Vietnam is the best episode ever. Jeremy being a hater of motorcycles and riders has an epiphany at the end where he says he still doesn't like them but understands why people ride. It's so wholesome and honestly so pure it truly feels like an honest reaction and not something scripted.
@@gavinsmith8844 the fell off the bike is the rite of passage that every rider must experience at least once in their life. if you fell off your bike once, you're basically already baptized as a rider.
The moments such as during the Patagonia special, where Clarkson spoke of his father or had a tribute to a dying car make or model, always hit you in a deep way. Beyond the banter and the car talk you had real emotion come through the screen. Those moments are few and far between in mass media today. Truly a special show and a special trio of presenters and the crew behind them making it happen.
Have to agree with this presentation, it wasn't funny in the least, at leayto anyone I know. I do love how James dropped into revirothe car he'd jjst been given. He's by far our favorite.
I second this, surprisingly mean-spirited even by Hammond and Clarkson's standards. They don't usually write-off each others cars like that and instead mostly opt to screw with each other by creatively modifying each others cars.
The show, Jeremy Clarkson mostly, was so unique and intriguing, that my daughter from around the age of 11, until about 14, would watch it with myself and her older brother. It was possibly the only such bridge between her girl world and car based idiotic humor that could have and will ever be. I greatly appreciated the unique and very unexpected bringing of us three together at the time and look back with fond memories. It served the adolescent girl well too. Men were presented in a hilarious but ultimately competent fashion, as she needed to get up to speed with the often obtuse and obscure for which she had no reference whatsoever. Another small step on the way from the loins of an uneducated single father to the university of Cambridge. Thanks Top Gear. And for what it is worth I have not and would never watch the continuation post departure of our trio version.
To be fair, I dont think anyone watches it anymore. Those tv licences paid for it for season after season. Now the test track is being demolished to build homes.
One thing to mention is Top Gear arguably became more beloved because of the non stop replays on Dave/uktv meaning everyone who wanted could watch every episode, knew every funny moment so every reference became universal, similar to how everyone would stop and watch classic Simpsons episodes.
I dont have cable anymore but last time I visited parents TopGear re-run was on some channel. Just looked at my dad, we both nodded and watched it. Great time.
The issue with Top Gear now is that they were caught between two worlds. They didn’t know whether to go with the car review show or an entertainment show and tried to do both which failed horribly and almost ended the life of Freddie Flintoff. What they should’ve done is what they did originally, just get 3 car journalists who can be on TV. That’s all they needed. It was never a show that needed celebrities. They just needed people who knew about cars and cared about cars who were also willing to expose who they are as people to the world. And even though the show has been cancelled, if it ever comes back, they need to just get 3 car journalists and just make the show.
I would argue, around that time, the BBC had some good shows. I enjoyed Doctor Who during that time as well; but lost my interest the moment they got Capaldi in. I maybe watched the first 1 1/2 seasons with him but then switched off.
The more I think about it, the more I think that the reason Top Gear was successful was that it was a great example of healthy masculinity. The relationship between Clarkson, Hammond and May is something guys all over the world crave. A group of mates who love each other as much as they hate one another. On most of the specials, they spend the first two thirds of their journey generally annoying and insulting each other. May's car getting rear ended until he pulls out a machete. Hammond's seat being moved all the way back and the fuse removed because he's short. Clarkson's sumptuously modified vehicles being dirtied and dismantled. But then as the end of the journey draws near, the three of them are given a nearly impossible task like building a bridge or converting their vehicles into boats. Despite their constant bickering and messing with one another, they band together and accomplish something remarkable. It's something you rarely see on TV anymore, and I think that formula really resonates with the audience.
Seconded. I’d never thought about it that way, but their playful piss-taking never came at the expense of an ability to express sincere emotions - often quite caring ones - whenever the time was right. This comment makes me want to rewatch all the specials with that perspective in mind.
Top Gear with Jeremy, Richard and James was the best tv show ever. So funny, even my 80 year old mum enjoyed watching it, RIP Mum. I think the Vietnam Challenge was the best of all of them. I had no idea Vietnam is so beautiful.
May is stranded with no fuel, soaked in the pouring rain. Guy helps him. May; I think I’ll pay him. Reaches for his money (Vietnames Dong) in his trouser pocket; I think my dong’s gonna be all soggy. I nearly wetted myself when I watched that.
you know what's the best part? I discovered Top Gear on an Emirates flight, guess which video was available? The Vietnam special... Quite a way to introduce a show
@@RD19902010 HA HA HA That is awesome! I'm glad it was your first. Wow that must have been a wonderful flight, that Airline is one of the best in the world. I'm glad your safe and you now know Jeremy, Richard and James. Have a wonderful life my friend
Top Gear was the final blast of old British humour. Back in the fifties, radio comedy on the BBC was written and performed by people who had served in the forces and brought much of the forces' humour with them . The style of comedy, (Hancock's Half Hour / The Goons / The Navy Lark), was dry, often surreal and inevitably ended in something blowing up - often for no adequately explored reason. This was carried on in the seventies by The Goodies and then ultimately in the form of Alternative Comedy. In an era when Health & Safety was trying to ban anything like this, Top Gear was the last show to carry on in this vein. Because it was a car show it somehow slipped under the radar and nobody really seemed to notice. We knew that once its current iteration of CHM ended that it would then be the end of the era - and it was.
These 3 guys had an undeniable magic, based on friendship and a true love for all things mechanical. Watching it was a perfect escape from the madness of the world. Plus, all three are accomplished actors and writers (all having written very enjoyable books, with a few misses here and there). There is no TG after they left.
hammonds book on his first nasty crash and recovery was absolutely gut wrenching to read, especially more so now for me after having recently survived a nasty crash myself a year ago.
The show has a special place in my heart. Consistently gave me laughs. I discovered it on tv in Canada in like 2008 and had been watching ever since. It wasnt Top Gear necessarily and that was evident when the Golden Trio left and started the Grand Tour. I realized it was those three that brought the magic. A great mixture of beautiful cinematics, great writing, a unique humour that could only be recreated with Captain slow, the Baboon and the Hobbit. They slowed down from the comedy at the right times to tell amazing stories of motor racing/history, they brought us on hilarious adventures nobody else would ever try during those times, and created a show that yes was about cars, but they made it so much more. I have a lot of good memories watching the show. At a time in my life when there arent any good memories to be made, when I find myself being consumed by memories that used to be happy and now bring nothing but pain and regret, this show manages to bring me back to when I was happier, with no context to ruin them. I still watch older clips and they manage to put a extremely rare smile on my face, I watch the trios new specials and again, Im able to smile and forget the shit life around me. It might all sound a bit extreme and an over the top description, but in the end the show made me happy. And for that, it will always hold a place in my heart. When the three officially do call it a career, itll be a sad day. Till then though, hopefully (or regretably at this point) ill still be around to see whatever else they do.
