This Minivan In Massachusetts Keeps Getting Weirder And Weirder And We’re Here For It

Weird Van Ts
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“I’ve never emailed a website before,” Autopian user SkyChief07 begins their email with. “I love the site, love the mission, love you all as writers and journalists. You’re doing a thing, and things are hard, but you’re succeeding in building a corner of the internet where car weirdos feel truly at home,” they continue before getting to the highly pressing crux of the matter: This absurd minivan.

“I work at a college in Massachussetts,” they continue, “and I’ve been driving past this van on campus for the past couple of years, and it just keeps getting better and better as the owner adds more and more stuff to it.” Behold the van:

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SkyChief07 continues by describing why this is an Autopian van:

I had to stop the other day and take some pictures, and it occurred to me that this is a very Autopian van for the following reasons:

1. An unhinged amount of auxiliary lighting. I have a fantasy of Jason sitting at the bar at The Scarlet Lighter, doing a dramatic spit take when he sees all these accessory lights, spraying a fine mist of Filament Julep (a taillight-subculture bar has to have themed cocktails, right?) all over his phone. There are even LEDs mounted inside the rear bumper.
2. Is that a snorkel on a 2WD van riding on all-seasons? Where is this van going? What is it snorkeling?
3. It’s a 2nd-gen Kia Sedona in the top trim available at the time (EX). When’s the last time you’ve seen an ’01-’05 Sedona in such great shape (if at all)?
4. All the little details: the jerry can with a combination lock, the legs dangling from the tailgate, the Ring stickers, WIDE LOAD banner under the rear wiper (what if you accidentally hit the stalk and turn it on?), the fuzzy dice, the 2023 sticker, the name Bessie.
This van is awesome. It makes me smile every time I drive past it, and I thought it would ring true to the Autopian vibe. I hope the owner is an Autopian reader.
Happy Wednesday, all. Thanks for the great content.
Holy crap, SkyChief07, this is an incredible email! It’s a cheap, Gambler-ish type vehicle, so you know Mercedes will love it; it’s a forgotten Kia from the mid-2000s, so I bet Thomas (who loves mundate, oft-forgotten vehicles) will at least appreciate it; it’s sorta off-road-y, so you know I love it; it’s a van, so you know Matt will dig it; and as for Torch? Well, you already know why he’ll love it (see Scarlet Lighter above). What an incredible machine, and an incredible reader-submission!
The Wide Load thing has me a bit perplexed, as does that light bar behind the rear hatch glass, and those legs sticking out of the bottom of that hatch are odd, and also I just looked at a picture of the Kia Sedona’s engine and the airbox is actually on the other side of the car so that snorkel has me confused, too. Yeah, this is bizarre, and we love that around here.

89 thoughts on “This Minivan In Massachusetts Keeps Getting Weirder And Weirder And We’re Here For It

  1. Anything worth doing is better if you go over the top??
    Surprisingly, with all my years driving crapcans, I’ve never done anything like this: my modifications were all under the skin.
    Maybe it’s my Midwest upbringing/Quaker heritage: ‘Don’t attract attention’ ?

    I mean, I admire the dedication —but I don’t want the gendarmes to even glance at me as I glide by 😉

  2. This is a JCWHITNEY advertising vehicle. It has not been improved it is just crap glued to crap.
    BTW does anyone know how to remove broken wind visor pieces from a car?

    1. Depends on the car but I know how to do it on older MBs. Pelican Parts has a wealth of “tech articles” that are step by step instructions for how to do random things. Maybe they can help. Or YouTube!

    2. Try dental floss through the adhesive. Could also use a thin piece of wire if the floss keeps snapping. Warming the adhesive can make it a little easier.

      Sometimes you can hit the adhesive area with a heat gun and just pull the pieces off. Be careful not to damage anything delicate with the heat gun.

      1. Or heat gun + dental floss + goo ne gone. If the dental floss keeps breaking, recommend using fishing line with a high (ish) lbs. rating, less likely to scratch up your paint

  3. I *think* this person “escorts” prefab and “mobile” homes on the highway. When I lived in the sticks up North, these rolling domiciles were a common sight moving up 89 and 91, with a passenger car fore and aft heralding another poorly constructed house heading to its forever home.

    Always clearly someone’s regular car, outfitted with signs and lights, because why pay someone and equip them, when you can make someone an independent contractor that uses their own vehicle? The American way!

    1. Usually pilot cars have a sign on the side advertising they are a pilot car. They also are usually equipped with CB radio, so there would likely be a giant whip antenna. I think we have to consider this person is just having a lot of fun on their own.

