Home » Jeeps Get No Respect At Fancy Car Shows

Jeeps Get No Respect At Fancy Car Shows

Jeeps Get No Respect I Tells Ya Ts2
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Land Rovers, Toyota Land Cruisers, Ford Broncos, and even Mercedes G-Wagens — these are the off-roaders you’re most likely to see at some of the world’s fanciest vintage car shows. And that bothers me a little, because all of those cars — every last one of them – owes its existence to Jeep, a brand that regularly gets snubbed at swanky car gatherings. It’s not cool.

Between the Michigan Concours d’Elegance in Plymouth and the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance in California (plus The Quail, and various other shows here in California and in Metro Detroit), I’ve attended quite a few fancy car gatherings, and one thing I’ve noticed is that Jeeps are suspiciously absent, even though Jeep-inspired SUVs are present.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

I, a Jeep fan, think it’s wack.

 

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A post shared by David Tracy (@davidntracy)

Look at the video above, and you’ll see lots of Land Rovers funneling into the Concours d’Elegance in Pebble Beach yesterday. The brand was also well-represented last year:

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Land Rover Pebble
Image: Land Rover

Other vehicles that I’ve tended to find at swanky car gatherings around LA are the Bronco and Land Cruiser, the former of which has become the “It Car” for celebrities like the NBA’s all-time GOAT, Lebron James:

 

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A post shared by Chau Nguyen (@chauism)

Land Cruisers, too, have exploded in value, despite many being quite mechanically similar to much-less-valuable vehicles like the Jeep CJ-7. This restored 1960 Toyota FJ40 sold for an absurd $89,600. There are very, very few Jeeps — sans many a perfectly mint Grand Wagoneer — that would ever sell for this much:

Screen Shot 2025 08 18 At 1.11.13 Pm
Screenshot: Gooding

The wild thing is that these vehicles are all based on the (much less valuable) World War II Jeep in one way, shape, or form. Here’s how Autoweek describes the emergence of the very first Land Rover:

The inspiration came from overseas, specifically from the U.S. It just so happened that Rover’s head of design, Maurice Wilks, had a U.S. Army Jeep. The Willys model was basic, of course, but it was still an suitable starting step and a point of inspiration. If Rover could create something similar but with some of the comforts of a modern car, then that vehicle could have significant potential at home and overseas, offering go-anywhere ability and a slightly more complete, enclosed interior that the Willys lacked. And that was the 4×4 that served as the prototype.

Car culture website silodrome talks about how the first Land Cruiser “BJ” was basically Toyota trying to copy the World War II Jeep formula, with the website writing:

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The story of the Toyota Land Cruiser J Series (FJ40 / BJ40 etc) starts in the Philippines during the Second World War, the Japanese had invaded the nation, along which much of the rest of East Asia, and they found an abandoned Jeep that had been left by retreating American forces.

There is a little contention as to exactly which Jeep or Jeep-like vehicle it was that they found, most sources say it was either a Willys Jeep or a Ford GPW (Ford’s Jeep), but some claim it was an American Bantam BRC 60 Mark II.

Toyota themselves haven’t included any reference to this captured vehicle in their own history of the Land Cruiser, and instead pick up the story in the 1950s.

Whichever vehicle it was, we know that it was an American military 4×4, and we know the Japanese military immediately recognised how useful it would be to have their own version.

It was shipped back to Japan, and Toyota was tasked with building a local version using as many off the shelf parts as possible – they were also instructed to make sure it didn’t look too much like a Jeep.

And here’s how Ford itself describes the initial development of the Bronco:

Why and how did Ford develop the Bronco? For that story, we need to return to World War II.  In addition to its other war-time production, Ford was one of three companies which worked to develop the Jeep.  During the war, Ford produced more than 250,00 Jeeps and were renowned for their quality.  After the war, surplus Jeeps were the choice of returning veterans and outdoor enthusiasts.  However, with the improving highway system and demand for a more comfortable driving environment, even on the trails, Ford saw the chance to design and develop a best of class utility vehicle that could also serve as a sports vehicle.  We already had experience building the Jeep, and during the late 1950s and early 1960s Ford designed and built the MUTT, a troop utility vehicle.