You did this phenomenon justice. Well written, presented and edited. Your journalistic approach, with an appropriate comment about your own experience here and there, was perfect. You kept the focus on the subject(s). Thank you for not tarnishing my memories.
23:25 Hammond has done many other projects aside from The Great Escapists. He's done a documentary called Big, where he reviews the largest examples of various thing men have built (cargo ships, stadiums, skyscrapers, etc), he currently runs The Smallest Cog, a Car Restoration Shop and affiliated television program, and he is heavily involved with what remains of DriveTribe.
I remember one night coming home, coming up the stairs to my moms house, and there she is, watching Top Gear. My mom is not a car person, so I was a bit baffled. I can't remember exactly what episode it was, but I do remember it being one of their challenge episodes. And sure enough, she was laughing along with the show. That was the moment, I realized Top Gear in the mid-teen seasons was truly on a tier of its own, and would probably never be topped by any other show. I know as I'd sit and watch old episodes back when it was available on Prime, I'd enjoy the early series, laugh my ass off in the mid series, and as you neared the 20 series mark, it just didn't feel as special anymore with the exception of the specials (like South America). In a way, it was a good thing it came to a end, and they rebooted. Because The Grand Tour really brought back some old time feels. And the specials with GT were great as well. And I also love Clarksons farm, and Our Man In _____. With out quitting the BBC, we'd probably never get this. But I'd love to see James revive Toy Stories, and Jeremy do some more WWII Documentaries.
You have understood the show and its appeal very well. Great work. Spiritually the show did end when Clarkson, Hammond and May left - certainly in the UK the “new” Top Gear without them was immediately ridiculed and is not even close to having anything resembling the cultural resonance of the proper show. To be honest I’m not sure why the BBC bothers with it.
Seems the Beeb is hoping the goose will lay another golden egg. A forlorn hope (imho), given that, by the end of the group's tenure, the relationship between them was why people watched. That and the political incorrectness, of course. I've always believed that the departure of Clarkson was a set up. The three had just signed a contract with the BBC for a new series, when along came Amazon, offering a truckload of cash. The BBC contract was ironclad, so how to get out of it? Being fired was the perfect, probably the only solution (the Beeb wasn't about to let the presenters of its highest grossing show off the hook). So JC did the deed and Hammond and May, who weren't fired, could walk "in solidarity" with him. That was neat, as it ensured the public would have sympathy for their "principled" gesture, overcoming or at least helping to counter any bad feeling towards JC over his actions. Mere conjecture on my part, of course.
At work, even non-car people used to talk about TopGear every Monday. Since the three left and the new show is out, are the car talked died off and boring football is back on the menu. Occasionally you hear someone mentioning The Grand Tour, but considering they seem to release now every 6 months a show, that is on its way out. With TopGear you had Seasons, and they kept the fire burning, having Grand Tour splited so much apart and also considering the age of the presenters - we soon have to say farewell. The only host worth watching on the new Top Gear is Chris Harries, and prefer watching his reviews on TH-cam over watching the whole show.
It was dire with chris cretinous evans and i cant help thinking back to that partridge clip with tony hayers as hes proposing the ideas when chris evans was “exactly what the beeb wanted”
Just something to point out is in the Vietnam special the music that played out of the little box that came with the back up vehicle was not originally the American national anthem, it was originally aired with Bruce Springsteen song Born in the USA, if I'm correct its to do with the music licensing for some of the music they use in the show. Very good video though! Nice to see an American perspective on Top Gear. I know it was a wildly watched show on an international level but its always pretty cool to see other perspectives outside the UK.
I grew up with Top Gear, I grew up with this trio. Nothing replaces them, they're an integral part of my childhood and even now I watch every season of the Grand Tour.
Really interesting video, especially to see it from an American’s perspective. One thing I think you did miss out though is any mention of how famous Clarkson already was before “new” Top Gear in 2002. He’d already made “old” Top Gear pretty much synonymous with himself (and Tiff) before leaving, and had plenty of other shows - including his own chat show, VHS tapes, other newspaper columns and other media appearances in the 90s and around the millennium. Everyone knew who he was and his “character” was already well established, while the other presenters were plucked from relative total obscurity. Even if James was originally James’s replacement on “old” Top Gear!
I will delete my comment which basically says the same love or loathe him he was the driving force behind the new format and andy wilman. Was destined for greater things than the old style shows which still hold a special place in my heart.
Old top gear with Clarkson, Hammond and May made me fall head over heels in love with cars again, even when the trio left, the love for cars stayed with me… that’s something I’ll never forget.
The evolution was so natural it’s only when you put season 2 when may joined next to session 10 you can see how much it changed… they just took the bits that people liked most and expanded it to create a great entertainment show and the fact 20+ years later they are still doing it on Amazon (well specials at-least) is a testament to how well it worked and they stuck together though it all
You forgot the best bit where James May was confronted by reporters at his front door. "As much as I think he's a knob, I quite like working with Jeremy." Those three have a chemistry that just cannot be faked, I'm glad they stuck together.
I wish The Grand Tour continued with the original format, including the seasonal specials. The show was genuinely good, but luckily I have found comfort in Clarkson's Farm. I remember first watching Clarkson's Farm, and I created an IMDb account that night just so I could give it a ten. Highly recommended.
Watching Top Gear was like having conversations and talking about cars with your friends, and how you can go on and on about the topic for hours. They were likeminded friends, companions for life.
It’s the Clarkson, Hammond and May trio that made it work. I haven’t seen much of the show, but it do know that their chemistry and comedic abilities was what made Top Gear so appealing.
As much as i love specials and challenges. In the end i came to the conclusion that News and Conversation Street where the absolute best parts of the shows, because it was just these 3 conversing together.
Lots of people in my life have long enjoyed this show (dad, husband, and now son) and I’ve not understood it. I feel like I get it now. Thank you for explaining it so well. Great video!
At 14:58 there is something that fascinates me to no end about different Top Gear releases. Depending on when you watch it, what streaming service, network, or DVD you may have, since the show used a lot of licensed music, it’s often different, it also often varies by reason. On the DVD of the Vietnam special that I have - as an Australian - instead of the American national anthem, the music “dubbed in” that the bike is playing, is Born In The USA by Bruce Springsteen. Which somehow feels more inappropriate and funnier, IMO.
When Jeremy drove a diesel Audi A8 as far as possible on one tank of fuel, the original broadcast used James Horner's "Apollo 13" score for the finale but all subsequent repeats they used some generic background music, it wasn't the same.
@@FlyingHeadbutt100 Was that the challenge where they had to get to Blackpool, to turn the lights on for a festival? There's a number of other examples of this happening. I remember Jeremy arriving in the "Giant Panda" for the limousine challenge, that - once again - the music was different on the TH-cam upload, to a DVD of it I have. I can't recall which tracks were swapped, but I remember vastly preferring the DVD score.
