In today’s thrilling Showdown, we’re re-examining a choice made by a fictional young woman in a twenty-year-old song. Why, you may ask? Because these are the two cars that caught my eye, after rejecting a dozen others, some of which may appear later in the week. What, you think choosing cars for this column is a piece of cake?
We finished up Friday with a comments-only challenge, and while I didn’t go through and count votes, there didn’t seem to be much of a consensus, except that most of you were unwilling to burn the Audi, which I was happy to see. In fact, a large number of you chose it as your daily driver. Very few of you wanted to put the Transit on the track, but I applaud those of you who want to try. It would certainly be entertaining to watch.


Now, keep in mind that I can’t actually condone burning any car; it’s a waste of a good machine and an environmental nightmare. But for the purposes of the game, I had no trouble choosing which one to dispose of: the Transit. Small vans like that are everywhere, and they will be cheap and plentiful on used car lots for a long time. I went back and forth on the other two, but I think I’ll keep the Audi for daily use, and keep it as nice as I can for as long as I can. The Mazda, I could abuse to my heart’s content without feeling guilty.
Now, back to the fictional young woman in the twenty-year-old song. I remember my friend Jon being absolutely outraged about the vehicular choices made in “Short Skirt, Long Jacket” when Cake’s album Comfort Eagle first came out. He had recently had a bad experience with an early LeBaron convertible, one equipped with that dreadful Mitsubishi 2.6-liter engine, and had sworn off Chrysler entirely as a result. I guess I can’t blame him. However, after nine trouble-prone years of MG ownership, I’m beginning to think the object of John McCrea’s affection may have made the right call – if she really wanted a car that will get her there.
1974 MG Midget MkIII – $5,900

Engine/drivetrain: 1.3-liter overhead valve inline 4, four-speed manual, RWD
Location: Allentown, PA
Odometer reading: 71,000 miles
Operational status: Runs and drives well
Mention reliability among British car enthusiasts, and almost immediately the claws come out. “They’re not that unreliable,” they insist. “Other old cars have problems too, you know.” That’s as may be, but I have owned my 1971 MGB GT since the summer of 2016, and have only managed to drive it 1,000 miles. The longest trouble-free journey it has completed is a sixty-mile round trip. It has only been towed home once, after the radiator blew on the day I bought it, but it has been limped home more than once. Keeping it alive has been a constant struggle. It is currently marooned in my garage awaiting replacement of its failed clutch hydraulics.

This Midget is from roughly the same era as my B, just before the one-two punch of bumper regulations and emissions standards sapped most of the fun out of little British cars. Even this Mark III Midget’s 1275 cc engine is down on power, with a lower compression ratio than earlier cars. But at least it still has the twin SU carburetors. The seller says it runs great, and has just had the oil changed. Change it again, though, just to be sure: use 20W-50 with ZDDP additive, and nothing else, unless you feel like replacing the camshaft. Ask me how I know.

Larger folks, of course, need not apply: the Midget is as small inside as it is on the outside. There’s plenty of legroom, surprisingly, but it’s very narrow, and if you’re taller than about five-ten, you’ll be eye-to-eye with the windshield header. I’m six feet, and I can drive a Midget, but not comfortably. This one looks clean and original inside, though please note that it lacks not only a cupholder armrest, but a glovebox as well.

Still, for all their faults, on a sunny day that’s not too hot, out in the country away from traffic, and with the right company, small British sports cars can be absolutely magical. You’re not going to fit more in the Midget’s boot than a weekend getaway’s worth of clothes, but that’s enough. Any longer than that away from the comfort and safety of its garage would terrify this little car.
1994 Chrysler LeBaron LX – $6,500

Engine/drivetrain: 3.0-liter overhead cam V6, three-speed automatic, FWD
Location: Massillon, OH
Odometer reading: 63,000 miles
Operational status: Runs and drives well
Chrysler reintroduced convertibles to the US market in 1982, with a drop-top version of the new LeBaron and Dodge 400 coupes. The new K platform was high-tech at the time (no, seriously), but due to Lee Iacocca’s preferences, the new cars hewed closely to the Brougham-and-chrome aesthetic of the previous decade. It wasn’t until 1985 that a new design, the LeBaron GTS and Dodge Lancer, ushered in a softer, more modern look for the K-based cars. In 1987, the LeBaron coupe and convertible were totally redesigned – and vastly improved, both in appearance and quality.

This isn’t quite the LeBaron I’d want if I were shopping for one. I’d prefer one slightly older, with the covered sealed-beam headlights and, more importantly, the turbocharged four-cylinder engine. By 1994, LeBarons were only available with a Mitsuhishi-built 3.0-liter V6, the same unit powering everything from Galants to minivans in the mid-90s. It’s not a bad engine, but in transverse orientation like this, it’s much more difficult to service. You could get a LeBaron convertible with a stick, but good luck finding one; like nearly all of them, this one has an automatic. If I’m seeing the shifter right, however, it’s the old reliable three-speed version – which, trust me, is the one you want.

