Small car. Big power. Much fun
Of all the attempts to give equine power to the people, the hot hatch has to be the noblest yet. Sure, the chaps in Detroit gave the world its first blue-collared, automotive pulp hero in the form of the muscle car – but, much like the lantern-jawed, bristly, one-dimensional protagonists of pulp fiction, it’s a bit too bombastic and obtrusive for everyday functioning. Ask any real-world MI6 agent where an unhealthy fondness for martinis and skirt chasing will land him (hint: not the beaches of Barbados).
That’s where hot hatches come in: unassuming, focused and positively monastic compared to other power-driven derivatives. And no hot hatch, certainly none in the country, is more so than the new Volkswagen Polo GTI – a car and a badge that confused many a bystander while I drove it around. So, let’s clear a few things up first, shall we: Is this Polo GTI still a Polo? Yes, very much so. And, also, no, absolutely not.
After the widespread success of VW’s resident hot hatch-in-chief, the Golf GTI, the company decided to extend the GTI line – essentially an in-house tuning of its models, much like Merc’s AMG or Audi’s Quattro divisions. It made sense for the Polo to be the next model to receive this heady injection of power – the Polo R WRC has, after all, won the last four World Rallying Championships.
Bu hikaye GQ India dergisinin March 2017 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye GQ India dergisinin March 2017 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
How to Dress for a Concert in Your Thirties
GQ World Humour
MARNI'S FRANCESCO Risso WILL NEVER GROW UP
The eccentric Italian designer is proving that the very serious business of fashion doesn't have to be very serious at all.
WELCOME TO LAUREN HALSEY'S NEIGHBORHOOD
The red-hot 36-year-old artist has achieved global success with a very local approach: applying imaginative, laser-like focus to a few square blocks of her hometown. In doing so, she renders and reflects what it's actually like to live and work in-and never, ever leave-South Central Los Angeles.
MEET THE WILDEST CHARACTER IN THE WORLD'S MOST INFLUENTIAL MUSIC SCENE
Right now, to be the most important new voice in Afrobeats means you might just be the most important new voice in global music, period. That title currently belongs to Asake, a Nigerian singer with bonkers style and a penchant for making speaker-melting hits.
BACK TO THE FUTURE
Goa's buzziest restaurants Praça Prazeres and Larder + Folk traverse the European continent for inspiration.
LEWIS HAMILTON IS CHANGING LANES
The seven-time F1 champ says he still has a world title in him-maybe this year, his final one at Mercedes; maybe next year when he joins Ferrari, a shocking move he tells us he manifested. But it's his passionate work outside of racing-in fashion, in film, in music-that's setting him up to keep making moves after the chequered flag drops on his racing career.
Summer of Sobhita
From Vizag to LA, Sobhita Dhulipala is having a golden run.
THE GQ35 MOST INFLUENTIAL YOUNG INDIANS
It's been 10 heady years since this list was first launched. And this year's edition celebrates India's youth power like never before. These individuals are leaders of powerful tribes, and personalities bearing influence over millions across the globe. They are pioneering business models, defining culture, and disrupting the status quo. They are driving innovation, pushing boundaries, and effecting change. Welcome to the future, today.
The Life-Changing Magic of Asking Kind Strangers to Rate Your Looks Online
On Reddit, a community dedicated to advice on one's appearance has given some men some unexpected confidence-and its moderators are trying to maintain one of the internet's few troll-free places.
Syncretic Jewels
An exhibition by Cartier at the Louvre, Abu Dhabi, highlighted the influence of Islamic art and Indian gems on the French maison's haute joaillerie over the years through more than 400 works from the museum's collection as well as those of partner museums, the Cartier archives, and private collectors.