I think it would be impossible to know Jean Jennings and not like Jean Jennings if you had any sense of humor. Automotive media is always at risk of becoming extremely boring. All the free cars, rich food, and ad dollars can have a dulling effect on the soul. Jean Jennings, the first woman to edit a national car magazine and the first to win a national magazine award for one, was never dull.
Jean passed away from complications related to Alzheimer’s this morning at the age of 70. There will be people who know her better who will write more detailed obits about her. I’ll link to a few of those here, but because I was lucky enough to know her a little I wanted to share some of my experience.
If you’re an auto journalist, PR person, exec, or a subscriber to Car And Driver in the ’80s/Automobile from its inception, then you know Jean’s story. If not, I’ll do a brief summary, because it’s helpful to know how Jean became Jean. Growing up in a small town in Michigan, the daughter of a copy editor and journalist, Jean attended the University of Michigan for two semesters before dropping out and becoming a cab driver.
That’s not a great gig, so her brother let her know about a job at Chrysler’s Proving Grounds. After a few rejections, Jean finally landed a union position as a test driver (she had surgery for cervical cancer the week before she started because she didn’t want to miss the opportunity). Eventually, Jean was laid off, but not before starting a union newsletter called The Chrysler Crew’s News.
From there, she got a job working for the great David E. Davis at Car And Driver and became a “pioneer” at the magazine as a writer who also happened to be a woman. As groundbreaking as that was, it shouldn’t be forgotten that she was also brave, quick-witted, and shameless in a way that made car writing worth reading.
Joe Lorio writes in that site’s obit:
Aside from writing talent, though, Jean was special because of her madcap style and taste for adventure. She drove in a demolition derby. She rode in an off-road race with Walker Evans. She ran Brock Yates’s One Lap of America three times, first in the inaugural year with Walker Evans and Parnelli Jones (in a beer-delivery van), next with Canadian WRC driver Nicole Ouimet, and lastly with Hurley Haywood.
Her magnetic personality attracted both industry leaders—a trio of mammoth Rolodexes was a fixture of her office—and strangers alike. In the famously star-crossed Car and Driver road test “Greetings from Sunny Mexico,” author Brock Yates described how Jean repeatedly extricated her C/D compatriots from scrapes with the federales. First, when Yates was arrested for public urination, Jennings, the only Spanish speaker in the group, denounces him as a pig, and the cops let him off with a 10-dollar fine. Later, after a police ambush in La Paz, Yates wrote, “Lindamood is brilliant as she aborts impending arrest by demonstrating the Datsun’s idiotic synthesized voice to the awe-struck lawmen.” Still later, Jean and technical editor Don Sherman are carted off with a federale for failing to report the Dodge’s collision with a cow. But somehow, Jean ends up driving the patrol car and manicuring the cop’s girlfriend’s nails, and the incident nets a $50 fine.
David E. Davis eventually bolted Car And Driver with Jean and others to create Automobile magazine, placing Jean as the Executive Editor. Eventually, she’d take the magazine over and become the first woman to edit a national car magazine. She’d win tons of awards for her editing and hire many of the stars of autojournalism’s next generation.
She even got a profile from Susan Orlean in The New Yorker that is a hoot to read, and includes this great line:
“Feel sorry for yourself,” Jean said. “That’s my advice. That’s my slogan. If you have a shitty time, no one cares, so you might as well have a good time.”
By the time I met her, in 2008, the company had become part of Source Interlink, and Jean was somehow at every event. Tall and usually wearing one of her signature hats, you could always spot Jean. And if you couldn’t see her, you could hear her, as she was always talking or laughing.
Back then, writing for a car blog was not considered a prestigious position. Some of the buff book folks looked at us with a mixture of pity, fear, and contempt. Not Jean. Whether she sensed the shifting grounds of automotive journalism or was just being her usual gregarious self I’ll never know, but she always greeted me and other bloggers with warmth and humor.
I’ll never forget when I heard Source Interlink, which was in the process of becoming The Enthusiast Network, fired Jean and half the staff. It wasn’t a call I wanted to make. Jean picked up the phone and made it easier on me by being straightforward and not just a little funny:
Now former Editor-in-Chief Jean Jennings told me this afternoon that the rumors about Source Interlink and their content chief Angus Mackenzie were true, that she was “surprised” by the timing of the announcement but not entirely surprised that it did happen.
“It’s business,” she said, noting that Source Interlink tried to move the magazine to Los Angeles a decade ago until she says she intervened.
She says Automobile will close its Ann Arbor offices, leaving only a handful of employees, moving a few “cherry picked” people to an office in Royal Oak and moving the magazine to be closer to Motor Trend. None of those people will be copy editors, apparently.
“I don’t think Angus ever believed you needed copy editors, and I said ‘that’s why you have typos in your column Angus,'” she joked.
It was a shitty time, sure, and yet Jean was true to her slogan even then, having a little fun. Here’s a video of her in 2017 on her own YouTube channel talking about the Detroit Auto Show:
Jean is survived by her husband, Tim Jennings; her brothers Paul (Anita), Ted (Rosemarie), and Tom Lienert; niece Becky Lienert; and nephews Daniel and Phillip Lienert. Her dogs Jackey, Farley, and Ray the Stray will also miss her.
