Lauren Fix
Lauren Fix, The Car Coach® is a nationally recognized automotive expert, media guest, journalist, author, keynote speaker and television host. A trusted car expert, Lauren provides an insider’s perspective on a wide range of automotive topics and safety issues for both the auto industry and consumers. Her analysis is honest and straightforward.

Lauren is the National Automotive Correspondent for Newsmax TV, a conservative news net carried in 23 countries and in over 35 million U.S. cable/satellite homes. She is also The Weather Channel and Inside Edition’s auto expert. Lauren Fix serves as a juror for the esteemed North American Car & Truck of the Year Awards (NACTOY).
Lauren is The Car Coach columnist for Parade Magazine and eBay Motors and writes a weekly column. She also appears weekly on USA Radio’s DayBreak USA.
Lauren is the president and founder of Automotive Aspects, Inc., a consulting firm with a wide range of multi-media services, including media consulting, broadcast messaging strategy, public relations and television production.
Lauren is the author of three books: most recently, Lauren Fix’s Guide To Loving Your Car with St. Martins Press, Driving Ambitions: A Complete Guide to Amateur Auto Racing, and The Performance Tire and Wheel Handbook.
Lauren’s broadcast experience includes Oprah, Live! With Regis and Kelly, The View, TODAY, 20/20, The Early Show, CNN, FOX News, FOX Business, MSNBC, HLN, TBS Makeover and a Movie, Inside Edition, ESPN, TBS, Discovery, Speed and NPR, to name a few. Lauren previously hosted four seasons of Talk 2 DIY Automotive on the Do-It-Yourself Network (DIY), was the National Automotive Correspondent for Time Warner Cable and hosted Female Driven on Lifetime TV.
Lauren’s articles and advice have appeared in USA Today, Good Housekeeping, Redbook, eBay, Woman’s World, Esquire, First for Women, InTouch and Self. She has also contributed content to Motor Trend, Truck Trend, Hot Rod, Car Craft and many other automotive publications.
Lauren is a member of the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE), the Society of Automotive Analysts (SAA) and is an ASE (Automotive Service Excellence) certified technician. She inherited her love of all things automotive from her father, who owned a brake remanufacturing business and worked for many U.S. manufacturers. Lauren has been fixing, restoring and racing cars since the age of ten. She has been advising drivers almost all her life.
In addition to being a leader in positive consumer awareness and the automotive industry, Lauren is often asked to speak to groups around the world about her success in marketing, motivation, entrepreneurship, parenting and other lifestyle topics.
Lauren was named the 2015 WIN Award, 2013 SEMA Business Network “Mentor of The Year”; SEMA Business Network 2012 Woman of the Year; and awarded various Car Care Council “Automotive Communications Awards” in 2012, 2013 and 2014. Past awards include 2008 Automotive Woman Of The Year and 2010 Woman of Distinction – Entrepreneur winner. Lauren Fix was inducted into the National Women and Transportation Hall of Fame in 2009 – a very high honor for a hard working automotive professional.

Tags: cars | radio | news | censorship
OPINION

Carmakers Want to Control What You Hear in Your Car

Carmakers Want to Control What You Hear in Your Car
(Dreamstime)

Lauren Fix By Monday, 29 December 2025 05:02 PM EST Current | Bio | Archive

First, it was AM radio now it’s FM radio. Imagine starting your car and realizing that what you can hear—or can’t hear—has already been decided for you. The same tech giants that censor your posts, curate your newsfeeds, and impact your online experience now want to control what plays through your vehicle dashboard.

Last week, Tesla confirmed it will remove FM radio from its base Model 3 and Model Y vehicles. Just days later, General Motors doubled down on plans to eliminate Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, opting instead for proprietary systems designed with Big Tech partners.

Individually, these sound like technical upgrades. But together, they represent a fundamental shift: control of the car is shifting from drivers to corporations. We’ve seen this before in our social media feeds, search results, and app stores.

