a memorable event, or a cherished moment from the past. Stories about contemporary cars, by contrast, focus less on nostalgia and more on the role the vehicle plays in everyday life. In conversations with chick car owners, most women spoke about what the car enabled them to do, how it made them feel, and how it expressed their personal identity.

Adventure in a New Beetle

The chick car – a term that became popular during the early 2000s – was in many ways a response to the vehicle historically associated with the woman driver. Sturdy, spacious, and utilitarian, the “women’s car” – the ubiquitous station wagon of the 1950s and 1960s, the 1970 hatchback sedan, the popular minivan introduced in the late 1980s, and today’s downsized SUV and crossover – was recognized as the perfect vehicle for carrying kids and cargo.

Ready for a twisty ride

However, in the late 1990s, a new type of female driver emerged. She appeared in many guises: as a young single woman making her way in the world, a married professional focused on career, or middle-aged empty nester looking forward to a more independent life. Seeking to shed their domestic identities, whether temporarily or permanently, these women embraced a car that was in no way utilitarian, but rather, small, quick, stylish, and “fun.” This vehicle became branded in many automotive circles as the “chick car.” The most common cars in this category were the Miata, MINI, and VW New Beetle.

Autocross in a Miata

When chick car owners tell stories, they are accompanied not by nostalgia, but by joy. The small, nimble cars provide automotive experiences that cannot be duplicated by a heavy, cumbersome, and practical automobile. Many of the car stories related to me told of automotive adventures: road trips in which the journey – not the destination – was the point. The chick car owners often spoke of the pleasure and excitement of navigating “twisty, fun roads” in new and exciting places, often with organizations composed of similar-minded auto aficionados. As a 49-year-old human resources officer remarked of her participation in the “Italian Job” run in Venice, California, “It’s just so much fun. I’m giggling the whole time.” Rather than calling on the automobile solely for the performance of everyday tasks on suburban thoroughfares, chick car drivers find exhilarating new uses on country highways, scenic byways, and a multitude of “curvy mountain roads.” Many of the women spoke of driving the Tail of the Dragon, a legendary 11-mile stretch located at Deals Gap on the Tennessee – North Carolina border. Famous for its challenging driving experiences, the road features dramatic switchbacks, tight curves, and steep embankments with no intersecting roads or driveways. Unaccustomed to thinking of the automobile as a road machine, many women mentioned how they enjoyed preserving these new driving moments through journals, scrapbooking, and online photo albums. A 53-year old accountant, who keeps a photo of her first drive through the Dragon as computer wallpaper, remarked, “In the picture, I’m coming out of one curve, setting up for the next, and you can see a third curve in the distance.  I have the top down, I’m wearing a fun hat, and you can my eyes reflected in the rearview mirror. A really cool picture.” 

MINI parade

Although many told stories of driving trips and tours, some found pleasure in creating stories in which the car was the star. Because the chick is car is small, stylish, and unusual, the women who own them are continually thinking of new, imaginative, and fun uses for their respective Miatas, MINIs, and New Beetles. A 55-year-old community service officer created a photo book for her 2004 Mini Cooper. Armed with a tin of chocolate chip cookies as a “reward” for participation, she and a friend would drive aimlessly “looking for interesting places to take pictures of my car.” Some the photos included: ready to be scooped-up by a back hoe, parked next to a helicopter, in a firehouse, next to a fire truck, in a restricted area military bunker (with a helicopter escort), ready to be clobbered by Western Exterminator’s “Little Man” (Western Exterminators added this picture to their employee newsletter), on a nude beach, with bathing suits hanging from the car door, with Verizon Wireless’s “Can you hear me now” guy, looking very tiny next to a live elephant, and being driven by the Chick-fil-a cow (which broke the driver’s seat). A 58-year-old technical writer “did the trick photography that every single person got into the back seat of the MINI. And the last guy, he was six foot seven, got into the passenger seat and I opened the sunroof and his head was sticking up out of it.” A 45-year-old tech teacher awarded “Bertha” – her 2011 Mini – with its own Facebook page.

Fun with a MINI

Ownership of a chick car is accompanied by experiences many women never thought possible. The stories the women tell are filled with humor, exhilaration, freedom, and fun. They disrupt the popular image of the woman driver, from one who is dutiful, serious, and cautious, to an individual who is carefree, adventurous, creative, and ultimately empowered. To the women who own them, the chick car is not merely transportation. It is transformative. 

My Biggest Car Mistake

Auto writer Logan Carter recently asked Jalopnik readers to share their most expensive automotive mistakes. He confessed that his own was purchasing his first car from a “sketchy dude” from Craigslist, only for everything to go wrong the moment the 2005 Saab cabriolet was parked in his driveway. The reader responses ranged from tales of purchasing a beater with the intention to fix it up, trusting cheap mechanics, deciding to invest in questionable upgrades on a perfectly serviceable daily driver, and “thinking I could afford that new 1985 Pontiac Fiero on my measly paycheck.” The last story hit close to home, as I found myself in a similar situation when I purchased a hot little convertible based on an attempt at coolness coupled with a rather embarrassing misunderstanding of a potential pay raise [more on that later].

My story of woe goes as follows. I had recently started my first job in advertising. I drove to work in a rusted out, 11-year-old VW Beetle that had been my trusty college commuter car. One day returning from work I discovered all of the spots in my apartment were taken; consequently, I parked my car on a Detroit street. When I went out to get in the car for work the next morning, the car was completely totaled, due to an errant [and nowhere to be found] driver. Although I got nearly half of what I paid for the VW from the insurance company, the amount was worth a lot less in the 11 year since I had purchased the car.

Faced with a conundrum of what to buy, I looked around at my co-workers’ rides. I was ultimately smitten with that of my supervisor [who happened to be Cathy Guisewite, not yet rich and famous for her self-titled comic strip], a 1975 Fiat Spider convertible in black. Having just received what I thought was a substantial raise, and wanting to emulate my cool and successful boss, I purchased the same car in fiery red. Soon afterward the troubles began.

First of all, I couldn’t afford it. When I was told by my supervisors I was “getting sixteen”, I assumed it meant my salary was being raised from ten grand to $16000 a year [which seemed like a lot to me in 1976]. Alas, what was meant was that I was receiving an additional $1600 a year, which raised my yearly salary to a whopping $11600. Those car payments were painful right from the start.

Secondly, Fiats at that time were not known for their dependability. The politically incorrect phrase attached to FIAT was “Fix It Again Tony,” intended to poke fun at the unreliability of the Italian car brand. So not only was I making significant car payments, but the car’s frequent appearances at the repair shop caused me to go into significant debt.

Finally, a convertible makes absolutely no sense in Michigan. Although I enjoyed the ease at which the top lowered [I could do it at a stoplight], the joy of wind in my hair could only be enjoyed for 3 or 4 months a year. In the winter, the car’s rear wheel drive and lowered stance made driving on snowy roads a considerable challenge. And as I didn’t have a garage, the cloth top experienced some wear and tear.

At some point, I realized my mistake and traded in the Fiat for a VW Scirocco, which continued my [interrupted] love affair with the German car maker. Proof of my dislike as well as embarrassment of the Fiat is that I never took a photo of the car or of myself driving it. The only good news is that I learned both financially and personally from my costly and rather embarrassing car-buying mistake. Although over the past 50 years I have enjoyed some vehicles more than others, I never regretted a car purchase as much as that of the 1976 Fiat Spider convertible.