JERRY REED DIDN’T WRITE A LOVE SONG. HE WROTE A COMPLAINT LETTER TO HENRY FORD — AND EVERY BROKE DRIVER IN AMERICA UNDERSTOOD IT. In the late 1960s, Jerry Reed took one of the most ordinary frustrations in America and turned it into mischief. Traffic. Repair bills. Monthly payments. That feeling of loving your car until it starts eating your paycheck one part at a time. So he imagined writing straight to Henry Ford. Not with anger exactly. With that Jerry Reed grin hiding under every line. The song looked back at the “simple horseless carriage” and asked how something meant to make life easier had turned into highways, breakdowns, horns, debt, and everybody rushing nowhere faster than before. That was Reed’s gift. He could take a complaint most people muttered under their breath and make it bounce. It was funny, yes. But it worked because the joke was true. Jerry Reed made a car song that was not really about cars. It was about every working person who ever looked at a bill, looked at the driveway, and wondered if progress had played a trick on them.
Jerry Reed Didn’t Write a Love Song. He Wrote a Complaint Letter to Henry Ford — and Every Broke Driver…