In lieu of flowers, the family suggests memorial contributions be sent to the Arbor Day Foundation.
UPDATE: The team over at MotorTrend is doing a great job gathering remembrances from people she worked with, and I thought this one from her longtime friend Joe DeMatio was particularly good:
I was an editorial assistant, lowest of the low, but the first weekend I was there, Jean invited me to her house for a Super Bowl party. I brought a particularly good batch of my homemade guacamole, which was a hit, and I was part of the club. Before long, I was answering Jean’s mail, specializing in composing appropriate replies to her fans, many of whom happened to be prison inmates. Inmates are incredibly perverted.
Top image: Jean Knows Cars/YouTube
Oh no, no, no. Car and Driver in the early to mid 80’s was the absolute height of entertaining automotive journalism. To me, she was Jean Lindamood (I vaguely remember one of the C/D articles joking about her last name should be “Indamood”). The wit, the enthusiasm . . . I know David E. cursed her soul in later years but I hope they patched things before DED Jr passed. Jean will be greatly missed.
This one hurts, even though I only ever met her once that I could remember. We were on the same press drive and the presenter for part of the intro made some vaguely sexist comment and neither of us were having it, haha. I don’t think the presenter meant any harm per se, but gaaaaahhhhrrrrr-baaaaagggggeee jokes at our expense are still annoyingly endemic to the car world. I can’t even remember the exact comment, but I know it was in that “the ol’ ball ‘n’ chain”/”your girlfriend who can’t drive”/”women amirite?” vein of cringe. I do, however, remember Jean interrupting that guy. Hell yeah.
Reading that old dispatch from when she was let go from Automobile stings even harder in retrospect knowing that TEN laying off every woman on staff en masse was, well, pretty damn on-brand for everything I’ve heard about that company. (Not to mention disappointingly common in this cursed niche.) I’m just glad there are more of us now and we’re harder to ignore, and a lot of that is probably thanks to Jean.
RIP, Jean. She was one of the best.
And to think that she was one of the first women to fight the good fight against misogyny and bias in auto journalism back in the 80s when it was industrial strength.
My chance encounter with her was life-affirming. We established we’re both Soul Coughing fans before I realized who the very interesting woman was that we were seated next to at that Amelia Island British pub. Can’t put a value on that …
https://youtu.be/PGv70rZFfOo
Hell yeah. She had Taste (TM).
So does The Autopian as I don’t see any other major sites bothering to note her passing. If I had any slight love of the “former lighting site” it’s been extinguished.
There’s a few out there, actually. C&D and MT had some pretty touching personal stories in theirs.
40 years later and I still agree with every single one of the conclusions at the end of that C&D article:
This really sucks. I loved her at Automobile, and her writing was always funny. When Motorweek put their Obituary for Denis McCluggage. in the opening frames, there’s Jean at a table with her smiling.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nZahqXg-iLY
She was awesome and I always, always enjoyed her writing style. Her wit and humor shined through every time as did her knowledge.
I looked forward to my issues of “Automobile” and “Car & Driver” arriving in the mail every month when I was a kid. My mom subscribed to them all for me.
To hold her own — and stand out — among the group at C&D back then is a testament to both her writing and her attitude. It can’t have been easy, but I think the magazine needed her to counter balance the immense testosterone levels already in place and keep them out of jail. And, as David E. Davis pointed out, she could weld.
RIP to a legend.
My freshman year roommate and i were both car nerds and loved reading all the mags. He was such a fan of Jean, and I became one as well. On a whim he contacted her, which lead to him getting an internship that first summer with Automobile Magazine.
I’ve heard of her but I don’t know her personally. She sounds like an epic legend.
RIP
I had Car and Driver and R&T subscriptions from 1996 through the early 2000s. She was long gone from there by then, of course, but there still was a lot of intelligent writers at C/D who had some of the same ‘devil-may-care’ style of writing and criticizing things.
I used to call it “a collegiate way to insult things”. I think I learned more about sentence structure and how to write due to how enjoyable I found their writing. Just think about how most articles were written back then. We weren’t all that far removed from the FCC Fairness Doctrine being killed in the ’90s. So many newspapers and the like were pretty dry and factual in their reporting. Things weren’t so editorialized as they are now, so reading the sort of writing that is so editorialized, but also very intelligently written at the same time, it was just fun to read no matter what car they were reviewing.
I would later come across Automobile mag and find the most enjoyable part of it being Jean Jennings’ own column for many of the same reasons.
Also helped that both Car and Driver and Automobile, at the time at least, were based in Ann Arbor. Not that far from where I lived and eventually ended up working in town from 2004-2010. So, a sort of source of local pride for me at least.
I have a couple of car nut friends who did meet her as well as Jason Cammisa before he moved to California and left Automobile. Jason posted a story about her and how much of his career he owes to her on Instagram yesterday. He’s one of my favorite Automotive voices to listen to, at least in his Hagerty-sponsored, kind of nerdy, telling of history of odd cars on YouTube. He has a lot of that same snark and sarcasm done at a high level that made older C/D and Jean Jennings’ writings so enjoyable. He’s kind of an interesting intersection of the old auto journalist guard like Jean that I loved so much and the modern bloggers.
