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This woman was quoted $500 to fix her car's sun visor — so she got a $50 part from Amazon and did it herself

This woman was quoted $500 to fix her car's sun visor — so she got a $50 part from Amazon and did it herself

Yahoo2 days ago

When TikTok user Julia Lutz was told it would cost $500 to replace her car's broken sun visor, she didn't just take the quote at face value — she took matters into her own hands. Armed with a $50 part from Amazon, a screwdriver and a couple of how-to videos, she pulled off the repair herself.
'I found a replacement on Amazon for $50,'she said in her recent TikTok.'About to watch probably like two TikToks, maybe a YouTube video — I'm going to replace this.'
Lutz ended up saving $450 by skipping the shop — and she's not alone. As car technology gets more advanced, repair prices are climbing. Maintenance and repair costs rose 4.1% annually from 2013 to 2023, outpacing the 2.8% average inflation rate, as reported by CNBC.
While prices vary depending on the make and model, more Americans are noticing a gap between what shops charge and what the repair actually costs — and many are starting to wonder: Should I just fix it myself?
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Lutz's repair quote may have seemed steep — but she's far from alone. The comment section flooded with similar struggles, sharing sky-high bills for what they say were relatively minor fixes.
One Toyota owner said she was quoted $650 to replace a window regulator — a part she later bought for just $50. Another chimed in and wrote, ''I got quoted to change my serpentine belt for $400 when a belt is $30 at autozone, so I did it myself. I am no mechanic but YouTube is the best teacher I ever had.'
These stories echo a broader trend of the rising labor and parts cost. In 2019, the average labor rate for auto repairs was below $50 an hour, according to repair software firm Mitchell as reported by CNBC. By the end of 2023, that figure had jumped to nearly $60. Much of that increase came in the post-pandemic years, as repair demand slowed, skilled techs left the industry and parts prices surged due to global shipping disruptions.
'If cars are to be affordable, they must also be affordable to maintain,'Alan Amici, president and CEO of the Center for Automotive Research, told CNBC. 'And they must be affordable to repair, or else we're going to have fewer vehicle sales. So I think the automakers are going to be motivated to drive those costs down.'
The recent tariffs are only adding fuel to this fire. The Trump administration has added a 25% tariff to all imported auto parts — from engines to electrical components — making even basic repairs more expensive for everyday drivers. And while more recently, a U.S. federal court has blocked Trump's broader plan to impose global trade tariffs, not all tariffs are off the table and the policy keeps changing. Existing duties on steel, aluminum and auto imports under a separate law — the Trade Expansion Act's Section 232 — still stand, meaning drivers aren't in the clear just yet.
Read more: Want an extra $1,300,000 when you retire? Dave Ramsey says — and that 'anyone' can do it
You can't control the economy — or the rising cost of car parts — but you can control how you budget for your next repair bill.
When Lutz's car needed work, she skipped the mechanic and turned to Amazon for parts and YouTube for guidance. DIY can save you hundreds — especially for simpler fixes like window regulators or serpentine belts. But when it comes to major repairs like engines or transmissions, it's usually smarter (and safer) to leave it to the pros.
Consumer Reports cautions that while DIY jobs might offer short-term savings, mistakes can cost you more in the long run. It may also mean voiding possible warranties, so be sure to first check what your DIY repair might impact. That said, working with a mechanic doesn't mean paying full price.
According to a Consumer Reports survey, many independent shops and national chains were rated highly for offering discounts and being open to negotiation. Dealerships, on the other hand, didn't score well when it came to affordability or flexibility.
And, of course, it's important not to ignore the warning signs. If your car starts squealing, leaking or making mysterious new noise, get it checked out sooner rather than later. Catching problems early can be another way to save you even more in the long run.
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This article provides information only and should not be construed as advice. It is provided without warranty of any kind.

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Trump admin live updates: Trump signs proclamation banning travel from 12 countries

time18 minutes ago

Trump admin live updates: Trump signs proclamation banning travel from 12 countries

