In the hot seat
Autocar UK|September 11, 2024
Is the best automotive job in the world actually in miniature scale? Hot Wheels' design boss assures STEPHEN DOBIE it is
STEPHEN DOBIE
In the hot seat

Is designing miniature toy cars the best job in the world? "There's no maybe about it," says Hot Wheels' creative chief, Craig Callum. "In the toy design world, we create fun for kids. We're thinking on a daily basis about what would a kid love, what would make a kid happy and what would develop them. Working with all that in mind is really rewarding. There's nothing on earth that kids' laughter isn't the medicine for."

Callum channels the playful attitude that sparked Hot Wheels into life. Launched in 1968 as the brainchild of Elliot Handler (whose wife Ruth brought Barbie dolls to market), the very first example was a blue custom Chevrolet Camaro, part of the original 'sweet sixteen' line-up rich in muscular American flair. The portfolio is now far more diverse: a typical range contains about 450 cars, around half of them fresh that year, always split between manufacturer-licensed real models and wackier Hot Wheels Originals, which envisage everything from pie-in-the-sky supercars to wheeled toilets. "Still with the proportions of a pick-up truck, though," grins Callum.

So how does a young man from Sandy, Bedfordshire, end up designing toys of the future at Mattel's Californian headquarters?

Callum's love for cars started aged five during the school run in his mum's Citroën 2CV: "A bunch of students were hanging out the roof of a 2CV alongside, cheering and laughing when they saw us. I was like: 'Wow, cars can create this kind of reaction in people."

This story is from the September 11, 2024 edition of Autocar UK.

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This story is from the September 11, 2024 edition of Autocar UK.

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