Nelly's Customized 2009 Ford Flex Unveiled at SEMA

Hip hop artist Nelly's customized 2009 Ford Flex comes to SEMA
by Alex Ricciuti
November 4, 2008 11:59 AM
Filed Under: American, Ford, Music, SEMA, Tuners

Hip hop artist Nelly fell in love with Ford's latest crossover and he just had to have one. And he had to have the Ford Flex his way.

The 34 year-old Grammy winner saw the car for the first time at a Ford event in Atlanta last July. He shared his enthusiasm with his friend DJ Funkmaster Flex, who himself has worked with Ford since 2005 on customizing vehicles.

Nelly took his ideas to Ford and worked with designer Melvin Betancourt on achieving his vision for the car. The work is exclusively cosmetic and includes a refined leather interior with a state-of-the-art sound system, custom-color blue with a white roof, 22-inch wheels, and an exhaust system that adds a little rumble to the Flex.

Ford claims that over half of its Flex customers are new to the Ford brand and hopes that adding a little glamour to the Flex by introducing this star-inspired tuner model at SEMA will help promote sales.

In the press release, Nelly refers to himself as a ‘premiere stuntastic stuntman'. We are still awaiting details on what that means.

Source: Ford
Press Release (Click to expand)

Grammy Award-winning artist Nelly will see his brand new customized 2009 Ford Flex for the first time today when the vehicle is unveiled on the Ford stand at the Specialty Equipment Market Association (SEMA) show in Las Vegas.

The 34-year-old rapper, singer and actor says Ford’s newest crossover caught his eye for the first time in July when it was on display at a Ford-sponsored event in Atlanta.

“When I saw it, I said ‘Yo, that’s hot!  How can I get one of those?’” he recalled.  “I thought it was a real unique vehicle.”

Later that night, Nelly shared his excitement about the car with his good friend, hip hop DJ Funkmaster Flex, who has a customized Flex of his own.  That’s when the metaphorical wheels started turning.

"I've been partnering with Ford on some amazing vehicles since 2005," said Funkmaster Flex. When Nelly reached out on wanting a custom Flex of his own, I knew it was going to be 'on and poppin.'  From our initial meeting with him at my warehouse in the Bronx to follow-up conversations that we had about this vehicle, there was no doubt that we could deliver something that would ultimately be true to Nelly and his own style".

"When it comes to a vehicle looking sweet, this crossover is beyond sweet," said Flex of the crossover. "This vehicle is one where you can be hot coming off the dealership lot—which is a plus, but when you know that you can customize it afterwards and turn a car that's a 10 into a 20—that's super hot." It was even more exciting for me to be able to work with Nelly and introduce him to the Ford team of designers to create a vehicle all his own. It was definitely an experience." 

Usha Raghavachari, Ford's Crossover Marketing Communications Manager, attended the initial event in Atlanta and says she was delighted to see how enthusiastic Nelly was about the Flex. 

“He is a huge hip hop star who transcends the traditional audience.  The fact that he is attracted to Flex is testament to its head-turning design,” she said.

Nelly says he was thrilled about the idea of “building” his own Flex. 

“I’m what they call a ‘premiere stuntastic stuntman,’ and so you know when it comes to cars, I’m pretty inclined to go overboard,” he said.  “I wanted to really turn the vehicle into mine.  You can do so much with it, and I think that’s the best thing about it.”

After meeting with Nelly and getting a feel for his taste, Ford Designer Melvin Betancourt began sketching. 

“Just from talking with Nelly, we knew that he wanted a custom-color blue car with a white roof, a great sound system, 22-inch wheels, an exhaust system with a little bit of a rumble on it, and a personalized interior,” said Betancourt, who worked with Catalyst Industrial Marking, Inc. to build the vehicle.  “He wanted our input on the other elements of the customization.”

One of the first ideas they had, says Betancourt, was to design a custom appliqué for the roof.

“We created an art form that we feel reflects Nelly’s personality,” he said.  “It’s a bird, which is a symbol of freedom -- the ability to do whatever you want in life -- and it has a very modern feel to it, which is very Flex.”

The wheels had to stand out.  So the team chose NC Forged “6 Spoke” 3-piece aluminum, 22-inch wheels with NC floating center caps. 

“Wheels are usually either all-chrome or all-painted.  We did custom chrome rims with a brushed aluminum center, which is very unusual,” he said.  “We also wanted a wild, crazy offset on the wheels, so we went with a 4½-inch rim in the back and a 3-inch rim in the front, which creates a staggered look.”

Betancourt says the inspiration for the interior of the vehicle came largely from the exterior.

“The outside of the car reflects his personality, so it was a matter of bringing the some of the same elements inside,” he said. 

The team selected a black Tuscany leather interior with Katzkin® seats and contrast blue stitching that picks up the unique exterior color of the car.  They also replaced all the wood grain trim inside the car with the same artwork appliqué featured on the roof. 

In addition, Nelly’s Flex features the industry-exclusive Ford SYNC™ technology and a CIM LIIV™ wireless Internet entertainment system, which enables passengers to enjoy web surfing, online games, e-mail, downloaded movies, music and live television. 

Nelly says one of the things that really attracts him to the Ford Flex is the vehicle’s potential to transcend the generation gap. 

“It used to be that parents and kids didn’t like the same thing.  Families are getting a lot younger, and now it’s kind of a friendship between parents and kids,” he explained.  “When you can have a vehicle that both can rock their own way, I think you have something there that’s very special.”

Raghavachari agrees.

“Flex has successfully attracted a wide variety of people to Ford, with over half our customers being completely new to the Ford brand,” she said.  “This car helps our customers make a real statement about themselves and allows us to make a statement about where Ford is headed in terms of design and innovation."

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Comments

looks a lot like a modified range rover

by Lucifa | November 4, 2008 12:05 PM
too bad..it doesn't sell that well..ford did hope that flex would save them...

by phobos | November 4, 2008 12:07 PM
The Ford Flex. The car for people who aren't sophisticated enough for a Range Rover.

Did Ford REALLY think yet another derivative take on the horrible inefficeint SUV would save them? They can't be that stupid, surely?

by bristol411s3 | November 4, 2008 12:54 PM
The car looks good, and yeah, it's normal to look a bit like range until this year Range was owned by ford,so what is the problem?

by Motor_Yakuza | November 4, 2008 1:34 PM
It looks like the hideous bastardchild of a Range Rover and a Mini clubman.

by motorjedi | November 4, 2008 2:47 PM
i think the flex is pretty much what other american fords should be: original, stylish and contemporary. ford should not kill its american persona in favor of ford of europe's sporty flair, as some of you guys have suggested before... it would be somehow like killing the american-flavored cars altogether, as chevrolet is basically becoming daewoo and chrysler is, well, you know.

ford should try to stand up for the cool all american car, and maybe sell the pricier mondeos, kugas and s-maxes through mercury.

maybe that would work. yeah, right.

by politz | November 4, 2008 2:53 PM
by the way: calling it the fairlane would be much more appealing

and a brad-and-angelina customization would seem more likely, also.

by politz | November 4, 2008 2:57 PM

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