In 1962, Ford began to extensively survey Jeep and International Harvester Scout owners to see what they liked and disliked about their vehicles.  These findings were summarized in an internal memo on July 11, 1963 noting that both vehicles had “poor comfort, ride, noise and vibration qualities” and that the size and power of both were also unsatisfactory.  These findings, indicating a gap in the market, went to the Product Planning Committee on October, 23, 1963 with the recommendation for “funds for further development of a Ford utility vehicle, code named Bronco.” A fascinating memo a week later had the subject line “1966 G.O.A.T” as it heading.  The G.O.A.T. terminology was indicative of the desire to develop a Goes Over All Terrain vehicle while the document itself describes the drivability of the car.

These fancy, expensive Land Cruisers and Broncos and Series Is are all copycats of the original World War II Jeep, a vehicle largely absent at fancy car shows. And why? I asked Jason about it.

“The issue comes down to this,” he said: “UK: I’m so rich, I drive around in the dirt all day. US: I’m so poor I drive around in the dirt all day.”

“This is a fluke of geography,” he continued. “In the UK, a small island, big areas of rural land are for the rich. In the US, a vast country, big areas of rural land are cheap. Those are the places Jeeps and Land Rovers thrive. So one gets associated with poor rednecks mudding, one gets associated with landed gentry going fox hunting.”

I buy that on some level. Off-roading is a rich-person’s sport in much of the world, while in the U.S., land of the Jeep, it’s enjoyed by everyone, since we have so much space.

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But the truth is that, as outraged as I’m pretending to be about Jeeps not being at fancy car shows, there are some logical reasons they’re not at places like Pebble Beach. First, there’s scarcity. There are lots of Jeeps here in the U.S. Sure, certain CJ models are fairly rare, especially compared to Land Cruisers, but many of the CJs look similar, and are powered by the same Go-Devil-based motors or Buick V6s or AMC engines. And if you compare these Jeeps to vintage Broncos, Jeeps are basically disposable.

Beyond volume, there’s the reality that Land Cruiser, Land Rover, and G-Wagon have all become luxury brands, so you’d expect their parent companies to ensure that their vehicles end up at swanky car shows. Jeep really doesn’t have as much incentive to get their cars to nice car shows, with an exception being the expensive Grand Wagoneer, which actually did show up to Pebble Beach a few years ago. It is the sole mention of Jeep and Pebble Beach I can find in a cursory Google search. All the other brands I mentioned show up in auction listings at the very least.

So I get why Jeep isn’t represented at these car shows, but if the shows weren’t about sponsors but actually about the vehicles themselves, then Jeeps should be there. They are the grandparents of all the other off-road SUVs we know and love. And I’m not the only one who’s noticed this absence. Here are some responses to my Instagram video towards the top of this article:

“Damn right!!”

You definitely have a point

“The Generals get all the credit, but it’s the troops who win the wars.”

“[As a Land Rover person] You’d expect me to be a bit biased but I actually agree 100%. The lack of enthusiasm around CJs is a travesty.”

Instagrammer Landys of War replied to that last comment (which was by Lewis.Expedition) with:

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“they are the ones that did cross the Darien gap first and started the camel trophy.
But they lack the broad international reach/appeal, which is what these cater too as they attract people from around the world and thus are judged by an international perspective”

Here’s how Lewis.Expedition replied:

“AMC acquired Jeep in ‘70. There is a LOT of CJ history prior to that year that you should look up. CJ simply means civilian Jeep. David is certainly not strictly referring to MBs/GPWs.”

Screen Shot 2025 08 18 At 2.54.35 Pm
Is this M38A1 THAT different than the Land Rovers/Land Cruisers above? No, and yet it is considered by many “Low Brow.” Image: Bring a Trailer

I get where Landys of War is coming from, since Jeep hasn’t been that strong internationally lately, but historically, I disagree. Over the last century, it’s really hard to beat a Jeep’s pedigree, having been a major factor in the Allies’ victory of WWII, and with numerous countries adopting Jeeps as major parts of their cultural identity (in India, CJ-3Bs are huge; In the Philippines, Jeepneys are iconic; in Japan, Mitsubishi Jeeps are cool pieces of history; but above all: Jeep is the brand that inspired all the rest).