The president cited national security concerns for enacting the ban. President Donald Trump on Wednesday will meet with a group of Senate Republicans as he pushes lawmakers to pass his "One Big Beautiful Bill Act." The sweeping immigration and tax bill faces pushback from some GOP members over concerns about growing the national debt and changes to Medicaid. It's also receiving heavy criticism from Elon Musk, who called it an "abomination." Meanwhile, Trump's higher steel and aluminum tariffs went into effect earlier Wednesday, doubling from 25% to 50%. Latest headlines: Jun 04, 2025, 10:23 PM EDT Trump blocks foreign students from entering US to attend Harvard Jun 04, 2025, 8:04 PM EDT Trump signs proclamation banning travel from 12 countries Jun 04, 2025, 8:17 PM EDT Trump orders investigation into whether Biden admin sought to cover up his mental state Jun 04, 2025, 4:43 PM EDT US steel and aluminum tariffs 'unlawful and unjustified': Carney Jun 04, 2025, 4:34 PM EDT Blue-state House Republicans threaten to derail megabill if Senate changes SALT caps Jun 04, 2025, 12:18 PM EDT Schumer criticizes Republicans, funding bill after CBO analysis Here's how the news is developing. Jun 04, 2025, 10:23 PM EDT Trump blocks foreign students from entering US to attend Harvard In the latest escalation of the White House's fight with Harvard University, President Donald Trump signed a proclamation Wednesday blocking foreign students from entering the U.S. to attend the school. Trump invoked the Immigration and Nationality Act to prohibit the entry of noncitizens from entering the U.S. to study at Harvard for at least six months, arguing the institution is "no longer a trustworthy steward" of international students. The proclamation also directed the secretary of state to consider revoking the visas of foreign students already in the U.S. to study at Harvard. "I have determined that the entry of the class of foreign nationals described above is detrimental to the interests of the United States because, in my judgment, Harvard's conduct has rendered it an unsuitable destination for foreign students and researchers," the proclamation said. Last month, the Department of Homeland Security tried to revoke Harvard's Student and Exchange Visitor Program last month -- which allows the school to sponsor foreign students – a federal judge issued a temporary order blocking the move. 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A three-judge panel on the First Circuit Court of Appeals found 'no basis on which to conclude' a federal judge erred when he issued a preliminary injunction last month blocking the effort to lay off half of the Department of Education's employees. 'What is at stake in this case, the District Court found, was whether a nearly half-century-old cabinet department would be permitted to carry out its statutorily assigned functions or prevented from doing so by a mass termination of employees aimed at implementing the effective closure of that department,' the judges wrote in the order. The court said there is 'no force' to the Trump administration's contention that the lower court's order would cause them any irreparable injury by "undermining implementation of an important presidential policy." 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Involution or evolution? China wants to stop the EV price war, but analysts are doubtful
Involution or evolution? China wants to stop the EV price war, but analysts are doubtful

CNBC

time25 minutes ago

  • CNBC

Involution or evolution? China wants to stop the EV price war, but analysts are doubtful

BEIJING — Chinese regulators aren't pleased about the price war brewing in its automotive sector, but industry players and analysts only see the competition heating up. "A certain automaker has taken the lead in launching significant price cuts and many companies have followed suit, triggering a new round of 'price war' panic," the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers said in a Chinese-language statement Saturday, translated by CNBC. The government-linked body was taking shots at electric vehicle giant BYD, which sparked the latest round of discounts on May 23, including a more than 30% price cut on one of its car models. "Disorderly 'price wars' intensify vicious competition," the association said, warning of further pressure on profit margins and consumer safety risks. It called for companies to abide by fair competition and not monopolize the market or "dump" goods at prices below the cost of production. "'Price wars' have no winners, much less a future," People's Daily, the official newspaper of the ruling Chinese Communist Party, subsequently said in an article, citing the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology. That's according to a CNBC translation of the Chinese. The ministry will increase regulation of non-productive competition and cooperate with other departments to enforce laws promoting fair competition, the report said. The ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment. BYD referred CNBC to its comment to China's state media, in which the automaker said it firmly supports the manufacturing association's calls for fair competition and creating a healthy market. There's even a buzzword in China to describe such excessive competition, in a race to the bottom: , or "involution." China's top leaders have in the last several months increasingly called for efforts to address involution. The term was mentioned in Chinese Premier Li Qiang's annual work report in March. The market regulator's meeting last month also called for "comprehensively rectifying 'involutionary' competition." Analysts noted that BYD's latest markdowns are actually formalizing discounts that consumers would have likely received previously under China's trade-in subsidy program, which aimed to boost consumption. Despite nearly a 30% market share, BYD faces competitive pressure as well, Nomura analysts pointed out in a report Monday. The automaker, which counted Warren Buffett as an early investor, reported 14% growth in sales last month, a slowdown from 19% year-on-year growth in April. "Given the current oversupply situation in the China auto market, we believe the most intense competitive phase is yet to come, until if we can see a meaningful market consolidation in the future," the Nomura analysts said. Despite the rhetoric, there isn't much that can be done about market competition, Zhong Shi, an analyst with the China Automobile Dealers Association, said last week. He added that other countries are also watching the intense competition in China's car market and what it could mean for their local auto industries. The average price of a car exported from China has fallen since 2023, reversing an upward trend previously, according to figures published on social media by the China Passenger Car Association's Secretary-General Cui Dongshu. For China auto sales to Germany, the average export price per vehicle has fallen to $21,000 as of this year, down from $30,000 in 2023, the data showed. In Mexico, the top destination for Chinese car exports, was an exception, with the average price rising to $13,000, up from $12,000 two years ago. 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The conservative-friendly studio beating Hollywood at its own game
The conservative-friendly studio beating Hollywood at its own game

