Home » Pontiac’s Sky Bird Was A Somewhat Cringeworthy Attempt To Make Firebirds More Appealing To Women

Pontiac’s Sky Bird Was A Somewhat Cringeworthy Attempt To Make Firebirds More Appealing To Women

Pontiac Sky Bird Topshot

There’s nothing wrong with car companies marketing products to certain segments of the population, and sometimes a niche focus pays off. And other times, the targeting is so on-the-nose that the results are disappointing if not downright cringeworthy.

Detroit’s attempts to lure lady buyers certainly fall into the latter two categories. Pontiac might be the brand most associated with T-shirt-wearing guys with grease from their GTOs or Fieros under their fingernails, but that’s not necessarily what Pontiac wanted to be. One attempt to change that in the late seventies was a special Firebird that might have taken things too far.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Girl, Have I Got A Car For You

If you want to see misogyny running wild, take a look at what a room full of chain-smoking dudes in skinny ties at some brands have done over the years to attract women customers. Even if it isn’t chauvinism, many of the choices they made were ill-advised at best. One of the more famous ones was the 1955 Dodge LaFemme. This thing looks basically like what it almost certainly was: a bunch of middle-aged men sitting around trying to decide what kind of car the “little lady” would absolutely want to have.

La Femme 2 6 20
source: Chrysler

Pink paint and upholstery? Of course, but that’s too easy. No, the LaFemme package also included a matching umbrella, rain cape, “dainty” rain boots, and a shoulder bag to really make the message clear.

La Femme 3 6 20
source: Chrysler1,500

If Dodge thought they had found the secret sauce, they were very mistaken; only 1,500 LaFemmes were sold in 1955, and in 1956, a mere 1,000 left the factory. It turned out that girly stuff pasted onto a car did not attract women who bought their own cars. On the other hand, you can imagine if a LaFemme were being purchased as a second car by a couple, the male partner would envision the times he’d inevitably have to drive it as social death.

Much more recently, Chrysler did something less blatantly gender-based when it released a new compact road-friendly Jeep in 2007 as two different products. These Dodge Caliber-based vehicles were entry-level machines aimed at first-time non-traditional Jeep buyers, and the two proposed concepts tested differently with men and women in consumer clinics, so the decision was made to release both of them. The boxy baby-XJ Cherokee-looking version was called the Patriot and ostensibly aimed at guys:

Jeep Patriot 6 21
source: Stellantis

Meanwhile, the non-traditional, softer-looking one called the Compass was aimed at the ladies:

Jeep Compass 6 20 Rev
source: Stellantis

As the clinics proved, men outnumbered women among Patriot buyers 57 to 43 percent, while women outnumbered men 51 to 49 percent among Compass buyers. Initial sales numbers were quite similar but quickly favored the boxier one, with the Compass selling significantly less than the more traditional-looking Patriot (like, half as many were sold). The big question that nobody seems to have asked was if Jeep had just offered the Patriot, would it have made a difference? I don’t think so. To me, the fact that seemingly well over half of the lifted Jeep Wranglers that I see transporting windshield ducks down the street have ladies behind the wheel proves this.

General Motors was not immune to these kinds of somewhat ill-conceived tactics, and the Firebird was their car of choice.

Fly, Robin, Fly

The changing world of the early seventies essentially killed the “muscle car,” but they also resulted in drastic changes to the “Pony Car” offerings. Straight-up gas-guzzling performance was done, and it was impossible for brands to ignore the fact that car buyers were no longer exclusively men, or at least not men who might possibly bring a lady along simply to sit there while they did the deal. Far more women were purchasing cars on their own, and the Big Three needed to offer products that they’d want.

Trash it all you want, but the Pinto-based Mustang II was a slam dunk in this regard. You could get this much-maligned car in a variety of flavors from the “Cobra II” that replaced outright performance with fun graphics all the way up to the fancy Ghia with a landau roof for your Vogue-reading classy ladies. All you had to do was switch on your television to see it:

Charlies Angels 11 25
source: ABC/ Spelling-Goldberg Productions

Pontiac had to have some of this action as well. Actually, it turned out that they already did; their data showed that around thirty percent of Firebirds in the early seventies were being bought by women. Naturally, Pontiac figured they could get additional female buyers to stray from the imports many were gravitating to by offering a Firebird with an economical twin-cam motor, tighter suspension, and more accurate steering. Nah, just kidding – they would woo them with a flashy trim kit! Yeah, you knew where this is going.

