The Bad Blonde | Automotive History

The Bad Blonde

This is recorded from the live automotive radio show in Corpus Christi, Texas on 1440KEYS. Ever wanted to know more about the mavericks of the automotive world? The cars that changed the world and the men behind them? This is my cup of tea, listen and enjoy the wild tales of the auto industry!

  1. History of Panhard et Levassor | The Bad Blonde Automotive History

    FEB 22

    History of Panhard et Levassor | The Bad Blonde Automotive History

    Today we discuss the Most Important Car Company You’ve Probably Never Hear about, an automotive manufacturer that basically wrote the recipe for most normal cars today.. Today we discuss When people talk about automotive history, they think Karl Benz, Henry Ford, maybe even Ferrari if they’re feeling dramatic. But if we’re being honest — the layout of almost every “normal” car on Earth traces back to a French company with a name that sounds like a law firm: Panhard et Levassor. And while they didn’t survive as a household name did invent the blueprint of the modern automobile — and then went racing across France to prove it worked. Panhard et Levassor began in 1887 in Paris, founded by René Panhard and Émile Levassor. At first, they built woodworking machinery but they had their sights set on something grander. Panhard et Levassor was formally established in 1887 by René Panhard and Émile Levassor in Paris. Originally manufacturers of woodworking machinery, the firm’s trajectory changed through a licensing agreement to produce engines designed by German engineer Gottlieb Daimler. The rights were secured through French industrialist Édouard Sarazin, whose widow later played a pivotal role in continuing French access to Daimler’s technology. While many early vehicle builders treated engines as add-on components for carriage-like machines, Levassor adopted a fundamentally different approach: the automobile should be designed around the engine itself. This insight led to a decisive engineering breakthrough in 1891. Basically Levassor asked “What if… the car is designed around the engine?” This might not sound like a wild thought to you BUT this was actually Revolutionary stuff — especially in the 1890s during the birth of the automobile.

    46 min
  2. Wildest Race Ever = 1908 New York to Paris Race | Bad Blonde Automotive History

    12/07/2025

    Wildest Race Ever = 1908 New York to Paris Race | Bad Blonde Automotive History

    Today we discuss one of the wildest car races ever in the history of motorsport, a race that lasted 5 months and had half the cars drop out, a race that traversed Siberia, today we discuss the nearly impossible 1908 New York to Paris Race. Let’s paint a little picture of the times, in 1908 the automobile is still an oddity. They were loud, temperamental and unreliable. The horseless carriage was still just a play thing for wealthy eccentrics. It was a two newspapers, Le Matin in Paris and the New York Times, that came up with the wild idea of an automobile race to span from New York all the way to Paris. The whole idea behind this wild feat was to prove what the automobile could do. Cars of the day were more like tractors than modern vehicles we know today. They were chain-driven, hand-cranked, snapping axles, and blowing gaskets. Drivers were to maneuver from New York, across the United States, then cross the frozen Bering Strait into Siberia, in which no one had ever traversed by car at this time, then cross through Russia into Europe, and THEN finish in Paris. If you are thinking that sounds tricky, you are right. The drivers would encounter obstacles and also the discovery that the Bering Strait doesn’t exactly freeze over enough to drive over. Plus, I want you to think about doing all this WITHOUT ROADS! Asphalt wasn’t even invented till two years after this race. Many spectators didn’t even think the cars would get out of New Jersey let alone get through Siberia!

    44 min
  3. Ferrari's Almost Rival = Automobili Turismo e Sport | Bad Blonde Automotive History

    12/07/2025

    Ferrari's Almost Rival = Automobili Turismo e Sport | Bad Blonde Automotive History

    Today we discuss a car company that could have been the 1960s F1 rival to Ferrari, a car company that should have stolen the grand touring seat from the prancing pony, a car company that helped pioneer mid-engine placement in grand touring cars, and car company that couldn’t quite get it together. Today we discuss Automobili Turismo e Sport aka ATS. To understand ATS, you have to start in Maranello in 1961 with the famous “Palace Revolt.” Alright it is the ’60s, Ferrari is successful but chaotic. Enzo Ferrari is running the place like a personal kingdom and he and his are fighting like there is no tomorrow. Ferrari staff tensions are boiling over when several senior staff clash with Enzo and, most importantly, with his wife Laura, who was increasingly involved in business matters. The result was a mass walkout (and a few firings for good measure) of some of Ferrari’s brightest technical minds, including chief engineer Carlo Chiti and development engineer Giotto Bizzarrini, one of the brains behind the 250 GTO. These “Ferrari runaways” were angry, ambitious, and very aware that Enzo’s dominance in both racing and road cars wasn’t inevitable. So they went to wealthy industrialists such as Giorgio Billi and Bolivian mining heir Jaime Ortiz-Patiño, and with a few other rich backers they decided to create a rival of Enzo Ferrari. And that was the dramatic start to Automobili Turismo e Sport aka ATS. TheATS was founded in 1962 in the Bologna area and their goal was simple. BEAT FERRARI.

    44 min

Ratings & Reviews

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out of 5
4 Ratings

About

This is recorded from the live automotive radio show in Corpus Christi, Texas on 1440KEYS. Ever wanted to know more about the mavericks of the automotive world? The cars that changed the world and the men behind them? This is my cup of tea, listen and enjoy the wild tales of the auto industry!