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Jeremy Clarkson

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Jeremy Charles Robert Clarkson (born April 11, 1960 in Doncaster) is a British writer and broadcaster who specialises in motoring issues. He writes weekly columns for The Sunday Times and The Sun, but is most associated with the BBC motoring programme Top Gear, which he presents, first doing so from 1989 until 1999, and then again from 2002. The show has 350 million viewers worldwide and won an International Emmy in 2005. "Not a man given to considered opinion," according to the BBChttp://www.bbc.co.uk/history/familyhistory/wdytya_s1_celeb_gallery_04.shtml BBC Family history site], URL accessed 9th July, 2006, Clarkson is known to be opinionated and forthright in his views, he was once summed up in an English newspaper both as a "dazzling hero of political incorrectness" and "Jim Davidson with a driving licence".

Biography

Clarkson was educated at Repton School, although he claims to have been expelled for drinking and smoking [link]. His first job was as a travelling salesman for his parents' business selling Paddington Bear toys, after which he trained as a journalist with the Rotherham Advertiser. [link]

In 1984, he combined his writing skills with his love of cars, and together with a business partner (Jonathan Gill) they formed the Motoring Press Agency (later MPA Fingal); conducting road-tests for local newspapers, and wrote for specialist car magazines such as: Performance Car from 1986, until 1993.

He married his agent Frances Catherine Cain on 8 May 1993. They have three children: Emily, Finlo, and Katya. The family lives in the Cotswolds near Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire. They also have a house on his wife's homeland of the Isle of Man, a place described by Clarkson in 2004 as "a thorn in the side of Tony Blair's nanny state," because of its lack of an upper speed limit.

His wife's father, Major Robert Henry Cain, was awarded the Victoria Cross for gallantry during Operation Market Garden in September 1944. When Clarkson presented a documentary about the Victoria Cross he highlighted the story of Major Cain, only revealing at the end that he had married Cain's daughter and that she hadn´t known that her father had won a Victoria Cross until after his death.

In 2004 during an episode of the BBC's Who Do You Think You Are?, Clarkson was invited to investigate his family history; including the story of his Great-Great-Great Grandfather; John Kilner (1792–1857), who invented the Kilner jar; a receptacle for preserved fruit. [link]

Television career

Top Gear DVD cover
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Top Gear DVD cover

Clarkson is mostly associated with the UK Motoring Programme Top Gear, which he presented from 1989 to 1999, and then again from 2002, when it was relaunched in a new format after a brief period when it was not broadcast. His current co-presenters are James May and Richard Hammond. It is now the most watched TV show on BBC Two, with about 350 million viewers around the world."[Ellen on BBC TWO’S Top Gear]." Team Ellen. 2 December 2005. Accessed 2 July 2006. It won an International Emmy in 2005, for the best non-scripted entertainment show that was not broadcast in the U.S. Jeremy proclaimed: "I didn't attend the awards ceremony because I didn't know that we had won, and I only found out after a 4am text message, whilst I was busy writing the script for the next show...."

Clarkson continues to release annual motoring-based videos: his first being 'Clarkson - Unleashed on cars' in 1996. Over the years, his videos have seen him driving many exotic cars, including a Ford GT40 which had been specially adapted to accommodate taller drivers (Clarkson is 6'5"=1.96m). He is also known for destroying his most hated cars in various ways including catapulting a Nissan Sunny using a trebuchet, dropping a Porsche 911 onto a caravan and shooting a Chevrolet Corvette with a Gatling gun attached to an airborne helicopter.

He has also presented other motoring-related series such as Star Cars, Jeremy Clarkson's Motorworld, and Jeremy Clarkson's Car Years. For a short while, Jeremy had his own chat show; 'Clarkson', where he is most notable for offending the Welsh by placing a 3D plastic map of Wales into a microwave oven and switching it on. He later defended this by saying "I put Wales in there because Scotland wouldn't fit". Similarly, he offended Americans by removing the map of the USA and renaming the resultant space the 'South Canada Sea'.

After the dismissal of Angus Deayton, Clarkson was one of a number of guest hosts recruited to present the topical panel show, Have I Got News For You. He was the first such host never to have previously been a guest of the programme. As of June 2 2006, he has presented the show four times and been a guest once.

Engineering interests

Clarkson is passionate about engineering, especially pioneering work, as his television programmes about Brunel and the Colossus computer have shown. Clarkson was awarded an honorary degree from Brunel University on September 12, 2003, partly because of his work in popularising engineering, and partly because of his advocacy of Isambard Kingdom Brunel in the 100 Greatest Britons programme.

