My first car was a 78 Buick Skyhawk (think Monza, with a Buick badge) - it had a 3.8l engine that the mechanic that owned it had tweaked out - top end was 130Mph. Ooh...I have a pic!
Yes, that's me with a mullet, picking up the car in 1989.

The green van is a Culliton Brothers van - they're a heating, electrical and cooling contractor based out of Stratford, Ontario. (I did a 6 month sheet metal apprenticeship with them before I had had enough with my foreman and quit)
Anywho - I had several GM's over the years - including a 2-door Grand Prix GTP back in 1997. That car was fun as well.
Rural people buy from the "big 3" - or did, back then, as we were keeping jobs in Canada and the US. (and all of our buddies that worked on cars could help us source parts easily enough).
I think the last one that I had was a Chevy Impala around 2011? 2011 is when I bought the Hyundai Tucson and BMW Z4 3.5i. (and, yes, the Z4 still pangs me how much I miss that car) *sniff*
I did pull out the stock infotainment system in the Tuscon and put in an Alpine head unit - one of the first ones to support wireless CarPlay.
Once you've had CarPlay, it's a deal breaker. That was likely my single biggest reason to never buy a Tesla. Well....and their douchbag CEO....who I knew always was a douchbag.
Car makers that don't listen to their customer base are doomed to fail.
I remember reading articles years ago how the car makers didn't want to give up the interface as they wanted to own the experience in the car. Here's a clue guys - throw money at Apple to put your own skin on CarPlay.
GM and others that follow this lead are reducing their already dwindling market share.