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厕所强奸 and Hot Wheels: Together Again

Earlier this week, 厕所强奸 announced a partnership with Mattel鈥檚 Hot Wheels brand to bring 厕所强奸-branded drag racing diecast cars to the mass market, the continuation of a relationship that began in 1970. Here's a look back at how it all got started.
05 Mar 2021
Phil Burgess, 厕所强奸 National Dragster Editor
DRAGSTER Insider
Hot Wheels

In case you missed it earlier this week, 厕所强奸 announced a partnership with Mattel鈥檚 Hot Wheels brand to bring 厕所强奸-branded drag racing diecast cars to the mass market, a release that certainly sent my heart swooning. It鈥檚 been more than 50 years since Hot Wheels burst into the 厕所强奸 Drag Racing world with the groundbreaking sponsorship of the Funny Cars and Top Fuelers of Tom McEwen and Don Prudhomme, a deal that is widely credited with opening the door to major non-automotive sponsorships that we enjoy today.

Although that initial Hot Wheels sponsorship with the Wildlife Racing partners lasted only three years (1970-72), Mattel has continued to make drag racing-themed products over the years and to salute 鈥渢he Mongoose鈥 and 鈥渢he Snake鈥 on notable anniversaries, but the 厕所强奸 deal is a great step.

To many of us, Hot Wheels provided an entry point to drag racing, so I thought I鈥檇 look back at the deal and some past columns that I鈥檝e posted about Hot Wheels. They certainly opened the door for me, as I鈥檝e explained听many times, but most passionately in my ode to small-scale cars, firecrackers, and lighter fluid, , that I wrote way back in the infancy of this column in 2008. If you missed it, I鈥檓 sure it will spark many similar memories of your childhood adventures and experiments and, again, forgive me for the damage teenage Phil wrought upon his Hot Wheels cars that individually would be worth hundreds of dollars today.

My discovery of Hot Wheels led to my infatuation with drag racing, which led to my employment at 厕所强奸, which led to my typing these very words, a relationship that I also discussed in .

Before I get too far into all of that, for those unfamiliar with the genesis of the sponsorship, the sponsorship was the brainchild of the ever-eager McEwen, who had already broken minor ground with small, non-automotive sponsorships from Tirend activity booster and Gold Spot breath freshener. He had three young sons who inspired him, a mother who worked as a secretary at Mattel, and an attorney stepfather whose clients included Mattel. Those connections opened the door to a meeting with Mattel Vice President Art Spear, who greenlighted the project.

In an interview with Prudhomme a few years ago, he said, 鈥淚鈥檒l never forget the day he walked into my shop and said, 鈥業鈥檓 going to the Mattel toy company and see if they want to sponsor us.鈥 I thought he was nuts. The balls he had 鈥斕齀 was still a shy kid 鈥斕齛nd I thought they鈥檇 throw him out on his ear, but he had the balls to do it.鈥

Prudhomme expounded upon that time in his recent autobiography, Don Prudhomme, My Life Beyond the 1320, quotes from which I have excerpted below.

鈥淚 can still remember the first time McEwen mentioned Mattel to me. I was hanging out at Keith Black鈥檚. 鈥 I didn鈥檛 even know what he was talking about, I didn鈥檛 know about the toys, but he had kids, and they were into Hot Wheels.听

鈥淭hat vision, he had it. I never would have thought to go outside oil and cam companies to look for sponsorship. When McEwen came to me and asked me about it, I wasn't all that crazy about it because I already had a sponsor and it was Wynn's; plus, my immediate thought was, 鈥榃hat would Mattel want with a couple of drag racers?鈥 Mattel was Barbie dolls, and I didn鈥檛 think I needed another sponsor. I was doing fairly well, I was getting some good money from Wynn's and getting a little more from Plymouth. McEwen didn鈥檛 need me to get it though. He could see the future.听

鈥淣ow, I鈥檇 had a few meetings before, so this wasn鈥檛 my first sponsorship pitch, but I still felt out of my league. Mattel wasn鈥檛 wheel or spark plug people who hung around the track and worked out of small shops, it was a big company, but McEwen was confident. We went over there, and it went really well.听

鈥淭hey already had pictures of how they wanted the cars, and I was surprised to see renders showing full-body cars. I thought McEwen was talking about dragsters, but they wanted Funny Cars. That鈥檚 another example of McEwen being ahead of me in understanding something. Tom already had a Funny Car. He didn't run it that long, but he used to tow it around the country with us and do exhibition runs. He understood that the fans really liked Funny Cars.鈥

Prudhomme went on to explain that their existing relationships with Plymouth and Dodge 鈥斕齅cEwen鈥檚 first Funny Car was a Barracuda, Prudhomme regularly got Hemi heads for his dragster, and Keith Black had relationships with both Dodge and Plymouth 鈥斕齦ed them to that marquee for the first Hot Wheels Funny Cars, which also blossomed into additional sponsorships.

