Home » This Pikes Peak Porsche 914 May Have The Worst Car-Eyes Placement I’ve Ever Seen

This Pikes Peak Porsche 914 May Have The Worst Car-Eyes Placement I’ve Ever Seen

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As many of you may be aware, I have extremely strong opinions regarding the portrayal and placement of eyes on anthropomorphized cars. This is obviously a subject of great, even dire importance to our daily lives, so when I encounter a notable example of automotive eye placement, I feel it is my honor-bound duty to report it to you, and evaluate its overall value and societal impact. I take this responsibility very seriously, which is why I must report to you with no joy that I believe I have encountered a heretofore untried manner of automotive eyeball placement, and it is with sincere regret that I have to say that it is awful, just awful — an affront to the very idea of automotive anthropomorphization, a deeply creepy misstep that I dearly hope I can prevent from ever being repeated. It is the eyeball placement on a 1970 Porsche 914 race car built for a Pikes Peak run in 2012, sponsored by, of all things, Focus on the Family.

I guess the car is really more themed in Adventures in Odyssey livery, which seems to be some sort of Christian-themed audio drama series involving an old guy with an ice cream shop and a lot of wholesome goings-on that end with some manner of evangelical messages, I guess. I’m not familiar with the property, to be honest, for reasons I’m guessing you can figure out.

[Editor’s Note: Jason has spoken with the creators of Pixar’s Cars series, and has written ad nauseam about how the franchise screwed up the location of the characters’ eyes. He’s also written a culture-shaping piece about the Little Tikes Cozy Coupe’s resurgence from the pits of hell. This article is a continuation of his crusade. -DT]

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This 914 looks like it was prepared really well; it’s referred to as a 914-8, so I suspect it’s got something in there other than the original VW Type 4 2-liter flat-four. Unless, you know, it has two of those or something. It’s driven by Jeff MacPherson, you know, like the strut, and he seems to have run it at Pikes Peak a number of times. Here it is in 2014:

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Great little car, right? I love it.

He seems to run the Porsche with different sponsors and liveries, but I just want to focus on the 2012 run, when it had the Adventures in Odyssey livery, because this is what it looked like:

See what I’m talking about there? Those eyes. Why, why, why would you choose that location for car eyes? They’re on the fenders, pointed up. Straight up! This makes no sense at all.

I get that a 914 is a challenge when it comes to adding anthropomorphic eyes; it has pop-up headlamps, so the eyes appear, in their natural state, closed — hardly the look you want for an alert race car on the go.

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Porsche 914 – Sales Brochures

But, by the same token, the headlamp covers are in the ideal location for painted-on eyes, right there on the car’s face, and had the eyes been placed there we’d all be completely happy and I wouldn’t have to undertake this miserable exercise. But that’s not what happened.

This happened:

Look at the car from the front there; you can barely make out the eyes, and they’re not pointing remotely in the direction the car is going. It looks like it’s not paying attention, and that’s a fucking problem.

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From a more overhead view, the expression of the car’s strange face is one of eyes rolled back in a head, like the expression a cartoon animal makes after it douses its burning ass using a bucket of water, accompanied by a dramatic hiss of steam as the burning biscuits are extinguished. It’s also the face one may make during or after a long-postponed and powerful urination.

You know this eye setup is bad when the artist for the Adventures in Odyssey series was commissioned to draw the car, and the only way he could make it work was by cheating the eyes into a forward-looking position that is not accurate to the actual car:

See? This illustration is a tacit admission of failure, not on the part of the artist, Gary Locke, but on the part of whoever designed this nightmare of a livery, a name I won’t search out of an unwillingness to humiliate them further.

Maybe the upward-looking eyes were something to do with turning your face to God or something like that, since this is a religious sponsor, after all? Could that be what’s going on here? Maybe? Even so, I think any deity who loves humans would rather you push the idea of looking where you’re driving in a race situation, but maybe that’s just my own biases.

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It’s awful, just awful, and I’m pleased that MacPherson changed liveries for later races because clearly this car deserves better.

I appreciate that the eyes are at least not on the windshield, but this – eyes on two lumps atop the hood, right on the front axle line, likely directly over the custom shock towers — this, this just doesn’t work.

Ugh.

 

(photos: Odyssey Scoop, Motorsport.com)

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msisaacs
msisaacs
2 years ago

It’s for looking up skirts. Pervy car.

Boter
Boter
2 years ago

They’re just trolling you at this point.

