Posted on 04/18/2002 3:40:20 AM PDT by 2Trievers
ONE CAR COMPANY is running ads in which its suave 44-year old CEO underscores his love for the outdoors by saying, I wont even stay in a hotel if I cant open the windows. Another car company, its tone set by its 70-year-old vice chairman an ex-Marine aviator is putting up three billboards. One shows a 1957 Chevys grillethink of Teddy Roosevelts grin in chrome and says: Proof your parents were actually cool once. Another shows the rear deck of a little red 1963 Corvette Sting Ray and says: They dont write songs about Volvos. The third shows the gritted-teeth grille of a 1970 Chevy Chevelle SS and says: Not everyone wants a car with a bud vase on the dash. Guess which company is doing best. Bill Fords problems at the company his great-grandfather founded are bigger than odd advertising. And there are many reasons why GM is soaring like the jet fighter Robert Lutz flies for fun. But institutions are the lengthening shadows of strong individuals, and Lutz is, in the elemental argot of Detroit, a car guy. When GM lured Lutz back into the car business last summer, The Detroit News headline (Lutz Rides In To Rev Up GM) was of a size usually reserved for Pearl Harbors or two-game Tiger winning streaks. But are Americans still car people the way they were when Lutz was young, in the 1950s? Then they were automobile voluptuaries, Detroit was in its rococo period and its great stylist was GMs Harley Earl, the Cellini of chrome, of whom it was said that if he could have put chrome on his clothes, he would have. Cars had front bumpers that were protuberant, not to say nubile, and tail fins. Cars looked, a wit said, like chorus girls coming and fighter planes going. Indeed, Buicks LeSabre emulated the F-86 Sabre jet. Lutz, tall and trim, knows that todays Americans generally have a less erotic relationship with cars. They look upon many cars, he says, as more or less an appliance. As mere transportation. Utilitarian. Boring. Furthermore, 20 years ago a premium car meant one substantially more capable. Today premium technologies (e.g., high-tech engines, overhead cams) are everywhere. But, Lutz says happily, your car is still an extension of your psycho-motor system. More than the other stuff we surround ourselves with do you know the brand of your refrigerator? will you replace it before it breaks down? your car continually makes an instant statement about you, even to complete strangers. So, Lutz insists, design is still central to success in the automobile business. Art is supposed to evoke emotional responses and cars are art a mobile sculpture. He also believes that when everybody else is doing it, dont. Most cars today have rounded aerodynamic lines. But the new Cadillac CTS, with angular lines, is described in ads as edgy. And when Lutz was at Chrysler a few years ago, he pushed through the development of the popular PT Cruiser, an echo of a 1937 Ford. Why? Surely not nostalgia. Probably most of the (mostly young) people buying these cars do not know who was President in 1937. Go figure. Lutz believes that aspirational aspects overwhelm the functional differences when car customers make their choices. When that happens, the left-analytical brain has been defeated again, the right brain has prevailed and Lutz rejoices. But this does not mean people plunk down large sums merely for high-status brands. Chevrolet sells more vehicles costing more than $30,000 than do Mercedes, BMW, Lexus and Audi combined, but this is partly due to the popularity of light trucks, a category that includes sport utility vehicles. Today an extremely high-end demographic e.g., investment bankers and stockbrokers are buying GMC SUVs. Some Americans (let us avoid the term liberals) hate fun, such as cheeseburgers, talk radio, guns, Las Vegas, and cars that are larger than roller skates and that look more interesting than shoe boxes. They hated 1950s cars that looked as a sniffy critic said like juke boxes on wheels. Such people love guilt, and want people to feel guilty about cars because cars have made possible suburbs, Wal-Mart, McDonalds and emancipation from public transportation. GMs car guy knows that Americans generally keep their cars longer than they used to creeping utilitarianism and do not define automotive fun as they did in the gaudy 1950s. But he is betting that lots of them still are guilty of letting their right brains rip when purchasing a car. George F. Will is a columnist with Newsweek and an ABC commentator.
I'll cast my vote for Virgil Exner.
Since you asked ... this is what I drive ... this is what I'd LIKE to drive ... &;-) To heck with Detroit Mr. Will!
Ever since 1967 they have built them for the non user croud, ie. camper clowns and not for work. Besides that I haven't worn it out yet, it's only got 890,000 miles on it.
Of course, if you're shopping for the F1, you could always just upgrade your current ride, now that they have a street version of the 911 GT1.....
Drool ;-)
Add another 10mph for the hardtop.
Yep, price is what killed the Camaro and Firebird. That and the T/A's over-the-top styling. That car screams, "PULL ME OVER! I am a sixteen year old experiencing major testosterone poisoning!" One automotive magazine called it a "stylistic felon." What it demonstrated was GM's disdainful caricature of its customers.
Anyway, last I heard, they were only making 30 of the GT1's, but they had left open the possibility of more. I confess - I've never been a fan of the Porsches. Even the 959 just wasn't my thing. So it figures that the very first Porsche that makes me sit up, do a double-take, and say "whoa, there" is the one that I have no chance in hell of ever actually getting my hands on ;)
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