Now, the same algorithms and corporate interests that decide what you see and hear online are coming for your radio dial.

That future isn’t hypothetical—it’s already idling in the driveway.

Dashboard Becomes a Walled Garden

For generations, the car radio has been the great equalizer—free, local, and open to all. It delivers news, weather alerts, and community updates instantly, no subscription or data plan required. But as vehicles become software platforms, automakers are rewriting the rules.

They’re no longer just selling cars; they’re building digital ecosystems.

By removing AM and FM radio and blocking third-party apps like CarPlay and Android Auto, they funnel drivers into closed environments where they alone decide what content is available.

This isn’t about innovation. It’s about revenue and control. And when that control extends to the dashboard—where 84% of Americans still listen to broadcast radio each week—the stakes go far beyond consumer choice.

What’s Really at Stake

When the power goes out, when cell towers fail, and when internet connections drop, broadcast radio keeps transmitting. It remains the backbone of America’s Emergency Alert System—reaching 272 million listeners every week.

FEMA, the Department of Homeland Security, and emergency managers nationwide all rely on AM radio as critical communications infrastructure.

In fact, seven former FEMA administrators from both parties have urged Congress to safeguard AM radio, citing its unmatched reliability and essential role in the success of the National Public Warning System.

But the stakes go beyond emergencies. Broadcast radio remains democracy’s most accessible platform. Local news stations serve communities too small for cable bureaus or newsrooms.

Faith-based programming reaches congregations across denominations. Foreign-language broadcasts connect immigrant communities.

Agricultural reports guide farmers making real-time decisions. High school football gets the same airtime as professional sports. These aren’t premium features available to subscribers.

They’re free, open, and available to anyone with a radio—until automakers decide they’re not.

The Gatekeeper Playbook

We know what happens when platforms consolidate control over content distribution. Algorithms replace editorial judgment. Subscription tiers determine access.

Content that doesn’t serve corporate interests gets deprioritized or excluded entirely. Tesla’s FM removal isn’t an isolated decision. GM’s CarPlay elimination isn’t a technical preference.

These are coordinated moves toward a future where your dashboard operates like your smartphone—except you can’t choose a different car as easily as you can switch apps.

The difference is critical: when you’re behind the wheel, access to information isn’t just about convenience. It’s about safety, civic engagement, and the free flow of ideas in a democratic society.

Congress Can Act—But the Window is Closing

The AM Radio for Every Vehicle Act (H.R. 3413 / S. 1669) would require automakers to include AM radio in all new vehicles at no extra cost. With support from more than 315 House members and 61 Senators, it’s one of the most bipartisan efforts in Washington today. Yet as Tesla and GM’s announcements show, time is running out.

Congress must act to guarantee that all broadcast radio remains standard equipment in vehicles, ensuring that free, over-the-air access to information doesn’t become a premium feature.

The automotive industry will argue this is about “consumer choice” and “technical optimization.” Don’t be fooled. It’s about controlling a captive audience and deciding what tens of millions of Americans will hear every day. Lawmakers need to pass the bill. And the public needs to push back

Call your representatives and tell them to support the AM Radio for Every Vehicle Act and make your voice heard before automakers take it away.

This story is still unfolding. And it’s far bigger than most people realize.

Video link: https://youtu.be/Z7eVYTJpakw

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_______________

Lauren Fix is an automotive expert and journalist covering industry trends, policy changes, and their impact on drivers nationwide. Follow her on X @LaurenFix for the latest car news and insights.

© 2025 Newsmax Finance. All rights reserved.


LaurenFix
First, it was AM radio now it's FM radio. Imagine starting your car and realizing that what you can hear-or can't hear-has already been decided for you. The same tech giants that censor your posts, curate your newsfeeds, and impact your online experience now want to control...
cars, radio, news, censorship
792
2025-02-29
Monday, 29 December 2025 05:02 PM
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