'Born in the USA' was the original song played. Jeremy references the lyrics later on when Richard's bike breaks down. This is the first time I've ever heard this version with the American national anthem dubbed over. I guess this is a clip taken from BBC America and ironically they must have not had the licensing to play 'Born in the USA' to American audiences.
@@interstate15 I forgot Jeremy referenced the lyrics of the song - interesting. It definitely feels ironic - like you said - that in the USA, they mustn’t have had the licensing for “Born In The USA”.
That was a very good summary, well done. I'd just like to say though, I'm pretty sure many (if not most) people, in the UK at least, had never heard the word 'slope' as a derogatory term, and only became aware of it when the controversy blew up. I remember watching the episode at the time and that completely passed me by.
The only people I had ever heard say that were American. I had never, ever heard that term in Australia. Don't get me wrong, I'd heard slurs with the same meaning but never that particular one
There was a slope on the bridge as well. It was angled to one side, and higher on one side as well. So technically Clarkson could've claimed that the media was just making a mountain out of a poor choice of words
My son and I watched every episode up until Clarkson, Hammond and May left. Never watched another episode but have watched all The Grand Tour. Great video. Really enjoyed it and the production. You've spoken really well - clear and concise. It comes across as a very well presented documentary on youtube. I'm really surprised that you don't have more subscribers but this may be early in your TH-cam life. Either way you have a new subscriber and hope to see more videos like this.
As a note on the Vietnam Special: At 13:48, Clarkson pushes the button to play the music, but in the version you showed, it is altered from the original broadcast. It actually plays "Born in the USA", with Clarkson noting so. His note is completely muted while he points at it. The original makes the USA bike, much much worse as backup vehicle. And as Clarkson states, is very inappropriate indeed with the original audio.
Some of the happiest times of my entire life is sitting with my 2 young sons watching top gear and all of us laughing from beginning to end. It’s so sad it’s over.
I've watched Top Gear for the past 20 years, it was one of the few shows I would sit down and watch as a kid. I think the show was the biggest influence on my interest in cars today.
Also yes, the Dacia thing was scripted . I can’t say for certain that James was also in on it, but it’s probable (and if he wasn’t he knew something was inevitably going to happen).
Top Gear was my childhood, I watched that with my dad since I was probably 4 years old, then watched The Grand Tour, and sadly can see that yeah, it will be wrapping up soon. I've watched for many years now, and this show was a big part of my early life and is part of what made me an avid car enthusiast, the trio was what really kept it alive. I'm glad they're still doing well.
These three guys were doing the things that no other TV show hosts we do… The challenges some of them had were tremendous… And the older they got the more they challenge themselves on Top Gear and then the grand tour… I don’t think you could pay any other celebrities to do what they did in Mongolia or south east Asia… These guys have a special chemistry and they are fantastic together. And at least two of them are very good with cars, most TV show host wouldn’t know how to fix anything… Just regular guys who happened to be really entertaining, funny, and skilled…
It's a staple of my childhood. I continue to rewatch the specials to this day, often with people who couldn't care less about cars. With The Grand Tour probably coming to an end soon, I'd really like for the trio to do a podcast format, perhaps every few months. It would be nice just to hear them chat about cars. Frankly, about anything. Their dynamic is endlessly entertaining.
Well done video and I agree with pretty much everything said here! Top Gear is a huge part my childhood and I wouldn't be who I am today without this show and these guys, and I think I'm not wrong, or alone, in thinking that. The amount of fun and golden moments the show gave us is immeasurable. It was just the coming together of the right people, with the right ideas, at the right time and in my honest opinion, there will never be another show like Top Gear ever again. Also, a few points I'd like to add that weren't covered in the video on why I think the show is so great and why it's so beloved especially in the car enthusiast community is that, 1) usually car enthusiasts (or cars) aren't portrayed rightly in mass media and big screens, but Top Gear became that one bastion that showed to the general audience how a lot of car guys really are and what they think about cars, so non-car people at least had an idea of why we care about cars so much. My mom, for example, has nothing to do with cars and never really sat through any car show or movie on TV (she would always invite me to watch but would herself leave and go do her own stuff) but Top Gear was the one car show she enjoyed watching, and the same goes for my uncle and aunt. Top Gear took the cars and presented them in a way normal people could enjoy. 2) in a world where media portrays men as either insufferable or incompetent (or both), Top Gear was one of the few, if not the only, major TV shows that showed competence, healthy camaraderie and companionship among men as friends and colleagues, even if they did stupid things and bickered and troubled each other but ultimately were close friends and very intelligent - it was a good example of men to look up to. And that chemistry and friendship is what sold the show, and also why post-2015 Top Gear just doesn't feel the same. There are many more reasons as well why Top Gear is so great, such as the writing, the humour, the presentation, the cinematography, the music selection and so on, but I'll stop this long ass essay right here.
The "controversy" side of it got worse because of modern stuff today, people just got offended by being so thin skinned. Clarkson isn't a racist person, only meant as a joke but he can laugh at himself, which in itself makes it even. He makes jokes of others and others make jokes of him and he doesn't mind it!
Then you need to pay attention more or were ignorant to it because you aren't British. The controversy isn't recent. It was almost always immediately after it aired. "Woke" wasn't even a thing back then. It's not because people were thin skinned, it was because it was from the BBC.
@@GloomGaiGarno it's because people are pathetic and still got offended over everything back then. Nobody who was actually watching the show was offended. It was always some Karen who heard about it.
The "in all my 5 weeks of television" joke was great What happened to the born in the USA music in the Vietnam special? Was it removed in the American airings?
Top Gear aired on a Sunday evening at 8pm which was the perfect time slot for the show. Everyone was at home, Mum, Dad, and the kids were all watching the same show. Mum maybe wasn’t a car fan but she was happy all the family were together. Dad was happy because it was car related and was probably the same age as the presenters so he got all the jokes. The kids loved it because it could be very childish and silly. Plus they had the star in a reasonably priced car segment which showed the pulling power and popularity of the show. It really was the perfect family show.
I have no clue when I discovered this show as a kid but it is easily one of, if not my favourite shows. It was never about the cars, it was never about the studio. It was the 3 idiots enjoying the challenges and each others company. This show is beyond rewatchable. Its fantastic. I still find myself using clarkson vocabulary like "yeeeeeeess" Also the specials episodes are still peak tv
It really frustrates me that any time there is a video or article talking about the success of Top Gear, no one mentions Andy Willman. He is the sole reason for the success of the show, no ifs, ands, or buts.
