Jeremy Clarkson to be sacked by the BBC

Tecumsehsbones

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I'm only dealing in facts here. I live in the real world.
Again demonstrating that you don't know what the word "fact" means. You actually believe that whatever speculation comes rattling out of your skull is as real as Cliffs of Dover.

Which is fine. Got no problem with that. Just pointing out to everybody here how utterly disconnected from reality you are.
 

Blackleaf

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Again demonstrating that you don't know what the word "fact" means. You actually believe that whatever speculation comes rattling out of your skull is as real as Cliffs of Dover.

Which is fine. Got no problem with that. Just pointing out to everybody here how utterly disconnected from reality you are.

Look. This is not up for debate. Anybody with half a brain knows that Clarkson was sacked for his non-PC views, not because he punched someone. That was just the excuse to finally get rid of him that the BBC have been waiting for.
 

tay

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I wouldn't fret about it.


If he's that popular (money maker) then some other TV outlet will sign him up and he continue on with the show............
 

Blackleaf

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I wouldn't fret about it.


If he's that popular (money maker) then some other TV outlet will sign him up and he continue on with the show............


Some more progressive station than the BBC (e.g. ITV or Sky) will snap all three of them up, Calarkson, Hammond and May. They'll just make a show that is Top Gear in all but name on Sky1 or ITV1. All the viewers which then flocked to the BBC at 8pm on Sunday nights (350 million EVERY Sunday night) will instead go to its rival channel, and the gormless left-wing liberals at the BBC will then regrest getting rid of him whilst their Top Gear struggles to pull in the viewers with more-PC but more mundane and humourless presenters.
 

Tecumsehsbones

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Look. This is not up for debate. Anybody with half a brain knows that Clarkson was sacked for his non-PC views, not because he punched someone. That was just the excuse to finally get rid of him that the BBC have been waiting for.
Of course it's up for debate. Everywhere in the world except in the echoing cavern of your skull.

If you wanted to prove your assertion, you would start looking for statistics on discipline of people who assaulted their co-workers, and show that assaulting one's co-workers rarely or never leads to firing.

But you see, that would be fact-based analysis, completely incompatible with your mode of "thought," which is banging your prejudices and grievances together and producing noise.
 

Blackleaf

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If you wanted to prove your assertion, you would start looking for statistics on discipline of people who assaulted their co-workers, and show that assaulting one's co-workers rarely or never leads to firing.


We could start by looking at all those Beeb employees with more lefty-liberal views over the years who have stepped too far over the line and NOT been sacked.

We all remember the Sachsgate affair in 2008 when the left-wing "comedian" Russell Brand - whom the BBC absolutely adores - and the talkshow host Jonathan Ross, on BBC Radio 2's The Russell Brand Show, left four obscene messages on the answer machine of the phome of actor Andrew Sachs, who played Manuel in Fawlty Towers. In the first message, Brand joked about Fawlty Towers and the fact that both he and Sachs had appeared in The Bill, but was interrupted by Ross shouting out "he ****ed your granddaughter". The rest of the message and the following three messages were all characterised by Brand and Ross attempting to apologise for Ross' outburst, but each quickly descended into farce, with, for example, Brand singing to Sachs: "It was consensual and she wasn't menstrual" and Ross asking to marry him.

Now, was the left-wing Russell Brand sacked from hosting The Russell Brand Show after that disgusting incident? No, he wasn't. He was merely suspended for a while by the BBC, but they quickly took him back and he still hosts the show today.

So if you're a left-wing luvvie which the BBC adores, such as the disgusting Russell Brand, you get to kepe your job, but if you're Jeremy Clarkson with, you get sacked.

Clarkson was sacked because he doesn't hold politically correct, liberal BBC/Guardian views, not because he punched someone. That was just the excuse the Guardiano-Beebers needed to finally get shot of him.
 

Tecumsehsbones

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We could start by looking at all those Beeb employees with more lefty-liberal views over the years who have stepped too far over the line and NOT been sacked.

