Like all Americans of a certain vintage, I learned about justice and the fine art of fool pitying from a series of televised documentaries known as The A-Team. This show about a group of Vietnam Special Forces veterans on the run from the law over some vague and unwarranted set of charges while they righted various wrongs across the countrywas known for many things, but the most important one for us was how they tended to weld a bunch of crap to cars or other vehicles every week.
This was a key part of the fairly formulaic plots: they’d come, someone would need help with, um, something, they’d come up with some plan that required an armored vehicle, which B.A. Baracus (played by the singular Mr.T) would make with an acetylene torch and whatever was handy, and then there’d be some kind of action scene where things drove into other things (and incredibly no one was killed, bad guys would just roll out of mangled cars rubbing their necks) and then somehow everything would be solved.
I don’t really remember many specifics of these episodes, except for one: I vividly remember that a Renault LeCar was transformed into some manner of armored vehicle to accomplish…something. It’d been years since I’d thought about it, but I finally decided to look into it.
And, thanks to the wonder of the internet, I found it. Not just a reference, but a video of the whole LeCar transformation scene and its eventual glorious destruction:
Honestly, the most shocking thing about this whole scene is not that a 51 horsepower 1981 Renault LeCar was able to drive with what had to be nearly 800 pounds of scrap metal (including a huge I-beam on the front bumper), but that all of this effort was expended to…sell some rapidly aging watermelons? This whole episode was about getting watermelons to a local produce market?
Are you flapping kidding me? I guess I never fully appreciated how literally cutthroat the central California watermelon-growing community was.

But let’s focus on this little Renault and its dramatic transformation into Watermelon-related war machine. The LeCar was the American-spec version of the Renault 5, and differed from the European version in a few ways, mostly larger 5 mph bumpers and sealed-beam headlamps, which went from round to rectangular in 1980.
You can see the LeCar from the show up above, and it looks to be brand new; in the context of the show, it was, owned by Amy, who is somehow related to the watermelon-growing concern.

The need for a fast, nimble, small armored vehicle to escort the large, clumsy armored truck was established, so Amy was coerced into donating her nice new LeCar to the cause, letting BA get to work with that acetylene cutting torch there.

The armor was primarily sheets of what looks like fairly thick sheet steel, including a snowplow blade on the lip of the hood.

The front bumper was transformed into a battering ram with a steel I-beam and three sharp spikes. The LeCar’s canvas sunroof was ringed with a steel turret, making for a protected point from which a gun could be fired, again, to assist with watermelon sales.

Rear quarter windows were armored with corrugated metal, and the rear featured a large array of hay bales which were lit afire to create a crude sort of smokescreen effect. Honestly, that’s pretty clever, if it didn’t mean you’d have to drive around with a massive wad of burning haybales just feet from the gas tank.

Of course, being the A-Team, this car’s fate had to end in a nice spectacular high-speed crash, which, again because this is the A-Team, was survived by the driver and passenger (Howlin’ Mad Murdoch and Face, respectively) despite the small car’s crashworthiness severely compromised by all those pieces of massive, heavy, sharp-edged metal.

I wonder how that thing drove with all that metal?
All this to sell some watermelons. And I think temporarily delay some kind of crooked land deal? I’m not really clear how much was solved once the A-Team left, but you know, once the episode was over, that wasn’t anyone’s problem.