Being twenty years newer than the MG definitely has its advantages on the inside. The LaBaron is roomy, comfortable, and equipped with all sorts of power equipment, as well as air conditioning for those days when it’s just too hot to put the top down. This one has the redesigned dashboard in it, which is a huge improvement over the older design. I know what you’re thinking: where’s the cupholder? If I remember correctly, it folds out from under the lid of the armrest.

It’s clean and shiny and rust-free outside, and it has a new top. It’s nowhere near as charming as the MG, granted, but this is the sort of car you could drive every day in traffic, and still enjoy dropping the top on the weekends for a nice drive in the country. It’s not sporty, but it’s not meant to be. This is a cruiser, and an excellent one at that.
It’s a little surprising, when you think about it, just how many of Cake’s songs have something to do with cars. “Stickshifs and Safetybelts,” “Race Car Ya-Yas,” “Carbon Monoxide,” “Satan Is My Motor,” and “The Distance” all talk about cars, though often more as metaphors than as transportation. Are the band members gearheads? Or do they just recognize the importance of the automobile as a part of contemporary society, and feel compelled to comment on it? If I ever meet any of them, I’ll ask. In the meantime, it’s up to you to decide whether possibly the most famous automotive trade-in deal in rock music was a good move.
Keep the MG. I have no desire to own any LeBaron, and having driven one, have no understanding of any one who would.
Can’t go with an MG that’s sub-B, so couldn’t vote for the Little Person. Principles and all that. Not that I like LeBarons, but since there was no “neither” it ended up with my vote.
Whenever I drive my MG, I always think “Should I change my name to Karen and trade my MG for a white Chrysler LeBaron?” The answer is always No.
I went both since it’s an option…otherwise I would have gone MG. It’s a real classic that looks great…plus stick, low miles and in great shape. The overpriced Lebaron is only good if it was owned by Jon Voight ha ha…although it is in really great shape. I wonder if his pencil is in the glovebox…
I’ve had a big soft spot for LeBarons since my dad let me slip behind the wheel of his bright red ’88 coupe in a parking lot when I was 14. The ’88 had the covered headlights and the hardtop coupe was a very beautiful car to my eyes.
Sitting high on my automotive bucket list is the GTC Turbo. White on white, please.
As for Kitty and her decision-making, I feel she would have ended up regretting the name change to Karen far more than any car trade.
MG’s especially of this vintage are a bit like similar vintage Harley’s. they have a bit of an attractiveness factor tot hem until you actually have to live with one. then it is usually a hate relationship unless you are the type that like to constantly tinker on the side of the road and generally understand and fix immediately(yourself) noises.
Mg’s also seem to mark there spots, also a bit like a Harley. you often have to learn the color and taste of most of the liquids to aid in identifying what part is most likely the next one to maintain or replace.
I own plenty of “modern”, “reliable” vehicles, I think today the MG speaks to me. I don’t mind the triple-white LeBaron; in fact, it would probably be a great summer car. However, while it sat in storage over the winter, I wouldn’t be interested in tinkering, just thinking about how I need to sell it in the spring to make room for something else.
You know which one this LeBaron owner is choosing.
Fantastic Showdown today (and always)! Bravo, Mark!
So, you’re choosing the ’09 Rusty Genesis? 😉
That car has officially been chosen! Look for Pat.2 later this week/early next week and thanks Ramblin’ Gamblin’ Man!
Wow! full speed ahead SWG!!!
(But please get a tetanus shot before you start working on the car!) 😉
I…don’t see a cup holder in that armrest. That said It’s been my belief that the LeBaron was her company car.
You could have put a pile of rust vs the LeBaron and I’m still never picking a K-car.
Spirit R/T DOHC 16V: Take my money!
So, that Genesis then? (Sorry SWG)
Rather than the K-car? YES
Shouldn’t the title be, “Did Karen Make the Right Call?”
Since we’re in past tense, she had already changed her name from Kitty to Karen, just before trading her MG for a white Chrysler La Baron.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZOIo5f8VIMU
As a public service I present Larkin Poe!
I saw them perform at a music festival a few years ago and was immediately hooked. It was an outdoor venue and they still managed to blow the roof off of the place!
Saw them live in Santa Cruz right after COVID. Played poolside, only 100 ft or so away. After the sun went down they were freezing. A fan lent Rebecca his coat! I got to talk to them as the walked by our room. Got to meet Megan’s mother in law. She was just 3 rooms down! A special day! Have vids and pix. Expensive, but worth it.
I’ll be looking to see them again soon.
I guess if you’re out to find something less reliable than a Dodge you did a fantastic job.I’ll pass on both today and maybe go shop for a mid 80’s Hyundai Excel.
eh, it is a mitsudodge if that makes it seem less dirty to go with the White Whale.
I’ve owned my Triumph Spitfire for nearly 30 years. It has only failed to get me home once in all that time (boneheaded previous owner mistake), and is generally as reliable as death and taxes. Once you take them apart and put them back together again properly, they are pretty good cars. The faults are well known, and so are the fixes for them. There is no excuse today for an LBC to be “unreliable”. Midgets ARE tighter inside than Spitfires though, so if you don’t fit you don’t fit.
