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Easy Rider in a Lamborghini?

Posted: Thu Jun 17, 2010 12:01 pm
by DerGolgo
http://jalopnik.com/5559767/
I Sold Everything To Buy A Lamborghini And Drive Across The Country

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Richard Jordan had everything he was told to want: cars, a new house, and a fiancee. Then his fiancee left him. So he sold everything, bought a Lamborghini Gallardo and set out across America. This is his amazing story.

This is a love story, but not a conventional one. Sure, there's a woman. There always is. But it's when the woman split that the real romance began. This is the story of Richard Jordan, a man who lost love and then found it again in an exotic Italian sports car and the open American road. Jordan's journey would take him across the country and back again multiple times as he racked up nearly 100,000 miles on a car so expensive, most owners rarely drive at all.
Independence Day

It was early 2006 and Richard's version of the American Dream lay crumbling at his feet. After giving his girlfriend of five years a ring and a house in suburban North Texas — purchased with the proceeds from selling his business, his old house and a few of his cars — she left him.

"I bought us the house and planned on moving in and, as soon as I did, she left," explains Richard. "So I got stuck in a house I didn't want, in an area I didn't want to be in... it was kind of emotionally traumatic. So I bought the car and wandered around."

It wasn't actually as easy as that. No one wanted to buy his new house so he was stuck with it. It took him months to sell the rest of his possessions and he used this money to afford a $75,000 down payment on a Lamborghini Gallardo — one of the most expensive vehicles on the market.


The Gallardo is named for a famous Spanish bull and unleashes a massive 512 HP through its mid-mounted V10. Its sharp looks hint at the performance: 0-to-60 mph in just 4.0 seconds with a top speed of 195 mph for the model Jordan purchased. The price? A steep $180,000 at the time of purchase.

After locating the right model and arranging the financing he picked up his black Lamborghini Gallardo Coupe from Lamborghini of Ohio. The date? July 4th, 2006.

Independence Day was an almost intentionally ironic choice, as he picked that day to separate from everything he'd created but now no longer wanted, including the house.

"I'd become a prisoner to my house, to everything, to my fantasy of an American Dream or anything I could remotely call home."
"I'm Not Moby"

With one of the fastest cars in the world but nowhere to take it, Jordan just started driving. For more than a year he wandered from place to place, living in motels and making new friends. He'd cross the United States three times and make trips from Ohio to Colorado to Texas to North Carolina on just a night's rest.

"It was just a feeling that I didn't really have a home, there was no place to safely be but the Lambo. That was the one thing that felt like it worked for me."

He visited the ghost towns and big cities and retraced childhood trips. As soon as he'd settle down somewhere he'd get the itch to move and pack up to drive somewhere else. He had trouble paying for the house in Dallas — his one remaining possession he couldn't shake — and was burning through what cash he had to afford gas. He almost lost the house numerous times.

"I have a few hundred grand against me, I don't like debt, but I'm used to it," Richard says. "I've accumulated a lot and paid it back several times in my life."

His wanderings yielded as much joy and humor as they did introspection and isolation, including a trip to strip club in Ohio where Richard, then 32, was mistaken for Moby by an a waitress who was convinced he was the musician because of his shaved head, glasses and fancy car.

"This girl comes up and was a waitress and she's like 'You're Moby, aren't you?' and I said 'I'll be anyone you want me to be,' and she took it as 'I'm Moby.'"

Richard is not Moby, but he's also not completely against accepting free bottles of champagne when offered.

"It was just ridiculous, the manager's like kissing my butt, I maybe spent $100 the whole night and it was just really, really silly and absurd."
"It was just like The Blues Brothers!"

Driving across the country in a Lamborghini means occasionally driving above the speed limit. Richard's honest about his desire to go fast and has a drawer full of 53 tickets to prove it. But it wasn't speed, exactly, that landed him in the handcuffs of an Indiana State Trooper.

Though generally jumping from hotel room to hotel room, Richard did have family responsibilities like serving as the best man in his cousin's wedding. While en route to the wedding he was stopped for speeding but ran afoul of the Indiana State Police and suddenly found himself staring down the highway at a roadblock.

Because his car's registration was one-day expired the troops were able to search the car and found a handgun.

