Staying On Message

Chuck Felt, my boss and Chevy's creative director at the time, wrote the copy, and it says so much about what Chevy was all about back then - very competitive, and very aggressive.

The picture was taken before Felt's copy was written and was part of what we called an experimental shoot. We took two truckloads of Chevy prototype cars to the GM Proving Ground in Mesa, Arizona, to take pictures that could later be turned into ads. Most of the effort was made on the proving grounds, but we also found a secure location just east of Apache Junction.

It was a Western town constructed by one of the movie studios way out in the desert. Perfect for the kind of security Chevrolet demanded, so we rented it for a day. I spotted an old barn, and we put two cars in it for the picture you see. Warren Winstanley was the photographer and the young lady, as I recall, was later to become famous as the Perfect 10... Bo Derek. I think she was only in her teens at the time. My only regret is that we didn't do a bit of retouching on the cars.

Chevy's ad department approved the ad, and it moved on to the general sales manager. He thought the rope interfered with the cars and should be removed. While that was being done, Chevy general manager "Pete" Estes reviewed the ad. He thought, as we did, that the rope added considerably to the ad, so it was put back in. When the general sales manager made his final approval, he asked for the rope's removal. He would handle the problem with 1 Mr. Estes. Out came the rope again. In a final review, with Mr. Estes and the corporation, Mr. Estes ordered the rope back in. Win some, lose some. This time a win.

Camaro and Corvette had also shared ad space in 1968. "HUGGING COUSINS" ran in the buff books and Sports I Illustrated as a single page. This j fine ad was produced by the creative team of Jim Hartzell and Tony Longo. Hartzell was the copywriter who would later make us all memorable with his Baseball, Hotdogs, Apple Pie, and Chevrolet television and radio commercials. (Probably the most famous ever written for Chevrolet, or any other automaker.) One of our finest art directors, Tony was a great proponent of using large type as a design element. It would be difficult to imagine this ad with the tiny type used in most ad headlines today. Design styles come and go, and I bet it won't be much longer before art directors again discover the value of large-type headlines as a design element. Copywriters will be happy when they do.

If you can find a copy of the November 11, 1967 issue of Newsweek or the December 6, 1967 issue of Life magazine, you'll have a copy of the spread version of this ad. Single pages ran in other national magazines.

The idea of "HUGGING COUSINS" was more than just a nifty turn on an old saying. It played beautifully to a theme we had been using for Camaro since 1967: "The Hugger - The road-hugging fun car from Chevrolet." Actually, Corvette and Camaro had very little in common. Corvette was a real sports car, and Camaro was a fun sporty car. They both had bucket seats, and they both handled well in turns. The Camaro's handling capability was the reason for the "Hugger" designation. The most important thing the two vehicles had in common was your local Chevrolet dealer. When you inspect the way the sheet metal looks on both cars, you can see why I wish we had done some retouching on the other ad.

While quite different in their presentation, both ads did a memorable job for Chevrolet.

Camaro's "Hugger" handle came about in a meeting with Chevrolet ad executives, and the ad here is the first in which we made that claim. We had presented a round of new advertising that was fairly well accepted but had generated considerable conversation about the Camaro's handling capability. Tom Staudt had recently joined Chevrolet as its first real director of marketing, and he liked to discuss at length various aspects of the communications.

I liked and respected him very much, but I think it is fair to say he could be a little long-winded at times. Still, he was one of the few ad executives with whom you could win an argument if you presented him with a convincing point of view. After a long speech about the Camaro's road-hugging capabilities, Tom kind of stumbled on the idea of Camaro as "The Hugger."

The ad was pretty much put together and approved in the meeting. The creative people are most often the ones who come up with ad ideas, but there are plenty of times when good thoughts come from other places. The trick for the creative people is to grab the thought no matter where it comes from and run with it. In this case, it made all future Camaro ads a lot easier to get approved if there was a mention of "The Hugger." This ad could have been better if the car had been shown performing at high speed in a tight turn, but the water on the road does help some. In retrospect, I don't remember why we didn't use a better picture. Sometimes it just works out that way.

THE THINGS WE DO FOR LOVE ... OF CHEVY5

I love shooting cars - with a camera, not a rifle. I've been doing so since I was 10 years old, and that was more than four decades ago. My first "real" camera was a Yashicamat 124G twin-lens reflex (I still have it), and my current weapon of choice is a Nikon D200 while I wait to get a good deal on the latest D700 full-frame D-SLR.

