The Honda Scandal: Arrogance And Accords The Inside Story Of
It was the first time the company publicly acknowledged what enthusiasts had known for 30 years: the Accord wasn’t just a car. It was a lifestyle.
Honda had accidentally created a new lifestyle category: . The car for the startup founder who didn’t want a German lease. The car for the lawyer who drove a Civic in college. The car for anyone who understood that arrogance doesn’t have to be loud. Part Five: The Modern Era—Accords in Hip-Hop, Streaming, and Memes Fast-forward to the 2020s. The Accord is now in its 11th generation. It’s a hybrid-only sedan in a world that hates sedans. And yet, it remains a lifestyle touchstone. Arrogance And Accords The Inside Story Of The Honda Scandal
Take the 1990 Honda Accord. While Detroit was still figuring out how to make a four-cylinder engine last 100,000 miles, Honda’s engineers had already designed an engine that could rev to 7,000 RPM, pass emissions in all 50 states, and still start on the first crank after a decade of neglect. The company’s internal motto might as well have been: “We know better than you do.” It was the first time the company publicly
And in hip-hop, the Accord has been name-checked by everyone from Drake ( “Used to push an Accord, now I push a Porsche” ) to Kodak Black, who famously said in an interview: “A Honda Accord with a sunroof? That’s a rich man’s car where I’m from.” In 2024, Honda finally leaned in. They released a commercial featuring a 1994 Accord racing a 2024 Accord through a neon-lit city, with a voiceover: “Some things change. The arrogance of excellence does not.” The car for the startup founder who didn’t
That arrogance extended to every component. The double-wishbone suspension on that Accord was more sophisticated than what Porsche was using on the 911. The transmission was engineered to tolerate abuse that would grenade a Ford Taurus. And the body panel gaps? Tighter than a Lexus costing twice as much.
A 2023 meme summed it up perfectly: a photo of a clapped-out, mismatched-panel, dented sixth-gen Accord with the caption: “This car has seen things. It has been to three funerals, two births, and one drive-by. It will outlive your Tesla.”