I think some people miss the objective of the Land Cruiser though (maybe me too, as I'm not a Toyota insider). I think the Cruiser has developed a reputation of being a solid vehicle, that is Toyota's pride and joy, hardly anyone would disagree with that. However, Toyota does not want the Cruiser to be on every street, they do not want it to be like the Explorer which damn near every family has. There is a prestige to a Cruiser that is more so that the money involved. Toyota has the 4-runner and Sequoia for the 'mass market', to compete with the Explorer, Grand Cherokee, and so on. Then Toyota makes a nicer, more refined, more stately vehicle, the Land Cruiser. It's smaller than the Sequoia, nicer than anything else they sell. I think it's rather funny because it's kinda saying that they don't need to make it huge for people to want it, they can make it average size and people will still pick it over larger vehicles. To have a Cruiser is a statement, that you know quality and recognize a good quality design.
We all are obviously biased towards Toyota, or we wouldn't be on this forum. However my sister is not, she couldn't care less what she drives, she was looking at a new Explorer, good fairly solid vehicle, was going to be about $40K. After 15+ attempts I finally got her to go testdrive a used Cruiser (Cleveland, OH, i.e. Ford/Chevy land), '99 to be exact (with rear locker, not that she would care), she couldn't believe the difference. The Explorer was not a bad vehicle, just what you'd expect, but the Cruiser was quieter, smoother, more comfortable, and way less money, even though it was used it was still more solid and better driving than the new Explorer. They bought it and then 6 months later bought another '99 (rear locker also!!), she is still baffled why the Cruiser is never talked about by the press or hardly anyone. They love their two and will gladly put theirs up against any other new vehicle on the market, for handling, acceleration, comfort, luxury, etc.
I think Toyota has done good with the Cruiser, it's out there, but not everyone has them, although here in Colorado I see a ton of them, which is cool. It's still a prestige thing to have one, they aren't cheap, but I see more LX470's that are new on the roads than I do new Cruisers, and LX470s start at $64K, but if you ask the people who buy them new, they say they are definetly worth the money and usually say it's the best vehicle they have ever owned, so Toyota/Lexus must be doing something right.
Just my $0.00 worth...maybe less...