As a kid I was slightly worried they’d done this to a car my Mum drove, as an adult I was displeased they took Amy’s car, that she was obviously very proud of, and ruined it.
My first inkling that the A-Team wasn’t really as woke as I thought.
Yeah The A Team is one of those shows that didn’t age well.
Married With Children on the other hand still holds up well.
God, I miss the 80’s.
I watched one the other day with a young Hulk Hogan in it. And beyond the typical wacky Murdock antics, there was always a lesson. Brain rot nowadays doesn’t seem to have that. I miss that.
We really need a return to over-the-top campy live-action TV shows.
Yeah, it’s all been a downhill slide since they cancelled The Searcher.
*Bad guy jumps out of a car being hit by a grenade fired by the A-team*
“Ow, that really hurt my neck! What’s wrong with you guys – you could’ve just called the police but instead you hit me with an RPG?!
My neck really hurts! And my back does too – I might end up getting a slipped disc! I’m going to find a local chiropractor, and you’re going to pay the bills…and if you don’t, you’ll hear from my lawyer!”
I remember my mom didn’t want us to watch the A Team because of all the violence. Or maybe because it would give the wrong impression that 5 bad guys could shoot at me without ever being hit.
I also remember how some ideas were in hindsight, stupid. In one episode they tricked someone into thinking they were taking off in a plane by using fogs and blinking lights. Apparently this person also couldn’t feel acceleration?
Apparently the A Team exists in a world where all bad guys have roughly the mind of a six month old, with no sense of object permanence or spatial awareness.
Forgive the politics but…have you seen the White House lately?
I’m not sure if you could even call it “violence” sense the bad guys never ended up worse than bruised, and firearms accuracy made Imperial Stormtroopers look like marksmen. It was more like slapstick with gunplay.
My Mom used to watch it with me because it was funny.
Well their accuracy at “hitting a car tire while also in a moving car themselves” was high. “Hitting people…” low.
Right?!
Cobra/Stormtrooper levels of inaccuracy when aiming at people.
“but that all of this effort was expended to…sell some rapidly aging watermelons?”
Classic example of the Cinq Cost Fallacy
They always had the best explosions. And a million rounds of ordnance expelled, and no one ever getting hit.
I think it speaks volumes that I only own just one scale model vehicle for display in my office and that that vehicle is the A-Team Vandura
That LeCar swayed from side to side so much it looked like it was going to roll over driving down the straights. Also, I love that the brand new car was belching smoke out the tail pipe. I guess that’s how you knew it was running?
Props to the props dept for making those piecees look like metal. Foam? Plastic? It holds up to driving pretty well it seems.
I’m also guessing they are two different LeCars. The armored one seems way too worn out just from attaching some metal pieces.
Not only did they routinely crash cars and high speeds with not injuries they also traded automatic gunfire in pretty much every episode without anyone ever getting hit.
Then there were the IEDs…..
Although this was also the time where bad guys would line up to fight the hero one by one – who never tired or even broke a sweat even after fighting dozens of guys.
Good thing they left the headlight area unarmored. I guess?
Don’t worry about the driver and passenger windows either
If the A-Team taught me anything, it’s that automotive safety peaked with the 1977 Plymouth Fury.
Decker seemed to like them
Amy was so pissed at what they did to her car she left the A-Team, and California, completely. She moved to the planet J’naii and changed her name to Soren where she eventually fell for Riker which caused her to be arrested and ordered to receive psychotectic therapy.
That’s crazy, I wonder if any of the other A-Team members went on to perform crazy space based shenanigans.
That Murdock guy was one of the only crew members that figured out what the holodeck was really for.
Then there’s Face, who had his space adventures before he joined the Team.
You know, I never clued in that Murdock and Barclay were the same actor.
And they were both among my favourite characters in both shows.
I liked him in ST-TNG, Even in the future people had struggles to deal with. In fact the whole show helped to shape who I grew up to be. Are there such inspirational shows around today for kids growing up ?
Same actor? Never noticed.
It’s the same actor, I don’t know if it’s supposed to be the same person.
If only Riker was able to join the A-team.
Obviously, he would’ve been their interrogation specialist, since the moment he goes into the room and sits down, the bad guy is so awestruck and intimated by the sheer lunacy of how he actually sits on the chair that the goon immediately gives up his bosses location.
