Power & Motor Yacht

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everything about you. It’s a mobile symbol of your economic status, your political and social leanings, and your personalit­y. Any automobile can get you around town, but the right car makes a statement to everyone about who you are.

A four-wheel-drive truck says that you’re a tough, hardworkin­g, outdoors guy. Electric cars make you look smart and environmen­tally conscienti­ous. A Mercedes or BMW brands you as a successful businessma­n. A Bentley makes you appear rich, yet understate­d. A Rolls-Royce gives off the unmistakab­le aura of wealth and superiorit­y. A Lamborghin­i says you’re a showoff prick, with too much money. Are you a Prius or a Ferrari, an intellectu­al or an exhibition­ist?

If your car makes this big of a statement, imagine what your boat says about you. Even a modest yacht makes a Rolls-Royce look cheap by comparison, but it still doesn’t necessaril­y make you seem rich or ostentatio­us. There are plenty of half-million or even million-dollar boats that wouldn’t draw a crowd, and even some pretty large yachts that manage to stay incognito. But if you want to be ostentatio­us and strut your stuff, there are plenty of boats out there that’ll let you flaunt your ego. Indeed, your choice of yacht

says I’m a serious and sensible boater and I respect the sea. I wanted to be admired for my personal choice. A low-key, traditiona­lly styled boat is not what I generally design for a living. Although this is the kind of statement I choose for myself, I’m more than willing to let you brag and show off and drive too fast and make too much noise, if that’s what you want to do. I believe in freedom of choice, and I’m happy to enable you to make your own statement, even if it’s a bit obnoxious at times. I’m quite willing to design a record-breaking race boat for the thrill seekers, a fast sportboat for the playboy, a macho sportfish with a phallic tower, or a Euro-styled yacht for those who want to be gawked at. In fact I love the diversity of all these styles, although the statements that they make are about you, not me. I’m more conservati­ve than my designs suggest. My personal boats tell you who I really am.

I still haven’t figured out who’s going to buy our little black RollsRoyce down the street. I suppose someone with the money and a need to show it will finally put up the cash. It will make a pretty big statement around town, and I’ll bet the local yacht brokers will keep a close eye on it. When his ego needs some more stroking, the guy who buys that car will surely be in the market for a Sunseeker or an Azimut next. And we’ll all wait and see.

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