Perfect. Thanks for the breakdown- and very glad I didn't spend any more time than I did listening.Skip all the way to 50:20, that's where they get into the CTR and ITS--Derek Hyphen prefers the ITS for sound and ride quality saying, "If the two cars have the same competence, why not choose the one that sounds and rides better?" Jason Cammisa essentially says, "Why would I pay $8,500 more for "meh seats" at best?". Cammisa believes the CTR looks more timeless and upscale on the inside (subjective), and proposes the CTR and ITS is a failure of product planning by Honda--(summarized) the CTR is light on sound deadening and has a quieter exhaust that you still can't hear + a more premium integrated widebody, but the ITS has extra sound deadening and a louder exhaust that you can't quite hear + less premium tacked on bodywork.
Cammisa said he can live with a CTR, but the +R mode is essentially too harsh to use. They at one point said, "So buy the Honda and put an exhaust on it and don't drive it in +R mode... but you don't get heated seats."
The funniest part for me started around 1:02:30 where Derek said he'd like to try a CTR and Jason said he'd try to get ahold of one for him to check out--Derek said he was afraid he'd want to buy one, "But how much do they cost again?". They both agreed that a CTR was "around $40,000", and don't get me wrong I'm sure either one of them could get one at MSRP (~$44k) with minimal trouble (in exchange for brand/dealership publicity, obviously), but they both essentially said, "$40,000 is kind of a lot of money." Yeah, well, try being a member of the general public that's buying the CTR at ~$60k.
It's another example of two obviously knowledgeable car people missing the key part of the buyer's equation--dealer markups. At this point, even if the CTR markups are dropping (from $20k, to $15k, to ~$10k today), the average CTR is still slightly more expensive out the door than the ITS. That would've made for a much more thoughtful dialogue, IMO.
Lol. There is a fast fwd button for a reason.Wow that was complete utter trash and an hour of my life I'll never get back...
I've been following the "what did you pay for your FL5" thread on civicxi, and it looks like markups are dropping pretty consistently. In the last few weeks people have been getting cars at 4-6k markups (some even at MSRP).Yeah, well, try being a member of the general public that's buying the CTR at ~$60k.
It's another example of two obviously knowledgeable car people missing the key part of the buyer's equation--dealer markups. At this point, even if the CTR markups are dropping (from $20k, to $15k, to ~$10k today), the average CTR is still slightly more expensive out the door than the ITS. That would've made for a much more thoughtful dialogue, IMO.
I used to enjoy the Hagerty videos a lot too, but it was really strange that they tested a GR Yaris with open diffs against the Morizo Corolla. Almost nobody is going to buy a GR Yaris with open diffs, and pretty much nobody is going to get their hands on the Morizo edition either. I think a regular CTR vs GR Corolla circuit video would have been a lot more useful to 99% of people.Which is too bad, I really like most of the Hagerty videos, although even the Corolla GR one had some weird toxicity to it that I didn't like. This just brought it to the surface.
They tested the Morizo against the CTR and the CTR was faster, but they tried their best to downplay that part. Was almost an after thought, as clearly it was designed as a CGR review, not a true comparo. I wonder how many of the 200 Morizos went to auto journalists, as every comparo seems to magically have one! I guess the FK8 LE got a lot of comparos also with no availability, so it is what it is.I used to enjoy the Hagerty videos a lot too, but it was really strange that they tested a GR Yaris with open diffs against the Morizo Corolla. Almost nobody is going to buy a GR Yaris with open diffs, and pretty much nobody is going to get their hands on the Morizo edition either. I think a regular CTR vs GR Corolla circuit video would have been a lot more useful to 99% of people.
Exactly. In small doses it's tolerable. As a podcast it just assaults the senses and is like nails on a chalkboard.I typically enjoy Camissa's sense of humor, not so much in the podcast format though. I can see how he might rub some the wrong way. He is a bit contrarian, that's his brand.