Cruisin’ The
Capital
Pirate
Press November 2016
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Car-centric
events in Mississippi are a real “Feast-or-Famine” occurrence. For months at a
time, the automotive landscape is bleaker than Death Valley and then suddenly
three spring up at the same time. For the first weekend of Fall, there was the
kickoff of “Cruisin’ The Coast”, “Cars and Coffee” in Biloxi and “Euro Fest” in
Jackson. But given the prominence of Italian cars at Euro Fest, it wasn’t hard
to decide which to attend. So, on October 1st, almost exactly one year after
the “Ferrari Days” event I attended in New Orleans, we ventured to our state
capital to attend another Ferrari meet. This one was much smaller though, and
not officially sanctioned by the Ferrari factory. However, I took exception to
the name, “Euro Fest” which sounds like a triple-x flick about a slatternly
Czech girl and a hotel room of amorous suitors. The improbable title
notwithstanding, the car show took place in the same city where I saw my first
Ferrari nearly thirty years ago.
That was in
January 1987 at Ferrari South, the only authorized dealership between Florida
and Texas. My Father volunteered to drive me the three hours to Jackson so I
wouldn’t get hopelessly lost and end up somewhere like the pecan orchards of
Indianola. And this was the Eighties, where you didn’t drive anywhere without a
gas station highway map that unfolded into the size of a small tent. Back in
those dark days before Al Gore claimed he invented the internet, there was no
GPS or crowd-sourcing apps like Trip Advisor or Yelp, so we just
rolled the dice when stopping for food in an unknown town. They say you can’t
judge a book by its cover, but you do have much better odds of choosing a
restaurant by its storefront. And we lucked out when we stopped at a nice two
story, wood-sided eatery on the forested outskirts of Jackson. Lunch was
going along swimmingly until I attempted to open a glass bottle of Heinz
ketchup. Remember, these were the old times when restaurants still had pay
phones, so the ubiquitous fast food squeeze bottles were as foreign as wireless
routers. Back then it could take a lot of cajoling, begging, pleading,
embarrassing hand gestures and sometimes even a ritual-sacrifice before you
could eventually coax the ketchup out of the bottle. And unlike a good bottle
of wine, you didn’t want to receive an aged bottle of ketchup where the
contents had the same viscosity as flypaper. Nope, you’d have better luck
breaking the glass bottle over the bow of the Titanic and picking out the glass
shards than persuading it to pour out in a reasonable amount of time. As such,
when the ketchup finally decided to exit the bottle it did so with an explosive
force equal to that generated by Mount St. Helens. But instead of grey soot and
ash, this was an enormous, anomalous blob of ketchup moving at roughly the
speed of light towards my crotch. Almost as if guided by an extraterrestrial
intelligence, it somehow completely missed my plate and napkin and made a
perfect bulls-eye on my button-fly jeans. I immediately grabbed my napkin and
desperately tried to wipe it off, but I only succeeded in rubbing it more into
the faded denim. Meanwhile, my stern Father made an exasperated expression that
seemed to convey he couldn’t take my anywhere without it embarrassing him. A
trip to the men’s room was also futile in removing the stain which now bore an
eerie resemblance to Gorbachev’s Port-Wine Birthmark. Determined there was
nothing else I could do, I sheepishly left with the huge crimson stain on the
front of my pants, looking like an unprepared woman who was surprised by the
early arrival of her monthly visitor.
Shortly
thereafter, we arrived at 419 South Gallatin Street, the location of Ferrari
South. Granted, Gallatin Street in Jackson was never a prosperous section of
the state capital even when the economy was booming in the 1980’s under a
Republican president. I always thought it was a little incongruous that a
dealership purveying $125,000 sports cars was built in an impoverished area
where houses were a half-century old and displaced less square footage than a
politician’s kitchen. Additionally, the nearby named Hooker Street did little
to boost property values and encourage community reinvestments. Finally,
Jackson’s mass-transit authority was within walking distance and became a hub
for a parade of modern-day carpetbaggers. In 2014, this unsavory element helped
catapult Jackson to number two for murder rates in the Southeast (behind only
New Orleans) and number four nationwide.
