Charles Brower, one of the greats of the ad business and for years a top executive at Batten, Barton, Durstine & Osbon, has been writing his memoirs in Advertising Age.
A yarn he tells is of young Bruce Barton’s encounter in 1931 with “impatient, impulsive, brief”, William Knudsen, then head of Chevrolet and subsequently chairman of the board of General Motors.
Barton and Knudsen had trouble communicating. Knudsen’s engineering mind didn’t savvy the ad business and Barton didn’t savvy the car business.
Finally, Barton blurted out “What is your real opinion of the 1931 Chevrolet?”
“Is an almost perfect car,” said Knudsen in his Scandinavian accent. “Next year we make one little change. Then will be perfect.”
“And what will that be?”
Brower says that Knudsen shook his head, as though despairing of explaining it all to this New Yorker.
“You know what is the chassis?”
“Sure,” said Barton.
“Well, on each corner of this chassis, we are putting little hooks.”
“Yes?”
“And from these hooks we are hanging a big piece of canvas.”
In the same vein: “The parts that fall from this car are genuine, British-made” my 2nd favorite bumper sticker from the days when I was fixing and sometimes driving Sunbeams.
Reminds me of an incident when I was young :
I had an 84 Camero and was just driving along one day ,
I stopped at at red light and another young guy pulls up in an old ratted out Chevy nova.
he starts gunning the engine like he wants to race even though I was ignoring him and it was mid afternoon.
The light turns green and he peels out smoking tires all the way..
I just shook my head and started normally .. as the smoke cleared I passed him on the side of the road… his entire exhaust system.. muffler and a section of tailpipe were right in the middle of the road and a big truck came by and squashed em flat.
No that would be” My ma got run over and my dog left me while I was racin a guy who’s muffler fell off”..
I think Buck Owens did that one back in the 60’s
I remember dropping my tailpipe and muffler (in my late teens) as a guy was chasing me off his property with a shotgun! I had forgot all about that. Although it was a Ford, not a DeSoto…
leakysqueaky712 almost 15 years ago
He should have taken advantage of “Cash for Clunkers”
Yukoner almost 15 years ago
I think the Smithsonian made him a better offer.
Pacejv almost 15 years ago
Once you are in PARK…no more clunks.
leakysqueaky712 almost 15 years ago
That was funny Yukoner and more spot on. :-))
BigChiefDesoto almost 15 years ago
NO, NO, it’s not a Chevy ( “shovel it up and let it lay” ), it’s a Chrysler product!!!
BigChiefDesoto almost 15 years ago
Now there’s a style change!
Charles Brower, one of the greats of the ad business and for years a top executive at Batten, Barton, Durstine & Osbon, has been writing his memoirs in Advertising Age.
A yarn he tells is of young Bruce Barton’s encounter in 1931 with “impatient, impulsive, brief”, William Knudsen, then head of Chevrolet and subsequently chairman of the board of General Motors.
Barton and Knudsen had trouble communicating. Knudsen’s engineering mind didn’t savvy the ad business and Barton didn’t savvy the car business.
Finally, Barton blurted out “What is your real opinion of the 1931 Chevrolet?”
“Is an almost perfect car,” said Knudsen in his Scandinavian accent. “Next year we make one little change. Then will be perfect.”
“And what will that be?”
Brower says that Knudsen shook his head, as though despairing of explaining it all to this New Yorker.
“You know what is the chassis?”
“Sure,” said Barton.
“Well, on each corner of this chassis, we are putting little hooks.”
“Yes?”
“And from these hooks we are hanging a big piece of canvas.”
“Why?” asked Barton, fascinated.
“Catch all the goddamn parts that fall out!”
Llewellenbruce almost 15 years ago
I think the Statute of Limitations is up on that old clunker.
COWBOY7 almost 15 years ago
Heck, the price should be going up from now on!
snarky1941 almost 15 years ago
In the same vein: “The parts that fall from this car are genuine, British-made” my 2nd favorite bumper sticker from the days when I was fixing and sometimes driving Sunbeams.
freeholder1 almost 15 years ago
Chief and Joe. I won’t be able to google for a month.
freeholder1 almost 15 years ago
On the cartoon: “Prof. the company says it doesn’t recall making the car.”
Nighthawks Premium Member almost 15 years ago
and if the pieces taper off, just follow the trail of oil
treBsdrawkcaB almost 15 years ago
“On the road again! I left my transmission on the road again!” (Willie’s first version of the song…)
For those who remember Euell Gibbons, I once made a bumper sticker for my brother’s motorcycle: “Most parts are edible”
I worked with a guy named Eric Okamoto who had a license plate frame on his 1967 Mustang that read, “Made from bleeep beer cans”.
treBsdrawkcaB almost 15 years ago
OK - They bleeped the common slang term for a Japanese person during WWII - but that’s what the frame read.
gillbillvolume1 almost 15 years ago
Cash for clunkers…. we’ll give you a buck fifty for it if you throw in the little pine scented air freshener
gillbillvolume1 almost 15 years ago
Reminds me of an incident when I was young : I had an 84 Camero and was just driving along one day , I stopped at at red light and another young guy pulls up in an old ratted out Chevy nova. he starts gunning the engine like he wants to race even though I was ignoring him and it was mid afternoon.
The light turns green and he peels out smoking tires all the way.. I just shook my head and started normally .. as the smoke cleared I passed him on the side of the road… his entire exhaust system.. muffler and a section of tailpipe were right in the middle of the road and a big truck came by and squashed em flat.
I laughed all the way home :o)
ronaldmundy almost 15 years ago
sounds like a country song title.
gillbillvolume1 almost 15 years ago
No that would be” My ma got run over and my dog left me while I was racin a guy who’s muffler fell off”.. I think Buck Owens did that one back in the 60’s
earlydawnpatrol almost 15 years ago
I remember dropping my tailpipe and muffler (in my late teens) as a guy was chasing me off his property with a shotgun! I had forgot all about that. Although it was a Ford, not a DeSoto…
WallyCuppaJoe almost 15 years ago
The Old DeSoto probably stops better than a new Lexus.
jelatinMAN almost 15 years ago
Why is he driving? He’s a bird!!