Over the last couple of weeks, I have had to rent a couple of cars. Due to business travel, I am a Hertz President Circle member, which basically allows me to pick my own car (anything except the crazy high-end stuff they have) or request and usually receive upgrades, depending on where I am renting.
A couple of weeks ago, I was in Tallahassee visiting my son. The airport is pretty small, maybe 6 or so gates, so they don't give the option of picking your own car at the car rental counter. After collecting my bag from baggage claim, I was standing in line at the Hertz desk, as there were two or three people in front of me. Based on the conversations I was overhearing, there weren't any cars available as they were all being washed/cleaned after recently being returned, and the wait for a car was 20-30 minutes. While I don't tend to overflex my status in these situations, I was starting to get annoyed thinking that I, as a President's Circle member, would even consider waiting 20-30 minutes for that intermediate sedan that I had reserved. Don't they know who I am????
After 5-10 minutes, we got to the front of the line, and I handed the agent my DL and credit card. After tapping on the keyboard for a few seconds, she looked up at me, looked around at the growing line behind me, and mumbled something under her breath while looking back at me. Since I didn't understand what she said, I said, "I'm sorry, what?". And she said, a little louder this time, but still trying to stay discreet, "Do you want a Bronco?" After catching it that time, I was like, heck yeah! That's miles better than whatever piece of crap intermediate sedan was available (or not). I think the new Ford Broncos are the "Premium" line for the Hertz counter at the considerably small Tallahassee airport, so under normal circumstances, I wouldn't be automatically assigned that make/model. But thankfully due to my "status" and a helpful agent, I secured the upgrade. So for the next 3 days, we got to drive around in a brand new, Outer Banks Ford Bronco in Eruption Green (?!?). That was pretty awesome, and now I want one. LOL. And so does my wife.
That was until I took my trip to North Carolina last week for a few days of hiking. I flew into Asheville and had rented the least expensive available car, since it was just me. I think it was another intermediate sedan, so I was happy with whatever was available. I did get to the counter and asked the nice older lady, who was struggling with the new system that they just implemented, if they had any upgrades available. After punching at the keys for a short while and having to re-run my credit card multiple times through the reader, she said she only had two available vehicles: a Toyota Corolla (which was probably the intermediate sedan I originally reserved) and a pick-up truck. Needless to say, I chose the pickup. I was happy to see that it was a newish (~10k miles) 2025 Dodge Ram 1500 Laramie. I have never owned a pick-up truck, but damn, those 5 days of being able to drive one around, I certainly can understand the appeal. I fell in love with it and now want to buy one.
So if I had my druthers, I would shell out ~$110,000 for two new vehicles. But alas, that ain't gonna happen, and I'll just be happy tooling around town in my fully paid off 2000 Jeep Cherokee, 2007 Nissan Murano, or 2018 Audi Q5.
All that to say, I can't understand how people are able to afford new cars these days. When I bought my Audi back in 2017, I had just gotten a $10k bonus at work that I put as a down payment, and was still paying $700 a month for a car payment for a $50k vehicle. I can't imagine someone paying $65k or more for a pickup truck, no matter how nice they are, and I am more amazed when I see how many are driving around that part of North Carolina. Craziness.