Jeeps are now “low brow,” they are incredible machines — more historically significant than any SUV ever, visually interesting, and beloved. They belong at car shows. The fact that I rarely see them is absurd.

Top graphic images: Bring A Trailer; Casablanca Records

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Horizontally Opposed
Horizontally Opposed
3 days ago

Through tireless, dedicated and very focused work, first by FCA, then by Stellantis, the Jeep brand has been so thoroughly tarnished in the last 10 years. Not quite Dodge levels of stupidity but they definitely leaned into dumb machismo intentionally.

I used to be a huge fan and owned two YJs. Nowadays I feel absolutely no connection to the brand.

JDE
JDE
3 days ago

it goes in spurts, the Yuppie Jeep was pretty well despised simply because of square headlights. It is now less loved because it is too CJ in the suspension department, but for those that love them, they have a cult like following.

Concours shows are all about rare and usually elegant designs. neither have really been a Jeep hallmark. And I do not think the jeep crowd really wants to go hob knob around a golf course show anyway in most cases.

MegaVan
MegaVan
3 days ago

There are a lot of interesting comments about rental spec BMW’s and Taurus SHO etc not being accepted at a car show too… but the reality is that there will still be BMW and Ford represented at a show like this with restored classics.

I understand the point about a brand being important enough that it should have representation. The question really becomes – what cars did they make that pull them out of the “rental spec BMW” range?

If you had to choose 5 restored Jeeps to represent the entire brand’s history, what would they be?

1) CJ something? (I don’t know CJ’s well)
2) 1963-1965 Grand Wagoneer w/ IFS? (engine and suspension ahead of its time)
3) 1948 Jeepster? (the sports fail)
4) 1987 XJ & MJ? (unibody SUV – the first year they brought the engines in house and really made them a vehicle worth having)
5) Commando? J10/J20/J200/J300/J2000/J3000?

I love my Jeeps, and get your point – but what are the cars you parade in that make people turn their heads and pay attention?

MegaVan
MegaVan
3 days ago
Reply to  MegaVan

I’m an idiot and forgot to add FC150/FC170/Willys Jeep/Willys Wagon/DJ/M606/M676/M677/M678/M679/M715/M725. Surrey Gala.

Maybe even the M274 mule or the forgotten FJ.

Dan Bee
Dan Bee
3 days ago
Reply to  MegaVan

Agree. Pick an FC, a Willys Wagon, an M725, and a DJ Surrey Gala.

MegaVan
MegaVan
2 days ago
Reply to  Dan Bee

Technically I would want to see an AMC Eagle in there too as the vehicle leading up to the XJ launch and really 90% of SUV’s as we know them … but I’d guess Jeep doesn’t want to be associated with it even if it’s more Jeep than the offerings they have these days.

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
3 days ago
Reply to  MegaVan

Point taken – however how many old Jeeps are restored to factory condition?
Other than a handful of Grand Wagoneers – not many.

Most are resto-modded drivers – which makes them unwelcome at Concours events.

MegaVan
MegaVan
3 days ago
Reply to  Urban Runabout

I’ve seen quite a few Willys Wagon, FC, and Wagoneer. The rest you’re right. The true restorations are rare. Which I guess technically supports David’s point.

bomberoKevino
bomberoKevino
3 days ago

One of the things I’ve come to admire about Wranglers in the US is that they seem like relatively classless vehicles. Not classless in the sense of having angry eyes aftermarket front clips and wild lift and wheel setups but classless in the sense that you don’t know much about the income bracket of its owner just from the fact that they have a Jeep (Wrangler). And in an increasingly unequal country, that’s pretty cool. Jeeps also tend to be used for personal use, not work. In contrast my impression is that Rovers and Cruisers around the world tend to either be true working trucks or owned by the wealthy or enthusiasts. In all of the zero high end car shows I’ve been to it seems like those associated with the wealthy and to a lesser degree working vehicles tend to get pride of place–maybe that explains the exclusion?