Top Gear was amazing and damn I miss it. My dad and I saw it for the first time around 2004-2005 I believe. Jeremy was driving a Peugeot hatchbatch that had the engine in the rear, it was a proof of concept and it was hilarious. Every single corner he took the car would spin out and he said “Just like the French, sits in a cloud of its own smoke with its hands up!” We cried laughing and were hooked to it. The Bentley Brooklands review got me too. Love The Grand Tour too, but it ain’t top gear.
NONE of the past presenters apart from Jeremy, brought the laughter and happiness that Jeremy, Richard and James brought to our screens. Sadly missed. ❤❤❤❤
Excellent video, well done. So many people I know just didn't get Top Gear. I stopped watching it when the trio left, I loved their loyalty to each other.
Season 3 attempt to kill a Toyota Hylux was the first episode leading into the Top Gear of legend. Season four remained conservative but did have the first cheap car challenge. Season five had the first cheap car road trip challenge. Six had the second cheap car and 7 had the third cheap car/second road trip, but Top Gear as we know it arrived with season 8.
The part in the Vietnam special where the USA bike is revealed is edited- in the original the song is "Born in the USA" by Bruce Springsteen. Maybe the BBC changed it in the US release so the joke is more obvious to Americans? Someone in the know please explain. This just seems weird to me lol
Copyright issues. I could be wrong here, but my understanding is any show that broadcasts on a bbc television channel can use as much music as it wants to as because the organisation is publicly funded. Unfortunately, when it comes to home releases and streaming, those songs will be replaced because the bbc is making a profit there. Hope this comment helps.
Very good video which captures the essence of why the Clarkson/May?hammond incarnation of Top Gear was SUCH a success. As someone who has has watched TG since its start and who has known several of the presenters (Clarkson e.g. and Sue Baker, who didn't get a mention) as I was a professional car photographer from the mid 1970s to the mid 1990s. I hope you don't mind if I point out one key change you haven't mentioned which helped to make the Clarkson/May/Hammond incarnation the success it was, namely the excellent and creative standard of photography which kicked in when they took over.
During that Vietnam clip, originally the song that played with the bike was "Born In The USA". If you're wondering why Jeremy randomly says "evidently" while looking at the bike, it's because in the broadcast and DVD version, when he pushes the button on the box the chorus to "Born In The USA" plays. To this, Jeremy says "That's Born In The USA... evidently".
Very well done program. I learned some things about the early days of the show. And I agree with a majority of the positions you take on the program, the 3 blokes, and their individual paths. Thank you!
Growing up, my scout group watched the episode where they attempted to glide a car off a cliff in Utah, then we went out and camped in Moab, saw the place where they did it, and we even collected some parts that had been scattered across the ground. That’s one of my favorite memories.
Peak Top Gear at least for me was 2007 - 2011. Especially when two British drivers, Lewis Hamilton in 2008 and Button and Brawn GP in 2009, won back-to-back championships.
I barely missed an episode when Clarkson, Hammond, and May presented the show. But since they left, I can literally count on one hand how many times I have watched the new series, even though I am a fan of Freddy and Paddy, the show has lost its authenticity, and is a shadow of its former self.
As someone who absolutely LOVED the rebooted Top Gear, it lost some of its lustre towards the end of _The Three Amigos_ time on the show. (Maybe a season or two before Clarkson was fired) It felt contrived and almost forced at times. I feel the same about The Grand Tour.
That disastrous radio broadcast at the end. I remember that from so long ago, and it's just as funny. The opening of the Grand Tour though, when Hammond and May come alongside Clarkson I know I speak for a lot of people, it brought tears to my eyes. That's beyond friendship right there. Also from what I've seen of Clarkson's farm, as entertaining as it is it really shows you some of the real agony farmers go through. Such an obscene effort for such little reward at the end of the day.
The purpose of a show is to *feel* what the protagonists experience, and Top Gear gave any viewer an experience to appreciate. Three friends gather to poke fun, compete, and share ups and downs in a way that’s so genuine and uplifting. There never felt like a dull moment, the humor was spot on, and if you’re just an ordinary person who never thought twice about cars, you might begin to find value in what makes cars so special. For the most part, it could be enjoyed with family. It was a memorable experience for any age, sex, or if you could take a joke, race. That kind of genuine fun is difficult to mimic, and I fear the days of heart-felt television are over. If anyone has any show suggestions to prove me wrong, feel free to reply and thank you for your time.
You’re right, the original format TG is damn hard to find in any relevant chunks - mostly just a few clips here and there - I can’t even find an entire episode. Great video!!!!
@@Herefornow-571 it also is on freevee for free all seasons but the first one except a lot of the specials aren’t there - that’s where Tubi comes in lol
I know people always loved the specials way more than the actual episodes of seasons but having the meat in-between the specials is what helped them to be so good. You see with the grand tour now they don't do the show anymore they just do specials but without the actual meat of the show with regular episodes I have found my self not enjoying them as much
The slope thing was always ridiculous. At that time the newspapers were always looking for some reason to create a controversy, and so they looked up this archaic slur that I guarantee no one in modern Britain had ever heard
Entertainment gets the most views even if its fake. Its the same on youtube. Now i researched all the stunts and crashes and specials and also rewatched it frame by frame and almost everything is scripted or fake, except hammonds accidents
Don't ask me for a source but I recall from somewhere that the guy who Jeremy punched was 24 karat, stone cold arsehole. He only got the job because of his connections and was just a dick. Then on the day of the incident he apparently spent the whole day winding Jeremy up. So the whole no hot food thing was just the straw that broke the camel's back. I'm not condoning violence. Just saying it wasn't as simple as Jeremy arrived somewhere wanting hot food, the producer told him that wasn't possible so Jeremy just flew into a rage and punched the guy.
