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Car and Driver is an American automotive enthusiast magazine. Its total circulation of 1.37 million, according to the Magazine Publishers of America, makes it the most-popular auto magazine in the United States. It is owned by Hachette Filipacchi Magazines. Originally headquartered in New York City, the magazine has been based in Ann Arbor, Michigan since the late 1970s.

It was known as Sports Car Illustrated until the early-1960s, when editor Karl Ludvigsen renamed it to show a more general automotive focus. 2005 marked the 50-year anniversary of Car and Driver.

IssuesOwner
Ownership
Jul 1955–Feb 1956Motor Publications
Mar 1956–Apr 1985Ziff-Davis
May 1985–Dec 1987CBS
Jan 1988–1992?Diamandis Communications
1992?–Hachette Filipacchi Media U.S.
Car and Driver once featured Bruce McCall, Jean Shepherd and Dick Smothers as columnists and PJ O'Rourke as a frequent contributor. Former editors include William Jeanes and David E. Davis, the latter of whom led some employees to defect in order to create Automobile Magazine. The current magazine editor is Csaba Csere. Other notable staff members are Patrick Bedard, who raced in the Indianapolis 500 in 1983 and 1984, John Phillips, Barry Winfield, Aaron Robinson, Larry Webster, Patricia Eldridge Maki, Dave VanderWerp, Tony Swan, Tony Quiroga, André Idzikowski, and Ron Kiino.

Rather than electing a Car of the Year, Car and Driver picks ten "best" cars each year.

Car and Driver is home to the John Lingenfelter Memorial Trophy. This award is given annually at their Supercar/Superfour Challenge.

Editorial direction


IssuesEditor
Editors
Jul 1955–Nov 1955George Parks
Dec 1955–Feb 1956Arthur Kramer
Mar 1956–Dec 1956Ken Purdy
Jan 1957–Nov 1959John Christy
Dec 1959–Jan 1962Karl Ludvigsen
Feb 1962–Feb 1963William Pain
Mar 1963–Jan 1966David E. Davis, Jr.
Feb 1966–Oct 1966Brock Yates
Nov 1966–Jan 1968Steve Smith
Feb 1968–Dec 1969Leon Mandel
Jan 1970–Mar 1971Gordon Jennings
Apr 1971–Nov 1974Bob Brown
Dec 1974–Sep 1976Stephan Wilkinson
Oct 1976–Oct 1985David E. Davis, Jr.
Nov 1985–Feb 1988Don Sherman
Mar 1988–May 1993William Jeanes
Jun 1993–Csaba Csere
The magazine once had an irreverent tone and habit of "telling it like it is", especially with regard to underperforming automobiles, which endeared it to readers. However, this has diminished in recent years, and the magazine's writing is no longer dramatically different editorially from other car magazines.

In recent years, the magazine has delved into politics. Its editorial columns tend to be moderately conservative with often humorous critiques of left-wing political ideas.

The magazine was one of the first to be unabashedly critical of the American automakers. However, it has been quick to praise noteworthy efforts like the Ford Focus and Chevrolet Corvette.

The magazine has been at the center of a few controversies based on this editorial direction:

  • Their instrumented testing is considered by some to be rigorous among automotive magazines. It has twice revealed false power claims by manufacturers: Both the 1999 SVT Mustang Cobra and 2001 Mazda Miata tests showed these vehicles not producing performance equivalents to their claimed power output. In both cases, the manufacturers' claims were proved wrong, forcing buybacks and apologies.

  • Their tests of radar detectors have consistently shown the Valentine One detector, a major Car and Driver advertiser, trouncing all competition. The magazine contends that their tests are accurate, while some question its objectivity.

Car and Driver and Road & Track are sister publications at Hachette and have for many years shared the same publisher, advertising, sales, marketing, and circulation departments. However, their editorial operations are separate.

Car and Driver Television is the television counterpart that formerly aired on Spike TV's Powerblock weekend lineup. Larry Webster, one of the magazine's editors, usually hosted with Csaba Csere adding occasional commentary and news.

See also


External links


United States magazines | Automobile magazines

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Car and Driver".

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