Luxrage
Luxrage
3 days ago

Coulda been the first person in Pebble Beach history to be kicked out for rubber ducking historical Jeeps!

Emil Minty
Emil Minty
3 days ago
Reply to  Luxrage

Just needs to use the $200 vintage rubber duck.

https://www.ebay.com/itm/364218201422

That Belgian Guy
That Belgian Guy
3 days ago

Having been taught to drive in a landrover. I don’t get the love for these slow, heavy, lumbering beasts.
The MINERVA series I landrover however, those have pedigree.

Last edited 3 days ago by That Belgian Guy
Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
3 days ago

To be fair, you’re not going to find any Hispano-Suiza H6Cs at Moab, either.

Dogisbadob
Dogisbadob
3 days ago

It’s a Jeep Thing. They don’t understand 😛

VS 57
VS 57
3 days ago
Reply to  Dogisbadob

It’s an advertising slogan. We didn’t fall for it.

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
3 days ago

What’s the point of getting excited about something that’s incredibly common?
Go to any beach, trailhead, Starbucks, ski-slope, college – There will be Jeeps.

It’s like taking a lease-special 2013 silver over black automatic 3 Series sedan to Cars and Coffee or even Bimmerfest and wondering why you’re not getting any attention.
“But the 3 Series is the original sport sedan!”
Nobody cares.

Last edited 3 days ago by Urban Runabout
That Belgian Guy
That Belgian Guy
3 days ago
Reply to  Urban Runabout

Correction. Go to any beach, trailhead, Starbucks, ski-slope, college, IN THE US – There will be Jeeps.
In Europe, beaches are not to be driven on. Trailheads and ski-slopes are for fiat Panda’s. And we don’t do McCoffee.

GENERIC_NAME
GENERIC_NAME
3 days ago

Beaches are driven on sometimes. No Jeeps though.

https://www.bristolpost.co.uk/news/real-life/22-beach-car-fails-left-7375867

Rippstik
Rippstik
3 days ago

I’d argue that lots of Jeeps were on European beaches in 1944.

V10omous
V10omous
3 days ago

NBA’s all-time GOAT, Lebron James

Now there’s bait if I’ve ever seen it.

I don't hate manual transmissions
I don't hate manual transmissions
3 days ago
Reply to  V10omous

I would jokingly say that proves this entire article was a work of fiction, but I don’t want to offend David.

I kinda agree with him on the lack of Jeep representation. The NBA analysis, though, not so much. Something something, bunch of Bulls… 🙂

Last edited 3 days ago by I don't hate manual transmissions
Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
3 days ago
Reply to  V10omous

Yeah, this is a transgression that we can excuse due to David’s extremely young age.

Jesse Lee
Jesse Lee
3 days ago

Now I don’t want to hurt anyone’s feelings, but the early Jeeps were fairly crude and the quality was pretty iffy. The windshield was just sheetmetal welded to an exposed steel tubing hoop. Same with the seat frame. The early ones didn’t even have seat adjustments. The later ones had like 3 sets of mounting holes for you to move the seat back and forth. Everything fit together in the most slap-dash way- the floppy hood just overlaps over the grill. They didn’t even attempt to make the two meet together. The hardtop and doors fit awkwardly. The heater was some aftermarket contraption.The fold-down windshield rested on these huge ugly squarish rubber blocks. So while it clearly did its job and revolutionize 4wd cars, you just cant shake the crudeness of the whole exercise.

V8 Fairmont Longroof
V8 Fairmont Longroof
3 days ago
Reply to  Jesse Lee

Series I Land Rover enters the chat…

Phuzz
Phuzz
3 days ago

The Series 3 wasn’t much more advanced, they’re agricultural vehicles.

Jesse Lee
Jesse Lee
2 days ago

Even the Series 1 Land Rover was much better finished than the flat fendered jeeps. It actually had a door that fits the door opening, and the fenders that enclose the wheels. A lot of the body panels are reinforced with riveted edge banding/ bindings.

