Search Results for “carpoolers”.


Interesting story in the Westchester section of the NY Times about NuRide.com, “a national ride-sharing website” that pairs up carpoolers with rides to work. Only NuRide goes traditional carpooling one better, as its 26,000 members can swap ride partners like ’70s suburbanites used to swap wives.

Unlike traditional car pools, NuRiders can switch their rides, enabling those who sign up to, say, ride to work with one person and return home with another.

“Traditional car-pooling is like getting married,” [founder Rick] Steele said. “This is like dating. You can be flexible. That’s essential.”

Thanks to both the price of gas and escalating environmental concerns, NuRide membership has grown 28% in the past year. One guy who commutes from Wappingers Falls to White Plains says he saves $300 a month in gas–and made a few friends.

Mr. Alston said that his experience had “gone above and beyond” simply sharing rides with his car-pooling partners. He has developed friendships on the way to and from work. “It’s been a great experience,” he said, “both financially and socially.”

Pardon my fiscal–and environmental–irresponsibility, but I think I’d rather pay the extra three hundred a month and not have to make small talk at 7 a.m. with strangers.

The new issue of trade mag Broadcasting & Cable weighs in on the new fall shows, and the report isn’t good for Carpoolers, the ABC rook that was going to show the world how much fun it really is to drive to work with a bunch of other guys from the nabe.

The mag asked the nation’s TV critics to weigh in on the best and worst of the new shows, and Carpoolers made the worst list. No, not even the comic stylings of Jerry O’Connell as divorced lothario “Laird” appears capable of keeping Carpoolers out of the breakdOn the bright side, the critics liked Carpoolers more than they did Caveman.

Commuters are slated to get their very own sitcom, as there’s a comedy pilot in the works at ABC called Carpoolers that follows the travails of four “very different men” who carpool to work together each day. It’s from Bruce McCulloch, who you may remember as one of the Kids in the Hall.

 brucemc1.jpg

Given the copycat nature of television, can the definite Metro-North sitcom be far off?