It’s scary how accurate this is. Also do not use cruise control.
It's accurate because Nissan's financing arm went super lax on their credit requirements to charge high interest rates on their loans. Apparently people with really bad credit are just happy to get approved and are unlikely to shop interest rates, so they were able to juice their income for years doing this.
But since people with really bad credit are more likely to defer maintenance and/or forego repairs, you end up seeing a lot of Nissan's with reliability issues (certainly some manufacutirng issues there too though) and on the road with serious dents and dings and bumpers hanging off or missing. That helped trash Nissan's reputation as far as reliability goes and also caused Nissans to become associated with lower socioeconomic status drivers, so they also became less desirable for image status buyers also. The more you know.