BEFORE THE TERM EVER EXISTED. JIM WANGERS WAS THE ULTIMATE GTO INFLUENCER.
Hot Rod|September 2023
When the origin of the muscle car is debated, there's a reason automotive historians point to the Pontiac GTO as ground zero.
DREW HARDIN
BEFORE THE TERM EVER EXISTED. JIM WANGERS WAS THE ULTIMATE GTO INFLUENCER.

Sure, performance sedans predated it, and the big-engine-in-midsize-car packaging concept wasn't new either. What set the GTO apart was a wide-ranging campaign to sell it to a new, younger group of buyers, the teenagers and early-20-somethings we now call Baby Boomers. The architect of that campaign was Detroit ad man Jim Wangers, who passed away in late April at age 96.

Wangers' background as a car guy and drag racer-he won Top Stock Eliminator at the 1960 NHRA Nationals driving a Royal Pontiac-prepped Super Duty Catalina-had a major impact on Pontiac's advertising even before the GTO. In those "Wide Track" days of the early 1960s, Wanger-influenced ads showed a Catalina serving as a push-car for a front-engine dragster, trumpeted the power of the 421 V8 and talked about these cars running "loose on the streets." GTO ads, too, emphasized performance over polish; a full-page ad in HOT ROD's December 1963 issue featured the car but also its four-barrel carburetor, exhaust splitters, and standard Hurst shifter.

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