Hey Stilldreaming,
Hang in there on getting your first Corvette. I was 19 and entered the Army the year you were born, didn't get my first Vette until I was 41, now 10 years later I just got my third. It will happen if you want it to, just don't let others distract your ambitions by telling you it's frivilous, or has only two seats, or gets bad gas mileage etc etc.
As for the T-Bird looks, I think they need to lean forward and get rid of the retro-look on cars that have a history. Chrysler was the first to bring the retro-look to the market place and did quite well with the PT Cruiser. That worked well because the PT Cruiser was looked at more like a "toy" at first. Then people discovered it has a very well designed and useful interior layout, and the sales went through the roof. The price was within the range of the younger set that wanted something to customize that wasn't just another econo-box.
The T-Bird heritage deserves more than a gimmic retro-look, I think Ford should re-evaluate what they want to do with the T-Bird nameplate before the "look" wears off and potential buyers look elsewhere.
Chevy seems to be standing their ground with the Corvette, they know that Corvette buyers don't really want gimmics, they want performance. I also think that's why we don't see them jumping to improve the interior levels to compete with the luxo cars. It isn't intended to compete with the interior styling or quality of the Lexus, BMW, or Caddy. The interior is very lightweight compared to the heavy interiors of the luxo models. Many true enthusiasts would have to begin ripping out the interior just to reduce the weight for competative racing.
Maybe they should look at the idea of offering two or three levels of interiors, the ZO6 borders on that idea, only one power seat, no sound insulation, no CD changer offered, thinner windshield and backlight.
However, by contrast to the rest of the automotive market, the Vette is still a limited production vehicle. The Corvette 35,000 units / year is about 1/10th the annual production volume of a standard vehicle model. The breakdown of models within the Vette production to Coupes, Verts, and ZO6s reduces the volume of each to a very small number, then to break those figures down into interior configurations reduces the numbers into the hundreds. That probably isn't worth the $$$$ it would cost to offer those numerous options, or it would necessitate raising the vehicle price to a level that would place it out of the reach of the target market.