Home » These Could Be The Most Fun Headrests In All Of Automobilia: Cold Start

These Could Be The Most Fun Headrests In All Of Automobilia: Cold Start

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I like when carmakers come up with special editions of their mainstream cars because the rules that dictate what makes sense or is a good idea or any of the usual rules just don’t seem to apply, or at least aren’t applied as rigorously. That’s why we get things like those “jeans”-themed cars crammed full of denim from Volkswagen and AMC, or that Smart car with the funny bird wings or even a Citroën special edition based on a disposable pen. They’re weird. That’s why, given the context, the Peugeot 106 Cartoon really isn’t all that strange, even if it objectively is.

The Peugeot 106 Cartoon was a special edition not based on a specific cartoon character or group of cartoon characters, like, say, the Chevy Venture Warner Bros edition or maybe those Mitsubishi Hello Kitty cars, but rather just the general idea of cartoons, in a sort of abstracted, generalized way.

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From the outside, the 106 Cartoon doesn’t look like anything that remarkable, just a regular small city car in the expected European FWD hatchback mode, but with some small stickers on the door signaling to you that the owner of this car appreciates the idea of animation and comical drawings:

Cs Pugtoon 1That logo is kind of odd because visually the way the letters are drawn they almost feel more like architectural or technical drawings, except for that pair of eyes. Like, those arrows around the C and T, indicating motion, that feels like something from a sketch of a mechanism, doesn’t it? This all feels like they described the idea of cartoons to someone who perhaps had never actually encountered one.

Now, inside, the 106 Cartoon is more fun and bonkers, mostly because of the seat and door card upholstery, which looks like this:

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That upholstery references a lot of comic or cartoon tropes, with panels and Ben-Day dots and a certain bonkers tone, though the colors don’t feel very “cartoon” and the whole thing again feels like the result of faxing an alien a quick description of what cartoons are.

But the headrests! The headrests just about make up for it all, because they may be the most whimsical and fun headrests that have ever grown in a car, because they’re car headrests that are car headrests, as they’ve been meme’d:

They are like little plush car-dolls. Intrestingly, I’m not sure they really resemble a Peugeot 106 all that much; they feel more like a Citroën  C3 (or maybe a Pluriel) to me? Even if that didn’t really exist exactly when this came out, of course.

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By far the most cartoony thing about the Peugeot 106 Cartoon was this commercial, which Peugot hired the famous Tex Avery to do, and featuring Tex Avery’s trademark characters, a hot lady named Red (sometimes Miss Vavoom in more recent times) and a painfully horny wolf who loses all composure and even eyeball retention upon seeing her:

Holy crap, wolf, have a wank or something. Though here, his affections seem to be focused on the car, which contains, oddly, that depressed-sounding hound dog from those other cartoons.

Still, incredible headrests.

 

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WK2JeepHdStreetGlide
WK2JeepHdStreetGlide
1 month ago

I get teenage mutant ninja turtle vibes from those head rests

Goblin
Goblin
1 month ago

And you haven’t even seen the endless Peugeots with seats and door cards wrapped in jeans fabric 🙂

Matt Wishart
Matt Wishart
1 month ago

Those headrests are indeed excellent!.
Continuing on with French vehicles with interesting headrests – May I introduce you to the Peugeot 806 ‘Eden Park’ edition. This MPV was named after the All Blacks rugby team home ground here in Auckland, New Zealand, yet it was never offered for sale here.
The brochure has some feature images commemorating the ground, however other images were most definitely were not taken there. Anyway, I digress. As part of the ‘Eden Park’ package, so equipped 806’s received Rugby ball shaped shaped headrests. These even had seams and actual laces on the back of them.
Not sure what the Green ‘kiwi’ trim on the seats had to do with the All Blacks, however…grass maybe?

Check them out – EgQPnBMXoAAC2zB

Last edited 1 month ago by Matt Wishart
Rick Garcia
Rick Garcia
1 month ago

Interesting, but I don’t want my interior designed by a 5 year old.

Ea Gregory
Ea Gregory
1 month ago
Reply to  Rick Garcia

I agree 100%. Why are both headrests driving the same way, shouldn’t they be driving apart from each other? Why the drab gray seats with turquoise-green and yellow lines? Why did they pick that technical CARTOON lettering? This would be fun it wasn’t done completely wrong. It’s a cool, whimsical idea, but boy was it done poorly. Sort of like child-like annoying AI.

Highland Green Miata
Highland Green Miata
1 month ago

It’s a pity we have gotten so far away from cheap and cheerful vehicles (and colors, inside and out) that such trifles as this no longer exist. Maybe we’ll get back to it someday with cheap electric city cars. The Ami comes close.

Ben
Ben
1 month ago

I guess now we know where the inspiration for Jessica Rabbit came from.

Peter Andruskiewicz
Peter Andruskiewicz
1 month ago
Reply to  Ben

I’m not bad, I’m just drawn that way

Box Rocket
Box Rocket
1 month ago
Reply to  Ben

“Who Framed Roger Rabbit?” came out in 1988.
The Peugeot 106 Cartoon came out in 1999, I believe.

