MTV Removed Some Upgrades As Soon As Filming Wrapped
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Everyone really wanted to believe that the insane upgrades given to cars were kept there. Sure, it's not really practical to drive with a fish tank in the back seat of your car, but people wanted to believe someone out there would do it regardless. Unfortunately, many of the show's upgrades were removed as soon as Pimp My Ride finished filming, either because they weren't street-legal or road-safe (like the drive-in movie theater contraption installed in one episode).
Not all the upgrades were removed, though - some were replaced with street-legal versions. According to the co-executive producer, Larry Hochberg, something like "24-inch spinner rims" looked awesome on TV, but "out of abundance of caution" they swapped them for "beautiful 20s for daily driving."
The Auditions Were Totally Fake, And So Were The Backstories
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MTV didn't actually audition a number of contestants on the show. Brooke Siegel, a contestant who had her Chevy Cavalier pimped, ended up meeting the producers of Pimp My Ride through a mutual friend. They gave her the gig, but the producers made her act in a scene, begging to have her car pimped. They gave her an entire fake backstory, saying she was a 22-year-old film aficionado. In reality, she was a "25-year-old cocktail waitress."
Some Upgrades Were Completely Faulty Or Just Straight-Up Fake
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Seth Martino, a contestant on Pimp My Ride, had LED lights, a cotton candy machine, and a robotic arm added to his car. He admitted that some of the show's upgrades were totally faulty. He ended up having to remove the awesome LED lights installed on the seats because they would get dangerously hot. The cotton candy machine was completely non-functioning and a total mess because it didn't come with a lid. If you used the machine, it shot cotton candy all over the place.
As for the robotic arm, Martino said it was "controlled by commands that were entered into a laptop by the spiky haired guy off screen." In reality, the arm was completely fake and didn't work at all.
The Houses Shown On Set Didn't Belong To Contestants
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Much like MTV's show Cribs, the contestants' houses on Pimp My Ride weren't actually their houses. Contestant Brook Siegel admitted that when Xzibit showed up to her house to tell her she'd been chosen, they didn't even use her real home for the shot.
That Cool Pop Champagne Contraption Was Removed Because It Promoted Drunk Driving
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MTV realized that they didn't want to condone drinking and driving, which is why they removed the super cool pop-up champagne contraption from one contestant's car right after they shot is episode. Justin Dearinger, who offered up his Toyota Rav4, revealed in a Reddit AMA that the customization was just for show. "They actually take out a lot of the stuff that they showed on TV," he said.
Contestants Have Accused 'Pimp My Ride' Of Fat-Shaming
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Pimp My Ride was apparently as rude to their contestants as they were to their cars. In a Reddit AMA, Seth Martino reveals that the producers fat-shamed him. He writes, "They went the extra mile to make me look extra fat by telling the world that I kept candy all over my seat and floor, just in case I got hungry." They wanted to put a cotton candy machine in someone's car, and Martino thinks they picked him just because he was fat. They poured bags of candy into his pre-pimped car to make him look extra chubby.