On the Cover: Driverless Cars

The cover of New York’s tech and design issue. Drawing from Mary Evans Picture Library/Everett Collection. Colorized by Gluekit.

For the cover story of New York Magazine’s October 17–30, 2016, tech and design issue, writer and author of On Trails Robert Moor looks at the phenomenon of the self-driving car and what it means for the future of the self. “Stop for a moment to consider the magnitude of this transformation,” writes Moor. “Our republic of drivers is poised to become a nation of passengers.”

In designing the cover, New York Magazine design director Thomas Alberty says he and the editorial team knew they wanted to focus on the self-driving car. Doing research, designer Aaron Garza realized people have been talking about self-driving cars for decades. The car image featured on the cover is a vintage ad depicting a 1950s vision of the driverless car. “It encapsulates everything this story is about,” Alberty says.

Contrasting the futuristic yet old-fashioned “Nifty ’50s driving culture” cover, the inside art includes a collage of classic-movie car scenes from Bonnie and Clyde, Psycho, Thelma & Louise, Wayne’s World, Rebel Without a Cause, and others.

On the cover of New York Magazine: driverless cars.