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I'm a huge fan of cars, so I've been watching every episode since day one. I'm a little unnerved that nobody here has mentioned Carson's spreading of hatred. During the show he continuously bashed other countries, calling Americans "fat, gun toting idiots", and calling the French "surrender monkeys", and calling modern day Germans "nazis" and worse. Oddly enough, he did an episode on Britain's decline, stating that they are "stuck in 1936", which is what he seems to be. He also was very obvious about giving British cars precedence in his reviews, never giving cars like the Porsche 911 a fair chance and always promoting the Aston Martin. That type of guy shouldn't be on a rating show, or any show for that matter. To top it off, he bullies his co-hosts in the show, and their displeasure is quite obvious episode after episode. Clarkson behaves like a big, spoiled child, which ended up with him punching his superior over nothing. This is not okay in any industry, which is why he got himself fired.
Top Gear was an anitidote to all the PC nonense we are forced to swallow on a daily basis.
Yes we all know what Jeremy Clarkson is like !Entertaining ...... Yes Rude ..............YesA bully..........yesPolitically Incorrect ...... YesA Bit arrogant ... Hmmm ......YesFun to watch ....... YESThis is why the BBC Employed him, to bring in the $$$$$He might be all of the above, and some I've missed, But at the end of the day, he was what the show was all about ;-TI personally believe you have to watch shows like this for the entertainment value only, if you wish to pick holes in everything in life .... you will be constantly disappointed. Don't like it...... Don't watch it and bitch about it later, send them a letter, they will throw it on the pile they started years ago. :D ;D
One episode I remember was a race between a 1966 VW Beetle and a new Porsche 911 AWD. They did one race on the 1 mile course and showed the results. The next race was in a Desert in Africa and they dropped the VW from 1 mile up and the Porsche was racing on the desert one mile away. THAT was entertaining.
To be honest this was one of the sexiest things I've ever seen.. The way Sabine was puffing, panting, turning red and gripping the wheel.. Whew boy I was in quite a state by the end of that segment!Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
So maybe Ois is a really decent guy. Kudos to him.Makes this all a little stranger.I mean in contrast frickin Martha Stewart GOT A TV SHOW AFTER going to prison.
Don't you remember the Stig's Chinese Cousin? He kicked James May "right in the plums'.
No.It has been widely reported, and is undisputed by Clarkson and the other Top Gear presenters, that Clarkson was previously issued a "last chance" warning by BBC management and put on probation for incidents in the prior season of the show. Maybe the BBC tolerated his antics up to a point, but prior to this season, the BBC had already decided that enough was enough.So, your theory is... the BBC knew in advance that an unrelated scandal within the BBC would some day be exposed, and therefore BBC management put Jeremy Clarkson, the star presenter of their highest-rated show, on notice that one further screw-up would cost him his job, not as a valid management tool to control his offensive and embarrassing behavior, but in preparation for the day when that the unrelated BBC scandal would be exposed, all the while knowing for a certainty that Clarkson would once again commit a faux pas, and that it would occur at the same time that this yet unrevealed scandal was in the news, which the BBC could then cite as Clarkson using up his "last chance," justifying their refusal to renew his contract, and thereby accomplishing the BBC's nefarious goal of distracting public attention from the as-yet-unrevealed, and unrelated, scandal.Fascinating!
I can only suggest you go back and re read my posts. Your theory, as presented above, has no relevance to what I have written.My posts were to do with current events, Ie the BBC in doodoo right now. So Clarkson's gaffe, came, just at the right moment, as a story, to blow out of proportion,as a distraction, while they worked on their whitewash.
It has every relevance to what you have written and what you just wrote. Your theory is the BBC "bl[ew] [the story] out of proportion, as a distraction..." My point is, the BBC had, prior to the unrelated scandal breaking, already told Clarkson that one more gaffe and he would be fired. So, his termination was not a calculated distraction or a "blowing" of anything "out of proportion:" it was the necessary consequence of the prior warning that he had received. Your timeline is wrong, simple as that. Unless BBC management is capable of clairvoyance, your theory that the BBC's reaction to what Clarkson did was an overreaction calculated to distract from the molestation scandal is nonsense.