Car2D2
Car2D2
2 years ago

It’s my understanding that the placement of an organism’s eyes is generally due to whether they are predator/prey. Judging by this I would say this vehicle evolved to avoid aerial ambush predators. Its primitive ancestor probably faced extinction from sentient helicopters.

cyko9
cyko9
2 years ago

The car itself is all right (I like the 914), but the livery is comical. Then I saw the artist’s rendering and it’s terrifying! The eyes rolled all the way forward so as to appear either demonic (!) or elongated from great speed. That is not whimsical, that is a scary image.

Unacceptably Dry Scones
Unacceptably Dry Scones
2 years ago

It’s the car equivilent of that fish with the transparent head and eyes that look upward.

Also, Focus on the Family is fuckin’ gross and screw anything or anyone they are associated with.

vniow
vniow
2 years ago
lahjik
lahjik
2 years ago

I was going to say that, maybe, since this car was built to compete on the Peak that they figured most the camera coverage would be via helicopter and thus designed the livery to look “right” there. Then I saw it was a Focus on the Family organization sponsoring it and realized it’s just that everything those assholes touch is shit.

DougK
DougK
2 years ago
Reply to  lahjik

came here to say this – anything touched by Focus on the Family is guaranteed to be offbeat in a peculiar way, weird, creepy and faintly disgusting – the car is a perfect expression of these values.

HT
HT
2 years ago

My first thought when I saw the headline picture was how will Jason describe the face that car is making?

“…like the expression a cartoon animal makes after it douses its burning ass using a bucket of water… It’s also the face one may make during or after a long-postponed and powerful urination.”

Sir, you did not disappoint.

TriangleRAD
TriangleRAD
2 years ago

It’s a Pike’s Peak car, it’s obviously looking up….AT THE PEAK. It’s keeping its eyes on the prize.

WhoDeyBuckeye
WhoDeyBuckeye
2 years ago

I’m just glad this was before the modern Angry Eye (aka constipated eye) trend so at least the car looked happy to be staring up into the sky while it raced up Pike’s Peak.

unclesam
unclesam
2 years ago

The “pray for Colorado” Hitler stache is a vibe, too

98Z28
98Z28
2 years ago

It is like the goldfish bred to look up at the Emperor.

Still ugh.

JTSnooks
JTSnooks
2 years ago

First, while this would looks horrible from the front, it’s not that bad from above, which I assume is why all of the pictures were taken from above.

Now for some anecdotal information (not about the car, unfortunately, as this is the first time I’ve laid eyes on it), I grew up listening to Adventures in Odyssey on our many road trips as a kid. We had the radio show on cassette tapes, so it was basically like listening to a voice-acted podcast on our trips to Texas, Michigan, Florida, and elsewhere. All that to say, I have good memories of that show (although I had no idea it was still going as of 2012), so I’ll give this car a pass. Honestly I think the worst thing about it is that awful green.

flatisflat
flatisflat
2 years ago
Reply to  JTSnooks

I concur about the view from the top. And I think it’s worth mentioning that most of the Pikes Peak filming is done from a helicopter above the course, not alongside it. Thus….smiling all the way to the top!

Ayrton Swansborough
Ayrton Swansborough
2 years ago

Thank you for this nightmare fuel.

I’m genuinely going to take myself on an adventure to find a worse example of an anthropomorphic car face just so that this car loses that special title, so I can begin forgetting its existence.

And you best believe I will be sending the next contender your way for judgement.

hugh crawford
hugh crawford
2 years ago

Old MacPherson had some struts
E Eye E Eye Oh
And on those struts he had some Eyes

Not sure why the struts need to come through the frunk lid , must be some sort of evolutionary thing.

69442
69442
2 years ago
Reply to  hugh crawford

They finally finished paving the last section of Pikes Peak in 2011, but they probably built this car before then and wanted some extra shock travel for the rougher sections of the course.

Rando
Rando
2 years ago
Reply to  69442

I’m not so sure about that. From the pictures it looks like its there similar to the reason the old NASCAR super birds, to prevent the tire rubbing.

Donald Petersen
Donald Petersen
2 years ago

Oh, it’s totally looking heavenward. Jesus, take the wheel!

parsko
parsko
2 years ago

Deep breath Torch. Go have yourself a Capri Sun in the Changli while making fast car sounds.

Deuce
Deuce
2 years ago
Reply to  parsko

Cotd.

TOSSABL
TOSSABL
2 years ago

Artist saw the custom strut-bumps and used ‘em.
That’s the most parsimonious explanation in my opinion.

Halftrack El Camino
Halftrack El Camino
2 years ago

The automotive equivalent of a flounder, and just as attractive.

Nic
Nic
2 years ago

Helicopter shots? It may have been designed to be seem from above.

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