GIRL THAT DRIVES A JEEP: Brand, Bass & the Business of Good Vibes
- Quadeera Teart

- 15 minutes ago
- 4 min read
From producer and artist Moultrie’s perspective — how culture, commerce, and community became a record built to move bodies

Some records are created from emotion. Some are created from experience.
This one was created from intention.
From producer and artist Moultrie’s perspective, “GIRL THAT DRIVES A JEEP” was born in a
business-focused season. His mind was centered on sales, marketing, advertisement, and sync placements. He was already reaching out to companies. Already crafting advertisement jingles.
Already thinking about how music integrates with brand.
He had just released a single titled “I AIN’T GOT TIME.” Momentum was active.
Then a videographer who shot that video invited him to a Jeep & Bronco event to capture content.
That event introduced him to the Jeep community—and to fellow artist Super Pinky.
That moment became the spark.
The culture. The visibility. The energy of the community. Super Pinky’s presence within it.
From there, “GIRL THAT DRIVES A JEEP” took shape—brand-friendly, market-aware, and culturally aligned.
Not accidental inspiration.Strategic creation.
Designed to Shift the Body
Moultrie is clear about what he wants listeners to feel.
He wants women to feel loved.He wants men to feel confident about loving.
He wants those who don’t drive Jeeps to feel a sudden urge to.He wants those who do drive them to feel proud, seen, and represented.
There is no apology for the commercial intelligence here. If the record contributes to gatherings, to community celebration—even to a sales spike—he welcomes it. When music makes people move, energy circulates. And when energy circulates, economies move too.
But beneath the market awareness is something simple: good vibes on purpose.
This is music meant to lift posture, relax shoulders, and make you turn the volume up proudly.

A Soundtrack for Real Life
Moultrie describes his music as a soundtrack for life.
Road trips with the windows down. Singing loud enough to feel like you’re headlining your own concert. Standing in the mirror before a big presentation, channeling your inner 8 Mile moment with headphones on.
It lives in:
Driving
Decompression
Creative flow
Movement
Confidence-building
Play
Identity reinforcement
Whether preparing for the day or pushing through a workout, the rhythm is built to activate.
Go hard or go home.

Permission to Be Wild & Unapologetic
When asked what identity this record gives people permission to access, Moultrie’s answer is direct:
Wild. Free. Happy. Unified.
Even a touch of bringing chivalry back.
The hook says it plainly:
“Falling in love with a girl that drives a Jeep… she unique, make my heart skip a beat…”
It’s flirtation layered over bass. Masculine admiration without insecurity. Feminine identity without shrinking.
Because Super Pinky authentically embodies that Jeep culture energy, the record doesn’t feel manufactured. It feels lived in.
The Parking Lot Test
Before release, every track goes through the same ritual.
Empty parking lot. Doors open. Music blasting.
Moultrie listens for flaws. Adjusts rhythm. Ensures the drums and rhymes create a natural internal reaction—either transporting him mentally or making his body move automatically.
If it doesn’t shift him, it doesn’t go out.
By the time it’s released, he may be tired of hearing it. But once the world hears it, excitement returns. Now others get to feel what he felt alone.
And most likely, he’s moving right there with them.

On Energy & Responsibility
Moultrie does not believe artists should be forced to carry the world’s responsibility for energy.
Yet he acknowledges a truth: once music is released, it becomes vibration in motion.
Repetition magnifies message. Rhythm amplifies influence. Words carry power.
As artists grow, consciousness evolves. Lyrics are reconsidered. Delivery is questioned. Awareness increases.
But listeners hold power too. People choose what they entertain. They choose what enters their nervous system.
Music influences. Discernment directs.
The Culture Beneath the Surface
Beyond Jeeps and events, Moultrie speaks to something deeper.
Freedom. Becoming. Building against the grain.
A warrior mindset.
He names the mental terrain of creation—days of silence, no calls, no sales, just equipment and thoughts. One day up. The next day down.
And still, the internal voice persists:
Make another beat. Produce another song. Entertain one more time.
That resilience is the culture.
Super Pinky amplifies it through presence and community, but the heartbeat is endurance.
Movement as Validation
All music is tested in motion.
In the car first. Always.
You have to feel cool in your own vehicle while listening to it. Proud enough to turn it up loud. Head nodding. Cruising.
Walking or running, where rhythm syncs with each step. Dancing, where something almost spiritual happens—watching people of every background move to the same beat.
When music truly lands, it doesn’t just sit in your ears.
It takes hold of your body.

If You Press Play to Return to Yourself
“GIRL THAT DRIVES A JEEP” was intentionally created with good vibes.
Comfortable in any environment.Accessible to anyone.
You don’t have to drive a Jeep to enjoy it.
But if you do end up getting one after hearing it?
Let Jeep know Moultrie and Super Pinky sent you.
Reflection to Carry Forward:
Pay attention to what you turn up. It is shaping more than your mood. It is reinforcing who you are becoming.
FeelWell Magazine exists to support leaders in this deeper work—where mindset, identity, and leadership meet.
Quadeera Teart is the author of ManifestHer: Awakening the Power Within to Build Your God-Sized Vision, Publisher of FeelWell Magazine, and Founder of ManifestHer Media. For over 15 years, she has operated at the intersection of branding, media, and intellectual property—architecting highly visible personal and company brands that scale influence and income. As an Influence Builder, Quadeera specializes in organizing ideas, expertise, and lived experience into premium brand assets, signature programs, and authority-driven platforms. Through her Seen. Heard. Profitable.™ Influence-Building Model, she activates power from within and structures it into refined ecosystems that drive visibility, profitability, cultural impact, and legacy.
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