i'm so mad i've seen the leaks tho, i didn't even look for it and it was posted on my dash 😐
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i'm so mad i've seen the leaks tho, i didn't even look for it and it was posted on my dash 😐
Where Did All The Minivans Go? The Popularity of The Once-Iconic Family Car Has Dwindled Quite A Bit.
— By Sam Hindman | May 19, 2025
It Doesn’t Get Much More Suburban Than This. Nano/GettyImages
If you were born between 1985 and 2005, chances are you spent a solid portion of your childhood squished into the third row of a Dodge Caravan, eating Goldfish crackers off the floor mats. Back then, minivans were everywhere.
But now, they’ve all but vanished. You’ll still spot the occasional minivan out on the road. But they’re a scarce sight in today’s school drop-off lines, replaced instead by the ever-ubiquitous SUV. What happened to this quintessential family vehicle as we knew it?
A Brief History of the Minivan
A Mini Comeback
A Brief History of The Minivan
The minivan got its start in the age of shoulder pads and Satanic panic. Chrysler came up with an idea for a vehicle built around the American suburbanite in the 1980s. It was the minivan, a spacious vehicle complete with sliding doors, cupholders, and enough cargo storage for your kids and their soccer buddies.
By the early 2000s, the minivan had hit its peak, with 1.3 million sold in a single year. But that peak was also the beginning of the end. Because while the minivan was useful, it was never cool: the cars were even rudely dubbed “mom-mobiles” and “loser cruisers.”
The rise of Sport Utility Vehicles (SUVs) in the ‘90s and early 2000s didn’t help the minivan’s popularity. While the SUV was basically just a less practical, more expensive version of its older counterpart, there was a key difference in branding that brought in the consumer crowds. Suddenly, everyone wanted to embody that very SUV feeling of adventure, freedom, and a less stuck-in-the-suburbs version of parenthood.
A Mini Comeback
The minivan’s fall from grace was partially about aesthetics, but it was also about something deeper: the changing American family.
Birth rates in the U.S. have been steadily declining for years, with the CDC reporting a historic low in 2023. Meanwhile, a growing number of young adults aren’t sure they want kids at all. The classic image of two parents shuttling around their horde of kids just doesn’t represent most households anymore. With fewer children to lug around, the demand for a vehicle that could fit a large family has simply declined.
A Volkswagen Caddy Maxi Minivan on Display at the 101st Brussels Motor Show, 2025. Sjoerd van der Wal/GettyImages
Though the minivan might not dominate the family market anymore, the nail isn’t in the coffin quite yet. Millennials, once loyal city slickers, are slowly settling down into less urban locations. According to a Bank of America survey, around 45 percent of Millennials expect to buy a home in the suburbs. And what do the suburbs demand? A car with storage space that can handle Costco hauls and a whole lot of commuting. Perhaps it isn’t so surprising after all that minivan sales have actually seen an uptick in 2025.
i liked him then romantically but now it feels like he only flirts/make sexual remarks and it’s so boring and there’s no substance to our conversations and i missed when we talked like friends
http://bit.ly/2slcL0x Manuel Pellegrini was dismissed by West Ham after his side were beaten by LeicesterPinpointing the precise moment when it all began to unravel for Manuel Pellegrini at West Ham is fairly easy. Saturday, 28 September. Bournemouth away. Up to that point, West Ham had enjoyed a pretty good start to the season. The previous week they had beaten Manchester United at London Stadium and were fifth in the Premier League with 11 points from six games, level on points with a Leicester side with whom they were expected to compete as the most likely outsider to gatecrash the ‘top
Manuel Pellegrini: How West Ham faith dwindled - and could David Moyes return?
Manuel Pellegrini: How West Ham faith dwindled – and could David Moyes return?
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Manuel Pellegrini was dismissed by West Ham after his side were beaten by Leicester
Pinpointing the precise moment when it all began to unravel for Manuel Pellegrini at West Ham is fairly easy.
Saturday, 28 September. Bournemouth away.
Up to that point, West Ham had enjoyed a pretty good start to the season.
The previous week they had beaten Manchester United at London Stadium and were…
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‘Yellow Vest’ Anniversary Brings Fires, Tear Gas and Dwindled Crowds
‘Yellow Vest’ Anniversary Brings Fires, Tear Gas and Dwindled Crowds
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PARIS — Clouds of tear gas covered a major square in southern Paris on Saturday as the police attempted to quell a “Yellow Vest” demonstration marking the movement’s anniversary.
Protesters, some masked, threw paving stones and set trash cans on fire, while dozens of other demonstrators, a few wearing the yellow road-emergency vests that became the movement’s uniform, milled about on the…
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Trump's chances of winning a second term and the growing number of his Democratic rivals wanting to run for president have dwindled
Trump's chances of winning a second term and the growing number of his Democratic rivals wanting to run for president have dwindled
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A large number of Democrats announced their intention to run for president in the United States on the grounds of the belief that the chances of President Donald Trump to win a second term in 2020.
