Man who featured on Pimp My Ride revealed what they actually did to his car once MTV’s cameras had gone
Unsurprisingly, not everything was genuine The post Man who featured on Pimp My Ride revealed what they actually did to his car once MTV’s cameras had gone appeared first on Supercar Blondie.

People who featured on MTV hit show Pimp My Ride revealed what actually happened to the cars once the cameras had gone.
Back when the show aired, the notion that reality television was actually not always real was a bit foreign.
As you can imagine, Pimp My Ride was not 100 percent genuine either.
But the truth beneath the surface is interesting.
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Pimp My Ride was (in part) staged
A lot of what was going on on Pimp My Ride was fake.
Shocker, we know.
Jokes aside, the MTV hit show everyone loved in the early 2000s was, at least in part, staged and scripted.
No one knew at the time, then people began suspecting years later, and now everyone knows.
The show, hosted by rapper Xzibit, ran for six seasons and used the help of West Coast Customs to take people’s vehicles from drab to fab.
It also went went global, with spin-offs in Europe, Indonesia, and Brazil.
But a lot of what we saw on screen remained, well, on screen.
Justin Dearinger from season six, for example, had his 1997 Toyota RAV4 pimped by MTV.
He revealed that even though it looks like it only takes a couple of weeks in the shop to pimp your ride, Justin was left without a car for five months.
They also added stuff they removed later.
After filming ended, the team actually removed some of the coolest parts of his car, like the ‘pop-up champagne’, because they were unsafe or illegal.
This was not a one-off, as several guests on the show shared very similar stories.
Now the audience knows

Remember the movie i, Robot starring Will Smith?
Most cars featured in the movie were Audis, including the supercar driven by the protagonist portrayed by Will Smith.
Back then, people would have called it an amusing coincidence whereas now, everyone knows that’s called product placement.
In the early days of the internet, the audience mostly believed that reality shows were 100 percent genuine.
Now, everyone’s aware most things are scripted, in the same way most people know Apple’s ‘No Villain Clause’ is not a hoax.
That’s why it would be difficult to make Pimp My Ride work in today’s television.
Because people would probably just assume most of it is fake anyway.
Pity.The post Man who featured on Pimp My Ride revealed what they actually did to his car once MTV’s cameras had gone appeared first on Supercar Blondie.
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