
Top Gear Season 13 Ending – Aston Martin V12 Vantage HD (via YouTube)
In a recent comment on a Grist article, I was accused of being “jealous” of a proud owner of a Ford Mustang with a 5.0 liter V8 engine with over 400-HP Ford Mustang (labeled as a “penile extension” by another commenter).
I responded:
“the fact that you believe owning a Ford Mustang could induce jealousy in anyone, let alone me, is in fact quite amusing”.
Which led to the recollection of a fascinating film production in the closing season of a television show I have never heard of called “Top Gear”.
The film features a crisp luminescent sun glistening through swift blowing clouds, with impeccable green grass covering miles and miles of untouched natural land, with mountain peaks poised in the background.
The poppy flowers, the birds chirping, the sparkling water wallowing around the rock; this video was produced to imbue fervor, sadness and an unyielding sense of being at one with nature, making the viewer feel a natural attachment with the V12, 500HP Aston Martin highlighted in the film.
The film serves to surface an emotional attachment to the automobile by exploiting our inherent human attachment to nature and converging that natural human affliction with a man-made motor vehicle that, frankly, is quite the opposite of nature itself.
Narrated by the driver of the Aston Martin in a soothing British accent:
Well, it’s an Aston Martin Vantage with a V12 engine. So what do you think it’s going to be like?
It is fantastic. It’s wonderful, wonderful, wonderful.
What it makes me feel like, is sad. I just can’t help thinking that thanks to all sorts of things, the environment, the economy, problems in the Middle East, the relentless war on speed – cars like this will soon be consigned to the history books.
I just have this horrible, dreadful feeling that what I am driving here… is an ending.
Goodnight
This film can bring out emotions in someone who has no attachment to motor vehicles. That is the point. That is how people become so emotionally attached to the hunks of steel that sit in their garage in our car dependent society.
Perhaps I am jealous after all. Jealous that our car culture can pull together 62 people (I counted, twice) to create this 4 minute and 50 second film to inspire you and formulate these emotions in you. This was a calculated and measured manipulation of your mind that indeed does make me jealous.
If only we put this amount of resources into stimulating emotions for things that are actually good for ourselves and the natural environment that was so shamelessly exploited in this film…
James D. Schwartz is a Transportation Pragmatist and the Editor of The Urban Country. You can contact James at james.schwartz@theurbancountry.com or follow him on Twitter.
Related Articles:
- We’ve Been Carjacked (Dec 2011)
- The World Has Changed. So Can You. (April 2011)
- Motorists Prime Beneficiaries of Socialism (Aug 2011)
- We Are Addicted To Automobiles (May 2011)
- Americans Work 2 Hours Each Day To Pa For Their Cars (May 2011)



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