Early Jalopnik was fun because they had some of that same attitude as well, but somewhere they lost that…
Rest in Power, Jean. You are a legend.
I saw Jean at ATL International Airport c. 2008. The weather was extremely shitty that day and both our flights had been delayed. i regret not working up to nerve to say hi, but considering her cell phone was practically glued to her ear the entire time, my window of opportunity was incredibly small.
In a strange coincidence, I was driving back home from somewhere last night and suddenly thought “I wonder what Jean Jennings is up to, she’s great.”
Because she was great, always making everything she did extremely fun and engaging. I don’t think you could read a Jennings piece without your day getting slightly better.
Apparently she had a cameo in a very dumb sounding pilot with Carrol Shelby and Pierce Brosnan called Running Wilde. I’m not sure it exists anywhere but the column describing shooting it was a classic that has stuck in my head for over 30 years.
I subscribed to a lot of car magazines in the 1990s and 2000s. The last magazine I subscribed to was Automobile. I considered it the best of the best. And that was entirely to the credit of Jean Jennings leadership. While 70 is too young, Alzheimer’s is tough. In some ways, leaving this universe for the next earlier than later is a godsend. May the entire multiverse be graced with Jean’s talents.
It sounds like she managed to live a dozen lifetimes worth of experiences in her 70 years. May we all be so lucky.
What an incredible person.
Jean Jennings was Erma Bombeck of automotive journal, infusing lot of comedy and adventure in her columns and articles. Along with David E. Davis, her column, Vile Gossips, was the reason for subscribing to Automobile magazine in the 1980s and 1990s.
I think she inspired the future journalists such as Jeremy Clarkson, James May, and Richard Hammond who made Top Gear and later Grand Tour one of the greatest automotive journalism.
I was 14 and just starting to read car magazines in 1983 and that Baja Mexico road test article was the introduction to me of the personalities and adventure side of the writers.
I was 12 when I read her “One Fake Ferrari” article in Automobile Magazine about the Machiavelli Max (1 of 12: 1986 Machiavelli Max | Barn Finds) which made it clear the Miami-based company was one step ahead of being sued by Ferrari, and somehow also one step from being raided by Crockett and Tubbs.
Jean Jennings and Sabine Schmidt both had an exuberance that just drew you in. I’ll never forget her personality. Sad to hear she’s gone.
70 is too young! 🙁
I’m so sorry to hear this news. I must have read Jean’s work when she was at C/D, but my first memory of her was the early days of Automobile.
Condolences to her family, friends and colleagues. Alzheimer’s is cruel, and seventy is much too young.
I hugged this lovely woman with gusto at the 2018 Amelia Concours when I realized who she was – I’d only ever known her through her prose at that point. I didn’t know who she was, sitting next to us at the Ritz Carlton British pub so we initially talked about music; Soul Coughing, Brian Eno etc. Then I overheard enough of her witty automotive banter with her friends to realize who she was: a Car & Driver writer I’d idolized in my youth for her wit and sarcasm. The hug was 99% consensual – she accepted it gracefully and with a big smile. She’s going to be deeply missed.
Sad news. Jean is a legend and will be greatly missed. May she rest in peace.
RIP to a legend
My all-time favorite picture of Jean was at the end of the C/D demo derby article: holding her trophy and wearing a neck brace and a McGard Wheel Locks T-shirt: “I’ve Got TOUGH NUTS.”
No lies detected.
Wishing her family members and her many friends peace.
What a wonderful voice she had. She came across as smart, funny, and really passionate about cars. (“Irreverent” was almost a given back in the old C/D days.) Her column was always the first I turned to when I got a new issue. If heaven doesn’t already have a lot of fun shit to do with cars, she’ll make it happen.
Way back in ‘93 I had the opportunity to visit the offices of Automobile and it was certainly a treat. I had the distinct honor of meeting and sitting down with Rich Ceppos in his office and also the honorable David E. Davis.
Rich gave me permission to sit in front of Jean’s desk for a moment as she was out of town on one of her many engagements and I along with two of my fellow microfilmers were given a tour of the office.
Would have enjoyed the chance to speak to Jean in person but it was not to happen but always caught up with her with her words on paper and print.
It was a Great Day in Ann Arbor some 31 years ago.
Godspeed Jean.
-OneBigMitsubishiFamily aka Troy Doyle
Wow, this was a real surprise to me. 70 is not old! I grew up with Car & Driver in one of its heydays with Jennings (I keep almost writing Lindamood every time) as a part of it – my first car magazine ever was the October 1984 issue of Car & Driver, and some of my favorite pieces ever were her reports on the early One Lap of America. Rereading my old car magazines being something of a regular habit of mine (and one that my partner finds adorably hilarious), I only a few months ago went back and reread those mid-80s One Lap reports that Jennings wrote. My monthly Car & Driver, Automobile, Road & Track and Motor Trend (and Sports Car Internatioinal!) was a big part of my childhood (and on), and Jennings was one of my favorite writers. I’ll miss her.