In February of 1976, Pontiac showed the “Blue Bird” concept, essentially a paint-and-stripe package for the more luxury-oriented Esprit version of the Firebird that was the antithesis of “macho.” Maybe somebody remembered the failure of the Dodge LaFemme, so this time the marketing geniuses decided that what “the ladies” would really go for is a bright robin’s egg blue Firebird instead of pink.

Sky Bird 1 6 23
source: Mecum Auctions

What was blue? Everything. Everything was blue. You got a two-tone paint job with “Lombard Blue” on top (a Pontiac Astre color of all things) and a darker tone for the rocker panels. The grille received blue accents; I’ve seen examples with the actual grille material painted blue and some with just the outsides.

Sky Bird 2 6 23
source: Mecum Auctions

You also got darker pinstripe accents and decal identification on the pillars. By the time of production, however, the “Blue Bird” moniker had been changed to “Sky Bird,” since the Blue Bird name was owned by the bus company that made the yellow tin boxes that you jumped around in on the way to fourth grade.

Sky Bird Logo 6 23
source: Mecum Auctions

The famous Pontiac “snowflake” aluminum wheels also got the blue treatment. How much more blue could you get?

Sky Bird 5 6 23
source: Mecum Auctions

More blue, that’s how blue. Open the door and gaze upon acres of your choice of blue-grey cloth or vinyl, including special color-coordinated seat belts.

Blue Bird Interior 6 23
source: Auto Gallery Chicago

Sky Birds also got an exclusive steering wheel from the Formula that was – you guessed it – also painted blue. How did they get the blue coloring to stay on such a high-touch item? They didn’t; the finish wore off quickly in almost all cases.

Blue Bird Dash 2 6 23
source: Auto Gallery Chicago

Man, I love the “base” gauges of Malaise era cars. From a distance, it looks like you’re getting a whole bunch of instruments, but ultimately, all you got was a speedometer, gas gauge, and “gauge style” warning lights:

Blue Bird Dash 6 23
source: Auto Gallery Chicago

If you didn’t want the standard Buick 3.8-liter V6, you could choose from a selection of V8s. Top motor was either a Pontiac or Oldsmobile 350 with around 160 to 180 horsepower.

Blue Bird Engine 6 23
source: Mecum Auctions

Sales were not spectacular; as with most cars of the era, exact production numbers are hard to quantify, but it appears that only around 5,700 Sky Birds were sold out of the over 155,000 Firebirds made in 1977. What was Pontiac’s response to what might be considered a failure? Make more colors for the ladies!

I See Red

That’s right; for 1978 Pontiac gave us the Red Bird, which ultimately replaced the Sky Bird. It was the same deal as the blue one but done up in Sammy Hagar’s favorite red, red, (‘cept he wouldn’t run one without a 400).

Red Bird 4 6 20
source: Trans Am Florida (car for sale)

Actually, this paint job in the two tones of red is sort of fetching and, to my eye at least, far more preferable to the baby-blue Sky Bird, even if it still looks a bit like an unpainted plastic model kit.

Red Bird 2 6 23
source: Trans Am Florida (car for sale)

Then again, maybe I’m just a sucker for anything with color-coded snowflakes and raised white letters, but can you blame me?

Red Bird 1 6 20
source: Trans Am Florida (car for sale)

This color combination didn’t prove to be much more popular than the baby blue. Offered in 1978 and ’79, Pontiac is estimated to have sold around 10,000 to 12,000 of the “Red Bird” over both model years. It might look like a Trans Am with those added-on Walrus tusk exhausts, but don’t be fooled, the 400 V8 was not on the table.

So now, finally, Pontiac learned that this marketing strategy was a dead-end, right? No! For 1980, they offered one final version of the series in the form of the “Yellow Bird.” No relation to a certain 911, of course.

1980 Pontiac Firebird Esprit Yellow Bird Front
source: Classic Cars.com

This one had a unique camel tan interior and, like its predecessors, had very limited success.

1980 Pontiac Firebird Esprit Yellow Bird Instrumentation
source: Classic Cars.com

After the run of 3,850 Yellow Birds, Pontiac finally called it quits on the “Color Bird” series. Still, if GM was hellbent on trying anything to get buyers that weren’t muscle car dudes, there might have been a better way. Oddly enough, the other version of GM’s F-Body seems to have done it.