We all remember the Sachsgate affair in 2008 when the left-wing "comedian" Russell Brand - whom the BBC absolutely adores - and the talkshow host Jonathan Ross, on BBC Radio 2's The Russell Brand Show, left four obscene messages on the answer machine of the phome of actor Andrew Sachs, who played Manuel in Fawlty Towers. In the first message, Brand joked about Fawlty Towers and the fact that both he and Sachs had appeared in The Bill, but was interrupted by Ross shouting out "he ****ed your granddaughter". The rest of the message and the following three messages were all characterised by Brand and Ross attempting to apologise for Ross' outburst, but each quickly descended into farce, with, for example, Brand singing to Sachs: "It was consensual and she wasn't menstrual" and Ross asking to marry him.

Now, was the left-wing Russell Brand sacked from hosting The Russell Brand Show after that disgusting incident? No, he wasn't. He was merely suspended for a while by the BBC, but they quickly took him back and he still hosts the show today.

So if you're a left-wing luvvie which the BBC adores, such as the disgusting Russell Brand, you get to kepe your job, but if you're Jeremy Clarkson with, you get sacked.

Clarkson was sacked because he doesn't hold politically correct, liberal BBC/Guardian views, not because he punched someone. That was just the excuse the Guardiano-Beebers needed to finally get shot of him.
Not understanding the difference between speech and assault is another of your encyclopaedic list of shortcomings, Blackleaf.

I note that when I outlined how one would go about proving one's assertion, you seemed to think that coming up with a single anecdote of someone who did not assault a co-worker qualifies as looking into statistics on the disciplining of people who assault co-workers.

I do understand that, being lazy as well as stupid, you were not about to do any actual work.
 

Twila

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Mar 26, 2003
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He's a prick and the short guy needs a haircut.

yes he is and yes he does. But that's what sometimes makes a threesome work so well. You've got to have someone to be pissed off at, someone to laugh at, and someone who can hold them all together. Not that any one of those has to be that way all the time.

Plus, some men are so good at being pricks. I mean, they've practically made it an art form.
 

Blackleaf

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Plus, some men are so good at being pricks..


And so are many women.

Not understanding the difference between speech and assault is another of your encyclopaedic list of shortcomings, Blackleaf.

I note that when I outlined how one would go about proving one's assertion, you seemed to think that coming up with a single anecdote of someone who did not assault a co-worker qualifies as looking into statistics on the disciplining of people who assault co-workers.

I do understand that, being lazy as well as stupid, you were not about to do any actual work.


I'll say again: Clarkson was sacked for his non-PC, non-left-wing beliefs, not because he punched someone. The BBC have been trying to get rid of him for years. They don't see him as one of them, with his non-PC views which don't toe the BBC/Establishment line.

The BBC deliberately covers up child abuse from its presenters like Savile and many others, and allows them to continue working on the shows they present even when it (but hardly anybody else) knows what's been going on. It takes hardly any action when Left-wing scum like Russell Brand leave obscene messages on an elderly actor's answerphone about his granddaughter. Yet when Clarkson punches a mate of his - a mate who, like others who witnesses it, has said that the incident was "nothing much" and he didn't want any further action to be taken (it was Clarkson who reported it to Al-Bibisiyah) - in a heat of the moment thing when he was given a cold platter after a hard day's filming, the BBC immediately sacks him.

The BBC sacked Clarkson merely for not holding PC, liberal views. This punching incident was just the excuse it needed. They've been trying for years to get rid of him. It seems that if you're a Left-winger, you get to continue hosting TV and radio shows on the BBC even if you've sent obscene messages to an elderly actor and even abused hundreds of children for years. Yet you get sacked for not holding lefty-liberal views.

Make no mistake: the Top Gear brouhaha is cultural warfare


The PC vipers are after Clarkson because they want to make all speech that they deplore into hate speech. Anything that might cause trauma to anyone of any race except the white one will be expunged.


Make no mistake: the Top Gear brouhaha is cultural warfare » The Spectator
 

Blackleaf

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In the wake of the Top Gear row, the Left-wing BBC has shown its true metropolitan elitist, lefty-liberal, Islington dinner party, Guardianista colours by being patronising and insulting to the working class.

A BBC boss has insulted nearly half the country by dismissing them using marketing jargon.

