And what about all the super fast cars Germany, Italy and other countries produce? The French love Le Mans, and historically there was never a speed limit on the Autobahn...
And it's not like the Brits have not always had a thing for super fast cars themselves...maybe not for the average person, but certainly for the better off
Anyway, NASCAR is part of our culture as the Indianapolis 500 always was...
30 December 2013 Last updated at 19:00 ET
Why the US is addicted to fast cars and street racing
Film
and TV star Idris Elba - best known as Stringer Bell from The Wire -
has been touring the US as part of a series about the history of
underground racing. It turns out the American obsession with speed dates
back to the Prohibition era.
But ever since automobile production began in Detroit there has been a temptation to speed.
Daniel Pierce, a professor of history at the University of North Carolina, says: "I don't think the love of speed was so much an effort to thumb your nose at the authorities, although that was part of it.
"Speed was tied up with masculinity for a lot of young males. Especially in the south, and in southern California, to make a car go fast and to be able to control it was a sign of masculinity."
Prof Pierce, editor of Real Nascar: White Lightning, Red Clay, and Big Bill France, adds: "[Nascar driver] Richard Petty once said the first automobile race was when the second cat got his car."
The first mass-produced car was the Curved Dash Oldsmobile, which had a top speed of only 20mph (30km/h), and went into production in 1901.
That same year, the state of Connecticut introduced a 12mph speed limit.
Over the following 19 years he would produce 15 million Model Ts from a factory in Detroit.
But the 1920s and 1930s was the era of Prohibition and the bootleggers bringing whisky in from Canada or transporting it across "dry" states needed faster cars to outwit the police and federal agents.
"You had to have fast cars to haul your whiskey to the people and to get away from the revenue and the ABC [Alcoholic Beverage Control commission] and the federal officers," says Junior Johnson, a former bootlegger from North Carolina who became a legend in the world of Nascar racing.
"If it hadn't been for whiskey, Nascar wouldn't have been formed. That's a fact," adds Johnson, who was jailed a year after he began his Nascar career, for running an illegal whiskey still, a crime that was pardoned 30 years later by President Ronald Reagan.
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Find out more
- Watch the first episode of Idris Elba: King of Speed on the BBC iPlayer.
While Al Capone was shuttled around Chicago in a bulletproof Cadillac,
his underlings would outrun the Feds in a Chevrolet Mercury or a
Packard DeLuxe Roadster, which could reach 70mph or 100mph respectively.
Barrow wrote that the V8 was a "dandy car" and added: "For sustained speed and freedom from trouble the Ford has got every other car skinned."
After the war there was a boom in the number of people owning cars in the US and some of these motorists wanted to drive fast and even race each other.
Illegal street racing became popular in the 1950s and dozens of drivers and spectators were killed during that decade.
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Idris Elba and cars
- Born in Hackney, east London, in 1972
- First job was as tyre-fitter in nearby Forest Gate
- Father was a shop steward for 25 years at the giant Ford factory in Dagenham. He died earlier this year, aged 76
- When he was 14 he bought his first car, a Mini Clubman and six years later he bought a Ford Fiesta XR2 and became a "boy racer"
- In the 2007 film Daddy's Little Girls he played a mechanic
- Next year he will star in No Good Deed, playing a sinister stranger who calls on a single mother after her car breaks down
The authorities in California encouraged Wally Parks when he set up the National Hot Rod Association, which promoted drag racing in safe, off-street tracks.
A third genre, Indy car racing - akin to Europe's Formula 1 - suffered a setback in 1957 when, two years after the Le Mans disaster in France which killed 77 spectators, US car manufacturers were banned from taking part in the sport.
Nowadays Nascar is the second most lucrative sport in the US, behind American football, with top drivers such as Dale Earnhardt Jr earning $25m (£15m) a year.
Nascar was traditionally most popular in the southern US but it has in recent years attracted fans from Michigan, California and Arizona.
But despite the popularity of Nascar and drag racing, there remains a sub-culture devoted to illegal street racing.
