OK, I am both a heterosexual male who appreciates the aesthetic of the female form and the father of two daughters who cringes at how women are portrayed in….well everything and everywhere in society. Yes, that makes me a hypocrite just like everyone else on the planet to a greater or lesser extent.
I don’t go to SEMA, custom car shows, drift events etc. But I do go to NAIAS every year, Indy car events, F1 races, classic and marque shows/club/events.
Maybe I have too sheltered a life, but these days I don’t see the massive objectification and exploitation of women at the Detroit show that apparently happens in some places. Especial compared to Indy and F1 where ‘pit babes’ are flaunted and pushed in your face everywhere. The exception to this tends to be Lamborghini and other high end exotic makers. But when you move away from the exotics to the mass market manufacturers (particularly Ford and GM), while you do tend to see far more women than men, many stands have men on them as well. Most stands that have a concept car, new or major refreshed products have some kind of raised rotating platform where every 30 mins or so a presenter (model) will stand up and give a rundown of the features and highlights. These can be men as well as women, and when women the hem length of their skirts seem to be at the knee not the crotch. Think slim perfectly tailored business suit rather than 8 mile try out. Ditto at the information booths where you get brochures etc. Men and Women, all just as knowledgeable as each other on the products, options, specs etc. Maybe the LA show is very different from the Detroit show being in the middle of the Hollywood hype and Beverly Hills life style.
Personally I think the mass media, films, TV and adverts are a far bigger offender than the modern auto show circuit (Lambo excepted). Percentage wise there was far far more average or unattractive men on screen than women. The ‘average’ women on screen (according to my wife) all had boob jobs, this nipped, that tucked etc. Like it or not TV, film and print media leads what we society deems acceptable for fashion, dress code, decency etc. As I say, I don’t see the mass misogyny that without used to be the auto industry and auto show circuit, but until mass media comes a little more into line and stops telling our 13 year old daughters they should look and dress like centerfolds to go to school or the shops, then I’d say there is no chance of car promotion reining itself in any further.
I’ve mentioned Lamborghini several times as they are the one manufacturer that I seem to recall always has very very attractive women by the cars all the time, not talking or giving information, just walking around as an ornament trying not to look board. But even the Lambo models are reasonably tasteful dressed. Compare that to any underwear add on the side of a building, in a magazine etc. where you literally have teenage ‘girls’ with fake boobs and bulimic bodies advertising almost nonexistent lingerie who are then air brushed to look ‘perfect’ when blown up to 30 feet tall for a billboard. Really, which is doing more harm to women or giving a more misogynistic view to an adolescent boy? But but but the lingerie advert is target for women and the car show at men. Bull E36 M3. The lingerie advert is target at society so men pressure their wives and girlfriends to dress like that and women feel pressured to dress like that to conform to ‘the norm’ Two, three, four wrongs don’t make a right. But I see media and advertising as massive ‘wrongs’ and (at least the ones I’ve been to over the last couple of years) auto shows as being minor transgressors who continue to move closer to doing it right. In fact I would say the average Detroit auto show I’ve been to is downright prudish compared to your aver daily paper, TV news crew, general interest magazine let alone sit com, reality show, drama, block buster movie etc.