The static reveal of a new car usually goes something as follows: After agreeing to an embargo, bleary-eyed journalists board a jet, arrive at a place far from home, get in a van, see what they’re meant to see, take some photos or video, have a bite to eat, and then pretty much turn around and go home. The very definition of business travel, this is jet-setting in such a non-tourist way that it simply becomes part of the routine. However, reports suggest that the debut of the Ferrari Luce wasn’t quite routine. Reading between the lines, it seems that Ferrari was nervous.
First off, there’s who was invited. On Tuesday, veteran journalist Chris Harris (who has historically had a bumpy relationship with Ferrari) recently recorded an “emergency podcast” in which he talked about the Luce with friends. Beyond the initial reactions, Harris said Ferrari, like any automaker holding a press event, had a certain vetting process when it came to the Luce:
As a journalist, I can tell you [that] you had to meet certain criteria to be invited for that unveiling. I’m proud to say I didn’t meet them. I was telephoned and asked how positive I was about electric cars and I said “Not very,” and the invite was not forthcoming.
[Ed Note: It’s common for Automakers to invite journalists they trust and whom they think will like their product. While they don’t usually ask the journalist point-blank what they think of a certain type of car, they definitely figure out it out by reading journalists’ stories. In some ways, asking point blank could be seen as better. -DT]
It goes without saying that automakers control who’s invited to press launches, and being choosy is within their right. They’re spending enormous sums to fly media in, so they get to pick who’s invited.
A brief look around the sphere at who was and wasn’t invited to Luce is telling. Harris, one of Britain’s most accomplished motoring journalists who has been known to give controversial models like the Jaguar Type 01 a fair shake upon experiencing them, was not invited. Meanwhile, technology influencers reportedly received their own junket wave including time at Alfa Romeo’s Balocco Proving Ground.
So what about the experience of those who did attend the unveiling? While this is the account of one individual, Tim Burton of Shmee150 gave an eye-opening look into just how Ferrari dealt with things.
As we left our hotel, our phones got fully stickered, our laptops got stickered, everything got completely covered up. Then, on arrival at the venue, as we entered the car park, same again, checking everything. Then at the door, again the same to go inside, then at the entrance to the hall, exactly the same again. So, the most protective event—despite this being 24 hours before the reveal—that I’ve ever been to in my life.
Stickers over cameras isn’t unprecedented, but it’s clear Ferrari’s security was tight.
On top of that, according to Burton, the embargo that states that every outlet must hold reporting until a certain time to give everyone a fair chance to write their stories, process their photos, and edit their videos came with a rather shocking clause.
This is probably gonna be the most controversial part of this video and possibly get me in a little bit of trouble, but I think it’s important to be honest with you because it will also make quite a bit of sense as to what you’ve seen out there. For example, take Top Gear’s video by Jason. Great video, but the top comment basically says ‘journalists have become PR representatives for automotive companies’. And that’s because Ferrari played this very cleverly in the way they did this event. I felt really uncomfortable with it for various reasons, and I’ve been shooting first look videos like this for many years and done a lot of them, but there was something quite unique about this one in particular that I have never had to do before and that’s in connection with the embargo.
So it’s very normal when you get to see something in advance of its public preview that you sign a contract effectively stating that you won’t share or publish or leak any imagery or anything about the car until a certain date and time when it’s due to be released, and that’s completely normal and—I think—totally, totally fine. In the case of this one, though, not only was it that, but you also had to agree to pay €600,000 in damages if you were responsible for a leak. Now for any publication, that’s not small change, and that’s not something I have ever had to do before.
[Ed Note: Embargo agreements are serious and often threatening. Here you can see a Kia agreement that I signed; it’s written in legalese and clearly quite serious:

And here is Scout threatening to pursue legal action (which could include going after “damages” i.e. money) if I break the embargo:

To spell out a dollar figure like $699,000, though, seems a bit much. This may be how Ferrari does things, but to some this paints a picture of nervousness around the Luce reveal. -DT]

At current exchange rates, €600,000 is about $699,000, an utterly ruinous sum for many outlets. While it’s understandable not wanting anything to leak, in all my years of being a car journalist, I’ve never been asked to sign for a responsibility over a specific, explicitly stated monetary amount of damages associated with a leak. Not once. What’s more, threatening such damages over a leak could potentially be seen as more intimidating than useful due to how the media was actually captured. As Burton went on to state:
Now that’s one thing and you know, for myself, that’s kind of like right, y’know, accept that, take that seriously, but that was then combined with this exceptionally peculiar filming setup and in particular, that we had to use their camera operators, their camera equipment, and they kept all the footage to share with us only a couple hours before the embargo dropped. Now, in my opinion, you can’t have both of those. If there’s going to be a massive fine, then let you get the right content, let you shoot it correctly, let you get the right messaging and explain the car. If you’re going to be leaving the memory stick with them, then you can’t leak it anyway because they’ve got it. You’ve not done anything wrong. This was a completely unique scenario.