In April 2004, he appeared on the talk show Parkinson and mentioned that he was writing a book about the soul he believes many machines have. He cited Concorde as his primary example: when people heard it had crashed, quite aside from the sadness they felt for the loss of human life, there was almost a sadness for the machine. The book, titled I Know You Got Soul, was published in October 2004.

Clarkson owns various cars including Ford's latest supercar, the Ford GT, a Mercedes-Benz SL-Class Mercedes SL55 AMG, a Volvo XC90, Ford Focus and a BMW M5. His experiences with his Ford GT are well documented, having had many issues with the satellite tracker/alarm system - he reported that it would tell him the car had been stolen even when he was driving it. As a result of what he called "the most miserable month's motoring possible", he returned it to Ford for a full refund. After a short period, including asking Top Gear fans for advice over the internet, he bought back his GT. He also owned a Ferrari 355 for a short while. This was sold to make way for an SL55 AMG to which an SLK55 AMG was subsequently added.

His known passion for single- or two-passenger high-velocity transport led to his brief acquisition of an English Electric Lightning F.1A jet fighter, which was installed in the front garden of his country home. The Lightning was subsequently removed on the orders of the local council, which "wouldn't believe my claim that it was a leaf blower", according to Clarkson on a Tiscali Motoring webchat. In fact, the whole affair was a setup for the programme Speed, and English Electric Lightning XM172 is now back with the Farnborough preservation group.

Humour and controversy

Clarkson being pied at Oxford Brookes University [link]
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Clarkson being pied at Oxford Brookes University [link]

Clarkson has often been the focus of controversy for his humour. His comments on various subjects have sometimes been seen to cause offence, and while they have generally been taken as humourous, a small but vocal minority take them seriously and then claim to be offended by them. Clarkson has often made the observation that such remarks are usually given in a humorous context and that he hates everybody equally.

Rover

Clarkson was known for his relentless criticism of Rover cars which were manufactured at Austin's Longbridge car plant. After BMW pulled out of Longbridge (taking with it the Iconic Mini brand) Rover was bought by the Phoenix Consortium and the English MG and Rover brands merged becoming the last major British owned and built car manufacturer. Despite some moderately successful models and continued success in touring cars, Clarkson was still among many of the MG Rover brand detractors both on TV and in the papers. However, he did reserve some sympathy for the Rover workers left jobless, saying in his Sunday Times column, "I cannot even get teary and emotional about the demise of the company itself — though I do feel sorry for the workforce."[link]

Vauxhall

One of his most infamous road tests occurred during the filming of a Top Gear episode featuring the Vauxhall Vectra. Clarkson mainly walked around the car silently, because he couldn't think of anything interesting to say about it. Angry Vauxhall workers later blamed him for the Vectra’s poor sales. Ironically, officials from General Motors — who own Vauxhall — invited Clarkson to the launch of the much-improved Vectra, although it is not known whether he attended. Another incident occurred when he tried to prove that a Vauxhall Signum could be driven from the back seat; eventually crashing it after claiming the only good thing about the car was the legroom in the back. When asked where he was by an insurance company when the car crashed he replied, "In the back seat". In one episode, he went so far as to dump nearly half-a-ton of manure on a Vauxhall van during the annual "Top Gear Car of the Year" awards.

However in recent years Clarkson's view on Vauxhall has significantly changed. He praised the VX220 Turbo (even throwing a fan out of the studio when they said the VX220 was "uncool"), and is a big fan of the Monaro. However, neither of these cars were manufactured or designed solely by Vauxhall; the VX220 was designed and manufactured by Lotus Cars, and the Monaro by Holden Special Vehicles. He also gave the Astra VXR positive reviews, though (surprisingly for Clarkson) he felt it had far too much power for a front-wheel drive family car. It suffered from Torque steer and traction problems, which Clarkson demonstrated on Top Gear by smoking the front wheels with the traction control off. The Alfa Romeo 147 GTA has similar issues.

