along the highways of the US,
in the
1960s, huge fiberglass advertising statues were erected
across America, meant to draw attention and traffic to one business or another.
These were called Muffler Men, since many of the 18- to 25-foot figures held a
muffler or other product. The first one was a statue of Paul Bunyan, and the
company that inherited the mold used it to make giant men of all kinds, and
then branched out to other giant advertising statues, like chickens, dinosaurs,
and women. In the 1970s, fiberglass giants fell out of favor, and out of
advertising budgets. Now many of them have been repurposed, or belong to
private collectors, one such
collector, the Bay Area’s Bell Plastics, is refuge to what is perhaps the
world’s largest conglomeration of original muffler men. Once a year, they
invite the public into their warehouse for a unique opportunity to wander
amongst various advertising giants, including the rare Uniroyal Girl (a
bikini-clad female “Muffler Man” who is said to be modeled after Jackie
Kennedy), two of San Francisco’s beloved Doggie Diner heads, a slightly
demented Santa, a pair of industrious car washing octopi, and other oversized
company shills. What makes this event even more special is that Bell Plastics
has reconstructed the goliath molds using the original figures and now Big Mike
threatens to roam the earth once more,and now for the sad part, the bad
news is that the open house at Bell Plastics was last week,the good news is that Boing Boing has a collection of images from the event. And there's always
next year, if you want to start planning a road trip to Hayward, California, photograph by Kai Wada Roath via Bell Plastics, as an aside if enough people write in, maybe Bell Plastics could have a six monthly opening?
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