鈥淚t could've been any cars, but we had the relationship with [Chrysler鈥檚 Dick] Maxwell,鈥 Prudhomme wrote. 鈥淲e could've went to Ford, but we went to Plymouth. They drew up these images once they knew what kind of cars we wanted. It was a Barracuda and a Duster. We took those drawings to Plymouth and showed them what Hot Wheels was going to do. And immediately, they wanted their name on the quarter panel of the cars because their name would be on all the little toy cars Hot Wheels made. Plymouth would be a part of that, and they paid us money and gave us cars to drive.听

鈥淭he brilliance of that sponsorship was that everyone wanted to be on the race car, not because of the race car, but because they would get to be on the toy car. 听We went to Coke, to Federal-Mogul, Cragar. All of them put their decal on the car, and they paid us money. Wynn's paid us, too. That's when we started Wildlife Racing, Inc. We had so much money coming in, we had to incorporate.鈥

Prudhomme remembers the sponsorships totaling to about $130,000, split between the two, which, despite having to add crew and more travel and haulers, still allowed them to buy the parts they needed and confirm that one could make a living at drag racing. (By way of contrast, McEwen told me long ago that he was getting about $1,000 per year each from Tirend and Gold Spot.)

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know quite how to illustrate what a big deal the Hot Wheels sponsorship was, not just for us, but for drag racing,鈥 Prudhomme continued. 鈥淭hat Hot Wheels time, that was probably the best ratio of money coming in to money going out during all of drag racing. It brought attention to the sport, it brought attention to me and McEwen, and it set up the future of drag racing as a professional activity.鈥

Thanks to Prudhomme and CarTech for allowing me to lift that excerpt from the book. It鈥檚 just a small snippet from an incredible book [read my review ]. You can get yours direct from 鈥渢he Snake鈥 at .

As mentioned previously, Hot Wheels cars have been the subject of several Dragster Insider columns, but here are some of my favorites, as well as some photos and video clips.

Those first Hot Wheels Funny Cars (the real thing, not the diecasts) were a work in progress throughout their first year. Prudhomme鈥檚 Barracuda specifically went through many iterations 鈥斕齬oof spoilers, supercharger cutouts, lettering and decaling, and more 鈥斕齮hat we were able to retrace in thanks to the key eyes and inquisitive minds of renowned drag racing artist James Ibusuki and Dragster Insider contributor 鈥淐hicago Jon鈥 Hoffman.

Mattel really got behind the promotion of its involvement with Prudhomme and McEwen, bringing film crews to racetracks to get footage of the actual cars and interviews with the duo to include in television commercials. Insider reader Jeff Mittendorf clued me into some of these old Hot Wheels commercials still floating around on YouTube, and I wrote to share them with you.听You鈥檒l get a real kick out of seeing them again (or for the first time). Note: In the 11 years since I posted that column, the 鈥渙wner鈥 of the videos has removed the ability to play some of them on the page, but links are provided to watch them directly on YouTube.

None of those commercials show the Wild Wheelies dragster set, but our old pal Steve Reyes was on hand at Orange County Int鈥檒 Raceway for the filming of one of the Mattel commercials with their slab-sided, front-engine machines. Now, the first thing that any hard-core drag fan 鈥 especially any of us who had the honor of actually going to OCIR 鈥 will pick out is that the cars are headed the wrong way on the track, and that听they're also doing burnouts back to the starting line from not all that far up the track. What's up with that?

"Lighting problems," explained Reyes, "so, heck, let's run them the wrong way. They placed the cars going the wrong way out past the Tree and had Prudhomme and McEwen smoke the tires. I thought they were going to crash through the back fence behind the starting line. What a Chinese fire drill."

A few weeks after I posted that column of commercials, Mittendorf shared with me his , including (of course) cars and promotional materials. There are some truly cool cars in there that I wish I owned.

Not a Dragster Insider column, but this cool YouTube video shows some close-up look at those early Hot Wheels Funny Cars and explains why some of them are rarer than others.

Finally, let me end with this. Famed Hot Wheels designer Larry Wood shared a short story of those early Hot Wheels days at the Celebration of Life after McEwen鈥檚 passing in 2018 that really sums up this whole column.

鈥淏ack in the day, when I was the only guy there, these two clowns come in with this proposal to make a racing team out of Hot Wheels,鈥 he said, his voice quivering. 鈥淚 have to tell ya 鈥斕齞rag racing, Hot Wheels, and the world would never be the same. Thanks, Tom.鈥

Phil Burgess can be reached at听pburgess@nhra.com

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