    1. I have an 04′ Sienna, same, we call it our ‘light’ truck. It has made Many trips to the recycling center fully loaded. Ditto Menards/HomeDepot/Lowes for sheet material & dimensional lumber, plus cement bags. Last weekend had 500 lbs of water softener salt in the back + then took it to Costco for family groceries bf heading bk home with two other people in car too with plenty of room to spare

  4. Can we please talk about this next? It’s frequently spotted and every time I see a photo of it on Audi FB or Audi reddit there’s more, so not only does he daily this thing, but he’s always doing more as well. I kind of love it because it’s like a rolling shitpost. The guy is obviously doing it to troll people which I kind of love. Rumor is he’s an Audi technician and does it for the LOL’s.

    https://www.reddit.com/r/Shitty_Car_Mods/comments/10hi4wm/audi_s4_found_on_facebook/

  5. The snorkel had me rolling. It’s one of the silliest accessories when it’s actually functional – so this was just perfect execution.

  6. I have seen this phenomenon before. High school or college kid receives a hand-me-down dorkmobile from mom and/or dad. Since there’s absolutely no way to make it even remotely cool, they shoot for full-on ridiculousness and hilarity.

    1. See: My rusted to hell ’89 Geo Prism I had back in highschool, in which my friends and I tacked on:

      gold hood scoopgold wheel coverssilver contact paper for bottom halves of doors to cover the rust (lasted way longer than you’d expect)orange racing stripegigantic orange Geo logo decal for rear windshieldWhen your lot in life is a 750$ Prism that’s only a year younger than you are, you have fun where you can. This van is likely living the same life as that Geo once did.

      1. off topic, but you used “geo” in a sentence, so:

        morning commute today, saw a tiny speck in my rear view mirror. couldn’t believe it, and she wasn’t gaining, so i moved right and slowed down. eventually she caught up: dark teal 3-door metro with no visible rust. surprisingly, after at least three miles of freeway, she was up to 75. two little dimples above the lock on the hatch, but otherwise seemed pristine. it was 2nd gen by the headlights, and the car was still at least 5 or 10 years older than the driver.

        this was a treat, as i don’t remember seeing one of these in the last 15 years or so. rivians, lucids, a 4c the other day, and even occasional sightings of a Citroen CX by my office, but any geo metro hatch, let alone a clean one?

        1. I occasionally still see Metro hatches around here, which is a miracle in the Northeast. But every single one of them is holding on for dear life. A clean one… on an interstate? I haven’t seen that in probably 15 years.

        2. A friend had a convertable blue automatic metro in HS. Actually was a lot of fun driving it on twisty “55” mph 2 lane highways, of which there were a lot where I grew up.
          Of course I have always been of the school of thought of hoon whatever you have outside of perhaps a full on rv, though I bet you could still have fun hooning a Vixen!

    2. Then somehow that old Pontiac 6000 is still chugging along by the time I, the seventh sibling, gets it in high school.

      Oh the things my older sisters managed to do to it with spray paint, stencils, glitter and hot glue before it was handed off to me with multiple coolant leaks.

      Basically, I drove to high school in a half assed low budget parade float.

      Fuck it. I was excited just to have a car. The only thing I changed on it were the radiator hoses, tires, seat position, mirrors and radio presets.

          1. I do understand.
            But you’re now going to have to live with my mental image of you in a powder blue rented tux & your be-tulled Prom date awkwardly posed in front of your parade-float conveyance before the big event.

            1. Prom date? In that hooptie?
              Nah.

              However… if you wanted to score some beers or other illicit substances at the after party it was pretty apparent which vehicle you needed to approach, cautiously.

              1. “That one, over there.”

                “The Chevy Celebrity?”

                “No the… Buick Century?”

                “You mean the Oldsmobile Cutlass?”

                “Are you sure it’s not a Cadillac Cimarron?”

                  1. The faded brown one embossed with rattle can silver, copper and gold moons and stars!

                    The one with all the seashells glued to the front passenger side quarter panel.

                    The one that looks like repressed 16 year olds tried to decorate it, to live dangerously.

                    1. Oh, damn. I didn’t realize it really was that bad. That had to suck. But, like you said, it was transport.
                      Hey, I remembered a good car book. Well, truck, but I’m pretty sure you’ll dig it.
                      Truck; On Rebuilding a worn-out Pickup and Other Post Technological Adventures. By John Jerome.

                    2. It didn’t suck at all. I was gifted transportation, and the ability to recognize who my real friends were.

  7. I’m getting a Hi-Low vibe 😀

    Edit: can one of the staff send a couple of stickers to SkyChief07? Perhaps he could be persuaded to leave them with a note to the car’s owner. If that person is not an Autopian, now’s a good time to start. 🙂

  8. the airbox is actually on the other side of the car so that snorkel has me confused, too.

    Simple explanation: purely decorative.
    More fun explanation: there is a winding mass of ducting and/or hoses delivering that air across to the other side, and some of it even juts through the firewall and into the dash.

    1. Humph, in my day, people welded whistle tips in their exhaust pipes when they wanted some decoration, I’ll never understand these kids today and their silly fads

  9. I know we value car weirdos around here but this thing reminds me of John Doe’s notebooks in Se7en. Just a visual representation of an insane person.

    1. I remember my first real job. There was a gal in shipping, around 40, single mom with 3 kids, with a deadbeat dad that didn’t pay child support. She drove an old Mazda GLC. Probably paid about a grand for it. Smart. Does the job for cheap.