UnseenCat
UnseenCat
3 days ago
Reply to  Jesse Lee

But that’s part of what makes them interesting. Early Jeeps and the various Jeep-inspired 4x4s were cheap, crudely designed and built, but extremely durable and opened up places previously inaccessible to most cars or light trucks. They’re significant, historically and culturally.

Things get a bit blurrier with modern, commoditized ones though.

Jesse Lee
Jesse Lee
2 days ago
Reply to  UnseenCat

With a lot of classic cars, the charm disappears when they start getting too modern and slick. But with the Jeeps, I think the CJ5 at least looks more like a finished product than the flat fendered jeeps that look like it was made by a high school shop class with a sheet metal brake.

Jason H.
Jason H.
3 days ago

It mainly comes down to scarcity. Same reason you won’t see even the best Ford Taurus at Concours d’Elegance in Pebble Beach

The Dude
The Dude
3 days ago
Reply to  Jason H.

It’ll happen, probably with an SHO variant, eventually. Just might take several decades.

Eggsalad
Eggsalad
3 days ago

The modern version of the MB/CJ Jeeps isn’t the Wrangler. Rather, it’s the John Deere Gator, Kawasaki Mule, and etc. In many rural areas, UTV are road legal, or law enforcement looks the other way. The only reason a CJ-3 is road legal and a Mule isn’t is due to the fact that there were barely any standards for road legality in 1949 and today there are lots more rules.

Nick B.
Nick B.
3 days ago

And oh boy does the Philippines love their Jeeps. My Filipino coworker wants to import one of their little ones they build and export, and learn to drive a manual, so be can drive it around on his weekend food tours.

I’m about 90% sure that’s what’s in the box you had show up, but either you haven’t written that article yet or I somehow missed it to know for sure.

Beto O'Kitty
Beto O'Kitty
3 days ago

LeBron is the G.O.A.T.
Goes Over All Teams.
Jordan fans will argue to the grave that Michael was better. Of course, they can never admit that he saw The Rockets coming and he was smart enough to go try baseball for awhile.. He knew The Bulls had no answer for Hakeem and their scheme.

Tbird
Tbird
3 days ago
Reply to  Beto O'Kitty

Be Like Mike.

Jordan didn’t just dominate the sport, but the entire culture

Andrew Daisuke
Andrew Daisuke
3 days ago
Reply to  Beto O'Kitty

[muffled laughter]

Beto O'Kitty
Beto O'Kitty
3 days ago
Reply to  Andrew Daisuke

Pippin?lol

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
3 days ago
Reply to  Beto O'Kitty

*Forgets he had to get past the Pistons*

H4llelujah
H4llelujah
3 days ago

Just as I say with the minivan, good sub 20 bottles of wine, and the mossberg 500 shotgun:

They should be accessible to everyone, cheap, and plentiful.

Whatever balance has magically been struck to make them that way needs to stay that way! I’ll gladly sacrifice all the recognition in the world if I can find a topless 4×4 with infinite customizability from any year between 1941 to the 2000s for a few thousand bucks.

Jack Trade
Jack Trade
3 days ago
Reply to  H4llelujah

Well put. I’d add Timex watches and Levis jeans to your list as well.

NC Miata NA
NC Miata NA
3 days ago

David is right, Jeep owners really don’t congratulate themselves enough. Others really should be picking up the slack.

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
3 days ago
Reply to  NC Miata NA

Have a rubber duck.
You’re welcome.

Collegiate Autodidact
Collegiate Autodidact
3 days ago

Maybe you could try doing the Triple Lindy at Pebble Beach (after all, it’s a beach, right?) to get some respect for Jeep.
https://youtu.be/4VDry9fy8UE?si=086rNu7Ev1pYzzxo

Last edited 3 days ago by Collegiate Autodidact
ShinyMetalAsp
ShinyMetalAsp
3 days ago

“I go to my mechanic the other day, Vinnie Boombatz. I tell him I get a nasty death wobble over fifty, what should I do? He said ‘Spend more time on the interstate'”

ShinyMetalAsp
ShinyMetalAsp
3 days ago

“I tell people I’m a CJ-7. My wife tells everyone I’m a CJ four-and-a-half. No respect.”