"I don't travel without guns, I've been in too many situations so I always carry one or two guns with me," Richard says. "A car like that is an assault on the senses, and you could be in a decent area and just be barraged by people and you never knew who you're dealing with."

At first he didn't grasp the gravity of the situation — the police thought he was moving drugs — so his calm demeanor and jokes about hating the town he was in and a general Blues Brothers schtick didn't go over well. They kept him in the back of a squad car for four hours, eventually releasing him on his own recognizance when they realized they weren't able to drive the car on the back of a flatbed without his help.

He eventually got the car back and the charges settled, but the whole endeavor cost him $25,000 in fines, travel, and legal fees.
91,807 Miles

Most people don't use their expensive cars as daily drivers exactly because they're so expensive. The highest mileage of any Lamborghini Gallardo for sale on eBay Motors is 38,835 for a 2004 model, but the majority of vehicles are below 10,000 miles.

In his trips across the country Richard managed 91,807 miles.

"I can't afford to buy something like that and drive it on the weekend," Richard explains. "The difference between being materialistic and not is when you use what you have."

For him, it's a better value to drive it given the immediate drop in value for a used Lamborghini. It's even strange for him that others think otherwise.

"No one is concerned with anything as long as Starbucks and the mall is open. It baffles me. It overwhelms me actually. You can have something that's as extreme as a Lamborghini — that's perfect in a sense — and it has no value once you use it."


All that driving does have a price and now the car has even less value. After all the hard driving and long miles, the timing chain stretched, crunching the valves and turning the car into an exotic and expensive paperweight. The car is now worth less than he owes on it and the bank refuses to grant him another loan.

"For me, it's wasteful not to use it. That's anything. It doesn't matter if it's a fucking dishwasher," says Richard. "That's not really socially acceptable. It's not the way we're programmed... most people don't live like I do. I'd eat ramen noodles to pay for gasoline, just to avoid the monotony of being stuck in four walls."

Considering the traumatic experience that led him to buy the car, its destruction doesn't seem to burden him too much.

"It worked everyday, it worked like it was supposed to, it never broke down," Richard assures me. "It exceeded all my expectations."

He's using his sudden lack of transportation not as the end of one journey but as the start of a new one, setting up a shop in Dallas where he plans to build custom motorcycles and superbikes. He has plans to repair the engine or swap in a new one once he can afford it, but for now it makes an interesting sculpture to show friends and prospective customers in the main room of his new office. Richard's also met a girl, but he's trying to take it one step at a time.

His Lamborghini may no longer run, but Richard doesn't regret the decisions he's made. He adopts a zen-like tone that clashes with his mohawk while explaining how lucky he was to be able to leave everything behind and experience something many fantasize about but almost no one has the balls to actually do.

"You're never going to live up to anyone's expectations, so you might as well live up to your own and for me that's to be as free as you can. And if money doesn't buy you freedom then it's useless."

We couldn't agree more.

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Well, racking up hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt and giving up the suburban nightmare to spent a few years driving across America in one of the horniest, most decadent, depraved cars ever, that's kinda rebellious.

Also, this chap will write a book, get a movie deal and will then be able to spend the rest of his life this way. Probably. Good for him!

Posted: Thu Jun 17, 2010 12:18 pm
by xtian
romantic bullshit.
you don"t maintain a lambo in any local autoshop do you?
the guy's just a spoiled kid with an addiction for cliches.
he'd be doing it in a beetle or a 89 caprice i'd respect him more.

ok. flame on.

Posted: Thu Jun 17, 2010 12:27 pm
by Toonce(s)
His fiancee left im cauze he's a douchebag! And for that, he pulled the ultimate douchebag antic! Admirable in a Guinness Book Of World Records Most Epic Douchebag way, tragic in that he could have bought 5 GSs for that price, and had much money left over for dead hookers!

Posted: Thu Jun 17, 2010 12:28 pm
by Pattio
Deep, deep, deep, deep, deep and tolerant parental pockets. I am open to other explanations.

Posted: Thu Jun 17, 2010 12:29 pm
by DerGolgo
Am I the only one who thinks that, if nothing else, he showed some panache?

