A minivan recall never sounds dramatic at first. It sounds like paperwork. A letter in the mail. A service appointment to squeeze in between school pickup, groceries, work, and the 47 other t
Most drivers assume they would know if something serious was wrong with their car. That seems fair. If a vehicle has a safety problem, surely someone would call, email, text, send a giant red enve
There is a very specific kind of rage that only happens at night. A driver is heading home, minding their own business, and then some enormous pickup appears in the rearview mirror. Not even
You're driving along minding your business, maybe halfway through a podcast, maybe thinking about literally nothing, and suddenly your car decides the apocalypse is happening. BAM. T
Memorial Day weekend feels harmless enough on the surface. Burgers on the grill. Coolers packed. Somebody arguing over Bluetooth music before the road trip even starts. Summer energy. Freedom. Long we
Most people have seen their car’s VIN number a hundred times and never once cared about it. It’s just... there. Sitting at the bottom corner of the windshield collecting dust while
Nobody really thinks of a car as a computer until it starts acting like one. It unlocks from an app. It gets updates while parked. It remembers routes, phones, settings, payments, sometimes even wh
Most people assume they would hear about a recall if their car was affected. A letter in the mail, maybe a call from the dealer, something official. That is a nice idea. It is also not something an
Toyota is one of those brands people buy when they are tired of surprises. That is the whole appeal. You buy the Camry, the RAV4, the Highlander, and the expectation is pretty simple: it will start
It started with a story that was hard to shake. A child died after being caught in the power seat mechanism of a Hyundai Palisade. The seat kept folding and sliding without properly sensing contact