The Riker Maneuver™ can be a very effective interrogation tool.
and/or sex move
“caused her to be arrested and ordered to receive psychotectic therapy”
Well she had it coming… LOL
I don’t remember this episode but I do remember Nancy sitting on Mr. T’s lap. Telling us to “Just Say No’ and then doing weird shit.
I love it when a plan comes together
Amy had some interesting taste in cars. She also drove a Chevy Citation at one point!
And the answer to the first question is: they robbed a bank in Vietnam, as part of a covert operation, but the CO who ordered it was later killed. So to the military, they’re criminals who necessitate a series of character actors being sent after them, including the 80s-awesome Lance LeGault.
There were a lot of good subcompact cars available in this era. The LeCar wasn’t one of them. They sat and sat and sat on AMC/Renault dealer lots forever, and I’m sure the A-Team production staff bought this one for under $5k OTD.
The LeCar was the butt of another joke in an SNL sketch about The Adobe, allegedly the cheapest car you could buy because it was made out of mud. The prop car was a Renault LeCar, hastily slathered in actual mud.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F02P2JO7yfc
Jeez, we would really just watch anything back then, right?
And we LIKED it!
Liked? Still do.
I’m still watching it now. My background static on my WFH days consists of A-Team, Knight Rider, Airwolf, Greatest American Hero, Dukes, Miami Vice, etc.
My favorite was Kung Fu, because for 45 minutes he’d preach non-violence, then end the show by kicking the shit out of everyone
I recall that back in the day we’d watch that in the house (dorm) lounge after college club karate practice. Definitely fun times.
Remember we didn’t have 100+ channels + streaming on demand. At my house we had ABC, CBS, NBC, and PBS. It was a HUGE deal when Fox came the the area in the late 80’s and we jumped to 5 channels.
My grandmother lived in a rural area and even with a giant directional antenna with a rotator got 2 channels – both which were fuzzy most of the time.
We also had a couple local UHF channels where I’d watch Star Blazers and Robotech through a staticky haze, if they’d come in at all.
Ahhh Star Blazers, because what else they’d use besides the rusting bits of some WWII ship that blew itself to smithereens in a magazine explosion?
You use what you’ve got, I suppose. Earth’s surface was destroyed and uninhabitable thanks to heavy bombardment from Gamilon. Since people were living underground and the ship’s belly was exposed to them, it does make a very, very tiny amount of sense. Very tiny.
But come on man. It sure as hell wasn’t the weirdest thing to come out of Japan in the 70s.
The magazine explosion occurred as the ship was already headed to her watery grave. It was a secondary effect of having the living crap bombed and torpedoed out of her. Even if she had survived the attack, she would have beached herself at Okinawa, as the ship was literally on a suicide mission anyway. An honorable death, I suppose?
I can’t speak to this — having spent my entire life not watching a single episode of that show — but can echo Torch’s comment about the Le Car’s wheezy mouse motor pulling all that scrap around. Also, the soft suspension could easily have caused a rollover thanks to the weight of the turret.
What I do remember was a scene from the classic movie Repo Man that showed a round-headlight Le Car parked in front of the repo HQ. Oddly enough, it looked exactly like my ex’s car, paint color and all….
Repo Man! Let’s go get a drink!
Dumb shows with memorable cars was what the 80s were all about. This show came out when I was 10 so it was perfection back then.
I really do pity the fool.
Fool pitying is a skill that, once taught to me by Mr. T, continues to aid my career development and personal growth. Even as I type this, while also attending a Teams meeting, I’m actively pitying all the fools on the screen.
Another example of the importance of punctuation. How would you rather spend an hour:
One can either suffer fools, or pity them. I know which one I choose.
And I think temporarily delay some kind of crooked land deal?
It all just came together for me. Four quirky crime/problem solvers with a van. The A-Team was Scooby-Doo without the dog, but with more guns and crashes! They’re both hyphenated, even!
There was a dog, but only Murdock could see him.
Hence the nickname, Howling Mad Murdock.
Now I’ve watched the clip; never watched the show. Was the imaginary dog a recurring thing? If so, it reinforces my theory. Because like Shaggy, Murdock must have been using some substances.
It wasn’t recurring really, every episode Murdock would have some new fascination.
Did they ever have a Globetrotters cameo? That would have sealed the deal.
Lemme tell you somthin’, brother: they did have Hulk Hogan and a bunch of wrestlers once.
Good enough for me
Ri ruv it wren a pran comes rugether…
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