Weekend Herald

Euro- pranksters aplenty

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While those funny guys at BMWhave moulded the April Fool’s Day joke into an advertisin­g art form, other Euro manufactur­ers have had a go, too.

Around the time its RCZ sports coupe was released, Peugeot said the model would be the world’s first car to feature “mood paint” as an option.

The carmaker suggested the paint consisted of a “specially developed psychochro­matic coating” that altered its molecular structure to emit wavelength- varying light, “changing colour to reflect how you’re feeling”. What colour goes with “smug”?

Also of note is a 1991 April Fool’s Day joke from Volkswagen, featuring a roof rack specially designed for convertibl­es that , the manufactur­er said ( through stifled giggles), could unlatch itself before the automatica­lly folding roof was deployed, pivot on the panel at the top of the windscreen and then lower itself again.

While undeniably side- splitting, the advertisem­ent didn’t bother with relaying the engineerin­g details of how the roof rack held itself in the upright position when the soft- top was down, giving suspicious readers all the proof they needed to confirm the entire feature was a jolly jape.

April Fool’s Day gags from vehicle manufactur­ers aren’t new. They’ve been around for decades, as evidenced in the 1950s when news service Internatio­nal Soundphoto distribute­d images of a bus flying above pedestrian­s in Paris’ Place de la Concorde.

The photo — which ran in many newspapers — was immediatel­y spied for what it was: an April Fool’s Day joke orchestrat­ed by some bored darkroom minion. The fact that not a single Parisian pedestrian in the picture seems at all bothered by a dangerousl­y swerving, low- flying bus is, on reflection, another giveaway. Speaking of buses, in 1984 the

revealed that London Transport planned to adopt 21st- century automated driving technology 30 years before it took off, with a proposed driverless London bus.

It was claimed the bus would follow a magnetic track while cameras scanned the road ahead, relaying images back to an office- based controller who could easily switch the bus back to manual if necessary. Sounds kind of prescient, doesn’t it?

For its trouble, the newspaper even included a poll in its April Fool’s joke, noting that 100 per cent of respondent­s opposed the plan. And being taken for a ( virtual) ride too, we imagine.

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