The short story of how Gary and Gayle Stephan's 1970 C10 went from being seen at a Chevy show to the cover of Chevy Enthusiast is an interesting one. At a regional Vintage Chevy Club of America show, I picked it as one of my two "Editor's Choice" selections. (The other was a 997-point original-owner 1964 Chevy Chevelle Malibu.) In addition to a plaque, the other half of each award was to be a six-page feature spread in a future issue of Chevy Enthusiast. Little did Gary know that that future issue would come up immediately and that, in addition to a feature story, I'd selected his truck for the cover of issue two.

Cover selections are usually planned months in advance, with numerous factors coming into play. But because we're just getting this magazine off the ground, things are a bit more... fluid. I can make such decisions without much filtering. I'll discuss things with Senior Managing Editor Eric Kaminsky, who is the one burdened with cleaning up the production messes created by my last-minute decisions, and with my Publisher John Nichols, who has entrusted me with almost complete autonomy for what goes in-between the covers of Chevy Enthusiast. Because we've made a strong commitment to truck coverage right from the start, after seeing Gary's C10, John was 100 percent behind my decision to put it on the cover.

We both wanted an action photo for the cover, which means what we call a "car-to-car" shot. This process involves me hanging out the back of one vehicle, in this case a minivan being driven at about 15 to 20 miles per hour. Here, I'm holding my camera blindly just inches above the pavement on a deserted street at dusk. When the shot works, the target vehicle is tack-sharp and the wheels and background are blurred,
 requiring a minimum of post-shoot Photoshopping.

After getting the tracking shots "in the can," I wanted to take advantage of the great light just as the sun set below the horizon. So I positioned Gary's C10 about 200 feet away and put my D200 on a tripod for some low-angle, long-lens (200mm) static shots. Because it was nearly dark, and I was kneeling in the middle of the street, my driver Francisco Villalpando positioned the minivan behind me with the flashers on.

The reason for this precaution is simple. About 18 months ago, I was kneeling behind my D200, getting one last shot of a vintage Corvette in fading light, when I was struck from behind by a Toyota Solara coupe traveling 15 or 20 miles per hour. (The shot here was 10 seconds prior to impact.) Luckily, I never knew what was coming, and so was fairly relaxed when the Solara's grille left an imprint on my backside. My most serious injury was a painfully separated right shoulder. I'm reminded of this incident whenever I reach for the two-three upshift on my Corvair. My shoulder stings.

As Sergeant Phil Esterhaus said in 77 episodes of the '80s TV classic Hill Street Blues, "Hey, let's be careful out there." I know I am whenever I'm shooting.

Stiff Competition

The company churned them out by the hundreds of thousands annually. As a result, the Nova - and/or Chevy II, as it was known from its debut through the end of 1968 - is today a plentiful and inexpensive foundation for powerful street machines.

If you fancy the idea of turning your grandmother's grocery-getter Nova into the next Chevy Enthusiast cover car, take this bit of free advice from Brent VanDervort at Fat Man Fabrications.

"Novas can be great performance cars," he told us on a recent visit to his Charlotte, North Carolina, shop, "but their suspensions are very fragile. Everything ahead of the firewall needs to be beefed up and modified; otherwise, a powerful engine is just wasted."

Power was the last thing on the minds of Chevrolet's engineers when, in the late 1950s, they drew up specs for the new small car.
The Chevy II was designed to be an economical daily driver for the budget-minded buyer. It was cheap to build, and the lightweight unit-body chassis was fitted with unhurried four- and six-cylinder engines exclusively during 1962-63.

"Although V-8s fit under the hood just fine," VanDervort said, "one look at the subframe - especially on the early cars - shows they were not designed for high-performance. For one thing, there is no cross bracing from the radiator until you get to the transmission. Chevy was using the engine itself as a structural support."

For the past 18 years, Fat Man has been selling a kit engineered to bring the Nova's subframe into the modern world. This month, VanDervort and crew finished researching an updated Nova design that should be in the catalog by the time you read this.

Unlike other kits that require torching the front rails and substituting atubular subframe built around Mustang II mechanicals, the Fat Man conversion has bolt-on components that can be installed more easily and with greater accuracy. The centerpiece of the new design is a cross member made from 5/ie-inch plate steel that allows the car to be converted to McPherson struts, rack-and-pinion steering, and disc brakes - all with parts you can buy off the shelf at a local store (or junkyard) or as a complete kit from Fat Man.