Yeah, everyone likes to shit on Clarkson but to be honest, he just says shit we all say with the bros at the pub, problem is he said it with the bros on TV. Another thing is that he was kicked from BBC during really hard time in his life and that says more about BBC than him imo. If he was jsut attacking people becasue he is a celebrity primadona, people around him would not risk their reputation and career by leaving BBC with him, but he have very good friends that stood by him in difficult time and thats kind wholsome :D
This show meant and still means so much for me... In 2002 I started working my dream job, though it was kinda exhausting at times. I lived alone, didn't really have much to do outside of work, so I would always just watch TV or some VHS tapes of which I still have a huge collection, though I was just missing something. There weren't many interesting things on TV for me at the time, at least not most of the time I actually could just sit and watch. Fast forward to fall 2003, when I got cable television that included multiple foreign channels, including the BBCs. Knowing English pretty well, I decided to check it out one day just out of curiosity. I remember it like yesterday - I was preparing some food, when I heard a catchy intro song and a summary that sounded pretty hilarious. So I finished making the food and came to see Clarkson, Hammond and May enthusiasticly talking about what they've been up to on their latest challenge. I've never been a car person, but these three just instantly caught my eye, the way they talked to each other and to the camera felt like being in a pub with a group of friends, so I stayed to watch it and at the end of the episode and many laughs later I finally knew that this is it, this is what I've been missing since 2002, such a hilarious show to be excited about! And since that I would just watch every single episode (when I wasn't at work during some of them). And it actually still is my "tradition" to this day, though it's The Grand Tour now. I still work the same job, just for a different company, I don't live alone anymore, but my Wife loves the show too, we've in fact binged the entire Top Gear and The Grand Tour stock on some of our free days and never regretted even a second! It really isn't just about the cars, it's mainly about these three absolutely legendary presenters 💯
In the early 2010s, it started getting strained, and it became increasingly obvious that moments like the Dacia Sandero were indeed absolutely scripted and planned... the way they increasingly stretched their silly antics became lame and not at all amusing; very mean spirited. Extremely formulaic. "Oh this is the bit where they park up and Clarkson bashes into James's car..." "Oh wait, they're going to have Richard's car have engine trouble right now..." It was as formula tv, just like the cop procedurals where the suspect is identified, found, does a runner and is apprehended to be cleared around the 20 minute mark and the true culprit is caught at the last minute due to a seemingly insignificant piece of information or evidence in plain sight in the first few moment of the episode. The audience was already declining when Clarkson was basically fired, and it was seen by all and sundry that HE was Top Gear - and whether true or not, Hammond and May felt that too, hence them bailing also (of course, it was in support of their mate, but if they'd had better advice from their agents, they'd've stuck it out). Top Gear these days is absolutely a shadow of those days, as instead of being about cars, it's about three not terribly interesting blokes buggering about and being paid to have holidays and mid-life crises about cars. What you failed to mention is that when Top Gear was originally cancelled by the BBC, the entire team pitched the idea of the show to UK's Channel Five, and within weeks, Fifth Gear was launched on that channel, with an hour long slot (42 mins run time), and longer segments sometimes split into two parts. It was an instant hit, and the BBC revived Top Gear to compete as they realised what a mistake they'd made in not restructuring the show. Still, it was good fun for about 10 years... but it was a COPY of what the original Top Gear became when the team managed to get a new gig... even mocking the BBC with the name of the show! It ran for about a decade, also. While much of it is remembered with affection in the UK, it was pretty much in zombie mode from about 2013, having lost many viewers tired of the setup fakery and just wanting to see some sometimes exotic metal.
I can’t really disagree with your excellent post because essentially that was how Top Gear evolved and is where it is now. At its zenith like 5th Gear, it was still a show about cars with some entertainment thrown in. Where the two shows diverged was 5th gear remained a program for car enthusiasts whereas Top Gear tried to expand its audience (very successfully) to a much wider audience through the use of big budget road trips, stunts and various pieces to camera that although had mass appeal became ever more gimmicky and contrived (the inevitability of appealing to a global market I suppose). What remained at the core however was IMO the genius of Wilman and Clarkson who throughout the years understood how to build successful franchises (Top Gear, The Grand Tour, Clarksons Farm) and although Top Gear did indeed run out of ideas when Clarkson was fired it’s a testament to that duos creative skills that they were able to revive some of the earlier Top Gear magic and create something different in Clarksons Farm that in some ways I enjoy even more than Top Gear at its height. BTW, I only realised recently that Phil Churchwood (the Director in many of the episodes of the Grand Tour) is married to Vicki Butler-Henderson who of course has been a presenter on 5th Gear for many years.
I think what the road-trips did was tap into not only the cars but escaping to the places a car can take you with some friends. You can drive your dream car every day but if your only driving it on the same roads back and forth it loses some of the shine. As a American I never once wanted to go to Europe then I watched top gear and now I love it there so much I want to move there. As for the new top gear, if they just handed it to Harris and let him be himself then it would still be fun, but they make him act like a childish stooge and it just doesn’t work. He was excellent in /Drive with Matt Farrah and another dude, but that show had a horrible time slot on a secondary network, never knew when it was on.
Top gear helped shaped my personality. First episode i watched was in 2005 and sculpted into my high school career, even quoted the Africa special Clarkson quote “Power and Speed” as my yearbook quote in 2014. I own many seasons on DVD and on ITunes.
So apparently I pronounced Tiff Needell's name wrong in the opening.
I'm American, what can I say. 😅
🤣 I spat my drink out laughing when you said it 😂
Bro said Tiff Needle 😂😂
I stopped watching when Clarkson & Co came along. Like watching overgrown teenagers tiresome.
Tiff needle 🪡 😂
First time I heard about Tiff on 5th gear they said it like “Tiffany Dell” and I was wondering who the hell that was lol
Vietnam is the best episode ever. Jeremy being a hater of motorcycles and riders has an epiphany at the end where he says he still doesn't like them but understands why people ride. It's so wholesome and honestly so pure it truly feels like an honest reaction and not something scripted.
Then he crashed and hated them all over again. Laughed so hard at that
Didn't he say he understands but would kill his childif they ever got one
@@gavinsmith8844 the fell off the bike is the rite of passage that every rider must experience at least once in their life.
if you fell off your bike once, you're basically already baptized as a rider.
Most moments are ofcourse scripted in broad sense, but it was their banter and genuine moments that for sure wasn't scripted what made the show good.
Vietnam is honestly in my top 5 tv show episodes ever
The moments such as during the Patagonia special, where Clarkson spoke of his father or had a tribute to a dying car make or model, always hit you in a deep way. Beyond the banter and the car talk you had real emotion come through the screen. Those moments are few and far between in mass media today. Truly a special show and a special trio of presenters and the crew behind them making it happen.
God I love that special. Patagonia is amazing.
It's not for people who expect new car reviews, they need to get over that misnomer. It is pure genius is what it is.
The Aston Martin v12 Vantage one hit hard.
@@CHINZIG_UK I had to go back rewatch it after you mentioned it. So powerful.
I think his speech regarding that Porsche 928 will go down one of the best moments of the series ever.
I believe in regards to James's Dacia being reversed into was scripted but James was not aware of the skit so his reaction is legit.
Have to agree with this presentation, it wasn't funny in the least, at leayto anyone I know. I do love how James dropped into revirothe car he'd jjst been given. He's by far our favorite.
James doesn't run on TV so yeah James didn't know
I second this, surprisingly mean-spirited even by Hammond and Clarkson's standards. They don't usually write-off each others cars like that and instead mostly opt to screw with each other by creatively modifying each others cars.
I wouldn't be surprised if Clarkson had a newer, nicer Dacia waiting for James after the filming.
@@Trihawk7I just realized that now...
James ran like a scalded cat there!
