Surfing the internet late at night can get downright boring sometimes. Constantly scouring Tumblr sites, Reddit, and various car blogs for hours on end, you always hope to stumble upon something of interest. While browsing Ro_Ja’s blog, I came across an article the blogger reposted written by Charles Kha, now the SpeedHunters Editor-in-Chief. I read all of it and agreed with pretty much the entire article, and decided to repost it here. If you read Mayday Garage, then it’s aimed right at ya. It’s more or less how our car culture is as of late. Now go read.
Following words written by Charles Kha:
It’s not easy to be a modifier these days. While our scene has finally gone from underground obscurity to mainstream acknowledgment (modified cars have infiltrated television, toys, video games, movies, fashion and music), we are now facing a growing number of obstacles.
On one side enthusiasts face tough lifestyle decisions that didn’t exist before. Do we want an exhaust or an iPad? Do we spend the weekend at a track day or a music festival? These new temptations have all had an impact on the aftermarket industry, which has also been battered by the financial crisis.

Then there are the seemingly never-ending pressures from society. While our car culture may be recognised by the mainstream, it doesn’t mean we’ve been accepted. The media continue to circle above us, waiting to pounce the moment there’s a car crash involving a modified car or young driver. This in turn compels politicians – vying for the public’s vote – to put pressure on the Authorities to clamp down on us with stricter regulations and harsher penalties.
When you look at all the above as a collective, it’s easy to see why many believe the outlook for our scene is dire. Indeed, many of the conversations I have with readers at a car meet or with industry folk at events revolve around the future of this generation of modifiers. And while consumerism, the rise of hybrid technology and pressures from the Authorities have all had impacts on our scene, I’m certain none of these will cause our demise. Modifying cars has been around since the automobile was invented, and so too have these social and political pressures. Technology will always advance and the Authorities will always be influenced by the outcries from the public and media.

In my opinion, the real threat to our scene is ourselves. Let me explain. As our scene exploded into popularity, so too did the number of styles that fall under the late-model modified car umbrella. There are now dozens of interpretations of how cars should be modified. To some, matte black is the shit. To others, candy paint is cool. Some like massive wings, others delete them. This diversity is supposed to be the greatest thing about our generation, but it might well prove to be our downfall.
The biggest problem is how enthusiasts are starting to view one another. In the past, there was always an ‘us’ versus ‘them’ mentality; where late-model car modifiers stuck together as a unified front, irrespective of whether we drove mini-trucks, Honda Civics or Lancers. In our scene’s infancy we fought together, as a unit, for recognition.

In Australia, we were up against some of our street machine and hot rod predecessors, who viewed anyone with a Japanese modified car as a tasteless rich kid, with no idea of what innovation and build quality stood for. In the States, it was the domestics who laughed at the import tuner generation, labelling them as a bunch of ‘rice boys’ playing around with grocery getters. Back then we all fought tooth and nail to establish our scene, to gain credibility and to earn recognition. Having finally accomplished this, we’ve now begun to turn on ourselves.
If a car show enthusiast accidentally jumps onto a drifting forum, chances are he’ll be annihilated within minutes of his first post. If a drag racer tries to show off his latest creation on a forum full of J-style worshippers, there will probably be a pack of keyboard warriors ready to flame him for building a car that’s only fast in a straight line. And what’s even worse is that traces of racism are starting to surface as people pigeon-hole specific car trends to ethnicities.

Even if an outsider can appreciate the style and beliefs of those in that forum, it’s rare for such acceptance to be reciprocated from that forum’s community. If your car isn’t modified the way they think it should be then f**k off. That’s the mentality I’m seeing today. Not everyone on a forum does this of course – in fact the majority are innocent bystanders – just a few bad seeds are enough to scare away those of differing modifying religions. And this is the equivalent of erecting huge walls around each online community to keep intruders out.
Everyone is entitled to an opinion, but an opinion doesn’t entitle us to turn on our own kind. Any of us can insult someone online and take comfort knowledge they won’t be punched in the face. However the old adage ‘for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction’ still applies; we might not face recourse for our actions directly, but we’re still inflicting damage to our scene as a whole.

Perhaps i’m just dreaming of a far-fetched automotive utopia, where modifiers of all types can appreciate each other’s tastes – even if it isn’t keeping with your own personal modifying ethos. Where an airbrushed, chrome-wheeled show stopper can rub shoulders with a sleeper GT-R and still be appreciated for what it is. But if you think about it, such an oasis already exists.
One of the most ironic – and frustrating – things is how so many enthusiasts now draw inspiration from Japan’s car culture. This whole ‘JDM’ thing has been revolutionary; it is actually the first time a single trend has swept to all corners of the globe, overriding the unique modifying flavour each country used to have. You can be in Finland, Hong Kong, South Africa or New Zealand and you’ll see J-style cars cruising the streets.

But what people need to realise is that “JDM” is not the definition of Japan’s scene. Not even close. Japan’s scene isn’t just about functionality over form; it isn’t solely based around performance over aesthetics. It’s not about modifying ‘purity’.
What’s great about Japan’s culture – and it’s this aspect we all seem to overlook – is that anything and everything is accepted. If you want to see horrific rice boy creations, go to Japan. If you like a hundred neon lights, over-sized chrome wheels and a fish tank in the boot, go to Japan. Airbag suspension on a scooter? Japan. Triple stacked wings, pink paint and ludicrous body-kits on a van? You guessed it, Japan.

