I Couldn’t Help Myself: Cold Start

Cs Hawktuah 1
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Over the past couple days, the internet has been doing one of the things it does best, showing the entire population the same pool of things so that if one thing somehow catches people’s attention, it snowballs and becomes a fixture, if only for a moment, on the human collective consciousness. That’s currently happening now – perhaps actually winding down at this point – with a fascination with a young woman and her emphatic concept known now as hawk tuah. It was so pervasive that I found myself helpless to fight trying to come up with an automotive tie-in, which you see up above there.

If, somehow, you’re not familiar with the hawk tuah phenomenon, then first let me congratulate you from waking up from your coma, which I’m sure was no picnic, and I suppose I can just show you the original source.

Here’s the video clip that started it all, simply a woman being asked a question, and answering with a vigorous honesty and an undeniable joie de vivre: 

Yes, yes, sage advice for us all. Really, in many ways, this feels like a refreshingly simple and fun thing to go viral, just someone with an exuberant way of expressing herself and everyone was kind of strangely enthralled.

Anyway, if you don’t get the automotive version up there, I’m happy to explain: that’s a Studebaker Hawk, so, the Hawk with the TUAH license plate I hoped would convey the hawk-tuah reference. And, as a bonus, it’s nice to get people thinking about the Studebaker Hawk!

I like Hawks; they’re great-looking cars that had available superchargers and 275 horsepower way back in the 1950s. But I also have a sort of complicated feeling about them, because, as cool as they look, they’re also an example, I think, of how a design can get progressively ruined over time and everyone feeling an urge to needlessly “update” it and add crap.

See, the basic Hawk design started out as the Studebaker Starliner in 1953, a design penned by Bob Bourke, working under legendary industrial designer Raymond Loewy’s team. The car they came up with was, by 1950s standards especially, incredibly sleek and understated and elegant. Remember, 1950s American car design wasn’t really known for elegance or grace; this was an era when designers like Harley Earl would specify the amount of chrome trim he wanted to see on a car in terms of pounds. As in “add 100 more pounds of chrome on that.”

Here, look at this progression of the basic design from its introduction in 1953 (1954 one shown here, but it was basically the same) to the 1957 Hawk:

Cs Hawktuah Loewyprogression

All these cars are based on the same fundamental body design, but things were added and changed over the years; look how lean and svelte that Starliner was at the beginning, and then you see how the urge to add more chrome, a bigger grille, side trim and so on crept in, until the Hawk design which added a huge central grille and hood bulges and tacked-on indicator light pods on the front fenders and, of course, huge tailfins. They just couldn’t help themselves.

Much like how the Hawk Tuah woman can’t help herself from spitting on that thing, which is also why Matt suggested we add one more automotive Hawk Tuah image:

Cs Hawktuah Thing

You’re welcome.

79 thoughts on “I Couldn’t Help Myself: Cold Start

  1. Only this site could put such a spin on something so dumb. Also, I actually like the simplicity of the ’54, I’ll take that one please.

  2. I feel like years of work and study to increase my knowledge and wisdom were erased by a 21 second video. I am now legitimately dumber for having seen that.

    However, you’ve redeemed yourself with Studebaker material. I love Studebakers and like you, I think that ’54 is a quite attractive car from an automotive design era I happen to like much less than most people.

  3. that 1954 must have been a startling sight on the roads of its day, given the drabness of most car’s styling in that time. It still looks darn good.

  4. I think the ’54 with the ’55 body side trim would be a sweet looking ride. The ’54 just looks too naked to me. I don’t want the fins and big chrome grille.

  5. A friend was restoring a 57 and we were amused to find out that they were too cheap to tool new fenders. The fins were riveted onto the top of the original style fenders and then the rivets were hidden with a bit of chrome trim.

  6. Many years ago I formulated the hypothesis that the first year of an all-new car design was the best because they had worked so intensely on it, rejecting lesser ideas and executions. Then subsequent “refreshes” came from those rejects. “Hmmm, I’m not loving this, Ed, but save it in the Maybe Later file.”

    1. I think cost cutting happens over time. The used 1999 Grand Cherokee Laredo I owned was much better equipped than a friends 2003 model. Same vehicle, but without the incremental cost shaving.

    1. Shoot. I was gonna edit that to something more than a double entrende, but was a tad late. Anyway, for anyone interested about being in a coma, I’ll tell you what it’s like:

      When you go into a coma, you don’t know you are about to go into the abyss. There are indications that it’s possible, but it’s not like the light turns yellow before you get to that intersection. One minute you are awake…and then you are awake again, except everything is different. You most likely aren’t in the same physical place, you are most likely wearing different clothes, you most certainly have things pumping fluids into you and other things catching the fluids coming out. Your glasses are most likely bent. You most likely are surrounded by people whom you don’t know, and yet they somehow know you through your chart, and smile at you in an uncomfortably caring way that strangers don’t normally do. The best way to describe waking up from a coma is that it’s clinically abrupt and efficient, except you are receiving an odd amount of perceptibly undeserved compassion.

      There are no dreams or visions. For all you know, you died. Time just disappeared, and suddenly (and groggily) without warning you are alive again, only to be in somehow worse shape than when you left. 32 days later.