Not For Teenage Dirtbags

While the colorful Firebirds were struggling on the market, Chevy launched a new kind of Camaro for the 1979 model year called the Berlinetta. Aimed at essentially the same market as the Color Birds, the package included a plusher interior and extra sound deadening just like the Pontiac, but the exterior changes were far more subtle than on the all-one-color Firebirds. A little more brightwork to the greenhouse, grille, and lights were accented by simple pinstripes, so the end result looked rather tasteful. Actually, I personally think it’s one of the best-looking of all the second-generation Camaros.

79 Berlinetta 6 20
source: General Motors

The flares-and-hood-scoop Z-28 is admittedly cool, but the Berlinetta seems to most closely match the fake-Ferrari-250GT looks that Bill Mitchell’s team had in mind from the beginning. Familiarity breeds indifference, and we tend to overlook it, but in this form, it’s apparent that the second-generation Camaro is just a stunning car; it would be great to be able to build one with much of the Z-28’s performance and handling bits in this much more tasteful Berlinetta package.

79 Berlinetta 3 6 21
source: General Motors

Chevy continued with the Berlinetta model with the third-gen car, eventually giving it a bizarre Isuzu Impulse-like dashboard. On the outside, though, the subtle color accents and trim made for a really attractive Camaro.

84 Berlinetta 6 20
source: General Motors

This time, GM got it right. They didn’t pander to women buyers directly with a silly sticker package, but instead made an F-Body that emulated Japanese imports that found favor with female buyers based on their own merits as fun and practical sports coupes. Finally, an automaker had learned the real key to success: make an appealing car, and it will sell regardless of what gender the buyers are.

Still, don’t kid yourself. I know that some marketing person has an idea for a Barbie Corvette, a Baby Duck yellow Jeep Wrangler, or a Hello Kitty-themed Hyundai Venue on their desk. I fear that this ain’t over yet.

 

Pontiac Points: 65/100 (Sky Bird)

Verdict: It came out better than you’d think it would only by virtue of the second-generation Firebird being so appealing.

 

Top graphic image: Mecum Auctions

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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LTDScott
Member
LTDScott
1 day ago

Hat tip to the Teenage Dirtbag reference. No IROCs here.

I had no idea the Compass was aimed towards women. I always wondered why Jeep had two versions of basically the same CUV.

Canopysaurus
Member
Canopysaurus
2 days ago

My four longest term girlfriends drove these cars: 1979 Z28 Camaro, black with red stripes and T-Tops; 1983 Isuzu Impulse, black; 1989 Mustang GT convertible, black; and a 2010 Mini Cooper S convertible, black. All cars were manual trans. So, either the marketing folks are way off when it comes to women’s preferences or I subconsciously chose my girlfriends based on their car choices. I’d believe either or both things.

Luxobarge
Member
Luxobarge
2 days ago

Hi, man here. Those Firebirds may be aimed at women, but I think the colors are fun.

Pneumatic Tool
Pneumatic Tool
2 days ago

There was one of these in my neighborhood, a few blocks away from where I lived. I remember riding my bike over there more than a few times because it seemed so weird, even back then (early 80’s). One block over, there was a white Turbo Trans Am, which was quite the contrast.

The 3rd gen Berlinetta really was a very attractive car. I know that the 5.0 was an option, but I can’t remember ever really seeing one – the V-6 was far more prevalent. Those gold wheel insets really worked well with their available paint schemes.

SAABstory
Member
SAABstory
2 days ago

Now I want to mash all the versions together and have a Harlequin Firebird. Maybe a tie-in with all the Harlequin Romance paperbacks I remember from back in the day.

Luxobarge
Member
Luxobarge
1 day ago
Reply to  SAABstory

The cover has Fabio’s shirt falling open to reveal a giant Screaming Chicken tattoo.

Dennis Birtcher
Dennis Birtcher
2 days ago

Aside from the full whitewalls, I dig it. A late 70’s/early 80’s “muscle” car needs to have raised white letters.

Plus, I finally learned what the deal with the Berlinetta was.

77 SR5 LIftback
Member
77 SR5 LIftback
2 days ago

Went to High School with Frank Purdue’s niece.

She drove one of these.

Insert punch line here…

Kevin Rhodes
Member
Kevin Rhodes
2 days ago

Those late ’70s cars looked so much better in basic form without the screaming hood chicken and spoilers.

