They don't need to call it a "Volkswagen" because everyone and his dog already knows it's a Volkswagen. It's like saying why doesn't Steve McQueen or anyone else in "Bullitt" call the car he drives a "Mustang." Everyone and their cat already knows it's a "Mustang," since that was a very popular car model and still is, even if only car-buffs know it's a 1968 Ford Mustang 390 GT 2+2 Fastback.
The Volkswagen Beetle or "Bug" as designed by Hitler himself at a Munich restaurant in 1932 (see authenticated drawings at link below) and eventually finished by National Socialist Workers Party and Waffen-SS member Ferdinand Porsche, was already, by the 1968 release of the "Love Bug," the most popular & longest lasting car model of all time. It eventually sold over 200 million units by the time the original model, albeit with many improvements over the years yet nothing changed in the basic design, was retired in the 1990s. The immense popularity of Porsche's final original design is even more impressive when you realize that the Beetle was built at a time when only 35 out of a thousand Germans could afford the 5 marks a week to buy one to drive on the first and still greatest autobahn-freeway ever built.
http://www.hitler.org/artifacts/volkswagen/
In addition, as anyone with the slightest interest in automobiles knows, the VW Bug was the pre-cursor to the Porsche 911, another very popular car (maybe the most famous sports-car in the world), whose basic design also did not need to be changed for many decades, only improved upon in non-foundational ways.
Last but not least, the single most popular musical group of all time was named "The Silver Beetles" before they became the "Beatles" (notice the one letter change). Coincidence? I think not. I've got my own theory. They wanted popularity, so they picked a name that was already on everyone's tongues, that also "just happened to be" that of the most popular car around. "Silver" was probably just added to keep from being too obvious. A little later, the change from Beet to Beat-les still kept the sound of what Hitler's "people's car" was called by the English-speaking world but imposed a spell-ing on people that suggested rhythm (beat) and beatnik culture (eccentric artsy-fartsy pre-hippie "hipsters" of the 1950s and early 1960s).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=63_BMNxTces
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6zA5nLp8AS4
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