How MTV Deceived Us For Years With ‘PIMP MY RIDE’ Show

    We all know that reality shows aren’t “real,” but
    MTV’s classic Pimp My Ride just got exposed as being extra-fake. The show,
    which aired from 2004 to 2007, featured a simple premise: some poor-ass buster
    in southern California got his car, truck or other vehicle customized by rapper
    Xzibit and the body shop at West Coast Customs. Banging stereo systems, rocking
    hydraulics and insane paint jobs were the order of the day, but this incredible
    feature at the Huffington Post reveals that most of the “pimped” cars
    were more suited for turning tricks.

    Three owners talked with HuffPo and they all have pretty
    much the same stories: after filming, the producers would “take back”
    some of the more outrageous features, and the stuff they left behind didn’t
    work all that well. For Justin Dearinger, who had his 1997 Toyota Rav 4 tricked
    out with a pop-up champagne caddy and a drive-in theater, both of those were
    taken out before the film crew left. Seth Martino’s ’99 Nissan Maxima got a
    transforming stereo system complete with a robot arm, but the “robot”
    was actually remote-controlled by a production crew member and had a bunch of
    loose wires hanging out, and the cotton candy machine in the trunk didn’t have
    a dome, so strings of sticky sugar got all over the place.

    The show’s producer claims that those modifications were
    made for “safety reasons,” but that just begs the question as to why
    they’d install them in the first place? We already know the answer, though:
    because it looked good on TV. MTV’s audience didn’t want to watch mechanics put
    in more horsepower – they wanted plasma screens and goofy gadgets, and that’s
    what they got.
    In addition, producers often messed with cars beforehand,
    making them look even junkier so the remodel would be more impressive. Martino
    was shocked when producers filled his car with candy to make him look like a
    gluttonous slob. He says, “They went the extra mile to make me look extra
    fat by telling the world that I kept candy all over my seat and floor just in
    case I got hungry.” Jake Glazier, who got his ratchet ’86 Buick Century
    pimped out with a 22 inch subwoofer and turntable in the glove box, was told by
    producers to break up with his girlfriend for the show to make a better story.
    When you watch the show, it looks like the garage is jamming
    through the pimping process in just a few days, but the reality was worse. Some
    cars stayed in the show’s custody for as long as six months while work was
    being done, with their owners forced to drive rentals. MTV only paid for a few
    months of those rentals, forcing the poor schlubs to hold on to receipts in
    hopes of eventually being reimbursed.
    Even worse, most of the cars didn’t get any under the hood
    improvements to make them handle better. The excess weight added by all the
    pimped-out gadgets made the cars run even worse. Martino’s Maxima dragged on
    the ground and needed an engine replacement just a month after the show
    wrapped, and Dearinger’s car eventually burst into flames while he was driving
    it.
    Glazier sums it up by saying, “The problem with the
    show is, they don’t fix any of the mechanical issues, and my car was a piece of
    shit. What they did was make my piece of shit sound exceptionally awesome,
    which is great. Just not great enough to drive on roads.”
    In addition, if you want to sell off your “pimped”
    ride, the show’s contract stipulates that you can’t mention it was on Pimp My
    Ride in the ads and you can’t put it on auction sites like eBay.
    Glazier, however, managed to eventually come out on top by
    selling his Maxima two months later to the audio company that provided his
    massive subwoofer system for $18,000. Considering that he bought the thing for
    $500, that’s a pretty healthy profit.
    And, of course, hanging out with Xzibit was pretty cool. The
    host reportedly smelled pretty strongly of dank cheeba, ate a lot of Flaming
    Hot Cheetos, and told Glazier that he was “going to go down to hell to
    kill the devil so he can make some Satan skin boots.” That’s dope.

    If you were ever jealous that Xzibit and crew never showed
    up to your door to polish up your hoopty, now you can sleep a little easier
    knowing that the people who got pimped-out rides didn’t get to keep them on the
    streets for long…. duh

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