Hang on: If Ferrari or its contractors were responsible for visual media capture and this report of only being given assets hours before the embargo was up is accurate, the likelihood of a leak is very low. Especially with video, because most of that time will simply be eaten by grading footage and editing shots into a coherent narrative that fits the voice of each outlet. It’s understandable that Ferrari wanted to keep a lid on the Luce, but not only is withholding assets for such a time likely to compromise quality of visual coverage, there are some potential issues should an automaker collect and hold onto such pieces of media prior to publication.

I’ve been doing this for seven years and not once has an automaker asked to see parts of a story before it goes live. [Ed note: I’ve definitely been asked before under specific circumstances, but I usually decline. The only exception I can remember revolved around unique details that both sides wanted to get absolutely correct. – MH] There’s a certain unspoken trust here, not just for fairness but also for the editorial independence of any coverage. Ferrari reportedly having a hand in all audiovisual asset capture raises questions about potential control of reception. If coverage is negative, would the footage still be sent outlets’ way intact? Would that potential fear cause certain members of the media to be a bit less outspoken than usual? In a way, Harris summed it up best:
I think, judge a car company’s confidence by the way it manages car launches. The first time I drove a Porsche 918 that was finished, it was left in a garage with a key. There was no one there with it, they just said go off. They knew they’d made something brilliant. Same with great cars. If you have to show the interior then the exterior, then you have to do seven bleed-out launches, you know you’re dealing with a company that’s really having to manage things.
Judging by these reports, Ferrari seems to have had a serious grip on the Luce debut, and that begs several questions regarding trust in the journalistic process, and the automaker’s own confidence about the car in question. Obviously, the only way through this is to talk about it, so I’ve reached out to Ferrari and will update you as soon as I hear more.
Top graphic images: Ferrari; iOS









I think her name is Loo-chay, but they all call her Luce…
All this for the new Nissan Leaf?
To shreds, you say?
Good news, everyone!
AP video today of pope looking at car with COB:
Leo: “is this the first four-door ferrari?”
John Elkman: “first five-seater”
Leo: “first five-seater….”
Okay, serious question: do y’all think this will be the first Ferrari that will have cash on the hood rebates?
We’re stacking them deep and selling them cheap! We accept all credit applications! Free 40 inch TV with every purchase! Come meet local meteorologist, Bitsy Overbite!
I don’t think they’ll do rebates but I can definitely see a fair few of these get forced onto newer customers to “build a relationship with the brand” before Ferrari allows them to buy the car they actually wanted.
IIRC they had to do this with the California as well.
Reminds me of a local KIA dealer over decade ago. “Buy a Sedona minivan and get a FREE Rio.”
I’ve heard of luxury clothing and perfume brands buying back product and destroying it to “protect their brand.” Their product cannot be seen with a discount on it. I wouldn’t be surprised if Luces end up back at the factory to be quietly dismantled and destroyed.
They could follow Atari’s lead and bury them in the desert like the E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial cartridges.
Just made this with AI (yeah I know, sorry). But oh my god, give me this: https://gemini.google.com/share/77fd5021225a
Launch events like this make a car journalist’s life seem absolutely miserable. Why on Earth would you want to deal with a quick transatlantic trip just so you can look at a car and … comment on the press photos provided by the manufacturer? And why would the manufacturer think that’s a way to treat people. I hope they flew people Business at least.
Italian marketing is a synonym for intimidation. The mob’s still alive and well I see.
I’m not saying you should take this down, just, you know, some people might get upset if it stays up, and you’ve got such a lovely family that I’d hate to see something unpleasant happen to them over something so small, you know? – Ferrari PR
This sounds like merely a step up from the norm. Ferrari has been playing games with intros and reviews for many years from different ringers specifically set up to do better in specific tests to threats of a ban to anyone criticizing them, knowing that their cars sold magazine covers, that I never believe much of what I read about them, especially if there are conclusions that they’re the best of their competitors. After all, the best doesn’t need to put its thumb on the scales. Nowadays, there aren’t really magazine covers to sell and, well, I guess that works out for them here, but now threats are monetary. If they keep this up. I wonder how much longer people will care.
