Autobytel DVD Survey/poll
Are DVD Players Driving Drivers to Distraction or Keeping Kids Quiet? 61% of Drivers Surveyed in Autobytel Snap Poll Say DVDs Are Potential Safety Hazards; In Separate Poll 69% Say They Help Minimize Distraction of Screaming Kids June 30, 2005‹ According to Autobytel Inc.¹s Automotive Information Center (AIC) division, 22 new vehicle models in the U.S. now offer DVD players as standard features while nearly 1 in 5 of all new models offer them as an available option. The bottom line: When you hit the road this summer, there¹s a good chance that a movie will be playing ³in a car near you.² But is that a good thing or a bad thing in terms of driving safety? Critics have denounced the DVD player as just another in a series of high-tech bells and whistles e.g., cell phones, bluetooth, satellite radio, navigation systems, etal that are turning cars into electronic funhouses, and driving drivers to distraction. But these critics may be overlooking the upshot of mobile movie watching rapt, entertained, quiet kids. A recent Autobytel snap poll of its online car shoppers illustrates the dual role of DVD players as both ³good² and ³bad² distractions in the eyes of current drivers. Sixty-one percent of the drivers polled said they feel that DVD/entertainment systems installed in vehicles are a potential safety hazard, yet in a separate poll 69% said they ³helped minimize the distraction of kids screaming and crying by keeping them quiet and focused on movies.² The survey further suggests that DVD players may be doing more overall good than harm, by effectively quelling a major distraction with merely a minor one. When asked to name what they felt was the biggest distraction to drivers, 34% of respondents cited screaming and/or crying children (which finished second only to cell phones, at 47%) while only 12% named DVD players. Eighty-four percent of survey-takers agreed that it should be illegal for front-seat DVD systems to play movies while a car is being driven.