Creative director Alan Yentob was trying to rebut the allegation that the corporation caters only for the left-wing ‘metropolitan elite’.

The executive, who earns around £330,000 a year, insisted that the BBC appeals to all sorts of audiences because it airs programmes that ‘reach out to… C2s [and] DEs’,

C2 and DE are terms used by marketing professionals to describe the working classes – more than 47 per cent of the UK population.

Mr Yentob’s extraordinary declaration on Newsnight on Wednesday was an attempt to prove what an inclusive organisation the BBC is, amid concern that a huge swathe of its audience will stop tuning in now Jeremy Clarkson has been axed from Top Gear.

However, his comments backfired as viewers used social media to accuse him of arrogance and sounding so ‘out of touch’ they thought it was a spoof.

Meanwhile, Top Gear's James May has said that he might leave television altogether and become a teacher.

The BBC, and the British Establishment as a whole, really is a Left-wing cesspit and it needs clearing out.

I'm voting Ukip on 7th May to try and get it cleaned out.


How patronising! BBC boss Alan Yentob says: We DO make shows for the working classes


Alan Yentob was appearing on Newsnight over Jeremy Clarkson row
Denied BBC was elitist as programmes attract audiences that are 'C2, Ds'

Twitter users said use of the terms showed that Yentob was elitist

Terms are used in marketing to describe working class consumers

By Katherine Rushton For The Daily Mail
27 March 2015
Daily Mail

A BBC boss has insulted nearly half the country by dismissing them using marketing jargon.

Creative director Alan Yentob was trying to rebut the allegation that the corporation caters only for the ‘metropolitan elite’.

The executive, who earns around £330,000 a year, insisted that the BBC appeals to all sorts of audiences because it airs programmes that ‘reach out to… C2s [and] DEs’,


BBC creative director Alan Yentob has been mocked for using marketing speak to deny that the broadcaster was elitist describing working class people as 'C2s' and 'Ds' as he defended Jeremy Clarkson's sacking



Mr Yentob's comments quickly attracted the attention of social media users, who criticised the way he had described viewers


Robert MacDonald, tweeted: 'Did Alan Yentob really just say 'lots of our programmes reach out to C2 Ds' (in rejecting BBC is for 'metropolitan elite')?'

C2 and DE are terms used by marketing professionals to describe the working classes – more than 47 per cent of the UK population.

Mr Yentob’s extraordinary declaration on Newsnight on Wednesday was an attempt to prove what an inclusive organisation the BBC is, amid concern that a huge swathe of its audience will stop tuning in now Jeremy Clarkson has been axed from Top Gear.

However, his comments backfired as viewers used social media to accuse him of arrogance and sounding so ‘out of touch’ they thought it was a spoof.

They accused Mr Yentob of using obscure jargon that only the metropolitan elite would understand, in a way that suggested that working class viewers are a niche audience.

John Hemming, Liberal Democrat MP for Birmingham Yardley, accused Mr Yentob of ‘arrogance’ which only confirmed his status as part of the metropolitan elite.

He said: ‘In essence, he’s admitting that the BBC doesn’t do much for the working classes, and he is doing that in a way that is not making it easy for many people to understand.’

Mr Yentob – who earns more than £180,000 a year as creative director as well as an estimated £150,000 fee for editing and presenting the BBC arts series Imagine – made the remarks as he attempted to explain the decision to fire Clarkson.


Mr Yentob was appearing on Newsnight to defend the sacking of Jeremy Clarkson, whose contract is not being renewed after he attacked Top Gear producer Oisin Tymon


Twitter user Sacred Antinous wrote: 'Yentob describes all those who aren't 'metropolitan elite' as C2DEs. Our licence fee is so well spent on this man of the people #newsnight'


The terms C2s and Ds are marketing terms to describe working class people

Presenter Emily Maitlis asked if getting rid of the Top Gear host would make it harder for the BBC to reach ‘a demographic... increasingly disregarded’ by a corporation which ‘plays largely to the metropolitan elite’.

Apparently unaware of the irony, Mr Yentob responded: ‘I don’t know that I would buy that, actually, about the metropolitan elite.