Photo by James Evins
If we’re going to to draw inspiration fro the land of the rising sun, we shouldn’t just look at their hard-tuned street culture. We should look at Japan’s scene as a whole: how they can appreciate and embrace such an eclectic array of styles. We should be throwing out the welcome mat whenever we find someone who likes modifying, rather than slam the door if their ride doesn’t meet your stringent criteria of how it ‘should be done’.
I know forums are designed so you can meet like-minded people and build communities. But as our scene’s growth has risen, we’ve begun segregating our own kind; creating niches within a niche. The hated have become the haters.

That’s the real danger. Even if the Authorities put speed limiters on everyone’s cars, the media continues to paint us with that social menace brush and our race-tracks make way for residential developments, modifying cars will still continue on. While our scene may never have the attention to detail of the hot rod builders, or the faultless quality of street machiners, what we do have is our innovation and diversity. And if we strip that away from ourselves, what are we left with? Nothing.
-Charles Kha, Autosalon Magazine, Issue 85, 2010.
What do you guys think? Is Mr. Kha right?
–David–
David@maydaygarage.com

BONUS JDM PICTURE
I blame the internet. Plain & simple. But wow what an awesome read this was.
Without the Internet, people would just be less fat.
I agree that people should look how the majority of Japan embraces the various styles where the hot-headed way of criticism isn’t the norm.
To give the image that all the participants in car culture in Japan respect and admire each others work would be telling a lie. Similar to what Charles said in terms of flaming and criticism,here (Japan) it is your criticism that will likely to be your own enemy.
Sounds like he found houston-imports…
I spy me in the nostalgic pic. As fare as you all at MDG. I would say you guys seem to keep it balanced. And you guys defiantly don’t get the deserved recognition for what yall have brought to the table.. More track day write ups! I also think MDG should dig up old photos from people and do a story about about meets and street racing on Westheimer back in the 90′s. Would be sweetness.
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Fishy,
Thanks for the compliments! We’ve tried to cover more track days, but it seems (according to the numbers anyways) that our readers don’t care for them as much as event coverage and car features. But don’t worry, as long as I’m at a track, I will always take photos and take mental notes.
Funny you mention the 90′s Westheimer days, i’ve been wanting to collect old scanned photos from these years but it seems that it’s rare to get anyone to send me any. I’ll make a call for them later this year. Thanks for the input, guys!
Good article. I know you said you can’t cover everything. But I feel the drag scene is left out in many of the blogs, online mags, and majority of the print mags these days. You’re saying that we’re not as united as we were, but media like this is part of the blame for it.
I dont know who you are and how long you have been in the scene, but the beginnings of the import scene was race and show all in one place. BOTI in the early 90s showcased the whole scene together. If you were a Honda fan or import fan, you were seeing the same crowds at the stands of the race track and the aisled of the car show. It needs to come back as a whole again. Performance and show still belong together in some way.
As a drag race fan and being in this scene for almost 20 years, I can say that media has been a big part of the hype and show what is out there today. When the drift scene took over, the drag coverage died out. Drag racing never left or slowed down. Drag racing in my opinion is what drives the performance industry to be at its best. Do you think engine parts are pushed to its limits when a car is parked at a car show? Are turbocharger technology pushed on 400hp drift cars? I dont think so. Drag performance is what pushes HP and these cars to its limits. It all trickles down to the street and drift scene where high HP isnt required but they gain the new and improved parts.
Maybe you’re not familiar with the accomplishments of drag racing this past year. Do you know that the first 9sec All Motor Civic street class car was accomplished this year. Turbo street car class is in the 8.20s this year too. I think thats an amazing feat from where we have come from in the early years. But blogs and media that say they cover the scene dont ever showcase that. All you see is who’s car is stretched the most and which car has accomplished the lowest offset on a non bagged car. I can appreciate those as well, but honestly if thats the “game changing” news of the year, then that is where we have gone wrong today. The coverage of that stuff isnt what we can look back 15-20 years from now.
In 2030, are you going to look back and say. Oh wow, do you remember when so and so was able to put a 15×10 on a -10 offset on his non-bagged civic back in 2009? That was crazy!
All I’m saying is. Take your own advice. We influence what this scene becomes. So we are responsible as a whole to shape what it will be in the future and the direction it takes. Maybe you’re not a race fan so you’re just not exposed to that. But at least know where this scene began and how it got to this point. Recognize the beginnings of the import car scene. It wasnt shaped by wheel offsets and shaved engine bays. The performance and aesthetics of the scene was hand in hand. Unfortunately, it just spread apart as show became more show and race became more race.
^^ Sorry my words are towards Mr Kha. I know he maynot see this, but my advice is also to Mayday Garage and other people of the media.
I agree with the first 75% of that article. But it’s misleading to say that JDM cars aren’t always function > form. When we think of “JDM cars”, we’re thinking of **performance and race cars** – the high-performance beasts that have graced the covers of import magazines for the past 10 years – not the “air bagged scooters” or “bodykitted vans”
Let me just add that I think the article is otherwise flawlessly spot-on though. Every time I read something, I read looking for something to disagree with, but I found myself nodding my head more and more frequently as I went down the page. Nice job
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