The ultimate BMW ad
In their wildest dreams, there is no way that the managers of BMW could have hoped for this piece of good news for their male drivers (according to Reuters): BMW drivers have more sex than owners of any other cars and are much more active than Porsche drivers, a new German car magazine has found. ...
In their wildest dreams, there is no way that the managers of BMW could have hoped for this piece of good news for their male drivers (according to Reuters):
In their wildest dreams, there is no way that the managers of BMW could have hoped for this piece of good news for their male drivers (according to Reuters):
BMW drivers have more sex than owners of any other cars and are much more active than Porsche drivers, a new German car magazine has found. The German magazine “Men’s Car” found in a survey of 2,253 motorists aged 20 to 50 published in its inaugural May issue that male BMW drivers say they have sex on average 2.2 times each week while Porsche drivers have sex 1.4 times per week…. Among women, French car drivers were top with 2.1 times per week followed by Audi (2.0), Italian (2.0), and BMW (1.9) with Porsche again at the bottom of the scale at 1.2 times per week.
One does have to wonder if Porsche’s poor performance is correlated with the car’s paucity of space, which can lead to…. er… maneuvering difficulties, if one were to attempt to perform the deed in the car. This is a job for Mickey Kaus’ Gearbox if there ever was one — although he’s not a big fan of the Porsche anyway. UPDATE: Mickey e-mails to say, “they [male BMW drivers] only SAY they have sex 2.2 times a week.” Of course, male Porsche drivers only say they have sex 1.4 times a week. This leads to one of two possibilities:
1) Male BMW drivers have more sex than male Porsche drivers; or, 2) Male Porsche drivers are more discrete about their sexual activities than male BMW drivers.
Given the styling of both auto brands, I have to think that (1) is more likely than (2). In my mind, Porsches seem flashier than BMWs. One would therefore expect Porsche buyers to be more flamboyant/open than the buttoned-down BMWers, not less so. Furthermore, the fact that the poll shows a similar gap among female responsdents — who one might expect to be more modest in their survey responses due to historical double standards on this question — leads me to think that this isn’t a response bias problem. Yes, I just wasted ten minutes on this addendum that I will never have back.
Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner
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