So MG for me. I’d rather push an MG than be seen anywhere near a LeBarge. And wedding car triple white – eeeewh.
I already have reliable(-ish) cars, so big pass on the transverse V6 Diamond Star slushie-box.
Since I’m over 6′ and 200lbs, I’ll have to do the Magnum PI trick and pull out the driver seat and put some foam rubber directly on the floorboard to sit on. But if I can only go 60 miles at a time, then I think I can manage.
Since I’m not a washed up cheerleader – and am fine with being perceived as an eccentric anglophile – and I already own a reliable convertible – I’ll take the Midget.
I have a fair amount of experience with 80s and 90s Chrysler products. Fortunately that time in my life is over. MG all the way.
I love the MG. I dream of the MG. I crave a small British sports car (I really love the MGB GT, I don’t really want a convertible if I’m honest). The sound, the style, the lineage, it is all so intoxicatingly delightful!
I voted Lebaron.
Look, I’ve got a toddler, a wife, and I’d like to take them both on trips. Extra parking is way too expensive to consider an extra car that is finicky and charming that can’t carry my whole family or even just all 6’3″ of my own self.
The Lebaron is not a bad looking car. The interior would be comfortable. An example that clean would be welcome at most car shows, especially Radwood, and doubly so if you can roll up pumping out some Cake. I’d gladly drive that thing on my planned road trip this Summer and be perfectly happy. You could look at the Lebaron on your way to unlock it and chuckle. That feels like enough in this World of Two very particular convertibles.
If I had $1,000,000 I would buy you a K-car; a nice reliant automobile.
All comments to this article should be song quotes.
Check out Larkin Poes’ cover of Short Skirt and A Long Jacket! Posted a link in comments. They do a bang up job. The “ Allman Sisters”! Megan is the “Slide Queen” . Not on this track. Check ‘em out!
Take out the garbage and clean out the garage
My friend’s got a Chrysler
I’ve got a Dodge
We’re just ordinary average guys
MOPAR: Money or parts are ready! Or…
My Old Pig Ain’t Running.
MG …Morris Garages. Own one and with your electrical problems you will become aquainted with Lucas…the Prince of Darkness!
Didn’t I hear where Lucas made their refrigerators? And that’s why they drink warm beer?
It’s a joke folks. Gonna grab me a Watneys! Or maybe a Guinness! A cold one!! Lol
Everybody gotta believe in something!
I believe I’ll have another beer!
Bottoms up everyone!!
LeBaron with wedding-cake seating.
In the summer of 1978 I was a young Marine stationed at Cherry Point, NC.
I had just traded in my 1974 F-250 for a brand new Honda Civic station wagon when the price of gas went to a ridiculous price of 60 cents a gallon.
About the same time, one of the guys I was stationed with bought a new 1978 MG Midget. Sharp car! A great top down cruiser for going to the beach.
One weekend, he asked if we could swap cars so he could move his girl friend down from Virginia Beach (as noted, there ain’t much space in the boot of an MG).
Off he went to retrieve his true love.
It was a nice early summer Saturday and my room mate and i decided to take the MG to the beach to look for young ladies and get some dinner.
When we got to the restaurant, it was looking like rain, so we put the top up and went in for dinner.
When we came out, sure enough it was raining.
I managed to squeeze my 6’2″ highly trained Marine body into the driver’s seat, only banging my knees a couple of times and my head once.
We got back to the base, still raining and top up.
I never had any problem getting out of the passenger seat of that Midget, but the driver’s side was a different story.
I finally ended up twisting my upper body out, hands on the pavement and dragged my young butt out of the car.
The next day, when my friend came back with my Honda, I told him if he wanted to move her again to rent a U-Haul, I wasn’t driving that Midget again.
All of the neither.
My hulking, towering 5’7″ 160lb frame fits quite nicely in the Midget, and my spouse’s 6′ tall, 37″ inseam wearing frame hilariously will not. I’ll take the MG.
I’d pick the MG but I can’t fit, so it’d have to be the Lebaron, though I’d also prefer a turbo manual, which happens to be the first car I can remember my dad owning when I was a kid. When you’re 5 riding in the back of any red convertible is awesome!
Kudos to your Dad for owning a pretty righteous car! The first car I remember my dad owning was a 1988 Ford Aerostar in triple brown.
If it were LeBaron vs. 3x brown Aerostar, the freaks here would go for the earth toned van.
No doubt. It was the superior option for our family at the time. The other car was a 1984 Chevy Chevette that my mom drove.
My dad traded in his manual 1987 Rose Quartz Metallic Saab 900 Turbo for that Aerostar.
Man, you owe him
He followed that with a ‘99 Miata and daily drove that for over 20 years, a huge part of why I’m a car nut!
Were British people from the 70’s absurdly short, or did they just have poor posture?
They grew up hiding from German bombs in subway tunnels. I bet the nutrition was not always great.
Wartime rationing in the UK continued until 1954.
Is Jason Torchinsky shorter than the average Brit from the 1970s? That’s the question I now have.