      You will be on Eminem-levels of pharma juice, but you are helpless when you wake up. Helpless. The Dr. will ask what year it is. You will have no idea. It could be 1994 or 2038, it’s all news to you. He will ask you who is the President and you won’t be sure of which Country he means. This doesn’t last for an hour, or a day. It lasts in perpetuity for many subjects that arise. Every day still provides you with a moment of, “Oh shit. That’s right. I totally forgot about that one.”

      So, if you somehow fat thumbed your way onto this website after regaining consciousness from your very own coma, I am here to assure you that it’s actually true. Some college-aged girl with no filter described her personal “technique” on one aspect of the finer arts of compassionate care. It’s neither good nor bad, it’s just the brave new world you have re-joined. Voluntarily or not.

      Enjoy it from your fresh perspective. You own a gift that many would trade life savings for. You didn’t have to internally process whether something aligns with your personal moral compass. You can just skip whole chapters of examples of the shallowness of modern humanity. You can just be cool with getting some green Jello and chuckling about that movie…”What was it called? Shit. That movie with the brother from that acting family out of Chicago. Oh, yeah! ‘Better Off Dead’. That Ricky character seemed sweaty.”

      That about sums up comas.

        1. It’s a standard medical question to see how well a patient is “oriented,” or whatever the proper psychological term is. Year, month, president, what city you are in. Having dealt with two seniors who gradually lost the ability to answer the questions, it’s a familiar refrain.

        2. It is most definitely not a “trick” question. But, it is a tricky one to answer. What happens if you get it wrong? Are there ramifications? There are no facts to guide what the correct answer “should” be, only what you assume it to be…maybe.

          Speaking of which, the whole thing is a Grade “A” mindfuck. Why are eggs marked Grade “A” with only the A in quotation marks? Why does the word “Grade”get a free pass? Who made that standard? Is there someone out there proudly shipping out Grade “C-” eggs?

          These are coma awakening thoughts.

  7. Always loved Hawks, being from Indiana have a general soft spot for studabakers in general. The car lasted so long the design actually did get a bit better again towards the end of the run at least. Check out the ones built for the historic Pan-Am race, very cool.

  8. My friends have hawk tuahed all over my FB feed for the past week but I haven’t had anything to contribute back to it, until now, I’m stealing that top image.

  9. I saw a similar level of exuberance as the young lady when my Historic F1 friend drove a lovely Golden Hawk in the saloon car race at Goodwood Revival last year. “Tuah” was certainly one word that came to mind watching it through corners.

  10. I have no idea what is going on, but in times of crisis I turn to Skinner’s reassuring axiom:

    “Am I out of touch? No, it’s the children who are wrong.”

    1. oh, sometimes you have to acknowledge the trash around you. Just ask an archaeologist; sometimes what we throw out is what is most revealing about us.

  11. I think the Gran Turismo Hawk kind of walked things back in a good way, ditching the tail fins and adding the more modern roofline (and, eventually, a new trunklid). Might have still not been the masterpiece of design it started out as, but it did manage to look pretty contemporary for the early 1960s, did a good job hiding the age of the body within the budget limitations, a big deal when product cycles were more like 1-2 years instead of 5-7 (or 10-15, in the case of Stellantis)

    1. When was boy, the man who lived across the street had a pillarless 1953 Starliner coupe (Nocturne Blue. blue interior). He was a Greyhound bus driver, and one day he brought home his GMC PD4501 Scenicruiser for the neighborhood kids to climb in and gawk over. A few years later I got a few rides in a ’63 or ’64 Grand Turismo Hawk (Velvet Black, red leather interior) driven by a family friend who was a Studebaker salesman. Those three vehicles set the standard for my appreciation of automotive design.

  12. NO clue what you’re talking about, and the video link is “unavailable”. So, I will continue to live in my dark coma.

    That Hawk is pretty cool, and this “viral” video has introduced it to me. So, I guess this was all a good thing afterall??

          1. I would strongly advise against putting any effort into trying to watch the video. I would, however, strongly advise putting effort into avoiding it, as it will just make you sad about the state of humanity.

          2. It’s not a big deal. Just some college girl talking about giving a header makeover with no filter on her preferred technique. Neither hot nor groundbreaking. College girl hormone induced “locker room” talk that just happened to get recorded.

            Whoopdedoo.

              1. Oh, I agree. Way back in the day, it was something like Elvis gyrating. Then it moved to Madonna dating a cross-dressing Rodman. Even further along we got the Kardashians and their sex tapes/inner monologues. I don’t even know what today’s equivalent is, but it isn’t more puritanical, that is for sure.

                Although, at the same time, college aged kids have always been freaky. It’s just now it is all captured. So, who knows? It’s not really my bag. That much I know.

  13. Years ago, I had a VW Thing I was selling, and I included the line “Buy this and you can safely ask anyone ‘Hey, wanna see my Thing?'”

  14. While there’s not much excuse for the tailfins and superficial chrome, the larger central grille on the Hawk came into existence for a couple of valid reasons. Primarily, the higher engine output and optional supercharging on the Hawk needed better cooling — so a larger grille for airflow into the radiator was necessary.

    The second was a little more obscure and may be partially apocryphal — But at the time, Mercedes-Benz’ entry into the US was via a partnership with Studebaker. The Hawk grille could have had any profile — but it’s said the redesign incorporated a bit of Mercedes grille proportioning so that when the Hawk — a “halo car” for Studebaker — was in the same showrooms with Mercedes offerings, there we be a sort of unified, cohesive family resemblance which was thought to be good marketing for both brands.

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