Boston Globe

time38 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

The conservative-friendly studio beating Hollywood at its own game

Get The Gavel A weekly SCOTUS explainer newsletter by columnist Kimberly Atkins Stohr. Enter Email Sign Up The movie is one of the latest from Angel Studios, which is devoted to TV shows and movies that 'amplify light.' It successfully caters to a growing market of Americans who want values-driven entertainment and are dismayed with what they consider Hollywood's nihilism and tired storytelling. Advertisement As the lights dimmed for the screening of 'The Last Rodeo,' McDonough told a whooping crowd of family, friends, and fans that they'd see him kissing Ruvé in his portrayal of Joe Wainwright, a retired rodeo legend who has to return to bull riding in hopes of winning enough money for his ailing grandson's cancer treatment. Advertisement Neal and Ruvé McDonough were coproducers on the film, giving them the creative freedom to shape the casting. But McDonough told me that it can be a gamble for major studios to sign off on such maneuvers. He believes his project only made it to the big screen because he worked with a studio that shares his values. 'They said, 'Who do you want to play your wife in the film?' And I said, 'There's only one person's gonna play it; it's my wife, Ruvé,'' McDonough told me. 'And [Angel] said, 'Well, that makes sense.'' The differences between Angel Studios and Hollywood were apparent at the Texas premiere of 'The Last Rodeo,' starting with the suggested dress code on the invitation: boots and bowties. A Stetson-sporting McDonough beamed with his gaggle of five children while Ruvé stunned in a floor-length gown of denim patchwork. The stars, producers, and director of "The Last Rodeo" posed with family members at the film's Texas premiere. Carine Hajjar/Globe Staff But the overall vibe was decidedly less about couture than culture. Speaking to a mix of press, country influencers, and Southwestern personalities lining the red carpet, people involved with the film were open about how 'The Last Rodeo' deals with themes that aren't popular in the Hollywood circles they know well. The movie's director, Jon Avnett, who directed 'Fried Green Tomatoes' and produced 'Black Swan,' told me about the film's emphasis on 'the power of family.' Mykelti Williamson, who portrayed Private Benjamin Buford 'Bubba' Blue in 'Forrest Gump' and plays Wainwright's old friend in 'The Last Rodeo,' said the movie tells a story of an America that's 'actually a good place, with a lot of good people in it.' He added: 'She's not perfect, but she's worth it.' Advertisement Instead of a glitzy afterparty, Angel put on a barbecue for fans and benefactors and their families. Parents holding hot dogs looked on with half terror, half amusement as little boys fought for the next turn on an electric bull. Rodeo queens in fringed red leather and rhinestone cowgirl hats took selfies, while toddlers took wobbly steps around the various field games. If you wanted to wash it down with a beer from the drink stand, you'd have to settle for a Coke. It was unlike Hollywood in every way. And that's been the key to Angel's success. Mykelti Williamson in 'The Last Rodeo.' Angel Studios Avoiding cringe and outrage The American mainstream is in turmoil — and it's not just the 'liberal media' or lefty universities. It's many of the cultural institutions that have been swallowed up by the progressive crazes of the last decade. From Actors have always had a knack for publicly fawning over progressive causes and shaking their fists at Republicans. But those progressive sensibilities have spilled over to the way films are made, too. Now it seems as if every movie that portrays a white or male protagonist needs a remake. (I'm looking at you, 'She-Hulk: Attorney at Law.') It's safe to assume that Americans who are sick of having progressive politics shoved down their throats might also feel as if it's being stuffed into their popcorn buckets. That creates an opportunity for a studio like Angel to make entertainment for a market underserved by the mainstream. Advertisement Starting with families. Angel's cofounder Jeff Harmon says the studio began as the answer to a Harmon family problem. For him and his three brothers, Neal, Daniel, and Jordan, that problem was the erosion of values portrayed by Hollywood. 'I think for all of us as fathers, we were looking with our families at how quickly the entertainment was accelerating toward nihilism,' Jordan told me, sitting next to Jeff. Naming examples like 'House of Cards' and 'Game of Thrones,' he bemoaned the fact that 'you watch a great movie, the whole thing's great. And at the very end, the whole moral of the story is, 'Everybody's bad.'' The brothers figured that addressing this problem could make for a good business. Jordan, Neal, and Jeffery Harmon at Angel Studios in Provo, Utah, on March 31. RUSSEL DANIELS/NYT At the Fort Worth barbecue, I met Brittany Graves, a 36-year-old mother of four and member of the Angel Guild, whose roughly 1.2 million members pay a monthly fee for access to Angel's content. She told me that 'it's a lot more