'There are quite a lot of programmes which reach out to audiences which are C2s, DEs, which aren’t the metropolitan elite.’

The terms are part of the Approximated Social Grade, which defines social groups by occupation. AB (22 per cent of the UK) broadly covers higher and intermediate managerial.

C1 (31 per cent) is supervisory, clerical and junior managerial. C2 (21 per cent) is skilled manual while DE (26 per cent) is semi-skilled and unskilled, plus the unemployed.


Others questioned whether the BBC really were keen to make programmes that appealed to all audiences


Toby Wood said: 'Only metropolitan elite luvvies speak like Alan Yentob on @BBCNewsnight - he's in more opaque bubble than Westminster politicians #Clarkson'

A BBC spokesman said: ‘There’s nothing elitist about making programmes and services used by 97 per cent of people every week, and that’s the point Alan made.’

Mr Yentob admitted that axing Clarkson marked ‘a bad day’ for the BBC.

But he said director general Lord Hall felt he had no choice after the Top Gear star’s unprovoked physical and verbal attack on his producer.

However, he refused to rule out Clarkson returning to the BBC.


Clarkson attacked Mr Tymon (pictured) leaving him in such a state that he later took himself to A&E


The BBC has said that Top Gear will continue without Clarkson, who had hosted it since 1988, but there are doubts as to whether co-presenters Richard Hammond and James May will return. Rumours abound that ITV and Sky are now after Clarkson





Arrogant, smug and sneering: JANET STREET-PORTER, who spent years as a senior BBC boss, excoriates the incestuous luvvie clique who run it



By Janet Street-Porter For The Daily Mail
27 March 2015
Daily Mail


Alan Yentob, the 'creative director' of the BBC, has never worked anywhere but the BBC - where else would you find such a narrow gene pool at the top?


Proof that the people who run the BBC live in a precious world of their own was supplied this week when Alan Yentob — whose title at the corporation is ‘creative director’ — told Newsnight’s Emily Maitlis that ‘there are quite a lot of programmes which reach out to audiences which are C2s, DEs, which aren’t the metropolitan elite’.

In other words, he seemed to be saying that Jeremy Clarkson may have been sacked by the BBC ‘but common people will still find something to watch’.

How simply outrageous! And how very, very kind of the BBC to make a few programmes ‘reaching out’ to the non-metropolitan elite (as if they live on Mars) — those downmarket low-earners who live in places outside London and the South-East.

Anyone listening might have thought Yentob was talking about a vanishing tribe or a special needs group, instead of those millions of ordinary people who (unlike him and his pals, with their trendy artworks and minimalist designer sofas) live in normal homes and want to watch decent TV programmes.

People who live in small houses and flats, who don’t drink Terroir Series Malbec wine from Argentina and eat tapas.

People who don’t holiday in Tuscany or rent nice houses in Devon and Cornwall. But people who manage to be happy, despite living outside sought-after Islington and Notting Hill postcodes, where most of our political leaders, media chiefs and the chattering classes seem to reside.

In his hamfisted way, by talking about social classes ‘C2s, DEs’, Yentob was referring to the large majority of Britons — the kind of people the BBC top brass and most politicians tend not to mix with on a daily basis, unless they are partaking in a rare public meeting.

With Clarkson heading off into the sunset, taking his millions of male and female fans with him — probably to a new home at ITV, who must be ecstatic — what evidence exists, apart from Yentob’s patronising remark about the lower social classes, that the BBC has any idea how to engage with these millions of licence fee-payers?

Having spent nearly a decade working as a top executive at the BBC, I can vouch that it’s run by a bunch of smug, self-satisfied, over-educated types (nearly all graduates of the same universities) who communicate in an opaque language and conform to a very limited set of beliefs.

These Polenta People (as I like to think of them, since they enjoy eating the fancy Italian cornmeal) embody Left-wing Hampstead talking to trendy, Left-leaning Barnes. Everyone else seems to be excluded.

They make simple — and arrogant — assumptions about what viewers and listeners will enjoy, based on their own narrow experiences.


'The real disaster for the BBC was that the Clarkson episode had exposed its management as dangerously out of touch with a huge section of the people who fund them'


Alan Yentob — whom I love dearly, despite his failings — has never worked anywhere else apart from the BBC, starting as a trainee in 1968.

