• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    545 months ago

    Fun fact: instead of cupholders, 1970s cars would proudly advertise the number of ashtrays they had equipped the car with, usually 1 within reach of every seat. This number was equally important as horsepower or price on marketing materials.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      75 months ago

      Someday when beverages are a thing of the past, people will be aghast that cars ever advertised their drink holders.

      Yes, someday we will all ingest nothing but crumbly dry blocks of nutrient fuel, and scoff at those who used to slurp up liquids like a meat mosquito.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        25 months ago

        Someday when beverages are a thing of the past, people will be aghast that cars ever advertised their drink holders.

        But then where will I put my water bottle?

    • @geekworking
      link
      English
      45 months ago

      The flip side is that now that cars have zero ashtrays, most smokers just throw the butts out the window.

      • @Soggy
        link
        English
        75 months ago

        The same people doing that now would have been doing it then also. It’s so easy to put an ashtray in your car, or just an old soda can, and people used to care a lot less about “littering”.

    • @Got_Bent
      link
      English
      25 months ago

      I have a 2015 car. Imagine my surprise to find that it has front and rear ashtrays. I hadn’t seen an ashtray in a car since probably the early nineties. I remember for a while after the ashtrays stopped being standard that you could order a “smoker’s package” to get them, but I thought that option had long since gone away.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      25 months ago

      I have a Trabant, a car from East Germany that was made pretty much as cheap as possible. Still has ash trays front and back.