The show, Jeremy Clarkson mostly, was so unique and intriguing, that my daughter from around the age of 11, until about 14, would watch it with myself and her older brother. It was possibly the only such bridge between her girl world and car based idiotic humor that could have and will ever be. I greatly appreciated the unique and very unexpected bringing of us three together at the time and look back with fond memories. It served the adolescent girl well too. Men were presented in a hilarious but ultimately competent fashion, as she needed to get up to speed with the often obtuse and obscure for which she had no reference whatsoever. Another small step on the way from the loins of an uneducated single father to the university of Cambridge. Thanks Top Gear. And for what it is worth I have not and would never watch the continuation post departure of our trio version.
To be fair, I dont think anyone watches it anymore. Those tv licences paid for it for season after season. Now the test track is being demolished to build homes.
beautifully said
My sister loved the specials, and still enjoys The Grand Tour.
@@Hyvelez : ...because she is in she species
Never gave a shit about Cars either, but damn, i saw all seasons
One thing to mention is Top Gear arguably became more beloved because of the non stop replays on Dave/uktv meaning everyone who wanted could watch every episode, knew every funny moment so every reference became universal, similar to how everyone would stop and watch classic Simpsons episodes.
I dont have cable anymore but last time I visited parents TopGear re-run was on some channel. Just looked at my dad, we both nodded and watched it. Great time.
Dave, unfortunately, cut the Reliant Robin "bit" from that popular episode.
But hey, we've got TH-cam 🤷
All episodes are available on BBC iplayer, and can be watched with a decent vpn if outside the UK
@@danielshelton2658really I've caught it a couple times on there in the past
The issue with Top Gear now is that they were caught between two worlds. They didn’t know whether to go with the car review show or an entertainment show and tried to do both which failed horribly and almost ended the life of Freddie Flintoff. What they should’ve done is what they did originally, just get 3 car journalists who can be on TV. That’s all they needed. It was never a show that needed celebrities. They just needed people who knew about cars and cared about cars who were also willing to expose who they are as people to the world. And even though the show has been cancelled, if it ever comes back, they need to just get 3 car journalists and just make the show.
Top gear was the peak of television and we will never get anything close to it, ever again.
The grand tour: hold my beer.
@@szili76it’s absolutely great, but it doesn’t even come close to the utter consistent brilliance of Top Gear from 2002-2015.
@@szili76 Lol not even close.
Just by the way... It still exists... Just noone watchs it
I would argue, around that time, the BBC had some good shows.
I enjoyed Doctor Who during that time as well; but lost my interest the moment they got Capaldi in. I maybe watched the first 1 1/2 seasons with him but then switched off.
The more I think about it, the more I think that the reason Top Gear was successful was that it was a great example of healthy masculinity. The relationship between Clarkson, Hammond and May is something guys all over the world crave. A group of mates who love each other as much as they hate one another.
On most of the specials, they spend the first two thirds of their journey generally annoying and insulting each other. May's car getting rear ended until he pulls out a machete. Hammond's seat being moved all the way back and the fuse removed because he's short. Clarkson's sumptuously modified vehicles being dirtied and dismantled.
But then as the end of the journey draws near, the three of them are given a nearly impossible task like building a bridge or converting their vehicles into boats. Despite their constant bickering and messing with one another, they band together and accomplish something remarkable.
It's something you rarely see on TV anymore, and I think that formula really resonates with the audience.
That's a really damn good hypothesis, and I think you have a point.
Seconded. I’d never thought about it that way, but their playful piss-taking never came at the expense of an ability to express sincere emotions - often quite caring ones - whenever the time was right. This comment makes me want to rewatch all the specials with that perspective in mind.
Top Gear with Jeremy, Richard and James was the best tv show ever. So funny, even my 80 year old mum enjoyed watching it, RIP Mum. I think the Vietnam Challenge was the best of all of them. I had no idea Vietnam is so beautiful.
May is stranded with no fuel, soaked in the pouring rain.
Guy helps him.
May; I think I’ll pay him.
Reaches for his money (Vietnames Dong) in his trouser pocket; I think my dong’s gonna be all soggy.
I nearly wetted myself when I watched that.
Aye, and James isn't normally that funny. A car show's best episode, (in my opinion,) was on motorcycles. What a team.
Yes, I get it. My 80 year old mum always got a laugh out of it too. RIP
you know what's the best part? I discovered Top Gear on an Emirates flight, guess which video was available?
The Vietnam special...
Quite a way to introduce a show
@@RD19902010 HA HA HA That is awesome! I'm glad it was your first. Wow that must have been a wonderful flight, that Airline is one of the best in the world. I'm glad your safe and you now know Jeremy, Richard and James. Have a wonderful life my friend
Top Gear was the final blast of old British humour.
Back in the fifties, radio comedy on the BBC was written and performed by people who had served in the forces and brought much of the forces' humour with them
.
The style of comedy, (Hancock's Half Hour / The Goons / The Navy Lark), was dry, often surreal and inevitably ended in something blowing up - often for no adequately explored reason.
This was carried on in the seventies by The Goodies and then ultimately in the form of Alternative Comedy.
In an era when Health & Safety was trying to ban anything like this, Top Gear was the last show to carry on in this vein.
Because it was a car show it somehow slipped under the radar and nobody really seemed to notice.
We knew that once its current iteration of CHM ended that it would then be the end of the era - and it was.
Your commentary could be very useful for a Top Gear video essay in the future. Be sure to spread it around.
Jeremy, James, and Hammond had the best chemistry of a cast ever. They were hilarious.
These 3 guys had an undeniable magic, based on friendship and a true love for all things mechanical. Watching it was a perfect escape from the madness of the world. Plus, all three are accomplished actors and writers (all having written very enjoyable books, with a few misses here and there). There is no TG after they left.
hammonds book on his first nasty crash and recovery was absolutely gut wrenching to read, especially more so now for me after having recently survived a nasty crash myself a year ago.
The show has a special place in my heart. Consistently gave me laughs. I discovered it on tv in Canada in like 2008 and had been watching ever since. It wasnt Top Gear necessarily and that was evident when the Golden Trio left and started the Grand Tour. I realized it was those three that brought the magic. A great mixture of beautiful cinematics, great writing, a unique humour that could only be recreated with Captain slow, the Baboon and the Hobbit. They slowed down from the comedy at the right times to tell amazing stories of motor racing/history, they brought us on hilarious adventures nobody else would ever try during those times, and created a show that yes was about cars, but they made it so much more. I have a lot of good memories watching the show. At a time in my life when there arent any good memories to be made, when I find myself being consumed by memories that used to be happy and now bring nothing but pain and regret, this show manages to bring me back to when I was happier, with no context to ruin them. I still watch older clips and they manage to put a extremely rare smile on my face, I watch the trios new specials and again, Im able to smile and forget the shit life around me. It might all sound a bit extreme and an over the top description, but in the end the show made me happy. And for that, it will always hold a place in my heart. When the three officially do call it a career, itll be a sad day. Till then though, hopefully (or regretably at this point) ill still be around to see whatever else they do.