Is there any other billion-pound business with such a narrow gene pool at the top?

In typical corporate-speak, BBC executives talk of ‘delivery’ and ‘accountability’, and worry about ‘programme reach’.

But outside work they inhabit an incestuous world, cocooned away from this target audience.

They congregate at weekends, swapping in-jokes over bottles of Waitrose wine at kitchen suppers (that epitome of the chattering-class meal).

Their best pals inevitably write for The Guardian and they share the same set of leftish, liberal and politically correct values.

They loathe people such as Clarkson — a rare beacon of political incorrectness — which makes it even more remarkable that he lasted so long at the BBC.

Just how inward-looking BBC bosses have become was illustrated this week with the fallout from the Top Gear debacle.

The story of Clarkson’s sacking was the lead item on the 5pm news on Radio 4, ahead of the plane crash in the Alps in which 150 people died.

How predictable that, in the rarefied atmosphere of the BBC, a millionaire TV host is deemed more newsworthy than a major aviation disaster.

As part of a PR damage-limitation exercise after the BBC had sacked one of its most popular presenters, Yentob popped up on several programmes, from Steve Hewlett’s Media Show to Radio 4’s PM and BBC2’s Newsnight, talking about his ‘pal’ Clarkson and what a shame the whole story was.

Their best pals inevitably write for The Guardian and they share the same set of leftish, liberal and politically correct values

Surely, if this BBC nabob had been more honest, he would have admitted the real disaster for the BBC was that the Clarkson episode had exposed its management as dangerously out of touch with a huge section of the people who fund them: licence fee-payers on lower incomes.

For anyone on the minimum wage, paying the annual TV licence represents a far higher proportion of their weekly budget than it does for someone living in a nice flat in Primrose Hill or Notting Hill.

The truth is that the BBC has increasingly, over the years, represented the metropolitan elite (and become blander in the process).

However, Top Gear was a rare example of a format which appealed to the sort of audience the BBC cannot afford to lose — viewers who are switching away from BBC1 and watching more programmes on Sky and Channel 5.

The tragedy is that it is not only BBC top brass who live in this out-of-touch bubble. The same applies to our political leaders.

David Cameron, with his well-heeled pals in the Cotswolds (who, ironically, include Clarkson), knows no more about white van man and ordinary women than his nemesis, Ed ‘Two Kitchens’ Miliband, who lives in a £2 million home in London.

They might talk about ‘hard-working men and women’ — political code for ‘C2s, DEs’ — but they don’t know any.

No wonder a survey of voters this week found that the three attributes they thought best described Cameron were ‘out of touch’, ‘smug’ and ‘arrogant’. Miliband was ‘weird’, while Nick Clegg was also ‘out of touch’.


Yentob has been widely derided since using 'C2, DEs' to describe BBC viewers on lower incomes while being interviewed on Newsnight about the potential end of top Gear

What’s more, there is an unhealthy nexus between politicians and influential figures at the BBC and in other parts of the media.

For example, there was Ed Richards, a quintessential New Labour man who was an adviser to Tony Blair and Gordon Brown before becoming, for 11 years, the head of the media watchdog Ofcom.

Let’s not forget former Labour minister James Purnell, the BBC’s so-called head of strategy who was alleged to have been behind an odious smear against Clarkson in which he was compared to serial paedophile Jimmy Savile. Purnell strenuously denied being involved.

Then there is Ian Katz, who left The Guardian to run Newsnight. Not far away in Islington lives Tom Baldwin (married to an heiress, living in a very posh house), who quit The Times to work for Ed Miliband as his spin doctor.

They are typical of the metropolitan crew who claim to know about social deprivation and the working class but don’t have a clue how real people live.

The BBC is packed full of programmes that educate us with a small ‘e’ but manage to slightly patronise us at the same time

When I worked at the BBC, I was the only person in management without a university degree. I was also the only one with an Estuary accent — and things have changed very little since then.

This week, a new quiz started on BBC4 which sums up the problem. Called The Quizeum, it’s chaired by Mr Smug, Griff Rhys Jones, and broadcast from a different museum each week.

