Video: Paul Revere & The Raiders Introduce the 1969 GTO Judge

Here”s a genuine artifact of American pop culture: ’60s pop group Paul Revere and the Raiders presenting the hot new 1969 Pontiac GTO Judge.

 

With the 1968 Plymouth Road Runner, a stripped-down muscle car with branding borrowed from a Warner Brothers cartoon character, Chrysler scored a direct hit on the performance youth market. You bet the competition was quick to take notice, especially Pontiac and general manager John DeLorean. Gazing over the current pop culture scene, the General Motors division locked on the red-hot TV comedy sketch show Rowan & Martin’s Laugh In and its trendy catchphrase, “Here come da Judge,” originally a Pigmeat Markham bit. Pontiac’s pop-muscle car, DeLorean declared, would be called the GTO Judge.

In the original plan, the Judge was to be a decontented, value-priced muscle car like the Road Runner, but mission creep drove the cost $337 above and beyond the GTO’s base price. Still, buyers got a good deal as the standard Judge equipment included the 400 CID, 366-hp Ram Air III V8, a rear spoiler, Hurst shifter, and the eye-catching graphics. At launch, the only available color was Carousel Red (same paint code as Chevrolet Hugger Orange) but more colors were added later. Some 6,833 Judges were sold in the first year, the Pontiac experts say, including 108 convertibles, and the Judge package stayed in the GTO lineup through 1971.

To push the ’69 Judge marketing campaign, Pontiac signed up Paul Revere & The Raiders, the chart-topping Top-40 band of the moment. (Paul Revere DIck was the keyboardist while Mark Lindsay was vocalist and front man.) Among their duties, the group recorded a catchy single, “Judge GTO Breakaway,” and clowned around in the television commercial below. Join us for a moment of campy ’60s pop culture fun.

 

 

 

4 thoughts on “Video: Paul Revere & The Raiders Introduce the 1969 GTO Judge

  1. Good grief, man, must you dig these remnants of our youth, long forgotten, and for good reason. It’s amazing we made it through that era. Kind of like cell phone advertising of today, the hot button sells. I always thought Paul Revere was part of the British invasion in music, but am shocked to learn, 40 years later, they were out of Boise, Idaho. It should be noted, “Here comes da’ judge” was also played by Flip Wilson, who was a very funny guy. His show was the #1 variety show around that time, but not sure it had anything to do with Pontiac.

  2. The fastest car at my local drive-in as a teenager was a 1970 Judge. The owner went through the various Ram Air engines and eventually wound up with a big-block Chevy in it and a serious race car.

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