Alfa Romeo Just Sent The Bitchiest Press Release Of All Time

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Normally, automaker press releases are pretty well-mannered things. Their whole goal is to make whatever car or car detail or company they’re written about seem wonderful and grand and desirable and impressive, and that generally means not sounding, you know, bitchy. Or pissy. Or petulant.

And yet, somehow, we’ve been blessed with a dazzling and rare example of a major automaker press release actually sounding a little bitchy! It’s fantastic! A tax day miracle! It’s from Alfa Romeo or, more specifically its parent company Stellantis, and has to do with the name of Alfa Romeo’s new compact sporty SUV, the Milano. It seems that the Milano name is now illegal to use (maybe?), so Alfa is going to call the car “Junior.” Make sense? Of course not.

So, what the hell is going on here? I think I’ll let the Stellantis/Alfa Romeo press release explain it, so you too can revel in the pissy tone of a press release titled Alfa Romeo: Milano Name is Not Okay? Junior Then!:

“During one of the most important weeks for the future of Alfa Romeo, an Italian government official declared that the use of the name Milano – chosen by the brand for its recently unveiled new compact sports car – is banned by law.

Despite Alfa Romeo believing that the name meets all legal requirements, and that there are issues much more important than the name of a new car, Alfa Romeo has decided to change it from Milano to Junior in the spirit of promoting mutual understanding.”

Look at all that shade being thrown there, especially about how the Italian government maybe has more important things to worry about than the name of a new car! This is just the latest in a series of spats between the new Italian government and Stellantis.

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I also really appreciate how Alfa Romeo is taking the “fine, we don’t care, we’re cool changing the name, in fact it’s easy, and thanks for all the attention, government losers” angle:

“The Alfa Romeo team would like to thank the public for the positive feedback, the Italian dealer network for their support, journalists for the enormous media attention given to the new car and the Italian government for the free publicity brought on by this debate.

With a unique story and an endless list of names to choose from, the name change was not an issue. It was a pleasure to go over the list of names selected as favourites from the public’s suggestions, one of which was Junior.”

What this press release doesn’t address is why Alfa can’t use the name Milano. And the answer has more in common with champagne and cheese than it does cars, really. In much the same way that sparkling wines and muscatels are only allowed to be called “champagne” if they’re from within 100 miles of the region of France actually called Champagne, or how only certain cheeses may be called Parmigiano-Reggiano if they’re from Bologna, Reggio Emilia, Mantua, Modena, or Parma, or how extruded, ring-shape onion-flavored snacks can only be called “Funions” if they’re made within earshot of the burglar alarm at the big lumberyard in Wooster, Ohio, then only things built in Milan are allowed to be named for the city, at least according to an interpretation of the law by Italian government officials.

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The car-almost-named-Milano is to be built at Stellantis’ Tychy, Poland factory, which builds many cars for the company, including the popular and iconic Fiat 500. Ironically, the Milano was to be the only Alfa not built in Italy, with the other current Alfa Romeos – the Giulia and the Stelvio – still made in Alfa’s Cassino, Italy plant.

The Milano – sorry, the Junior – is a big deal for Alfa Romeo, as it will be their first all-electric car, though there will be a hybrid version as well. So, despite Alfa’s claim that the car’s name is not a worthy problem for the Italian government, it is definitely a big deal for Alfa. The Milano name has history for Alfa, of course, with the city’s symbol and the coat-of-arms of the Visconti family that once ruled Milan making up their logo. That’s why it has a snake eating a person, you see.

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And, of course, Alfa has had a Milano before, the celebrated boxy sports sedan from the 1980s, also known as the Alfa Romeo 75. The Milano name is certainly evocative of Italy and carries a certain gravity to it, one I’m not sure the “Junior” name will as well.

Sure, Alfa is playing it off like it’s no big deal – the press release quotes Stefano Odorici, President of the Italian Alfa Romeo Dealers Association:

Alfa Romeo is an inclusive brand, which welcomes and generates passion and positive emotions. You can clearly see it when I look into the eyes of our customers when they come to see, test, purchase and collect Alfa Romeo cars in our dealerships. For this reason, we welcome the decision taken by the company to change the name of the car from Milano to Junior in light of the latest news, which could affect the enthusiasm and the enormous attention that the new car is receiving from our customers recently. Junior, like Milano, are both beautiful names that have their roots in the history of the brand. It is no coincidence that they were immediately among the public’s favourites.”

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I mean, is Junior a “beautiful name” like Milano? To American ears? I’m not so sure. Junior certainly has history at Alfa, such as the Alfa Romeo Giulia GT 1300 Junior, a fantastic and quick little car, but will people associate “Junior” with that? There have been other cars named Junior, like the DKW Junior, and there was even a Porsche tractor named Junior.