As we walked up
to Ferrari South, Dick Manning, the Sales Manager, rushed to greeted us at the
door. In retrospect, this was probably because with the scarlet stain on my
pants and the part of town we were in, he probably thought I’d been stabbed and
had mistaken the dealership for an Urgent Care facility. However, he relaxed
once he saw that wasn’t the case. I introduced myself and he recalled us
speaking on the phone. Although I had made it clear that I was not there to buy
a Ferrari, he still gave us the royal treatment.
Incidentally,
that would be my first (and last) visit to Ferrari South as the owner, Ed
Wettach, would shutter the dealership in 1994. Wettach, as local lore has it,
became a real-life Horatio Alger. He was a typical used-car salesman until he
sold his future wife a Corvette. That woman just happened to be Eleanor
Hederman of the Hederman
family that owned Jackson’s Clarion-Ledger newspaper. He married her and flush
from a $110 Million dollar sale of the Clarion-Ledger to Gannet Corp., opened
Ferrari South in 1984 and used it as his private toy box. He leveraged his
position as a dealer to obtain not only the newest and best Ferraris for
himself, but also at a steep discount. One of his most famous acquisitions was
a 1993 Ferrari F40 LM, one of just 19 built worldwide. But believing the road
to Atlanta was paved with gold, Wettach began a “Sherman’s March” to Georgia’s
capital in 1995 with plans for a fancy new Ferrari dealership there. As with
the Civil War that happened 100 years earlier, there was considerable bloodshed
and casualties from employees who either left or were fired. In the ensuing
years, Ferrari of Atlanta thrived but Wettach passed away in 2013 after a long
struggle with MDS, a rare form of blood and bone marrow cancer.
A postcard of
the dealership in better days
And as it
stands now, with rampant rust and graffiti
Fast-forward to
present day and our destination for Euro Fest was Ridgeland, a swanky suburb
about 10 minutes north of Jackson. It can be confusing to find as there are
three locations in the same vicinity that sound similar. With the local lazy
southern drawl, Ridgeland, Richland and Richton are all pronounced the same but
are vastly different. There were many other small towns we passed through and
the lack of imagination when naming them seemed to reflect the local intellect,
or lack thereof. For instance, there was “Rock Hill” “Dry Creek” and “Strong
River”. There was even a billboard for a motel named the “Luxury Inn” that
included directions which read “Near Giant Cross” as if every passerby was a
local who would immediately recognize the location they were speaking of. Sure
enough, ten miles down the road the Luxury Inn was smack dab between a church
and a catfish restaurant, two of the most prolific industries in
Mississippi.
North of
Hattiesburg, there was a startling sound like distant thunder which was odd
given the clear forecast and picturesque Autumn weather. The cacophony grew
louder and louder before we spotted the origin of the disturbance. Behind us,
it looked like a giant, angry swarm was rapidly approaching. We watched as
nearly 200 bikers on hot-rodded Harley Davidson’s roared past us. They were so
loud, I told my wife they couldn’t even sneak up on a marching band. After the
deafening display, I laughed at the name of their gang stitched on their
leather jackets: “Sons of Silence”.
Euro Fest was
expected to draw 15,000
spectators to view 150 entries, manufactured in five different countries, and
coming from eight different states. Aside from Ferrari, some of the other
marquees represented were BMW, Jaguar, Porsche and Rolls Royce. It took place
in a 500,000 square foot open-air lifestyle center known as Renaissance at
Colony Park. We were also surprised when we spotted a 190-foot-tall replica of
the Washington Monument near the entrance. However, it turns out that the
monolithic obelisk was designed more for civic-minded progress than flag-waving
patriotism. Upon further inspection, there was nary a piece of marble or
granite to be found. Instead, we discovered that it was a carefully camouflaged
cell phone tower concealed in 4-foot by 8-foot fiberglass panels, painted to
mimic the approximation of stone. And yet, the irony was not lost on us: it was
a perfect metaphor for how today’s government painstakingly cultivates an image
to disguise its true nature.
However, after
a stroll around the Renaissance at Colony Park, I personally felt that a statue
of Atlas would be more appropriate given that the whole center feels as it was
founded on Ayn Rand’s philosophy of Objectivism. It’s also no surprise that shopping there requires a
political lobbyist’s salary and with such affluent tenants as Ruth’s Chris
Steakhouse and a Rolex dealer, it’s equally easy to wreck your cholesterol as
well as your bank account. Fittingly, the Ferraris were parked in front of
Biaggi’s Italian Ristorante, so we had a spectacular view of them as we dined
on such traditional delicacies as bomboloni, calamari and tiramisu.
