I would not have been this calm
#1
Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Chandler, AZ
Posts: 45
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Vehicle: 1999 Elantra
I would not have been this calm
Jerry Seinfeld furious after driver inflicts shrinkage on rare Porsche 911
Well before "Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee," Jerry Seinfeld was known in automotive circles as a consummate car collector, especially for classic Porsches, and his garages include the first 911 built. And as any car collector knows, the value of owning such vehicles isn't just in looking at them, but driving them as they were meant to be.
Which is all great, right until someone uses your rare Porsche 911 as a slow-motion crash tester.
According to the New York Post, Seinfeld was out in his 1973 Porsche 911 Carrera RSR — a racing model of which only 49 were built — last weekend in the Hamptons when a woman in a white BMW began backing into it:
In Seinfeld's telling, the woman seemed oblivious, and while she offered to trade information he let her go because "the idea of having her in my life for one more second was intolerable." This may be a bit of an over-correction; while even Seinfeld will find vintage Porsche repair parts pricey, it's not like he doesn't have a few other cars to drive.
Serenity now, Jerry. Serenity now.
Well before "Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee," Jerry Seinfeld was known in automotive circles as a consummate car collector, especially for classic Porsches, and his garages include the first 911 built. And as any car collector knows, the value of owning such vehicles isn't just in looking at them, but driving them as they were meant to be.
Which is all great, right until someone uses your rare Porsche 911 as a slow-motion crash tester.
According to the New York Post, Seinfeld was out in his 1973 Porsche 911 Carrera RSR — a racing model of which only 49 were built — last weekend in the Hamptons when a woman in a white BMW began backing into it:
“We could hear the sound of metal crunching — rare, classic, expensive, vintage metal, by the way — from across the street. A sickening sound to a car person,’’ Seinfeld said.
“And even though I’m sure I deserved this, because of who I am and that I have this amazing car, I was furious. I ran across the street, out of my mind, and yelled at her, ‘You just crashed into my car!’
“And even though I’m sure I deserved this, because of who I am and that I have this amazing car, I was furious. I ran across the street, out of my mind, and yelled at her, ‘You just crashed into my car!’
In Seinfeld's telling, the woman seemed oblivious, and while she offered to trade information he let her go because "the idea of having her in my life for one more second was intolerable." This may be a bit of an over-correction; while even Seinfeld will find vintage Porsche repair parts pricey, it's not like he doesn't have a few other cars to drive.
Serenity now, Jerry. Serenity now.
https://autos.yahoo.com/blogs/motora...154037560.html
I would of had to pimp slap the b*tch.
#3
Super Moderator
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Houston, Texas
Posts: 1,792
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Vehicle: 14 EGT 2.0
It probably was the better idea for him to tell her to go away. Its not like her insurance is going to pay out what the car is actually worth and who knows how long that would have dragged on. If he would have gotten a bat out and taken out rage on her car... he would have been all over the news as a crazy person. Could I have done it? Maybe if I had a fleet of other cars to drive and the money to fix the damage.