I watched the first episode. There wasn’t a studio audience to give the show any life. As one critic observed, ‘perhaps no one wanted to come’.

With all the will in the world, I can’t imagine any Darrens from Doncaster tuning in to such a programme.

Nor would they find much in common with the horribly precious historian Lucy Worsley (queen of the simper) who presents programmes about royal palaces.

The BBC is packed full of programmes that educate us with a small ‘e’ but manage to slightly patronise us at the same time.

There’s Michael Portillo and his train journeys. Clare Balding walking around Britain. Stephen Fry presenting everything from quiz shows to documentaries.

The BBC should reflect the diversity and richness of British culture — not just the tastes of those who read The Guardian, drive eco-friendly cars, despise Clarkson and make their own sourdough bread.

The Quizeum



BBC4's new gameshow, The Quizeum, in which two teams of history and culture experts are quizzed on their knowledge inside a museum, has already been branded "elitist" despite only one episode of it being aired so far, with critics saying the show will appeal to hardly anybody outside the left-wing metropolitan elite of London and the South East of England. But what do you think?

Quiz show in which Griff Rhys Jones visits museums around the UK with two teams of expert panellists made up of historians, scientists and cultural scholars.

At Britain's oldest public museum, the Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology in Oxford, being put to the test by Griff are Lars Tharp, Professor Kate Williams, Dr Janina Ramirez and Dr Michael Scott. The two teams pit their knowledgeable wits against each other in a series of rounds informed by the amazing contents of the museum.


Watch it Here:BBC iPlayer - The Quizeum - Episode 1


 
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Blackleaf

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Jeremy Clarkson: a true internationalist






Patrick West
27 March 2015
Spiked
49 comments

Far from being parochial, Top Gear was loved from Italy to Iran.


Jeremy Clarkson is viewed by his detractors as something of an oaf and a brute, a man whose plainspoken pronouncements on public transport, cyclists, health and safety (‘gone mad’), bus lanes (‘why do poor people have to get to places quicker than I do?’), public-sector workers going on strike (‘I would have them taken out and executed’) and climate change (‘ecomentalism’) mark him out as a kind of antediluvian embodiment of the Daily Mail. And between his suspension from BBC TV’s Top Gear earlier this month and his final departure this week, not a single censure-ridden profile of Clarkson failed to mention his unkind asides about Mexicans, Burmese and Argentinians.

Yet it is paradoxical, ironic even, that a TV presenter charged with today’s most grievous transgression – racism – has been responsible for creating a show that has an appeal that transcends borders, race and national divisions. Clarkson helped to turn Top Gear into the world’s most successful non-fiction TV programme: in 2013, Guinness World Records proclaimed it the most widely watched factual TV show on Earth.

It is watched by 350million people in 170 countries. It has been dubbed into eight languages. Homegrown versions of it have been created in Australia, Russia, the US, South Korea and, from last week, France. Yet still Top Gear is regarded as a show chiefly for parochial, provincial types who live in a land of ‘converted farmhouses, country pubs, Range Rovers, polo-necks and flat caps, hearty laughs, male solidarity and a steady belief in the Satanic provenance of traffic wardens’, as David Aaronovitch put it in The Times yesterday.


In 2013, Guinness World Records proclaimed Top Gear the most widely watched factual TV show on Earth. But what now for the show?

Paleoconservatives disdain Clarkson as much as the metropolitan, liberal left do. The Daily Telegraph’s Timothy Stanley yesterday also bemoaned ‘the cult of Jezza, a cult that is materialistic and brash and a celebration of loadsamoney’. How odd it is to deplore the popularity of this unsophisticated parvenu, when one considers how Top Gear has become the most genuinely internationalist programme… in the world (as Clarkson would put it).

When Clarkson’s suspension was announced, one of the first to express sadness was his Farsi voiceover, Mozaffar Shafeie, who helps to translate Top Gear for the benefit of the show’s multitude of viewers in Iran. As much as it might grate on the tender sensibilities of Clarkson’s detractors in the UK, his oafish, crass manner is actually fundamental to his popularity in the Islamic Republic. ‘His humour is so inappropriate and not at all what you hear on state TV’, said the BBC’s Darius Bazargan, who made a documentary in 2008 about motor racing in Tehran, before adding, ‘that must account for some of [Top Gear’s] appeal’.