There was also a
rogue element at Euro Fest that I had not experienced at any car shows before,
and that unpredictable factor was the general public. Previously, the Ferrari
events I had attended were largely private affairs that helped separate the
wheat from the chaff. But that cushion was absent here and it brought out the
absolute worst society has to offer: teenagers, shopping and selfies. That’s
right, these kids were literally falling all over themselves trying to snap
pictures in front of the cars, even though they knew nothing about them. Young
and old were equally mystified by the various marquees, not being able to tell
the difference between a Fiat and a Ferrari. A bright red Lotus Esprit Turbo
generated a lot of attention due to its cuneiform curves. I witnessed a
thirty-something woman drag her two young daughters over to it while sighing
heavily that it was the same car Richard Gere drove in “Pretty Woman”.
Similarly, I overheard a teenage boy confidently told his friend that it was a
million-dollar Lamborghini. They had no idea it was a 1981 model with just 220
hp and a price less than $20K on Ebay. But, the height of these clueless
onlookers had to be when I spotted an elderly man snapping photos of a new
Accord. I didn’t have the heart to tell him that he could see as many as he
wanted at the Honda store. Later on, I would reflect on the entire day and
remain amused at what an exercise in ethnology it was.
Aside from the
registered show cars, there were a lot of high performance vehicles parked
amongst the hoi polloi. I spotted an Acura NSX and a C7 Corvette Stingray on
one aisle, while a Dodge Viper and Porsche 911 Turbo were on another. But it
was a brand-new 2017 Tesla Model X that garnered the most attention. It might
have slipped through as discretely as any other random luxury crossover, but
that chance disappeared when its signature gull-wing doors lifted up. “What
is that?!?” asked my wife, genuinely perplexed. I explained that it was
essentially a $100,000 electric SUV, but that answer didn’t sit well with her.
Apparently, she could justify such a price tag for a Ferrari which combined
sleek bodywork with high-performance, but a $100,000 battery-powered minivan
was as alien to her as a flying saucer.
1971 Alfa
Romeo Junior Zagato
This Alfa Romeo
was a pleasant surprise, as both the styling and the Champagne Metallizzato color
strongly evoked the late sixties Space-Race era that it was born in. It
belonged to Mike Glore of New Orleans who had perhaps the strangest stable of
cars present. At one end was the aforementioned antique Alfa Romeo, and the
newer end was a sunburst orange 2012 McLaren MP4-12C.
2003 Westfield
Seven
Along with the
Alfa, this Westfield Seven was one of the stranger oddities. It’s essentially a
kit-car based on a Lotus Seven, hence the strong physical resemblance. However,
the main difference between the two is that Westfield continues manufacturing
their models in fiberglass as Lotus originally did, whereas Caterham (who
bought the rights) now uses aluminum. And given the light body weight, all
versions of the Seven are terrific performers with engine choices ranging from
mild to wild.
2013 Maserati
GranTurismo MC Stradale
With its special
one-of-a-kind Lamborghini Verde Ithaca Pearl Green paint, this Maserati was
certainly the brightest and most flamboyant vehicle in attendance.
Unfortunately, it was more flash than dash, with a relatively weak 444hp V-8 to
motivate its four-doors and 4000-plus pounds. It was offered by Motorcars of
Jackson and touted as the owner’s personal vehicle. With just 6,000 miles on
the odometer, it was being advertised for $135,000 but had no takers. Such an
ostentatious appearance clearly requires someone with the questionable taste
and money of a professional athlete.
2012 McLaren
MP4-12C
Next to the
Ferraris, this Pearl White McLaren was my favorite exotic at the show. I heard
it before I saw it, when the owner revved it up to demonstrate the custom
exhaust it was equipped with it. As I made my way through the crowd, I caught
the tail-end of his conversation explaining the special system. I may not have
gotten to speak to him, but the McLaren didn’t need an introduction. The
“Warp Drive” vanity plate was quite as fitting as the 600hp twin-turbo V8 made
it one of the fastest cars at Euro Fest.
