When it comes to interviewing race car drivers, women have a different and interesting perspective on the sport.
Through the ages women drivers have taken on the men and occasionally got one over them. One of the pioneers was Janet Guthrie who became the first woman to race the Indianapolis 500 (1977) and Nascar's Daytona 500 in the same year. Michele Mouton was a highly accomplished rally driver who won four rounds and finished second in the WRC in 1982. There was also Lella Lombardi, who won a point in Formula One, and Danica Patrick.
In 2008, Patrick became the first woman to win a major open wheel event when she led the IndyCar field home in Japan. She's now one of the biggest draw cards in Nascar and this year will be racing in the main game Sprint Cup full time.
If anyone thinks the organisers of F1, V8 Supercars, GP2, GP3, F3, or any of the many other racing class want to keep women out of motor sport, you're stark raving mad. Most of the blokes who run the sport would give an important part of their anatomy to have a woman who could compete in their series. If there was a super quick female F1 driver out there, Bernie Ecclestone would break the bank at Monte Carlo to get her a drive.
Why? All of sudden you've doubled your audience and opened the door for a whole new raft of sponsors to come on board.