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Left-wing senator Bernie Sanders accuses the Democrats of blocking his candidacy for the US presidency
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DENVER | Only a handful take action during anthem on NFL's 1st Sunday
New Post has been published on https://www.stl.news/denver-only-a-handful-take-action-during-anthem-on-nfls-1st-sunday/168600/
DENVER | Only a handful take action during anthem on NFL's 1st Sunday
DENVER — Last season, the Seattle Seahawks led the league when it came to the number of players willing to make a statement while the national anthem played.
To start this season, that wave of Seahawks has dwindled to only two players.
Linemen Duane Brown and Quinton Jefferson walked off the field and waited in the tunnel while a field-sized American flag was unfurled and the national anthem played before their season opener Sunday in Denver.
In a league where more than 200 players once took some sort of action to protest police brutality and social injustice in America during the anthem, The Associated Press counted fewer than 10 across the league who did so on the NFL’s opening Sunday. Only two of them — Albert Wilson and Kenny Stills of the Dolphins — kneeled while the “Star-Spangled Banner” played.
None of which bothered Brown much. He says he’s committed to what he’s doing.
“I made my decision,” he said. “That was my decision. I wasn’t paying attention to what other teams or other players are doing.”
The lower numbers might reflect a new strategy many players are embracing to draw attention to the issues Colin Kaepernick raised when he began kneeling for the anthem in 2016. The then-San Francisco 49ers quarterback was looking to shine a light on issues impacting African American communities.
Since then, a group of NFL players have formed the Players Coalition . They want to move the focus away from the anthem, which has become a lightning rod, in part because of President Donald Trump’s continued criticism of players who don’t stand during the anthem.
“We’re trying to move past the rhetoric of what’s right or what’s wrong in terms of the anthem, and really focus on the systematic issues that are plaguing our communities,” said Malcolm Jenkins of the Eagles, one of the group’s co-founders, who is no longer protesting during the anthem.
And yet, if Kaepernick is on board with all of that, it wasn’t clear Sunday. He took to twitter to praise Wilson and Stiles .
“My Brothers (Stills) and (Wilson) continue to show their unwavering strength by fighting for the oppressed,” Kaepernick said in his tweet. “They have not backed down, even when attacked and intimidated. … Love is at the root of our resistance.”
Kaepernick’s message got through to his friends in Miami.
“I know he has our back,” Stills said. “Really, there has been a huge difference between when we first started protesting and now. A lot of people are reaching out and supporting us, so I really appreciate that. To everybody out there … let’s keep doing our best to make positive change and have these conversations and make our country a better place.”
Since opting out of his contract after 2016, Kaepernick has been unable to land a job with an NFL team and is suing the league for collusion.
But his voice is still being heard. Last week, Nike introduced an ad featuring the quarterback and his message: “Believe in something, even if it means sacrificing everything.”
Other than Stills, Wilson and the two Seahawks, Dolphins defensive lineman Robert Quinn raised his fist during the anthem. Niners receiver Marquise Goodwin did the same at San Francisco’s game at Minnesota. In Los Angeles, Chargers left tackle Russell Okung raised his fist. And back in Denver, Broncos receiver Demaryius Thomas and linebacker Brandon Marshall retreated to their tunnel while the anthem played.
Marshall sent out a statement touting a charity designed to help people who are on the verge of homelessness.
“It is time that we build social currency by way of empowering our future generations,” Marshall said. “This begins by addressing the most fundamental needs — by feeding the minds and bodies.”
This came hours after Trump opened the day with a tweet that took digs at the NFL, linking low ratings for Thursday night’s opener between Atlanta and Philadelphia (lowest for an opener since 2008) to players who refuse to stand for the anthem.
“If the players stood proudly for our Flag and Anthem, and it is all shown on broadcast, maybe ratings could come back? Otherwise worse!” he tweeted.
CBS and Fox, which carried Sunday afternoon’s games, did not televise the anthem.
However, NBC did show the anthem Thursday night (but not before Sunday night’s Bears-Packers game), and no players kneeled or protested in other ways.
But while the tumult over the anthem appears to be dying down, the NFL still hasn’t collaborated with the players union to come up with a definitive solution.
In May, the league briefly put a policy in place, but rescinded it after the union filed a grievance. The union and league are still negotiating. Brown, of the Seahawks, said he has not received any message from the union to tamp down the protest.
“I don’t think that would be the best idea to try to get people to move on from it,” he said. “The country hasn’t moved on from it, so I’m not going to move on from it either.”
By EDDIE PELLS, Associated Press