Indeed, the show is huge in the Middle East. Before Syria descended into catastrophe, we saw on their 2010 trip from Iraq to Israel Clarkson and his co-presenters, James May and Richard Hammond, being mobbed by adoring passers-by in the now beleaguered country. The BBC correspondent Daniel Adamson recalls once pulling into a roadside cafe in the Jordan Valley, not far from Jericho in the West Bank. It was late at night, but there were still 20-or-so Palestinian men sitting around on plastic chairs, smoking shisha pipes and watching the Top Gear segment ‘Star in a Reasonably Priced Car’. Adamson recounts a similar scene beneath tin roofs in the slums of Mumbai.

On another occasion, he found himself in a taxi on a Peruvian dirt road near the old Inca city of Sayhuite. His driver, a Quechua Indian, having discovered that he was British, asked him but one question: ‘Who is the Stig?’


Popular: In a 2010 special, which saw the trio travel from Iraq to Israel, they were mobbed by fans

The BBC’s decision not to renew Clarkson’s contract this week consequently made headlines outside Britain. La Repubblica, the equivalent of the Guardian in Italy, speculated on the consequent gloomy outlook for ‘lo show dedicato alle auto più popolare al mondo’.

While Italian viewers like to jest that the British don’t even make their own cars any more, this doesn’t detract from Top Gear’s essential appeal in Italy and elsewhere: its larks, hijinks, risk-taking and challenges. Keep in mind also that Top Gear’s blokeish tenor is not offputting to women: 40 per cent of the show’s viewers are female.

On Wednesday, France’s Le Figaro also wondered what would happen to ‘l’émission culte’ of which ‘chaque semaine, 6.5 millions de téléspectateurs regardent le magazine’. ‘Clarkson is gone and Top Gear leaves a hole in my motoring life’, ran a headline in the Irish Independent, a newspaper that published no less than 11 articles about the affair online yesterday.

Most impressive of all, and a vivid indication that Germans understand Top Gear’s semi-serious, knockabout humour somewhat better than the liberal-left halfwits in the UK, Stern magazine included in its report a link to ‘Top Gear’s best quotes’; topping the list was ‘Only Hitler thought open-top cars were good’.

The BBC has already had to cancel live Top Gear shows in Norway. Even before the final dismissal, its suspension of Clarkson cost it millions globally in contracts it has failed to honour. It may be true, as Rod Liddle maintains, that a BBC ‘still run by the white, liberal, upper middle classes’ wished to unburden itself of this dreadfully embarrassing, uncouth arriviste. Or maybe assaulting a colleague, for which Clarkson is charged, was a legitimate sacking offence.

What is not in dispute is that the BBC has lost a real asset, because the show will not be the same without him. ‘Clarkson is one of the very few examples of on-screen British talent who is not a film star but has global appeal’, media commentator Neil Midgley told The Times yesterday. Top Gear is a genuinely international concern, earning BBC Worldwide £50million a year. This jolly, life-affirming show about risk-taking and camaraderie, one only superficially devoted to automobiles, has done more than any other TV show to spread happiness and bring people together on a global scale.

Patrick West is a writer and journalist. Visit his blog here.


The Top Gear set being dismantled at Dunsfold Park airfield in Surrey where the show is filmed. It will return in 2016, but who will present it?


Jeremy Clarkson: a true internationalist | 9-11: Ten years on | Arts & Culture | TV and radio | spiked
 
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Blackleaf

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Most start out that way.


Don't start that tosh. We've heard all that nonsense before. It's one of those silly things that the liberal-left keep trotting out. "Homophobes are secretly gay." What a load of bollocks.

I hate Chelsea footbal club. Does that mean I'm a secret Chelsea fan?
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
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Just making a simple observation, that's all

You're not observing anything. You're just being odd. Homosexuality - which has nothing at all to do with this thread about the greatest TV show on Earth - is wrong. I hate it. Now let that be the end of the matter.