In 2001 - the same year the first Fast and Furious film came out - the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) reported that police listed street racing as a factor in 135 fatal crashes, up from 72 the previous year. But the NHTSA does not keep street racing data.
NHTSA spokesman David Strickland says: "Motorists who drive at excessive speeds put themselves and others at an increased risk of being involved in a crash and possibly of being injured or killed."
Actor Idris Elba, who adopted a Baltimore accent for the TV series The Wire but grew up in London's East End, went to meet some street racers in Detroit and says: "I don't condone what they do, I can see why they do it. It is very exciting."
But Prof Pierce says street racing is nowhere near as popular nowadays as it was in his youth. "You can do it in a video game now and it's a little safer," he says.
He adds: "I don't think there is quite the car culture that you had in the 50s, 60s or 70s. It's hard to work on your own car any more because everything is computerised and young men don't seem to be so tied to cars as they were when I grew up."
Elba, whose father was a shop steward at the enormous Ford factory in Dagenham, east London, says: "Cars, racing, speed, they are and have been for many people throughout history, a way of life - either a means to make a living, or a means to escape.
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Street racing glossary
- Tuner cars - modern high-performance cars specially adapted with devices such as turbochargers. Popular models include Subaru WRX STi, Nissan R36 GTR and the Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution.
- Muscle cars - vehicles from the 1950s or 60s souped up with big tyres, chrome wheel trims and dual exhaust pipes.
- Drifting - deliberately over-steering into a bend - causing loss of traction in the rear wheels - but without losing control.
- Touge - two cars chasing each other single file through twisty mountain roads. Like drifting it originated in Japan.
- From a dig - when street racing takes place from a standstill such as an intersection stop light.
- From a roll - street racing when the cars are already at speed, and typically starts around 30 mph or 60 mph.
- Low riders - cars which are specially adapted so as to have minimal ground clearance. Hydraulic pumps allow them to raise and drop suspension to create a bouncing motion.
"I'm addicted to speed, it's no
secret, but whilst travelling, listening, learning and telling these
amazing stories, what surprised me the most, was just how far people are
willing to go, the risks people are willing to take, to satisfy that
addiction."
In 1971 a group of mavericks, led by Brock Yates Sr, started
the Cannonball Run - which was later fictionalised in a highly
successful movie with Burt Reynolds and an all-star cast - involved a
2,800 mile coast-to-coast race.It was named after Erwin "Cannonball" Baker, who had set a record of 53 hours for the drive in 1933.
Yates and co-driver Dan Gurney - winner of the 1967 Le Mans 24-hour race in France - cut that time to 35 hours and 54 minutes and amazingly picked up only one speeding fine.
Yates's son, Brock Jr, says: "Cannonball was started for two reasons - to prove that good drivers could traverse long distances at high speed safely... and a protest against the [proposed] 55[mph speed limit]."
But despite protests such as the Cannonball Run, President Richard Nixon introduced a national speed limit of 55mph (88kph) in 1973.
The limit has very little to do with safety. It was introduced as a result of the oil crisis triggered by the 1973 Arab-Israeli War.
Driving slower conserved fuel and with the US facing oil shortages there was an urgent need to cut speed.
But many car enthusiasts believed driving fast was as American as apple pie and the US government gradually backtracked on the 55mph limit.
In 1987 it went up to 65mph and in 1995 it was scrapped altogether, with power being passed back to individual states.
Nowadays speed limits range from 60mph in Hawaii to 80mph in Utah.
In October last year Texas granted permission for an 85mph limit on a new toll road between Austin and San Antonio.
Scot Keller, chief curator of the LeMay Museum in Tacoma, Washington, says higher speed limits tend to be allowed in states with "vast open spaces".
"The enthusiasm for films like Fast and Furious show that people like to do things that are dangerous or outside of the norm.
"Young people who are racing these performance cars, the tuner cars, the muscle cars, are very much like the hot-rodders in the 1950s. But they are starting with vehicles which involve computers and more sophisticated engines," says Mr Keller.
Watch the first episode of Idris Elba: King of Speed on the BBC iPlayer.
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