This is an automated archive made by the Lemmit Bot.

The original was posted on /r/cars by /u/cookingboy on 2025-11-07 02:35:13+00:00.


I was listening to TheSmokingTire podcast recently (I’m actually a big fan of Matt), and he mentioned that Porsche North America just gave him a 918 Spyder on loan for his 1000 miles road trip free of charge, with everything paid.

Now as someone who’s dabbled into supercar ownership, I can roughly estimate the ownership cost for a “regular joe” like me to put 1000 miles on a $2M car would easily be $50-100 per mile, thus putting this “gesture” from Porsche to Matt to be worth $50-100k on back of napkin math.

And he and all the other reviewers recently were flown to Spain for the Turbo S launch. They were wined and dined for a few days and were given the cars to drive on both the race track and scenic road.

Funny enough Porsche charges something similar for an experience like that: https://www.porschedriving.com/porsche-travel-experience/lake-tahoe/

Without plane tickets, you’d be paying $20k a person for a few days of what auto journalists routinely get from them, for free.

I understand it’s part of their job, but this shit would never fly in any other industry right? Now imagine every time Square Enix launches a new video game they fly game journalists to Japan and wine and dine them with the best Sake and Wagyu so they can try out the newest Final Fantasy in their expensive Hakone ryokan hotel room, nobody would be taking anything they say seriously, no matter how good the game actually is, would they?

I’m sure people like the SavageGeese team and Matt Farah would try to be objective, but how do you be objectively critical toward an OEM when they routinely give you experiences that you’d otherwise never be able to afford? (ok I know Matt came from money but my statement applies to 99% of reviewers)

In my impression how well praised a manufacturer’s products are is directly proportional to their marketing budget, and I’ve been somewhat burnt at least twice by reviewers over-rating Porsches, which is why I started asking actual owners of cars for their experiences before making purchases.

Ironically this kinda makes Consumer Reports the most credible car reviewer out there, since all they cars they review are bought anonymously with their own money, and they do not attend OEM events.

As far as enthusiast reviewers, I can only think of people with fuck-you money like Chris Harris or the Top Gear trio who have been able to bluntly criticize OEMs and their cars.