0:00 / 0:00
DON'T SLEEP ON THE MALL

DON'T SLEEP ON THE MALL

The Carpool with Kelly and Lizz May 06, 2026 56 min
0:00
0:00

About this episode

Kelly and Lizz bounce from teacher appreciation week and a solo-parenting update into a surprisingly enthusiastic defense of mall outings with kids. They talk through money-savvy children, a baby who cut off her own ponytail, and the realities of potty training before turning to car reliability and why big purchases deserve a fresh definition. The back half leans into shopping, pregnancy comfort clothes, and easy family dinners, with the mall food court emerging as a practical fix for dinner rut fatigue.

Filter:
|
Technical Too Afraid to Ask
Term

car reliability

"[1676.6s] So the next thing is I posted a reel about car reliability. [1686.8s] I'm like, I'm not going to, I mean, you can go watch the reel because I've been in a lot of [1689.7s] comments about just like how, why I never talk about reliability."

“Car reliability” means how dependable a car is—how often it breaks down or needs expensive repairs. Two cars that look similar can have very different reliability depending on the exact model and how they were maintained.

Concept

vehicle service contract

"Yeah. I mean, it's a, it's cars, especially it's a very big decision. And while the car mom offers so many great resources, it's still a 40, 60, 70 thousand dollar decision that you're making."

A vehicle service contract is like an extra warranty you can buy. It helps cover some repair costs if something breaks after the original warranty ends.

Concept

trade it in

"Because like the, and people don't like the statistic, but you have to realize it's most people, the majority of people only keep a car for 36 months. They trade it in. Most people are in the car market every three to four years."

“Trade it in” means you give your current car to the dealer and use that as part of the payment for a new one. It matters because many people switch cars after a few years.

Car

Honda Odyssey

"Okay. Honda stretches life cycles of a cord odyssey in HRV after costly EV pullback. American Honda ..."

The Honda Odyssey is a family van made to carry people comfortably. It has seats that can be rearranged and lots of space for trips or daily errands. It comes up in conversation because it’s a well-known model that Honda has kept in the lineup for a long time.

Car

Honda Hrv

"... Honda stretches life cycles of a cord odyssey in HRV after costly EV pullback. American Honda is stre..."

The Honda HR-V is a small SUV meant for everyday driving. It sits higher than a typical car, which can make it easier to get in and out. It’s mentioned because it’s a popular, practical model that Honda has kept around as plans for other vehicles changed.

Term

life cycle

"[2887.3s] Honda stretches life cycles of a cord odyssey in HRV after costly EV pullback. [2894.7s] American Honda is stretching the life cycles."

“Life cycle” here means how long a particular generation of a car stays in production before it gets replaced or heavily redesigned.

Concept

electric vehicle (EV) pullback

"[2887.3s] Honda stretches life cycles of a cord odyssey in HRV after costly EV pullback. [2902.8s] pivoting away from its ambitious electric vehicle plan."

“EV pullback” means Honda is backing off a bit from its electric-car plans. The idea is they’re changing course because the original plan didn’t go as expected.

Term

powertrain

"[2908.5s] Then it says, the job needs automakers squeezing more cash from proven platforms [2911.6s] while developing more efficient higher power trains for each other."

A powertrain is what makes the car move—basically the main mechanical/electrical system that includes the engine or motor and the parts that send power to the wheels.

Concept

proven platforms

"[2908.5s] Then it says, the job needs automakers squeezing more cash from proven platforms [2911.6s] while developing more efficient higher power trains for each other."

“Proven platforms” means car “building blocks” that already work well and have been used before. Automakers reuse them to save money and reduce risk while they develop newer tech.

2 cars featured

Request an Explanation

Heard something you'd like explained? We'll add it to this episode.

Sign in to request explanations for terms you heard.

Want to learn more?

Browse our glossary for plain-English explanations of automotive terms, jargon, and concepts.

Explore Terms

Help improve this episode

See something that's not quite right? Our annotations are AI-generated and can sometimes miss the mark. Click the flag icon on any annotation to suggest a correction.

Report incorrect info
Suggest better explanations
Flag missing cars