Also they did solve world hunger so bonus points for that!
Edit: (one of the episodes of the grand tour joke)
Keep your head up.
a fantastic reply! I hope your life gives you more than it does right now soon ❤
I can relate with you a hundred percent. Though for me it can also bring about bittersweet kind of happy memories. I hope you're well.
You did this phenomenon justice. Well written, presented and edited. Your journalistic approach, with an appropriate comment about your own experience here and there, was perfect. You kept the focus on the subject(s). Thank you for not tarnishing my memories.
I remember the Botswana special, and yes, I rooted for Oliver the whole way. I love that the little survivor is still around and being cared for.
And now Hammond owns whats believed to be both the Opel Kadetts in the country. Oliver and Olivia
23:25 Hammond has done many other projects aside from The Great Escapists. He's done a documentary called Big, where he reviews the largest examples of various thing men have built (cargo ships, stadiums, skyscrapers, etc), he currently runs The Smallest Cog, a Car Restoration Shop and affiliated television program, and he is heavily involved with what remains of DriveTribe.
"Now thats a proud moment...but is it straight?
YES!YES!"
The terror in Hammsters eyes when he said "but" 😂😂
The three presenters are just big kids having fun, just the way we all wish we could . A totally brilliant show .
I remember one night coming home, coming up the stairs to my moms house, and there she is, watching Top Gear. My mom is not a car person, so I was a bit baffled. I can't remember exactly what episode it was, but I do remember it being one of their challenge episodes. And sure enough, she was laughing along with the show. That was the moment, I realized Top Gear in the mid-teen seasons was truly on a tier of its own, and would probably never be topped by any other show. I know as I'd sit and watch old episodes back when it was available on Prime, I'd enjoy the early series, laugh my ass off in the mid series, and as you neared the 20 series mark, it just didn't feel as special anymore with the exception of the specials (like South America). In a way, it was a good thing it came to a end, and they rebooted. Because The Grand Tour really brought back some old time feels. And the specials with GT were great as well. And I also love Clarksons farm, and Our Man In _____. With out quitting the BBC, we'd probably never get this. But I'd love to see James revive Toy Stories, and Jeremy do some more WWII Documentaries.
The Dacia Sandero ‘good news’ segment is an all time classic
You have understood the show and its appeal very well. Great work. Spiritually the show did end when Clarkson, Hammond and May left - certainly in the UK the “new” Top Gear without them was immediately ridiculed and is not even close to having anything resembling the cultural resonance of the proper show. To be honest I’m not sure why the BBC bothers with it.
Seems the Beeb is hoping the goose will lay another golden egg. A forlorn hope (imho), given that, by the end of the group's tenure, the relationship between them was why people watched. That and the political incorrectness, of course.
I've always believed that the departure of Clarkson was a set up. The three had just signed a contract with the BBC for a new series, when along came Amazon, offering a truckload of cash. The BBC contract was ironclad, so how to get out of it? Being fired was the perfect, probably the only solution (the Beeb wasn't about to let the presenters of its highest grossing show off the hook). So JC did the deed and Hammond and May, who weren't fired, could walk "in solidarity" with him. That was neat, as it ensured the public would have sympathy for their "principled" gesture, overcoming or at least helping to counter any bad feeling towards JC over his actions. Mere conjecture on my part, of course.
In fairness the current batch of top gear really isn't all that bad. Ofc it's no OG trio but it certainly has its own simpler charm
At work, even non-car people used to talk about TopGear every Monday.
Since the three left and the new show is out, are the car talked died off and boring football is back on the menu.
Occasionally you hear someone mentioning The Grand Tour, but considering they seem to release now every 6 months a show, that is on its way out.
With TopGear you had Seasons, and they kept the fire burning, having Grand Tour splited so much apart and also considering the age of the presenters - we soon have to say farewell.
The only host worth watching on the new Top Gear is Chris Harries, and prefer watching his reviews on TH-cam over watching the whole show.
Because it still brings in money. It's not as big as before but it brings in money. It's that simple. Their number as are slowly creeping back up too.
It was dire with chris cretinous evans and i cant help thinking back to that partridge clip with tony hayers as hes proposing the ideas when chris evans was “exactly what the beeb wanted”
Just something to point out is in the Vietnam special the music that played out of the little box that came with the back up vehicle was not originally the American national anthem, it was originally aired with Bruce Springsteen song Born in the USA, if I'm correct its to do with the music licensing for some of the music they use in the show.
Very good video though! Nice to see an American perspective on Top Gear. I know it was a wildly watched show on an international level but its always pretty cool to see other perspectives outside the UK.
You are right with Born in the USA
I grew up with Top Gear, I grew up with this trio. Nothing replaces them, they're an integral part of my childhood and even now I watch every season of the Grand Tour.
Really interesting video, especially to see it from an American’s perspective.
One thing I think you did miss out though is any mention of how famous Clarkson already was before “new” Top Gear in 2002. He’d already made “old” Top Gear pretty much synonymous with himself (and Tiff) before leaving, and had plenty of other shows - including his own chat show, VHS tapes, other newspaper columns and other media appearances in the 90s and around the millennium. Everyone knew who he was and his “character” was already well established, while the other presenters were plucked from relative total obscurity. Even if James was originally James’s replacement on “old” Top Gear!
I will delete my comment which basically says the same love or loathe him he was the driving force behind the new format and andy wilman. Was destined for greater things than the old style shows which still hold a special place in my heart.
Old top gear with Clarkson, Hammond and May made me fall head over heels in love with cars again, even when the trio left, the love for cars stayed with me… that’s something I’ll never forget.
I can't describe how much joy and laughter these three have brought me over the years. Their chemistry is truly one of a kind.
The evolution was so natural it’s only when you put season 2 when may joined next to session 10 you can see how much it changed… they just took the bits that people liked most and expanded it to create a great entertainment show and the fact 20+ years later they are still doing it on Amazon (well specials at-least) is a testament to how well it worked and they stuck together though it all
You forgot the best bit where James May was confronted by reporters at his front door.
"As much as I think he's a knob, I quite like working with Jeremy."
Those three have a chemistry that just cannot be faked, I'm glad they stuck together.
I wish The Grand Tour continued with the original format, including the seasonal specials. The show was genuinely good, but luckily I have found comfort in Clarkson's Farm. I remember first watching Clarkson's Farm, and I created an IMDb account that night just so I could give it a ten. Highly recommended.
Hammond and May's shows are good too.
Grand Tour was nothing like old Top Gear if we're being honest. But the trio were still amazing in it
Watching Top Gear was like having conversations and talking about cars with your friends, and how you can go on and on about the topic for hours. They were likeminded friends, companions for life.