Foreigners

During the 13 November 2005 episode, a news segment featuring BMW's MINI Concept from the Tokyo Motor Show showcased what fellow-presenter Richard Hammond quoted as a "quintessentially British" integrated tea set. Clarkson responded by mocking that the German designed-and-owned MINI Cooper should be fitted with "a quintessentially German... sat-nav that only goes to Poland" in reference to the Nazi invasion of Poland that started World War II, and saying that "[one] fan belt will last a thousand years", a reference to Adolf Hitler's propaganda slogan of "the thousand-year Reich". These statements gained negative attention in the British and German news media. [link] He made similar remarks about the new Mercedes S-Class when he used the car's speech recognition system, inbuilt into the SatNav, to take him to Warsaw; the capital of Poland

In October, 1998, Hyundai cars complained to the BBC about what they described as "bigoted and racist" comments he made at the Birmingham Motor Show, where he was reported as saying that the people working on the Hyundai stand had "eaten a dog" (due to the fact that Koreans are known for their consumption of dog meat), and that the designer of the Hyundai XG had probably eaten a spaniel for his lunch. He also allegedly referred to those working on the BMW stand as "Nazis". [link]. He has also described some BMW vehicles as "Nazi-staffed cars".

His typical view of American cars is that they are poorly built, and have terrible steering and interior design. Despite this he owns Ford's new GT supercar (left-hand drive, something else of which he could be critical as well as the electrical problems) and is a big fan of the classic Ford Mustang. In September 2005, Clarkson wrote an editorial for The Sun, criticising Americans after the Hurricane Katrina rescue response, and included the comment: "Most Americans barely have the brains to walk on their back legs". On July 2nd 2006 in a Sunday Times article entitled "The United States of Total Paranoia", he wrote that during a recent trip to the USA, he learned that as a foreigner "you even need a passport to buy a drink. But interestingly you don't need one if you wish to rent some guns and some bullets." [link]

Clarkson also constantly makes references to the French. For example when he was driving a £7,000 Maserati Merak, he said "Now when the French and the Italians come together to do cooking, that's great. When they come together to make cars... run, run for your life."

Minorities

In the Sunday Times on June 2, 2002, he joked that he had spent the day hunting rats using tennis racquets and croquet mallets. The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals issued a warning to him as a result of this comment.

Clarkson's views on cyclists and promotion of motoring have caused concern among cycling and road-safety organisations. Transport 2000 have called for Top Gear to be replaced by a more safety, and environmentally-aware, motoring programme called "Third Gear". In February of 2004, Clarkson rammed a 30-year-old horse chestnut tree with a Toyota Hilux pick-up truck to demonstrate how rugged the vehicle was. This led to the BBC having to compensate the local parish council who, until they saw the Top Gear broadcast, thought that the damage had been caused by local vandals.

In 2005, the School of Technology at Oxford Brookes University awarded him an honorary engineering doctorate, leading to protests from green organizations, who objected to his statements about the environment and his advocacy of car use. He has said: "I do have a disregard for the environment. I think the world can look after itself and we should enjoy it as best as we can". After the ceremony, he was hit in the face with a banana-meringue pie by a protester. [link] Clarkson took the insult with humour, commenting that the pie had too much sugar.

Clarkson has often said that bald, bearded, pipe-smoking blokes wearing sandals with a caravan and a bike, who believe that "the speed limit is there for a reason", are not amongst his circle of friends.[[Citing sources citation needed]] Clarkson holds a clean driving licence.Top Gear series 7, episode 3, "Star in a Reasonably Priced Car".

Celebrities

Clarkson has also made numerous remarks on Have I Got News for You that have been seen as hilarious. He once famously jested, during a dispute that Paul McCartney should be credited before John Lennon on many of The Beatles' songs, that he believed McCartney should have been listed above Lennon on Mark Chapman's hitlist. He also joked that Paul McCartney has offered a date to a woman who used her prosthetic leg to fend off a burglar, in relation to his failed marriage to Heather Mills. Clarkson also defended Camilla Parker-Bowles on an episode. "People often criticise her (Parker-Bowles) because she's approaching 60," he said, "but they forget that Princess Diana was approaching 120 when she went into the tunnel."

He has a long-running public feud with Piers Morgan, former editor of the Daily Mirror. In October of 2003, on the last Concorde flight, he threw a glass of water over Morgan while the two were exchanging insults. In March 2004, at the British Press Awards, he cursed at Morgan and punched him, apparently angry that the newspaper had published photographs of Clarkson with a woman who was not his wife. [link] -->

Comedian Sean Lock unsuccessfully attempted to put Clarkson into Room 101. Since then, they have appeared together on numerous television programmes, including an episode of QI, where Lock repeatedly mocked and belittled Clarkson. He admitted the rift between the two is good humoured.

Trivia

See also

Works

Non-motoring shows

Videos

Clarkson has produced the following:

Books

References

Further reading

Top Gear
Presenters
Jeremy Clarkson - Richard Hammond - James May - The Stig
Episodes and Broadcasters
Top Gear Episodes - Top Gear Broadcasters and Video Releases
Related articles
Top Gear Magazine - Toybota - Dampervan

 


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