I respect the move to something completely different with their EV, but this is like a Monty Python punchline and it’s not even so novel in itself even if it might be for Ferrari. As I typed the other day, this looks like a novelty intentionally-generic-sports-car-of-weird-proportion VHS tape rewinder from the ’80s. Why would someone buy this? The specs are worse than much cheaper cars, the experience is likely lackluster, and the looks aren’t there. The name alone is all I can conclude, but people won’t bother to notice it’s a Ferrari to “be impressed” and are more likely to see it and think some dork put Ferrari badges on some low end car. Where’s the merit, where’s the inherent desire? It doesn’t have to look like a traditional ICE Ferrari (though, lately, that would be for the best, anyway) to generate desire.
To conclude with something positive, the steering wheel is great because it looks like it’s from the pre-airbag days.
This is an outrage! I refuse to buy one!
I remember that article! And I highly recommend everyone go read/re-read it, as it’s gold. These two quotes are out of order but I think they flow better this way:
“One English magazine went along with all the cheating-bullshit because the cars did seem to be representative of what a customer might get to drive, but then during the dyno session, the “standard” tires stuck themselves to the rollers. […]And this is the nub: how fucking paranoid do you have to be to put even stickier rubber on a Scuderia? It’s like John Holmes having an extra two inches grafted onto his dick.”
Leave worrying about what the new Ferrari looks like for the folks who can afford it. The rest of us are busy worrying about how we can afford groceries when we’re paying this much for gas or how we can afford gas when we’re paying this much for groceries.
As a guy who spent 20 years in newspapers writing about cars isn’t really journalism it is writing a supposed independent press release. Journalists write about daily events. Of course the marketing department is going to invite the people who are most likely to write positive reviews if they can’t actually control the story. Harris being proud of not writing positive stories is not a positive endicement of his career writing press releases. Being negative for no reason than being an ass. I noticed his Top Gear career was full of ass kissing.
Chris Harris is so out of touch it’s unbelievable. You’ve only got to listen to his nauseating podcast with his toffo mates to know that. There was a picture of him and William Storey posted on one of the two Marcos Sports Cars accounts – Storey seems to think he has the rights and has been showing off Ai renders of a ‘new’ Marcos he’s supposedly building.
Shifting focus…
Does the disappointment, anger, negativity of people for whom the Luce isn’t attainable…. relevant? If so, how?
This BEV is completely distinct from their ICE cars. And from what I’ve read plus watched in an interview with Ive and Manzoni, it seems highly improbable that the Luce will influence their ICE cars. Ferrari isn’t putting all its eggs in the Luce basket, as Jaguar has done with the Type 01.
So, is this really more about a cultural moment? More about fallen aspirations and a sense of loss?
Sure, it doesn’t look like past Ferraris. But did Ferrari really intend for it to be immediately identifiable as a Ferrari? Evidently not, otherwise it’d look more like their ICE cars. Is it acceptable for them to want to create something different than what is typical of Ferrari? Maybe it’ll drive more like a typical Ferrari and that will be a sufficient connection?
Guess I’m feeling a bit philosophical about the design, and accept that it’s intended to be different and not mimic Ferrari’s other cars.
Video interview with Ive and Manzoni:
Jony Ive Shows Me The Most Controversial Ferrari Ever (Ferrari Luce)
Anyone actually in the market for a new Ferrari: DO NOT COMMENT ON ANY OF THESE BOARDS – HERE OR ELSEWHERE!!!
Nothing is stopping them from forcing you to buy one of these before they allow you to buy any other model 😛
You were warned.
WHAT?
You mean I get to say I’m on Ferrari’s banned list AND I can’t afford one, instead of just I can’t afford one?
I think the whole “you have to buy our shitty products before you can buy the good stuff” should be warning enough.
It’s already the third article about this absolute POS in 48 hours, just here. This be success, no?
Subverting expectations.
Maybe? This should at least definitively settle the debate as to whether all press is, in fact, good press.
Normally, “any press is good press” rings true.
But, given Ferrari’s specific stranglehold on their image, this is probably an absolute nightmare.
Like, they SUED deadmau5 for wrapping his Ferrari with a Nyancat wrap. They regularly ban people from buying their cars if they don’t agree with the representation.
And you cannot get a pink Ferrari from the factory, no matter how much you’re willing to pay them.
The extremely critical reception made the front page of the Guardian website. They’ve dropped an absolute howler.
Funny how all those ‘design’ accounts running cover for Ive when the interior was shown a few months back are suddenly silent.
Only Jony Ive can save car design my ass.
Can we just get back to talking about the merits of an old RWP Honda with a clapped out body kit and no seats?
The Ferrari Luce is this year’s Cybertruck
I’d consider the Luce if it was made by Hyundai at less than 1/10th the price. I don’t need 1000 HP but 350 HP would suffice. The design of this thing is just trash as a Ferrari and OK for a mainstream brand, but the worst part is the price. The price is insulting to everyone with a brain.
