Curbside Musings: 1964 Buick Riviera – Emulating One’s Heroes

1964 Buick Riviera. Edgewater, Chicago, Illinois. Saturday, May 13, 2017.

My personification of cars stretches back to early childhood.  Even before I could read and understand the nuances of the printed ad copy in my parents’ National Geographic magazines, I watched television and was excited by commercial spots selling vehicles with dynamic cinematography, catchy music, and memorable slogans.  As a kid, I was doing the “Toyota jump” in the living room right along with the happy, fictional owners of new Celicas and Corollas.  I mention all of this only as I try to piece together when and how it all might have started with me assigning human-like attributes in my mind to various cars and trucks, based on what I perceived to be their personalities.

To expand on this idea, certain models might seem heavy on brute strength and light on grace and finesse, like a Chevy Camaro Z28.  A BMW 3-Series might be seen as cerebral and precise.  A Renault Fuego might be beautiful to look at, but also temperamental and unreliable.  Nobody wants to party with a clinical Toyota Camry.  Even up through my thirties and late nights spent out dancing, instead of seeing others at the club as the humans we were, it was sometimes easier for me to think of the dance floor as some kind of strobe-lit expressway with all of us participants representing various forms of automotive machinery as we moved together in the dark to the driving beat.  Like tires and their rhythmic pounding over joints in the pavement – thump, thump, thump, thump

1964 Buick Riviera brochure photos, as sourced from www.oldcarbrochures.org.

Thinking of myself as a particular year, make, and model was a fun way to gain or feign the confidence I might otherwise have lacked in the moment and participate in the “show”, comfortable inside my own body and the way I moved and performed.  It was a form of dissociation from what I perceived as my own inadequacies, but I saw it as a harmless form of escape and distraction.  Combined with the anesthetic effects of alcohol, this mindset allowed me to step outside of myself just long enough to feel included, normal, and just like every other body in the room, styled as differently from one another as we were.  “Every car has a story” goes the slogan here at Curbside Classic.  It was just sometimes easier to think of myself as a machine not subject to moral judgements or too many feelings.

Fast-forwarding to middle age, there are still times and tasks during which I feel much less than confident.  I was recently assigned a project at work that involves the kind of superficial, external social interaction that I’ve come to passionately dislike.  I’m perfectly capable of flipping my “personality switch” to the on-position when needed, and this is something most successful working adults need to be able to do at different points.  At the same time, none of us wants to be asked to do something with which we have had limited experience or success, especially in front of others whose trust and credibility we seek to either gain or maintain.

1964 Buick Riviera brochure photos, as sourced from www.oldcarbrochures.org.

It’s natural that in such a situation, we might dig deep inside ourselves, pray, and/or think of a hero to emulate in that moment, someone else to “be” that feels more comfortable to us than our own, fearful selves.  In this most recent episode at work, my sales calls were not quite a complete disaster, but I might have benefitted from remembering to remain cool like a Surf Green ’64 Riviera.  The first iteration of the Riv, from the 1963 – ’65 model years, is one of those timeless shapes that exudes more cool than a vat of Aqua Velva.  One could not imagine the soul of this car becoming flustered under any circumstances, especially with the power of one of two 425 cubic inch V8s under the hood.  The standard Wildcat 465 engine put out 340 horsepower, and the Super Wildcat, with its dual carburetors and larger air cleaner, was good for 20 horses more.

1964 Buick Riviera. Edgewater, Chicago, Illinois. Saturday, May 13, 2017.

Had I thought of it, I might have chanted to myself, “Be the Riviera… Be the Riviera…” as I waited for the recipients of those recent sales calls to pick up the receiver.  A lot of the time, I am not anything close to being the Riviera.  I’m courteous, efficient, empathic, logical, dedicated, and very hardworking, but those qualities don’t always necessarily fall into the category of calm, cool, and collected.  I simply care too much about doing a good job and not looking foolish, sometimes at the expense of coming across as being robotic.  The ’64 Riviera’s slight 6% sales dip to about 37,700 units in ’64 from the round, first-year number of 40,000, followed by 34,600 in ’65 seems to have indicated a certain steadiness to match this car’s solid, quiet, beautiful aura, both inside and out.

1964 Buick Riviera brochure photos, as sourced from www.oldcarbrochures.org.

I’d like to think of the most perfect version of myself as being like a ’64 Riviera, Flint’s best, but with my tendency to focus on moving steadily forward and just getting things done correctly and efficiently without putting too much emphasis on being the most liked person in the world, I’m probably closer to something like a ’79 Ford Mustang with the turbocharged 2.3 liter four.  Not always, but often enough I need to remind myself not to overheat and/or warp something.  Maybe I’m not the early turbo Mustang, but something foreign that works best and endures with regular maintenance and good (self-)care.  In any case, keeping it smooth like an early Riviera is always something to aspire toward.

Edgewater, Chicago, Illinois.
Saturday, May 13, 2017.

Factory brochure photos were as sourced from www.oldcarbrochures.org.