refreshing to watch [Angel's] movies than kind of the predictable Hollywood norm.' She describes herself as a Christian and homesteader, saying that she agrees more with 'the values that are portrayed in [Angel's] movies' than 'just being hit with cussing and soft-core and sometimes even hardcore porn' that you get from Hollywood. Nearby, Shandelyn Spadke told me that she and her husband, Trae, invest in Angel because they are 'very firm believers in conservative ideas.' As she bounced a baby on her knee, the mother of five said, 'Most of the time we have to censor and preview what they watch. But she doesn't have that problem with 'Tuttle Twins,' a children's show that Advertisement The Harmons say that Angel is essentially replacing the traditional tastemakers who turn up their noses at values-infused entertainment. 'Filmmakers have no issue making great family content; they don't have an issue making faith content, as long as it resonates and it's good storytelling, and it's done with craftsmanship,' Jeff Harmon says. What's missing are studio executives who want this kind of entertainment. 'You replace those gatekeepers — these executives that are out of touch, generally don't have normal families, don't look like Middle America; they don't look like the rest of the world — and you replace those people with the people who are the rest of the world.' Shandelyn Spadke and her baby at the Fort Worth barbecue hosted by Angel Studios. Carine Hajjar/Globe Staff That's where the idea for the Angel Guild came from. The members pay $12 and up per month for access to the programming at home — and the ability to shape it. Angel only produces films that the guild members want to see. First they vote on a 'torch,' or a proof of concept from filmmakers, like a short clip or a pilot episode. If the torch passes the guild, filmmakers can go on to produce their projects. But members also get to vote on final cuts and even provide feedback. Jordan Harmon says Angel Studios filmmakers have gotten more than 100,000 comments from guild members over the last 18 months. The Harmons believe that this is the key to Angel's high audience ratings. Angel Advertisement Wookyung Kim, Kristin Chenoweth, Seong-ho 'Jay' Jang, and Leia Jang attended the premiere of Angel Studios' "The King Of Kings" in Franklin, Tenn., on March Angel Studios Some of Angel's films deal with conservative themes or religious subjects, but it would be a mistake to lump them in with overtly conservative entertainment projects — like those produced by the entertainment studio that the Daily Wire, a conservative news outlet, announced in 2021. If titles like 'Am I a Racist?' and 'What Is a Woman?' don't give it away, many Daily Wire productions are an attempt to make entertainment out of owning the libs. Other conservative productions can be driven overtly by religion and are less concerned with production values and storytelling. Angel avoids earnest cringe and political outrage. That's because its projects aren't ever just characterized by a political or religious message. Even the New York Times The deference to storytelling over pontificating hasn't stopped critics from trying to label Angel conservative ideologues. 'Sound of Freedom,' for example, was The Harmons, who belong to the Church of Latter Day Saints, call Angel a 'faith-friendly' studio and don't allow their productions to take the Lord's name in vain. But the themes and stories they help produce are determined by the Angel Guild, and will evolve as it grows. And since it is serving an underserved market, an initial rightward tilt is to be expected. What's surprising is just how large that market seems to be. 'Our hypothesis is that we're actually going for the biggest segment of the entire entertainment world,' Jordan told me. In collaboration with the Faith and Media Initiative, Harris X Neal McDonough starred in Angel Studios' "Homestead," which had its premiere on Dec. 10, 2024, in Los Angel Studios Like the film 'Cabrini,' which tells the story of Mother Francis Xavier Cabrini's life and ministry to poor immigrants, especially orphaned Italian children in New York City. On the surface this is a story about a Catholic saint. But it deals with themes like standing up to the male-dominated church leadership and overcoming racism through her work for the poor and scorned migrants in America. The film earned a Rotten Tomatoes audience score of 98 percent and Some Angel productions aren't religious at all. Tony Hale, known for his role as Buster Bluth in the hit show 'Arrested Development,' is Even though the Harmons have kept to the sidelines of the raging culture wars, they have clearly benefited from conservative victories. Like Donald Trump's which depicts an animated Charles Dickens sharing the story of Jesus' life with his son. But Angel isn't interested in sticking it to the mainstream — its intention is to become the mainstream. 'Stories are upstream from culture,' Jordan Harmon says. And Angel intends to produce 'some of the most timeless stories throughout history.' Carine Hajjar is a Globe Opinion writer. She can be reached at

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