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  • 00:00

    Vespa: the stylish Italian scooter that can be found in any corner of the world.

  • 00:06

    What might surprise you is that Vespa’s origin comes straight out of Italy’s destruction

  • 00:11

    during the Second World War.

  • 00:12

    In this video, we’ll see how Vespa was able to break through the economic turmoil of its

  • 00:17

    time to achieve worldwide fame.

  • 00:23

    This video is brought to you by CuriosityStream.

  • 00:26

    Watch thousands of award-winning documentaries by signing up with the link in the description.

  • 00:32

    By the end of World War II, Italy had been left in ruins.

  • 00:36

    It had surrendered to the Allies in 1943 and was almost immediately occupied by Germany;

  • 00:43

    thus, over the next two years the peninsula became a fierce battlefield that claimed the

  • 00:49

    lives of hundreds of thousands.

  • 00:51

    The country had its infrastructure bombed out and ended up in massive debt.

  • 00:56

    Come 1946, and Italy’s government was too weak to restart its industry.

  • 01:01

    Meanwhile, the rest of the world was switching focus back to normal consumer production,

  • 01:07

    with the gas-powered automobile being one of the most popular post-war goods.

  • 01:12

    During the war, automotive factories had been converted for wartime military production,

  • 01:16

    and while the industrialized Allied countries could afford the switchover back to civilian

  • 01:22

    production, Italy’s government was in way too much debt to support such a transition.

  • 01:27

    Without repaired infrastructure or any government support, the industrialists of Italy had their

  • 01:32

    hands tied.

  • 01:34

    They had to make do with the very limited resources they had and, more importantly,

  • 01:39

    they had to adapt.

  • 01:41

    In comes Enrico Piaggio, who ran the eponymous Piaggio company.

  • 01:46

    Prior to the war, the Piaggio family produced locomotives and train cars, but once war broke

  • 01:51

    out, their factory had been converted for military production like most others in Italy.

  • 01:57

    Piaggio produced some of Italy’s best performing aircraft during the Second World War, which

  • 02:02

    of course made it a prime target for Allied bombing.

  • 02:05

    By 1945 their factory had been razed to the ground and Enrico didn’t have the money

  • 02:12

    to rebuild such an expensive production line.

  • 02:14

    Suffice to say, he knew that it was time to shift gears.

  • 02:18

    Now, with Italy’s roads demolished, Enrico knew that his fellow countrymen would struggle

  • 02:23

    to find a usable mode of transportation.

  • 02:26

    Italy’s infrastructure was in such a bad state of disrepair that driving full-sized

  • 02:31

    vehicles was practically out of the equation.

  • 02:34

    Enrico had to figure out a new method of transport that was both sturdy and versatile enough

  • 02:39

    to survive whatever was left of Italy’s roads.

  • 02:43

    Luckily for him, he had already seen the early scooter during the war.

  • 02:48

    Cushman scooters from America had been used during the Second World War by soldiers to

  • 02:52

    get around bases faster.

  • 02:54

    They were also dropped in alongside paratroopers or were used to sneak in between enemy lines.

  • 03:01

    Of course, because of their military nature, comfort was not really considered in the design,

  • 03:06

    nor was driver protection, or any semblance of visual appeal.

  • 03:10

    Thus, Enrico’s job extended beyond the technical specifications; the vehicle he wanted to build

  • 03:18

    would have to be stylistically bold enough to push Italy forward.

  • 03:22

    Luckily, there was plenty of engineering talent in Italy at the time; the country had been

  • 03:26

    banned from developing any military technology for 10 years after the war, which of course

  • 03:32

    left many engineers out of a job.

  • 03:35

    Enrico hired one such man to build a prototype—one sturdy enough to withstand the bombed out

  • 03:41

    infrastructure, yet cheap enough for a country left in financial ruin.

  • 03:45

    Enrico’s new engineer had actually been one of the leading Italian helicopter designers,

  • 03:50

    and thus he could apply principles from aircraft engineering to overcome the obstacles inherent

  • 03:55

    to two-wheeled vehicles.

  • 03:57

    As a counterpart to the dirty effect of motorcycles, he designed a body that would protect the

  • 04:02

    driver from any dirt or rocks.

