Back seat driver

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A back seat driver is a passenger in a vehicle who is not in control of the vehicle and does not appear to be comfortable with the skills of the current driver and/or feels the need to tutor said driver.

Some backseat drivers exhibit this type of behaviour simply because they feel unsafe or out of control since they are not driving the vehicle and therefore are nervous and jumpy and overly anxious to give suggestions and criticisms regarding the current drivers actions. The Maine Department of Transportation has a web poster "Are you a Good Back Seat Driver?" asking "True or False: Being a Backseat Driver means it is okay to be noisy or distracting to the driver as long as you are giving them safety tips." The Inland Register produced by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Spokane makes use of it in a sermon: "Even our phrase “back-seat driver” reflects this new-found freedom. Which of us who has graduated to the status of driver enjoys a passenger, especially one out of reach in the back seat, who seems to know how to drive better than we do? "

The Art of being a Backseat Driver in the San Bernadino sbsun summarizes various comments of the sort otherwise found in multiple blogs. Some are specialized, such as the Back Seat Driving blog, formerly the "LA Car Blog."

A famous example of a back seat driver is Hyacinth Bucket on the British sitcom Keeping Up Appearances. The term is also used in Backseat Drivers from Beyond the Stars, an episode of Invader Zim A poem "The Backseat Driver" by Parick G Hughes appears in the Northern Ireland BBC Writer's Showcase.

It is even used as a deliberate game. In All things Considered on NPR for July 19, 2006, there is an account of a "Back Seat Driver competition in Forest City, Iowa. ... The event -- in which a driver races backward while blindfolded and instructed by the voice of a companion over an intercom -- is in its eighth year." It has even been noticed by People's Daily [1].

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[edit] In a more technological sense

The term has also been used for devices installed in a car, which observe the driving through electronic means, and inform the driver or a third party. Back Seat Drivers are moving Up Front by Anne Eisenberg in the New York Times, Feb 4, 2007.

[edit] In a figurative sense

The term is also used in an allusive sense, for a person who gives advice and instructions about what he is not responsible for, and may not well understand. For example, Journalism's Back Seat Drivers in American Journalism Review of April 7, 2007, discusses how "The ascendant blogosphere has rattled the news media with its tough critiques and nonstop scrutiny of their reporting." It is an especially common use in articles dealing with the automobile industry, as in The Backseat Driver gets his Way: Bernd Pischetsrieder Quits as Boss of Europe's Biggest Carmaker in The Economist for Nov. 9, 2006.

[edit] Pop Culture

The Pennsylvania based indie/rock outfit Backseat Driver takes their name from said phrase.

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