Posted: Thu Jun 17, 2010 12:33 pm
by Toonce(s)
"Panache is a word of French origin that carries the connotation of a flamboyant manner and reckless courage."

Hmmm. Panache, or simply monied, impulsive douchebaggery?

I don't see the courage aspect really, so ixnay on anachepay.

Posted: Thu Jun 17, 2010 12:41 pm
by Zim
Dude's a twit.

Posted: Thu Jun 17, 2010 1:02 pm
by Pattio
DerGolgo wrote:Am I the only one who thinks that, if nothing else, he showed some panache?
Paris Hilton shows the world her panache just about every time she clambers out of her Mercedes...

Posted: Thu Jun 17, 2010 1:20 pm
by DerGolgo
He basically nuked his financial future, bought the most sweet-ass cage he could find and cut himself loose, beating the mechanical heart of that born trailer queen into submission, seeing a bit of the world.

Personally I think going into hock that deep for pretty much any reason is stupid, let alone for a car, but there's something very ...Zaphod Beeblebrox about his disregard for financial responsibility. Total aristocratic delinquency. Not exactly commendable but...kinda cool.

Posted: Thu Jun 17, 2010 1:24 pm
by Zim
Pattio wrote:
DerGolgo wrote:Am I the only one who thinks that, if nothing else, he showed some panache?
Paris Hilton shows the world her panache just about every time she clambers out of her Mercedes...
:lol:

Dude's a <s>twit</s> twat.

Posted: Thu Jun 17, 2010 1:39 pm
by sun rat
it's just fucking money. if i had access to those kinds of loans i'd do it.

so. you get born onto this planet. for what? to accumulate little pieces of paper which sit in a building somebody else owns? why? to pass them on to your progeny so they then can spend their whole wasted, useless lives accumulating little pieces of paper?

you guys talk like you are a bunch of middle-aged middle-managers.

and dare i say it? totally bourgeois.

Posted: Thu Jun 17, 2010 1:52 pm
by Toonce(s)
sun rat wrote:it's just fucking money. if i had access to those kinds of loans i'd do it.

so. you get born onto this planet. for what? to accumulate little pieces of paper which sit in a building somebody else owns? why? to pass them on to your progeny so they then can spend their whole wasted, useless lives accumulating little pieces of paper?

you guys talk like you are a bunch of middle-aged middle-managers.

and dare i say it? totally bourgeois.
Money, like sex, is no big deal... unless you don't have any!

Posted: Thu Jun 17, 2010 2:04 pm
by stiles
I think it's neat, myself. Having pitched it all and done a similar trip on my bike, I can totally identify with the drive to do such a thing.

It's his money and his life, so why not?

Posted: Thu Jun 17, 2010 2:04 pm
by sun rat
Toonce wrote:
sun rat wrote:it's just fucking money. if i had access to those kinds of loans i'd do it.

so. you get born onto this planet. for what? to accumulate little pieces of paper which sit in a building somebody else owns? why? to pass them on to your progeny so they then can spend their whole wasted, useless lives accumulating little pieces of paper?

you guys talk like you are a bunch of middle-aged middle-managers.

and dare i say it? totally bourgeois.
Money, like sex, is no big deal... unless you don't have any!
i totally agree with that sentiment. been poor all my life.

but i decided when i re-embarked on my education this time around that i will no longer be a slave to money. i 'll have some skills and little pieces of paper to prove it when i get out, and that should be enough to let me see what little is left of the world before i die.

is there any other purpose to life? not that i know of. my kids are almost all grown, and i've outlived my usefulness.

Posted: Thu Jun 17, 2010 3:18 pm
by Priest
stiles wrote:
It's his money and his life, so why not?
Totally. FTW, Lamborghini guy.

Posted: Thu Jun 17, 2010 4:18 pm
by goose
I think it totally rocks! Then again, I've never been able to save a dime. I do have fun though!

Posted: Thu Jun 17, 2010 5:59 pm
by 12ci
"It worked everyday, it worked like it was supposed to,"
until it didn't.

but then, stretching a timing chain and wrecking a few valves isn't really a break down, is it ?

more like a lack of proper maintenance.