Ben
Ben
1 month ago
Reply to  Box Rocket

I think the character of Red significantly predates this particular cartoon. Looks like 1943 according to Wikipedia.

Box Rocket
Box Rocket
1 month ago
Reply to  Ben

Oh gotcha, I misunderstood the prior comment. Cheers!

Kevin B Rhodes
Kevin B Rhodes
1 month ago

I love it! So very French.

Fuzzyweis
Fuzzyweis
1 month ago

It’s cool but back in the 90s cars were just having cool interiors, look at the Plymouth Neon seats, VW was doing plaid. This is a little more aggressive than those but I really miss when car makes would add a little whimsy, especially on the cheaper models.

The Mark
The Mark
1 month ago
Reply to  Fuzzyweis

Agreed! It could not have cost that much more to have those goofy fabrics, to cheer things up a little.

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
1 month ago

French Car Weird! Alert the media.
Seriously though, all I can hear in my head now is the woman singing “Oh Wolfie” from the old T&J cartoon. Thanks Torch!

Jakob K's Garage
Jakob K's Garage
1 month ago

With the black bumpers and exposed body colour in the cabin, it even seems like one of the cheap campaign models.
I owned a Citroën AX “Beaujolais” once. It was red. And new when they put the stickers on 😉

Taargus Taargus
Taargus Taargus
1 month ago

That upholstery is excellent. What a fun, whimsical interior that is.

Bring back fun upholstery damnit! Hell, give me random triangles and dots in rad colors, I don’t care, just give me something other than fake leather or scratchy black fabric. And no, I don’t just want random chunks of the seat to be an aggressive red color.

Kevin B Rhodes
Kevin B Rhodes
1 month ago

That’s *vegan* leather. <rolleyes>

But I agree – modern interior materials largely suck. Either “cloth” made out of recycled soda bottles, crappy plastic-coated leather, or vinyl. Yuck. Bring back nice tweeds, twills, and velours. I had one car that had a sort of corduroy material on the seats – that was great!

Taargus Taargus
Taargus Taargus
1 month ago
Reply to  Kevin B Rhodes

There are cheap Wayfair couches with nicer materials. I get that car upholstery should be hard-wearing enough to not look like crap after 10k miles, but is it impossible to have a textile that’s actually comfortable and nice to touch? The ’89 Geo Prism had nicer seats than a lot of modern stuff.

Kevin B Rhodes
Kevin B Rhodes
1 month ago

Same with my mid-80s VWs. But you know the good stuff costs more…

Data
Data
1 month ago

Well, Tex Avery did give us the classic short “Car of Tomorrow”. Still remember all the great cartoons from Saturday mornings.

Mechjaz
Mechjaz
1 month ago
Reply to  Data

The “[whatever] of Tomorrow” are some of my favorite cartoons, period. The art, the timing, the narration, the art again.

Andrew Pappas
Andrew Pappas
1 month ago
Reply to  Data

A real compact, compact…i can hear it still

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
1 month ago
Reply to  Data

If you have an antenna, check out MeTV Toons, hours upon hours of Tex Avery, Chuck Jones, etc. 24/7!

Data
Data
1 month ago

I have the Looney Toons Gold collection on DVD, multiple Tom & Jerry collections, and have been picking up the current Looney Tunes Collector’s Choice Blu-Rays. I also own Tex Avery Screwball Classics vol. 2 because it had “Car of Tomorrow’ as well as House, TV, and Farm of tomorrow.

I champion physical media because I know it will be there if I want to watch it. Streaming services are ephemeral. I was catching up on NCIS on Paramount +. There is a 3-parter across NCIS, Hawaii, and LA. Amazingly P+ does not have ANY episodes of NCIS: LA currently. They also farmed out the Star Trek motion pictures to some other service, but I have those on 4K so no loss to me.

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
1 month ago
Reply to  Data

Paramount + doesn’t even have T.O.P.S. (That Other Pregame Show), must to my consternation. I got it when I had Dish!

Maymar
Maymar
1 month ago

The seats seem a little reminiscent of when people take those play rugs you were meant to drive your cars on like it was a little city, and turn those into floor mats (in a good way).

https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRTe8iook4dXraIHuN0GIDcHzCj07S2_ThVjA&s

Also, slightly dying at “LE WEEK END” on the one seat, which as much as France French is much more tolerant of borrowing English terms than Quebecois French, still feels like when I blank on my grade school French and accidentally just chuck Le in front of anything. I mean, I remember “la fin du semaine,” but Peugeot didn’t, I guess.

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
1 month ago
Reply to  Maymar

“What is a Week End?”

StillNotATony
StillNotATony
1 month ago

But Jason, do not forget the formal definition of cartoon!

From Merriam Webster: : a preparatory design, drawing, or painting (as for a fresco)

So that logo is a combination of a preparatory design and a humorous drawing! The designer clearly went to art school and probably has a deep desire to be technically correct, the best kind of correct.

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