Ioniq6?
I think it looks better than the Ioniq6. I have an Ioniq5, would happily lease a Luce if it were in this group…
So they were going to *force* you to buy one of these POS if you broke the embargo? THAT was a powerful incentive to clam up for sure.
Or be honest
Oooh, COTD material right here.
Ferrari knows that this oversized, brightly colored sanding block with wheels has missed the mark by a very wide margin. Their uptight attitude belies their nervousness.
This will be a flop, unless sold at about 10-15% of the asking price.
It’s probably an excellent electric car, but not much of a Ferrari.
Yeah I kind of like the design. It just doesn’t look Ferrari at all.
Exactly why they don’t let the idiots cover it. A new Ferrari yes but a Ferrari for a new market? No way. Just a EV Ferrari isn’t a Ferrari, how is a manufacturer to grow in new markets if the so called journalist only wants the same Ferrari every year
Maybe they shouldn’t grow in new markets.
Maybe the idea of constant, continuous growth is stupid, created by marketing/business majors for shareholder benefit.
Maybe every brand doesn’t need to have everything for everyone.
IMHO this is a stupid car, regardless of hte design, because Ferrari should stay UPMARKET, not build cheap commuters, which is what this looks like. I’m sure the concept sketches looked fire, but the proportions on this look pretty bad, and do not reinforce the brand well.
No they just didn’t want the story to be about why it is not a Ferrari when they are venturing out into a new market. Remember the negative shit from the EV Mustang, the fans attack as do the unqualified writers appealing to the morons. The brand should not have to let the weak journalism appealing to the masses have access
They will sell every unit they can make, which was never going to be that many anyway. The Luce 456 or whatever they end up naming the next one will probably look more exciting.
I actually think that for the first time, they will have a slow time moving these. Time will tell us. But I think they will lick their wounds, call this a limited edition so they can move on, and then go back to doing what they know best.
This thing looks absolutely nothing like how someone imagines a Ferrari should look. You could slap a KIA badge on it and people would believe it’s a new EV6.
That is why Harris is not invited. They are apparently trying a new market. And your take based on pictures is uneducated at best
Monday night at work I asked a colleague (who is not a car guy) if he could guess who made it. He guessed Toyota, Honda, and then “some random Chinese brand” before he zoomed in enough to see the cavallinos on the wheels. Even the two car guys didn’t know it was a Ferrari at first until one of them stared at it for 30 seconds and remembered he’d seen a mention somewhere.
It would be excellent as just about anything else, but it’s a disasterpiece as a Ferrari. I will also note I state that just based on how I expect one to look. It doesn’t bother me that it’s an EV.
You expected free airfare, free hotel stay, free shrimp, and a free-for-all with all-you-can-eat photos and videos?
This is Ferrari – Not Stellantis.
Which manufacturer does free blackjack and hookers?
Wasn’t that DeLorean?
DeLorean was hookers and blow. Mostly blow.
To be fair to Ferrari. They did pull of the impossible with this car.
To make a vehicle that allows people to overlook the size, extra doors lack of cylinders, and not red color takes impressive work from the styling department.
It truly is impressive work.
Impressive as in what happened to me one day at work. I got on an elevator and dropped some papers. As I bent over to pick them up, I had a dual explosion. One was my overly tight cheap pants, the other was my overly cheap lunch. Hidden in the sound and fury of the event, the elevator had stopped on the next floor to admit others.
And even that first impression I had with several coworkers is nothing compared to the impression Ferrari made with the Luce.
I still don’t understand how the trunk works. This needs to be addressed.
It looks like the trunk of a properly sized Ferrari, swallowed by the trunk of whatever this is.
If the i8 “ate” a 911, then this looks like it ate a 80’s 308
I stand by my original take. I love the color, don’t hate the shape, but in no way does it look like half a mil.
If you changed the prancing horses for bowties and told me it was the new Chevrolet Impala, prices starting at $39,999 I’d not only believe you but put it on my “shop around for in 3 years when they start coming off lease” list.
EDIT: And for anyone else who will now never unsee the 2000-06 Impala in that taillight panel, you’re welcome.
Heh. That was what I thought of the taillights right away. My wife even asked if I was showing her a pic of a Chevy.
Quite the trick for Ferrari to be mistaken for an Impala, great work everyone.
It could be worse – at least it didn’t include an onboard AI lmao
You know what they say… Luce lips sing ships.
What? It’s pronounced Loochay? Crap.
This feels very on-brand for a company that won’t let you buy one of their cars unless you already own one of their cars, or sues you because they don’t like your paint job.