Jack Trade
Jack Trade
3 days ago

But isn’t it actually a compliment of sorts? That we don’t need a special gathering to celebrate Jeeps because they’re all around us every day?

As a Mustang guy, I get ya. Aside from the real rarities, these sorts of shows never feature average, everyday Mustangs. Nobody at them gets excited about a well-maintained GT, of any era.

But that’s okay. Ford made a bajillion of them precisely b/c people love them…so we’re surrounded by them all the time. And very few people get upset when they see a nice ’67 fastback motoring down the street; it’s a wonderful little bit of enjoyment for most everyone, enthusiast or not.

Framed
Framed
3 days ago
Reply to  Jack Trade

I remember at a Concourse about 12 years ago there was a black Mustang (some special edition) that was about 5 years old at the time. 97 miles on the odometer. Gorgeous car, but seems like a waste to not drive it.

Sam I am
Sam I am
3 days ago

Maybe it has something to do with the rubber ducks? Dunno

JP15
JP15
3 days ago

It entirely depends on the type of show. As a Jeep owner, I’d never remotely consider awarding a Jeep “Best in Show” or even Top 10 at a classic car show, though my screen-accurate Jurassic Park YJ replica has won awards. Boomers don’t know what it is, but kids LOVE it.

At “overlanding” or “vintage farming” type shows, they get all kinds of recognition.

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
3 days ago

DT I am a bit disappointed in your lack of Jeep knowledge. Sure everyone ripped off Jeeps made by Ford for WWII but the original Jeep was designed by Bantam, yrs you mentioned them, a small struggling car company from Butler PA whe designed the whole thing with thrown together parts but better than anything the anyone else produced, but the Army decided Bantam was too small they took the design gave it to Ford and threw a few crumbs to Bantam and bought jeep trailers from them. And after the war Ford continued to act as if they owned the patent that should have reverted to the true designer. Have you ever attended Bantamfest David?

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
2 days ago
Reply to  David Tracy

Once again proving you know more than me. Love your stuff

Mwoodski
Mwoodski
3 days ago

It’s because by and large, the owners of Jeeps suuuuuuuuck.

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
3 days ago
Reply to  Mwoodski

Unlike the owners of fake 4 wheelers that never gets dirty?

Chartreuse Bison
Chartreuse Bison
3 days ago

Exactly; it’s Pebble beach, every car there is a garage queen

4jim
4jim
3 days ago
Reply to  Mwoodski

I have been going to off road events for over 30 years and by far jeep people are the nicest, most considerate and classy compared to the rest of the people at off road events. Yes this is a bit of “damning with faint praise”

Phuzz
Phuzz
3 days ago
Reply to  Mwoodski

TBF Land Rover owners (in the UK at least) are usually perfectly pleasant people ,as long as you’re ok with the slight wiff of oil that seems to accompany them.

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
3 days ago
Reply to  Mwoodski

Mrs. Kim would like a word.

JP15
JP15
3 days ago
Reply to  Mwoodski

Jeep owner here: Yeah, kinda, though I think it’s a sliding scale where the older the Jeep, the more chill the owner, at least in my experience.

I have a Jurassic Park replica YJ that was professionally painted, and I’ve painstakingly resto-modded to be accurate to the film. I did it because it’s fun and other people love seeing it, not because I’m a Jeep guy.

At Cars & Coffee, I’m usually directed to park with the modern JK/JL Jeep clubs, and I find most of them insufferable. Angry eyes, ducks across the dash, LEDs everywhere, etc. On the flipside, the few CJ owners that come out always have interesting stories to share.

Cody
Cody
3 days ago

Does SEMA count as a car show? I think Jeep is represented there. There’s a place for Jeep.
I guess it’s not a “fancy” car show, but Jeep isn’t fancy. What’s the record auction on a WW2 jeep?

Last edited 3 days ago by Cody
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