Wow, I just read that FREEP article and it's pretty shocking! I had a GM Buick Century back in the 90's and I remember it didn't even last 10 years before I would occasionally get transmission "slippage" into neutral. That is, I would be going up a hill somewhere on a highway when all of a sudden the transmission would "slip" into neutral and my engine would all of a sudden RPM up against no resistance. Never had any issues on flat terrain or going down hill, because the engine torque/transmission torque differential must not have been very different. However, when pushed too hard by the engine to keep torque on the wheels.... the transmission slipped. NOT A GOOD THING!
It is also dangerous as you are driving along and every time you hit a valley/hill you either accelerate like crazy down the valley so you can ride up the upcoming hill by mostly coasting, or you need to be careful how much GAS to press lest you risk "slipping" your transmission, either way you end up decelerating each time you try to climb any grade while 18-WHEEL TRUCKS are right up your tail or flying by you and honking the horn at you.
Fairly shortly after that started happening, I sold the car for parts and was glad to be rid of it. I then bought a Nissan Sentra with a CVT and felt like I was driving a "rubber band" car, it was strange but it did accelerate like a demon. Then moved on to Honda CR-V which is my current daily driver... not particularly spunky in the acceleration department but it gets me from A to B. If I was to do it again, I might have bought a Subaru with a manual gearbox but then nobody in my family would be able to drive my car and the resale options/value would be dicey.
At least the CR-V I can offload in a jiffy for minimal depreciation, but it's not exactly fun to drive.