2016 Ferrari
F12
Whereas the
Maserati was simply too gaudy and could be spotted from outer space, the F12 on
display had the exact opposite problem and was too subdued. I didn’t feel that
that the Argento Nurburgring silver paint properly conveyed the Ferrari’s
powerful character. After all, with a 730hp naturally-aspirated V-12, it
remains the fastest production Ferrari available. But to test my theory, I
asked my wife which she thought was the quickest and most expensive Ferrari
present. She incorrectly picked a black 488 and a red California, both
eight-cylinder models, over the F12. Likewise, the performance is nearly as
breath-taking as the sticker price, starting at $319,999. But everything is a
la carte, so it’s not hard to rack up another $150,000 in accessories. For
instance, one carbon fiber cup holder fetches $3,533 making for a very
expensive way to carry your $5 Frappuccino. Similarly, convenience items
standard on even the most basic cars such as electric mirrors are also a $3,533
option. Finally, the most sensible item, a suspension lift for raising the
front a couple inches to clear steep inclines, seems a bargain at $5,461. But
for me, the real kicker is that Ferrari is discontinuing the fitted car cover
that came standard with every F12 purchase. Apparently, word is that the
Italian automaker is too cheap to continue including it for free.
The F12 belonged
to Paul McNeill, a Senior Vice-President at Merrill Lynch in Ridgeland and also
the President of the Mississippi Ferrari Chapter. He grew up in Oxford, England
before moving to Jackson when he was 13. As such, he goes by the moniker
“FerrariBrit” on the forums and is quite passionate about the prancing horse,
having owned every generation of eight-cylinder Ferrari available in the past
thirty years. Interestingly, he recently possessed a Rosso Corsa (Racing Red)
2015 F12 before trading it in on the platinum 2016 model. As he was proceeding
to leave, he cranked the F12 and it emitted a Valkyrian shriek from the
quad-exhaust tips before settling into a deep, gurgling idle. I turned around
and looked at my wife as is if to say, “Can you believe that unearthly
sound?!?” Noticing my surprise, Bobby Gill, the owner of an F430 Spider parked
nearby, leaned over and remarked that Paul had turned the exhaust valves in the
mufflers so that they stayed fully open all the time, resulting in the aural
ambrosia. But the only option on the F12 I didn’t desire was the curiously
named HELE Start&Stop feature. This “High
Emotion Low Emissions” technology helps Ferrari achieve a 23% reduction in CO2
emissions at the risk of automatically stopping and starting the vehicle at
every red light. Personally, I wouldn’t want that wear and tear on my
drivetrain, nor telling people that I have HELE, which sounds like an
autoimmune disease.
2009 Nissan
GT-R (Click Picture to Watch)
What’s this, a
six-cylinder Nissan ranked ahead of Ferrari’s V-12 flagship? Indeed, as we were
walking back from watching the Ferraris depart, I spied an unassuming silver
Nissan GTR pulling up. I casually pointed it out to my wife and then I noticed
the red fender badge which read “Alpha 16”. Suddenly, it hit me that this was
Ben Haynes’ world-record GT-R. Six-months ago, he had made history when he
dominated the TX2K16 event by beating a 2000+hp Lamborghini in the finals. I
remember thinking that it was incredible the trophy was coming home to the
Magnolia State instead of the usual areas like California or Florida.
So what kind of
guy races a Nissan that can do 0-60 in 1.6 seconds and hit 216 in a half-mile?
Ben is 31 and reminds me of a younger Brett Favre at the peak of his career. He
owns a construction company in nearby Madison, BBH Construction, which allows
him the budget to buy and modify his $60,000 Nissan, of which he has reportedly
spent over $200K in upgrades. Naturally, tripling the stock horsepower means
that very few items were carried over and the assembly was done by T1 Race
Development in Rockwall, Texas. Primarily, the stock 3.8-liter V-6 was bored
out to 4.2-liters and all internal pieces were replaced with T1’s proprietary
GT1R components. Following that, an AMS Alpha 16 turbo kit was fitted which was
akin to strapping dynamite to an atomic bomb. The explosive results speak for
themselves and are what prompted him to create the now-famous “LMBOKLR”
personalized plate which is short for “Lamborghini Killer”. Sure enough, when I
spotted him, the same license plate was on it as was the parachute mandatory
for slowing down from double-century digits. I gave him the thumbs up and he
smiled and waved. Amazingly, despite 1600 horsepower going to all four wheels,
it was trudging along in traffic as easily as a Toyota and nothing, save the
parachute, tipped off its performance potential. Now, that’s what I call a
supercar!