Thinking back over the years, of all the Firebird and Camaro owners I have known, only one wasn’t female. I worked with a dude who had a mid-90s Firebird Convertible. Not fancy, but it had a V8. Nice shade of dark metallic green. And he looked right out of central casting for the stereotypical Firebird owner, right down to cheesy pornstache and a righteous mullet. Rock ‘n roll drummer in his spare time, because of course he was. I got a ride in that thing – if you look up “cowl shake” in the dictionary, there needs to be a picture of a late Firebird convertible. It made my less than rigid Saab 900CVT seem like it was forged from a solid bar of steel by comparison.

Rob Stercraw
Rob Stercraw
2 days ago

My dad dated a woman that had a Sky Bird. I had so many plans for that car when they got married and I was old enough to drive. But they soon broke up.

Grey alien in a beige sedan
Member
Grey alien in a beige sedan
2 days ago

Gotta see if my old Eiffel 65 8-tracks still work in the ol’ Sky Bird.

Beasy Mist
Member
Beasy Mist
2 days ago

I think the blue one is gorgeous.

Peter Spinale
Peter Spinale
2 days ago

My brother tried (and failed) to restore a 1929 REO Flying Cloud, December.
December because the color and upholstery was different month to month, the colors and patten were published in the Ladies Home Journal a few months before.

Example:
https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTYoCWtlXjlQQJ1j9AXKerA98rU93IuPI8x607V_om9FNbr4_4BX8c-r2L4&s=10

SAABstory
Member
SAABstory
2 days ago
Reply to  Peter Spinale

It’s hard enough getting parts for a 1929 REO, but having to track down Ladies Home Journal just seems cruel.

Peter Spinale
Peter Spinale
1 day ago
Reply to  SAABstory

Well he’s mechanically inept, that was the first problem. He had the magazine, so he know what he was up against. Paint would have been easy, but upholstery? I think he was going to burn that bridge when he got to it. There were a fair number of people restoring them, so for unobtainum parts they were able to get them cast reasonably likely ridiculously priced. I shopped the radiator shell around New England trying to get it replated, no one would touch it. He went through a phase of having actual cars, some early Cadillacs and I think a Lincoln, now he has something ridiculous again, something where they made like 3 and they were Bugatti prices at the time. He’s an odd nut, but hey, everyone has something.

BB 2 wheels > 4
Member
BB 2 wheels > 4
2 days ago

wait, how many pontiac points?! I must know!

Rhymes With Bronco
Member
Rhymes With Bronco
2 days ago

I think the blue was intended to remind the ladies of the tuxedo their boyfriends rented for prom.

Clear Prop
Member
Clear Prop
2 days ago

My mom had a ’69 Firebird and then an ’80 Firebird. All I remember of the ’69 was that it was totally rusted out by 1980.

The ’80 Firebird was base model except for having a V8. Vinyl seats, AM radio, no A/C, manual windows, steel wheels with dog dish hubcabs, no spoiler and the shittiest suspension. By the time I was learning to drive in the late 80s, the ’86 Dodge Caravan we had handled teenage exuberant driving much better than the Firebird.

No idea why my mom liked Firebirds since they were totally impractical as a mom car, her job involved driving around NYC and street parking multiple times per day, and she never drove for fun.

JDE
JDE
2 days ago

I do imagine even in the 70’s the 3.8 was superior, but I would have like to see the OHC straight six poncho motor stick around from the late 60’s. perhaps work out the belt make up so that would stop being and excuse. But it would have been interesting to see the Iron Duke with an overhead cam as well.

Kevin Rhodes
Member
Kevin Rhodes
2 days ago
Reply to  JDE

Wasn’t the DOHC I-4 the General spat out in the late 80s and 90s pretty much that? I can’t recall the name, but it had the NVH of a coffee grinder full of nails, though made a decent amount of power for the day. Rented plenty of cars with them at the start of my career.

JDE
JDE
2 days ago
Reply to  Kevin Rhodes

possibly, but I always thought the Quad 4 was a clean sheet design. the Duke was supposedly a lopped off 6 banger as I understood it. It was also Buzzy and forgettable, but id often ran terribly for a very long time. I just wonder if an overhead cam would have left room for a balance shaft in the standard cam location on the basic OHV location. that would have provided RPM opportunities and perhaps a better tensioner setup over time.

TK-421
TK-421
2 days ago

I was getting ready to say “what about the Berlinetta?” until I finished the article. Yup, I had two ’84 Camaro’s, both sport coupes, but remember all that Berlinetta secretary stuff.

