Skip to Content
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Log In
DC Streetsblog

Nissan to Millennials: If You Really Want to Get Around, Don’t Drive

This Nissan ad, in heavy rotation during the NFL playoffs, smacks of 21st century carmaker desperation.

In "Commute," a young motorist, stuck with colleagues in city traffic and watching cyclists pass her by, speeds onto a conveniently located ramp and launches her Nissan Rogue on top of a passing train. Now they can get where they're going quickly and reliably.

"Fantasy, do not attempt," reads a tongue-in-cheek disclaimer, as the driver floors it and M.I.A.'s "Y.A.L.A." pulses in the background. "Cars can't jump on trains."

True to car ad convention, the millenial crew lands in an empty parking lot, having arrived early for their meeting. Says the voice-over: "Commute your way with the bold, all-new Nissan Rogue."

This ad bears resemblance to the subject of the first-ever Streetsblog Ad Nauseam. The ground has shifted in the seven years since General Motors levitated cars and drivers above traffic-choked urban streets. While motorists still yearn to escape their own gridlock, the Nissan ad is a pretty clear-cut expression of automaker anxiety over millenials' transportation preferences.

Cars can't jump on trains -- but people can, and increasing numbers of young Americans are opting not to drive. In 2014, "commute your way" sounds less like a car company slogan than an invitation to trade the hassles of auto ownership for a bike or metro pass.

The real fantasy, of course, is that you can drive everywhere without expecting to get stuck in traffic. Carmakers know this, and their target audience does too. Wrote one YouTube commenter: "Millennials are choosing transit and bikes over car-debt. Nissan, your strategy is showing."

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog Los Angeles

In October, Santa Monica Will Lower Speed Limits on 29 Streets

Taking advantage of a new state law, Santa Monica is lowering speed limits on twenty nine streets totaling 31 miles (and raising the limit on one other street)

August 30, 2024

Friday’s Headlines

LAPD Chief, Glendale bike lanes, Torched talks Langer's, bus lanes, Long Beach potholes, 10 Freeway expansion, Valley Blvd and more

August 30, 2024

Roscoe Blvd Bus-Priority Lanes Are Open

At 10.4 miles (20.8 lane-miles) Roscoe Boulevard now has the most bus-only lane mileage of any street in Southern California

August 29, 2024

Thursday’s Headlines

Move Culver City, Valley Boulevard, WeHo bike plans, electric school buses, wildlife crossings, and plenty of carnage

August 29, 2024
See all posts