      Though then she comes upstairs one day to where us IT folk are, inviting us down to come check out the “bling” she put on her car. This was just before the first Fast and Furious movie was out, but “tuner culture” was becoming a thing.

      All new wheels. Think 16s, might’ve been 17s. The three of us from upstairs immediately knew the wheels and tires very easily cost more than the entire car.

      One of her sons worked part time in shipping after school. Decent kid. Yet one thing I remembered is complaining about the usual “meat” for dinner would be a hot dog.

      ———-

      Still doesn’t beat some local guy though. Bought a used Cavalier Z24 and legitimately put an entire new C5 Corvette of money into it, to have a weird looking thing that would get demolished by the first US market Subaru WRX. He spent new C5 Z06 money all in.

        1. Nah, this was a guy in his early 20s that bought into, “tuner culture”. He had badly airbrushed flames, a crazy paint job with a lot of flake in it. A lot of “custom” interior work and everything under the hood (which was still a late 90s N.A. Ecotec) was chromed. Think 18” chrome wheels. He used to do races at an abandoned industrial park in my neck of the woods, and a drag strip about 15 miles away, but supposedly he stopped very early on because it got demolished by even stock Civic Sis.

          A friend of mine kind of knew him. When he did eventually sell it many years later (would’ve been like 12-13 years old) I heard he only got $2000 for it.

          it’s what taught me that if you’re heavily modifying your car, you need to ask yourself if you bought the wrong car. Save and get what you want.

          1. FYI – Third gen Z24 cavalier’s of the late 90s were faster to 60 and in the 1/4 mile then a stock Civic SI of the same year. Quarter mile was faster by around 1/2 second. Mostly due to much (much) higher torque. By the way, the 2.4 liter that came in the z24 in the 90s was not an Ecotec it was a DOHC that was developed long before the L85 ecotec made it into the cavaliers in 2003.

            1. A Z24 had 16-inch stock wheels though. We’re talking going to 18s, with possibly more section width. That’s not going to help in a straight line. Moreover, big chrome wheels. Possibly on the cheap side. Yet more weight than just going from 16s to 18s would be.

              A lot of interior mods. I’m not talking stripping it down to bare metal, I’m talking adding fuzzy red “velour” everything to every surface. A whole lot of stereo equipment, amps, woofers, etc. Yet more weight.

      1. Even though the cost of housing has gone up, it’s still pretty common to see houses that cost less than the luxury car/truck parked in front of them. I guess it’s an America thing. Probably makes sense when you spend more time in traffic than at home.

        1. House to car ratio is also very dependent on where the house is.

          Yes, if you live in southern Ohio just over the Ohio River, homes are very cheap. Even two very normal cars can be worth more than a run-down home.

          Though that’s definitely not everywhere.

          1. On the flip side, the neighborhood where my parents live and where I grew up in doesn’t have a single house in it that’s less than 3,500 square feet, my parents is somewhere around 6,500 and it’s not the only one that size. But almost no one there drives a luxury car. If they do, it’s usually a base model Benz or BMW, but more often than not cars are 5-10 years old and from non-luxury manufacturers. This is in Kentucky so houses like that aren’t as expensive as they’d be other places, but you can definitely tell people are really stretching things to live there. Growing up it wasn’t uncommon to go to someone’s house and find whole rooms or even floors unfurnished.

            1. Right, but keep in mind we’re both functionally talking about Central Appalachia. I’ve driven through most of the continental US, and Central Appalachia is about as economically depressed (lack of good paying opportunities) as you get outside of the wastelands turned into reservations in the Dakotas and Arizona/New Mexico. Again, you can buy a new RAV4 for more than the price of a (really rough) house in some parts of Central Appalachia.

              Drive NE from Central Appalachia and when you hit Pittsburgh (still Appalachia), average home prices are $235-250K. Drive another 5 hours to Richmond, VA and average home prices are more around $350K. Go further to DC and you’re north of $600K. Drive instead to Boston (6-7 hours) and you’re at north of $800K.

              Works the same going the other direction (SE instead of NE) as well, just not as extreme. Atlanta is $420K. Raleigh around $430K.

              There are huge extremes in what you’ll see in barely more than a half day road trip. Even when you get to the nice parts, even just 50 miles away the same opportunities may not exist and the top end of the labor market sees a 40-60% pay cut for common, “good paying” jobs, even though the cost of food and housing doesn’t go up that much.

              And those steps up buy a lot of car. It’s a shame people buy a lot of car, instead of keeping it sane and not getting eaten alive by depreciation.

          2. That’s inconceivable to me since most of Oregon is very expensive. Even a modest tract house is luxury motorhome or exotic car money and what’s parked out front is often older and cheap.

        2. At least out here in LA, in the barrios and hoods, your car is where it’s at. You can’t control where you live or your family, but you put every dime into your car, that’s where your pride resides.

        3. cries in British
          A one bed flat (apartment) around here, costs more than supercar money. (At least for cars ‘cheap’ enough that they list the price)
          Which is why I drive an 18 year old VW, and still can’t afford a house.

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