Less of a Goodbye, More of a See You Soon

Timothy Cain
by Timothy Cain

For more than 13 years I’ve been writing about cars, first in print media, then with my former website GoodCarBadCar, then with Canada’s far-reaching Bell Media, then with Cars.com, and eventually here at my long-term home, The Truth About Cars.

I will not stop writing about cars. But my current full-time role as sales analyst and road test editor at TTAC comes to an end today.

It’s not you. It’s me.

Naturally, there’s a large part of me that doesn’t want to go. Not only must I now exchange the work-at-home lifestyle I’ve enjoyed for more than a decade for a real job, not only will I forgo the enjoyable daily task of developing content for tens of thousands of readers every day, I will also no longer watch as my good friend Garry Sowerby performs weekly deliveries of some (often) tremendous cars.

The Audi RS3 that was due to land in my driveway next week? Not gonna happen.

I can’t help but credit my father for inspiring what would become a hugely fulfilling role in automotive journalism. I learned the name of every car on the road — makes were insufficient, model names were a must — before a speech therapist caused me to utilize the rest of the English language. (No word of a lie.) As a former teacher, my father fostered reading and writing while my mother and a legion of older siblings recognized in the early 1980s that birthday gifts unrelated to the auto industry were destined to collect dust in a dark corner of a forgotten closet in the basement.

Credit also belongs to Todd Gillis, my first editor at The Chronicle-Herald, who gave me a weekly review column simply because I emailed him a story about one of the first diesel-engined Smart Fortwos to have landed at our local Mercedes-Benz showroom. I’m not sure what compelled him, but that decision kickstarted a career.

One of my brothers then spurred me to build GoodCarBadCar in 2007. It took time, but eventually, with no shortage of help from my wife Steffani, we eventually designed a relatively simplistic means by which the world could access U.S. and Canadian automotive sales data free of charge. (We sold GoodCarBadCar to A07 Online earlier this year.)

Building on a background as a category space analyst for two different snack food companies, I was eventually asked to provide content to Sympatico Autos (now Autofocus.ca) by Michael Banovsky and benefited from a very productive working relationship with Nick Maronese, given a column at Cars.com by David Thomas, and brought to TTAC by Bertel Schmitt and Derek Kreindler.

The TTAC role was eventually expanded by Derek and Jack Baruth, and then again by Mark Stevenson. Eventually, Tim Healey filled the role as managing editor and permitted Steven Williamsen Stefan William Steve Viglensen Step Wilyams Steph Willems and me — surely sometimes through gritted teeth — to largely do with TTAC as we pleased.

It seems improbable that I could ever develop a better working relationship than the one I enjoyed these past few months with Steph, whose efficiency, effectiveness, and all-around talent made a breeze out of a particularly tumultuous period in my life and the life of this website.

Finally, let it be clear that there is perhaps no better lesson for our children than this: Don’t read the comments.

All across the internet, don’t you even dare to ever read the comments.

News websites? Sports websites? Entertainment? Politics? Cars? Do not read the comments.

Ah, but there is an exception. While the discourse below the articles at virtually every other website takes place somewhere between the gutter and the asylum, TTAC readers have at their disposal so much more than the article itself. TTAC’s Best & Brightest is littered with actual car owners, old people and young people, industry insiders, adults of mature intellect, enthusiasts of pickup trucks and sedans and manual transmissions and EVs. Only at TTAC can so much be learned from the comments. I will always appreciate the utterly insane number of hours so many of you spent reading my stuff over the last half-decade.

Nevertheless, although you will no longer see my byline four or five times per day, I will return to TTAC, GCBC, and Autofocus on a weekly basis if all goes according to plan. I will continue to update you on the state of sedans, the momentum (or lack thereof) of midsize pickup trucks, Subaru’s steady surge, and my love for my Miata. We might even talk about the Odyssey sometimes, plus whatever ends up in my driveway next.

This, therefore, after some 100 reviews and nearly 1,100 other articles, is not goodbye.

I’ll see you in November.

[Images: © Timothy Cain]

Timothy Cain is a contributing analyst at The Truth About Cars and Autofocus.ca and the founder and former editor of GoodCarBadCar.net. Follow on Twitter @timcaincars and Instagram.

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  • Brendan Duddy soon we'll see lawyers advertising big payout$ after getting injured by a 'rogue' vehicle
  • Zerofoo @VoGhost - The earth is in a 12,000 year long warming cycle. Before that most of North America was covered by a glacier 2 miles thick in some places. Where did that glacier go? Industrial CO2 emissions didn't cause the melt. Climate change frauds have done a masterful job correlating .04% of our atmosphere with a 12,000 year warming trend and then blaming human industrial activity for something that long predates those human activities. Human caused climate change is a lie.
  • Probert They already have hybrids, but these won't ever be them as they are built on the modular E-GMP skateboard.
  • Justin You guys still looking for that sportbak? I just saw one on the Facebook marketplace in Arizona
  • 28-Cars-Later I cannot remember what happens now, but there are whiteblocks in this period which develop a "tick" like sound which indicates they are toast (maybe head gasket?). Ten or so years ago I looked at an '03 or '04 S60 (I forget why) and I brought my Volvo indy along to tell me if it was worth my time - it ticked and that's when I learned this. This XC90 is probably worth about $300 as it sits, not kidding, and it will cost you conservatively $2500 for an engine swap (all the ones I see on car-part.com have north of 130K miles starting at $1,100 and that's not including freight to a shop, shop labor, other internals to do such as timing belt while engine out etc).
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