  • 04:05

    He concealed the engine to keep oil, grease and dirt off of the driver.

  • 04:09

    The ultimate focus, however, was on the scooter’s design, and the prototype Enrico eventually

  • 04:14

    saw evoked a rather interesting response from him.

  • 04:18

    Enrico looked at the wide central piece and the steering rod resembling antennas and he

  • 04:23

    remarked that “it looks like a wasp”; the word for which in Italian, is “Vespa”.

  • 04:29

    Production was easy enough to finance, especially when compared to building aircraft and so

  • 04:33

    by the spring of 1946 the Vespa was already being sold to the public.

  • 04:39

    In his first full year Enrico sold 2,500 units and he wisely invested the profits into expanding

  • 04:46

    his factory.

  • 04:47

    The next year, sales quadrupled to 10,000 Vespas, growing to 60,000 by the turn of the

  • 04:53

    decade.

  • 04:54

    Pretty soon, a new verb caught on in Italian parlance: vespare, which meant “to go somewhere

  • 05:01

    in a Vespa”.

  • 05:02

    Before long the whole of Italy had fallen in love with the fashionable scooter.

  • 05:06

    It was clean, lightweight and dependable, so it rapidly became an everyday mode of transportation.

  • 05:12

    Although its original purpose was to overcome Italy’s destroyed infrastructure at the

  • 05:17

    time, the Vespa’s unique aesthetic captured the attention of consumers abroad.

  • 05:22

    Enrico began exporting Vespas to India in 1948, becoming the country’s first scooter

  • 05:28

    dealer, where it enjoyed a near monopoly for decades.

  • 05:32

    The Vespa also became an American sensation with the release of the film Roman Holiday

  • 05:37

    in 1953, in which Audrey Hepburn rides the iconic Italian scooter around Rome.

  • 05:43

    It’s estimated that over 100,000 units were sold as a direct result of just that movie.

  • 05:50

    Then you have something like the Mods, a subculture in London which based itself around riding

  • 05:55

    Vespas into the late hours of the night.

  • 05:58

    As a cheap, dependable mode of transportation, the Vespa was perfect for teenage Mods looking

  • 06:04

    for freedom from the mundane.

  • 06:06

    Becoming a cultural icon was the Vespa’s road to global fame, which it still retains

  • 06:11

    to this day.

  • 06:12

    Enrico’s story is proof that you can make the best out of a bad situation and the bombing

  • 06:16

    of Italy during World War 2 was pretty bad.

  • 06:19

    If you wanna see just how bad the bombing got, and not just in Italy but across the

  • 06:24

    world, you should watch this awesome documentary on CuriosityStream, a streaming service built

  • 06:29

    exclusively for documentaries.

  • 06:32

    Founded by the same guy who made Discovery Channel, CuriosityStream has thousands of

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    award-winning documentaries, which you can watch exclusively for just $2.99 a month.

  • 06:42

    In fact, to show you just how awesome CuriosityStream is, I’m giving you a 30-day free trial if

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    you register using the link in the description and use the code ‘businesscasual’ when

  • 06:52

    you sign up.

  • 06:53

    In any case, I’d like to thank you for watching.

  • 06:56

    Make sure to like the video if you enjoyed it and to subscribe if you’re new; you should

  • 07:00

    also check out my Instagram page where I post awesome teasers for every upcoming video.

  • 07:05

    We’re gonna be seeing each other again very soon and until then: stay smart.

All

The example sentences of VESPA in videos (2 in total of 5)

the determiner de proper noun, singular havilland proper noun, singular dingo proper noun, singular , the determiner de proper noun, singular havilland proper noun, singular hyena proper noun, singular , the determiner vickers proper noun, singular vespa proper noun, singular , and coordinating conjunction the determiner bristol proper noun, singular boarhound proper noun, singular .
as preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner cheap adjective , dependable adjective mode noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction transportation noun, singular or mass , the determiner vespa proper noun, singular was verb, past tense perfect adjective for preposition or subordinating conjunction teenage adjective mods proper noun, singular looking verb, gerund or present participle

Definition and meaning of VESPA

What does "vespa mean?"

other
Type genus of the Vespidae: various hornets and yellow jackets.