Edsel"Ford produced the car of the decade in 1957 - the Edsel. Half of the
models sold proved spectacularly defective. If lucky, you could have got a car with any or all of the following features: doors that wouldn't close, bonnets and boots that wouldn't open, batteries that went flat, hooters that stuck, hubcaps that dropped off, paint that peeled, transmissions that seized up, brakes that failed and push buttons that couldn't be pushed even with three of you trying.
"In a stroke of marketing genius, the Edsel, one of the biggest and most lavish cars ever built, coincided with a phase when people increasingly wanted economy cars. As Time magazine said: 'It was a classic case of the wrong car for the wrong market at the wrong time.'
"Unpopular to begin with, the car's popularity declined. One business writer at the time likened the Edsel's sales graph to an extremely dangerous ski-slope. He added that, so far as he knew, there was only one case of an Edsel ever being stolen."
Ford, Edsel Bryant (1893-1943) American industrialist, Ford CEO (1919-1943), son of Henry Ford
[Sources: Stephen Pile,
The Book of Heroic Failures]More Edsel Ford anecdotesRelated Anecdote Keywords:
Cars Automobiles Theft Crime Bad Design
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