And of course the “Patriot” was for the dudes. ‘Murica!

4jim
4jim
2 days ago

Same people that sold the pink geo metro convertibles of the early 1990s?

Kevin Rhodes
Member
Kevin Rhodes
2 days ago
Reply to  4jim

Weren’t they pretty much only sold in pink and teal? But it WAS the ’90s… better than the ’70s, but not THAT much better.

4jim
4jim
2 days ago
Reply to  Kevin Rhodes

yes I know that is why I specified the pink ones. Not all firebirds in the 70s were baby blue.

Joe The Drummer
Joe The Drummer
2 days ago

You can certainly tell by my profile picture that I have an affinity for the second generation F-body. I remember all three of the “color ‘Birds” when they were new cars, as well as the Camaro Berlinetta. My three related hot takes:

1) With the exception of the 1974-76 “catfish” Firebirds – to be fair, two years when hardly any American automaker made anything that looked worth half a damn to anyone – every single model year of every single generation of Firebird always looks better than its Camaro counterpart. Every last one.

2) Having said that: Chevy made a far superior “chick car” with the Camaro Berlinetta than the color ‘Birds. It looks better, mainly because it was not offered in the same sort of try-hard colors.

3) As with other misogynistic marketing or products of the past, please don’t bore us to death in the comments relitigating how terrible the past was. You’re not making yourself look noble, and you’re definitely not solving any problems. Congratulations, you have realized that the past was awful. Some of us know this because it was the present to us while it was happening. We were there. We don’t need you telling us what was wrong. We know.

Ottomottopean
Member
Ottomottopean
2 days ago

Yeah, I’m fine looking back to understand what we did and why so we can be better going forward. I just don’t like judging all past actions using mores and norms of today. It was different and what people found acceptable (or at least ignored and moved on) was different than today. Not that it wasn’t wrong, just accepted.

But, what do I know? I would happily drive that Bluebird today if they swapped the sad white wall tires for the raised letter options. I do miss T-tops.

JDE
JDE
2 days ago

I would say the 79-80 Firebird/TA nose was fare less attractive than the Camaro equivalents. heck the 74-76 nose was better too. though Camaro was really hurting for style from 74 until the endura bumper setup became the thing.

Cerberus
Member
Cerberus
2 days ago

They still do this with movies.

Bob Boxbody
Member
Bob Boxbody
2 days ago

I kinda dig the wheels on these. I don’t like the color for myself, but if I saw them on the road I’d perhaps give them the “hmm, not bad” face.

Box Rocket
Box Rocket
2 days ago

Wow, 1978 was unkind to the Pontiac. Just… Yikes.

I don’t mind the colors, and the tri-color on the red and yellow versions looks better than the two-tone on the blue

On both the bird and the camaro though, those front ends are just ludicrously long (and generally empty!). Growing up I had a smattering of Micro Machines models of some of these – complete with the Firebird hood decal on a couple of them – and they have better proportions than the production models.

Joe The Drummer
Joe The Drummer
2 days ago
Reply to  Box Rocket

A camel colored Pontiac interior with an engine turned dash bezel and a Formula steering wheel always, always looks great. Always.

If only the rally gauge panel in these had actual, you know, gauges in the holes.

Last edited 2 days ago by Joe The Drummer
Kevin B
Kevin B
2 days ago

This brings back memories. A coworker’s wife had one of these. The picture of the car here triggered the long ago learned lesson of never have an affair with a coworker’s wife.

Albert Ferrer
Member
Albert Ferrer
2 days ago
Reply to  Kevin B

Or a married coworker…

Box Rocket
Box Rocket
2 days ago
Reply to  Kevin B

“Never have an affair” is just good life advice in general.

Urban Runabout
Member
Urban Runabout
2 days ago

“For 1980, they offered … the “Yellow Bird.”
This one had a unique camel tan interior…”

Uh – No.

That was not at all a unique interior. It was the exact same velour interior with turned aluminum fascia as one could get in the same-year Trans Am.

That said – of the Color Birds, I prefer the Red Bird…
…but I agree that the Berlinetta was the most tasteful choice of the bunch – and it could be had with the same V8s as was in the Z28.

Last edited 2 days ago by Urban Runabout
Lori Hille
Member
Lori Hille
2 days ago

I think Bill of Curious Cars did a video on a yellow bird.

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