Posted: Thu Jun 17, 2010 7:36 pm
by Pattio
Maybe the guy will write a book about his experiences. Maybe the book will be insightful, entertaining, and thought-provoking. Maybe it will include all the details that aren't in this little summary, like what he did with his time. Among the few details in this piece are that he went to a strip club and carried illegal guns. Maybe he also did a little rough framing work for Habitat for Humanity and did some shifts in a soup kitchen. Maybe he did some migrant produce picking. Maybe he had some long conversations with people from all walks of life, or made a long-lasting connection with an unlikely person that gave him new direction and insights. Maybe all those things happened and will be in a book- and that would go a long way toward offsetting the possibly-inaccurate impression that this is a selfish, decadent person who chose to pass his time in an expensive idleness and pass it off as some kind of flashy spirit quest.

What kind of 'loans' can you get to buy a high-end car when you have no job and no intent to get one? The kind you can get from your connections when you are born to aristocracy. If it's 'bourgeois' to speculate that this man's 'freedom' stems from the wealth of his family, so be it- this article could have avoided that impression by including just one, single, simple example of noblesse oblige.

Posted: Thu Jun 17, 2010 9:55 pm
by xtian
now that I think about it, I stopped looking for a job and spent a week on the road for a change of mood.
can I get a cool haircut and my picture in a magazine too?

panache? more like poseur.

Posted: Fri Jun 18, 2010 3:10 am
by dozer
Priest wrote:
stiles wrote:
It's his money and his life, so why not?
Totally. FTW, Lamborghini guy.
How does "it's my life I do what I want" prevent you from being a douche? It really doesn't.

Posted: Fri Jun 18, 2010 8:03 am
by guitargeek
I agree with every one of you.

Posted: Sun Jun 20, 2010 3:58 pm
by smashinator
Well, I think going in to huge debt and then not, say, maintaining the damn car was extremely foolish. I personally would not want debt on a non-running vehicle. I agree about the Beeblebrox-level of recklessness...

However, driving the almighty fuck out of a Lamborghini? As far as awesome things to do go, that is total win. I'm surprised the Lamborghini factory hasn't offered to repair his engine just because he clearly gets what cars are FOR. Maybe they will...

Posted: Sun Jun 20, 2010 5:11 pm
by Sisyphus
"I don't travel without guns, I've been in too many situations so I always carry one or two guns with me," Richard says. "A car like that is an assault on the senses, and you could be in a decent area and just be barraged by people and you never knew who you're dealing with."


Yeah, all that and brains, too.

Posted: Mon Jun 21, 2010 4:46 am
by MATPOC
Don't know if he's a spoiled brat, it does say that he sold his business and bought the house with the proceeds, perhaps it's not all from deep parental pockets.

Also if I was doing something similar I would do it in a German supercar. It probably would be less dramatic and here would be no article, but the car would still be running, I bet he could get another 200K from any Merc powered car, perhaps a Zonda?

Posted: Mon Jun 21, 2010 6:35 am
by xtian
MATPOC wrote:Don't know if he's a spoiled brat, it does say that he sold his business and bought the house with the proceeds, perhaps it's not all from deep parental pockets.

Also if I was doing something similar I would do it in a German supercar. It probably would be less dramatic and here would be no article, but the car would still be running, I bet he could get another 200K from any Merc powered car, perhaps a Zonda?
Lambo's ARE german supercars now.

Posted: Mon Jun 21, 2010 5:06 pm
by MATPOC
Yeah, I know, but I think with the name came the curse!

Audi is not known for it's reliability either, when I say German supercar I mean Porsche, BMW or Merc. Audi(VW) makes great race cars which they proved again at LeMans this year, but street cars are only nice to look at.

Also Zonda is Italian bot the lump comes from the silver star brand.

Posted: Wed Jun 23, 2010 9:14 pm
by stiles
smashinator wrote:Well, I think going in to huge debt and then not, say, maintaining the damn car was extremely foolish.

AFAIK there is no spec interval for timing chain replacement on that car since they are not considered a wear item. Also -

I can't remember the last time I saw a lambo with more than ~20k on it, and they are fairly common around these parts - there were six identical starter Lambos (different colors, different owners) lined up at the last strip-mall saturday car show I went to in Newport Beach.

