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Pimp My Ride

Pimp My Ride
Pimp My Ride logo.jpg
Created by
Presented by
Theme music composer Jeff Cardoni
Country of origin United States
No. of seasons 6
No. of episodes 73 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s)
  • Bruce Beresford-Redman
  • Rick Hurvitz
  • Larry Hochberg
Producer(s)
  • Jennifer Colbert
  • Tess Gamboa
  • Joel Raatz
  • Mark Ryan
  • Brian York
Cinematography Scott Sandman
Editor(s)
  • Brian York
  • Mike Bary
  • Stephen Baumhauer
Running time 27 minutes
Production company(s) MTV Series Development
Release
Original network MTV
Original release March 4, 2004 (2004-03-04) – December 30, 2007 (2007-12-30)
External links
Website

Pimp My Ride was an American television series produced by MTV and hosted by rapper Xzibit. Each episode consists of taking one car in poor condition and restoring it, as well as customizing it. MTV2 has begun airing episodes from Pimp My Ride UK hosted by DJ Tim Westwood, which features cars being customised in Britain, and Pimp My Ride International, featuring cars in central Europe, hosted by rappers Fat Joe and Lil' Jon, as well as the related CMT series Trick My Truck.

This show picks young car owners living in Los Angeles or elsewhere in Southern California. An episode of Pimp My Ride generally begins with the participant showing his or her car off, and convincing MTV why it needs to be "pimped". After this segment, the host (normally rapper Xzibit, but there are occasionally guest hosts such as Chamillionaire) shows up at the participant's house, takes a look at the car himself, makes wisecracks about the particular things that are wrong with it, and promises the owner a complete makeover of the vehicle.

After examining the car, Xzibit takes it to a custom body shop (West Coast Customs (WCC), in Corona, CA, in Seasons 1–4; replaced by Galpin Auto Sports (GAS) starting Season 5), where the shop team generally replaces most of the components and rebuilds the interior and exterior from scratch.

Each car is a custom "pimp", tailored to the personalities and interests of the owners. For example, a Need for Speed: Underground fan had his car painted to look like one specially customized in the Need for Speed: Underground 2 game, while a bowler had a ball spinner installed in his trunk, a badminton player had a badminton net installed in the back of his Dodge Caravan, and a surfer got a clothes dryer in the back of his Volkswagen Type 2. Work usually includes new paint, accessories, chrome, tires and rims, and internal electronics (DVD players, video games, large TFT screens, and other cutting-edge accessories). Most changes are only cosmetic, and mechanical work is generally only done to enable the car to run; the show has replaced entire engines with new engines. Both WCC and GAS are well known for putting their own whimsical touches in their work, such as the aforementioned dryer, or an electric fireplace in the trunk of another vehicle.


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