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What’s really bonkers is that it seems that this is not the first time Alfa Romeo had to backpedal from naming a car Milano; it happened before, in 2009, as noted in the wonderful Boring Car Trivia book:

So, incredibly, Alfa has made essentially the same general mistake twice! Wow. They’re only matched by Porsche, who somehow never thought to check and see if the name “Continental” was already in use anywhere in the mid 1950s, which it definitely was, so they had to change the name of their top-spec 356s, and then Porsche made the same mistake again in 1963, when they named their new car the 901, which was a number-name already “owned” by Peugeot, who had a lock on three-digit number-names with a central zero. So, that became the 911. Don’t these companies look into any of this crap?

I’ve heard – mostly just from our captive professional car designer Adrian – that this had to be some kind of stunt, or setup. But I don’t think so. I think this is just a great example of carmakers proving that they can be as half-assed as any of us, or perhaps it’s as hopeful as any of us?

Either way, there’s no Milano. There’s just the Junior, which I’m sure will see great success like other things named Junior have, like Junior Mints or the IBM PC Jr.

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122 thoughts on “Alfa Romeo Just Sent The Bitchiest Press Release Of All Time

  1. It is interesting that they’re ok with building an Alfa outside Italy now.

    The Fiata was going to be an Alfa, but Mazda wouldn’t let them built it in Italy, so it became a Fiat.

  2. Alfa has to have the worst model names of any manufacturer.

    Stelvio sounds like an artificial sweetener.

    Giulia makes me think of The Wedding Singer. Julia Giulia.

    And now Junior.

    1. Junior is also the name of a small coal mining town in West Virginia, maybe that’s redundant, let’s say small town in West Virginia, the coal part is probably assumed. Stellantis doesn’t have any plant there, wonder if their government will sue?

  3. Junior was the second choice, after Quasimodo.
    Seriously, that thing was beaten with the ugly stick so much that I’m starting to realize it has a fetish and probably paid for it in advance. Not that I want to kink shame anyone, but do we really need to see its O face?

  4. If they really wanted to get petty, rename the car the Alfa Polonia (Poland in Italian).
    “You want the car to say where it’s built? There ya go.”

    1. This is Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers level of petty and I am here for it. Plus Polonia sounds way better than Junior so it should be an easy decision for Alfa Romeo to make.

  5. If the American automakers had such restrictions we’d never have Monte Carlo, LeMans, Torino, Parisian, Cordoba, Granada, Monterey, or even the Eldorado!

      1. “Let’s call our luxo barge Monte Carlo, that sounds fancy.”
        “But it wouldn’t even fit on their streets.”
        “Where is Monte Carlo, anyway?”
        “Nobody knows, so it’s perfect.”

  6. So they’ve gone from the name of a cookie (as mentioned by other commenters) to the name of a New York-based purveyor of rather good cheesecake.

    Frankly I think it’s a step up.

  7. Definitely getting some tonal overtures from that press release. I’m wondering if Junior was the second name choice after the “Screwmilano”.

      1. I don’t know if hes still there but for a long time the service manager at VW Manhattan’s name was Corrado

        I mentioned the coincidence once and he told me that fewer than ten people have ever noticed

  8. The Italian town is Milan how do they control Milano? Their are over 12 other towns call Milan in the world why does Italy control it? If they own a plant in Milan shut it down and tell employees and townsfolk why.

  9. If this isn’t a stunt, Alfa sure should be glad it isn’t bringing this product stateside.

    Alfa already has trouble selling cars here. Oh but here’s a new Alfa! Oh, and it’s ugly! Oh and we fucking named it JUNIOR.

    I would make the joke that they would sell dozens of them, but I think even a dozen would be a stretch goal.

  10. I have a larger issue with

    Milano – chosen by the brand for its recently unveiled new compact sports car

    The fact that someone has referred to this as a sports car.

  11. Try Millano different spelling. Or just announce that in the future Alfas will be having a numeric name or a definite non Italian name. Let the citizens attack the government for ruining Italian car manufacturers. Announce closing italian car factories due to unfriendly government attacks. Send a few sorryvnext year your job will be transferred to gofukyurselfstan.

            1. Much better idea. Those Hollywood models lose value quickly and stay expensive to operate even after they go from sporty to beat comfortable.

  12. Adrian, I’d agree with you if this was Volkswagen…but does Stellantis make similar public gaffes often, or this visibly? (re: Voltswagen and the Harlekin paint jobs)

    I have to admit, “Junior” sounds like a joke to my American ears, but I think the examples given are strong enough to assume it’s serious.

    One of a handful of times they may need to hire badge engineers to make new molds for the badges. Ha.

  13. I guess this means they can’t build a new Montreal, either, since Stellantis doesn’t have a plant in Quebec.

    A Chrysler Cordoba revival might also be problematic, since Stellantis’ Spanish factory is in Galicia

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