Basically, anyone racking up that kind of mileage on a high dollar exotic is a test case. I don't think it's fair to blame the engine failure on the owner not pre-emptively replacing a (probably) brutally expensive part with no published service interval.

From what I've read, Gallardos are towards the more reliable & lower maintenance cost of their particular market niche, as compared to say, competitive Astons or Ferraris.

Posted: Mon Jun 28, 2010 2:05 pm
by absent_carlo
From the comments on the story:

"Richard Jordan has taken Matt Hardigree on a ride with a ton of lies here. He never sold all of his possessions or spent his "life savings" to set out on the open road or to buy the Lamborghini (OR any of the other luxury cars and bikes he's been afforded over the years).

Where to start with this pile of madness? He sold his metal fabrication business?! WHAT business? What was the name of this alleged business and to whom did he sell it and when? For that matter, WHAT JOB? And he took to the highway, living hotel to hotel after his fiancee left him???! The timeline in this is whack. He bought her a Corvette AFTER he bought the Lamborghini (and also after he bought the Hummer H1 and the Audi A4 AND the Ford F-650 AND the Cadillac and whatever else that he purchased within that five year block), and they were together for a long while afterward. What about the time he was pulled over in Indiana? Or the embarrassing time(s) he TOLD people he was Moby? The versions portrayed above of those incidents are a convoluted headache of half-truths. Witnesses were there, remember, Richard? This article leads readers to believe Mr. Jordan is some kind of nomadic Mad-Max-meets-Two-Lane-Black-Top messiah when he's really just a delusional kid who hails from extreme privilege. I'm sure his good family is floored by this hacked up mess of words.

Hell, my elderly parents have put more out-of-state miles on their car than Richard has put on this Lambo. The most driving he's done has been at 18o mph from Starbucks to Starbucks across the Dallas/Ft. Worth metroplex. This is SUCH an unbelievable crock. People can't possibly be reading this story, looking at the handful of pictures Richard took while on a few road trips along with the images of his new warehouse, and thinking all of this has no holes in it! Come on.

Richard, you owe Matt Hardigree a huge apology for wasting his time and for leading readers to believe you're some kind of reformed victim of love who left everything behind for some romantic, American dream. Did you think an article of this popular magnitude wouldn't be read by people who know you in real life?"

Posted: Mon Jun 28, 2010 4:23 pm
by Jonny
absent_carlo wrote:From the comments on the story:

"Richard Jordan has taken Matt Hardigree on a ride with a ton of lies here. He never sold all of his possessions or spent his "life savings" to set out on the open road or to buy the Lamborghini (OR any of the other luxury cars and bikes he's been afforded over the years).

Where to start with this pile of madness? He sold his metal fabrication business?! WHAT business? What was the name of this alleged business and to whom did he sell it and when? For that matter, WHAT JOB? And he took to the highway, living hotel to hotel after his fiancee left him???! The timeline in this is whack. He bought her a Corvette AFTER he bought the Lamborghini (and also after he bought the Hummer H1 and the Audi A4 AND the Ford F-650 AND the Cadillac and whatever else that he purchased within that five year block), and they were together for a long while afterward. What about the time he was pulled over in Indiana? Or the embarrassing time(s) he TOLD people he was Moby? The versions portrayed above of those incidents are a convoluted headache of half-truths. Witnesses were there, remember, Richard? This article leads readers to believe Mr. Jordan is some kind of nomadic Mad-Max-meets-Two-Lane-Black-Top messiah when he's really just a delusional kid who hails from extreme privilege. I'm sure his good family is floored by this hacked up mess of words.

Hell, my elderly parents have put more out-of-state miles on their car than Richard has put on this Lambo. The most driving he's done has been at 18o mph from Starbucks to Starbucks across the Dallas/Ft. Worth metroplex. This is SUCH an unbelievable crock. People can't possibly be reading this story, looking at the handful of pictures Richard took while on a few road trips along with the images of his new warehouse, and thinking all of this has no holes in it! Come on.

Richard, you owe Matt Hardigree a huge apology for wasting his time and for leading readers to believe you're some kind of reformed victim of love who left everything behind for some romantic, American dream. Did you think an article of this popular magnitude wouldn't be read by people who know you in real life?"
Hahahahahaha! Twat.