It’s the Clarkson, Hammond and May trio that made it work. I haven’t seen much of the show, but it do know that their chemistry and comedic abilities was what made Top Gear so appealing.
As much as i love specials and challenges.
In the end i came to the conclusion that News and Conversation Street where the absolute best parts of the shows, because it was just these 3 conversing together.
True. And you know what, the part that i liked most from top gear was the news.
I used to fast forward through the news. Now, I have playlists here on TH-cam that is only… The News!
Even though it was the Grand Tour, I remember the final episode of the final season, and like Jeremy, I started to cry. It was the end of an era.
Lots of people in my life have long enjoyed this show (dad, husband, and now son) and I’ve not understood it. I feel like I get it now. Thank you for explaining it so well. Great video!
At 14:58 there is something that fascinates me to no end about different Top Gear releases.
Depending on when you watch it, what streaming service, network, or DVD you may have, since the show used a lot of licensed music, it’s often different, it also often varies by reason. On the DVD of the Vietnam special that I have - as an Australian - instead of the American national anthem, the music “dubbed in” that the bike is playing, is Born In The USA by Bruce Springsteen. Which somehow feels more inappropriate and funnier, IMO.
When Jeremy drove a diesel Audi A8 as far as possible on one tank of fuel, the original broadcast used James Horner's "Apollo 13" score for the finale but all subsequent repeats they used some generic background music, it wasn't the same.
@@FlyingHeadbutt100 Was that the challenge where they had to get to Blackpool, to turn the lights on for a festival?
There's a number of other examples of this happening. I remember Jeremy arriving in the "Giant Panda" for the limousine challenge, that - once again - the music was different on the TH-cam upload, to a DVD of it I have. I can't recall which tracks were swapped, but I remember vastly preferring the DVD score.
'Born in the USA' was the original song played. Jeremy references the lyrics later on when Richard's bike breaks down. This is the first time I've ever heard this version with the American national anthem dubbed over. I guess this is a clip taken from BBC America and ironically they must have not had the licensing to play 'Born in the USA' to American audiences.
@@interstate15 I forgot Jeremy referenced the lyrics of the song - interesting. It definitely feels ironic - like you said - that in the USA, they mustn’t have had the licensing for “Born In The USA”.
That was a very good summary, well done. I'd just like to say though, I'm pretty sure many (if not most) people, in the UK at least, had never heard the word 'slope' as a derogatory term, and only became aware of it when the controversy blew up. I remember watching the episode at the time and that completely passed me by.
As part of the people it is supposed to actually offend. I didn't know either.
Just makes it more insidious, in my opinion. Like, a kind of old school racism no-one but the most ardent racists would know abt.
The only people I had ever heard say that were American. I had never, ever heard that term in Australia. Don't get me wrong, I'd heard slurs with the same meaning but never that particular one
There was a slope on the bridge as well. It was angled to one side, and higher on one side as well. So technically Clarkson could've claimed that the media was just making a mountain out of a poor choice of words
I hate when people forget Richard Hammonds workshop exists, its clarksons farm but with hammond and cars
Still rewatching 2002-2015 Top Gear when I have free time. Pure masterpiece.
Is there a place where you watch those? I really want to rewatch these old episodes too. They gave us so many laughs
@@qg1235BBC iPlayer. All episodes on there
How a guy with under 600 subs can do a video this good is beyond me. You are destined for great things sir! Keep it up! Sending love from Cape Town!
My son and I watched every episode up until Clarkson, Hammond and May left. Never watched another episode but have watched all The Grand Tour.
Great video. Really enjoyed it and the production. You've spoken really well - clear and concise. It comes across as a very well presented documentary on youtube. I'm really surprised that you don't have more subscribers but this may be early in your TH-cam life. Either way you have a new subscriber and hope to see more videos like this.
As a note on the Vietnam Special: At 13:48, Clarkson pushes the button to play the music, but in the version you showed, it is altered from the original broadcast. It actually plays "Born in the USA", with Clarkson noting so. His note is completely muted while he points at it. The original makes the USA bike, much much worse as backup vehicle. And as Clarkson states, is very inappropriate indeed with the original audio.
I mean the US national anthem is still pretty inappropriate
Some of the happiest times of my entire life is sitting with my 2 young sons watching top gear and all of us laughing from beginning to end. It’s so sad it’s over.
I've watched Top Gear for the past 20 years, it was one of the few shows I would sit down and watch as a kid. I think the show was the biggest influence on my interest in cars today.
That was probably the best short-form telling of the Top gear story I've ever seen, well done and I'm happy to see it appears to be a hit for you.
Oliver also featured in a kids tv show called “Richard Hammond’s Blast Labs”, I remember watching the show frequently as a kid alongside Top Gear
Also yes, the Dacia thing was scripted . I can’t say for certain that James was also in on it, but it’s probable (and if he wasn’t he knew something was inevitably going to happen).
Top Gear was my childhood, I watched that with my dad since I was probably 4 years old, then watched The Grand Tour, and sadly can see that yeah, it will be wrapping up soon. I've watched for many years now, and this show was a big part of my early life and is part of what made me an avid car enthusiast, the trio was what really kept it alive. I'm glad they're still doing well.
These three guys were doing the things that no other TV show hosts we do… The challenges some of them had were tremendous… And the older they got the more they challenge themselves on Top Gear and then the grand tour… I don’t think you could pay any other celebrities to do what they did in Mongolia or south east Asia… These guys have a special chemistry and they are fantastic together. And at least two of them are very good with cars, most TV show host wouldn’t know how to fix anything… Just regular guys who happened to be really entertaining, funny, and skilled…
Richard Hammond also has a show called The Smallest Cog and that’s definitely where his focus is. It’s pretty cool.
Smallest Cog is the name of the workshop, the show is Richard Hammonds Workshop
It's a staple of my childhood. I continue to rewatch the specials to this day, often with people who couldn't care less about cars. With The Grand Tour probably coming to an end soon, I'd really like for the trio to do a podcast format, perhaps every few months. It would be nice just to hear them chat about cars. Frankly, about anything. Their dynamic is endlessly entertaining.
One of the saddest moments in TV history…. Hammond wailing OLIVERRRR as Oliver sunk into the river.
Well done video and I agree with pretty much everything said here! Top Gear is a huge part my childhood and I wouldn't be who I am today without this show and these guys, and I think I'm not wrong, or alone, in thinking that. The amount of fun and golden moments the show gave us is immeasurable. It was just the coming together of the right people, with the right ideas, at the right time and in my honest opinion, there will never be another show like Top Gear ever again.
Also, a few points I'd like to add that weren't covered in the video on why I think the show is so great and why it's so beloved especially in the car enthusiast community is that, 1) usually car enthusiasts (or cars) aren't portrayed rightly in mass media and big screens, but Top Gear became that one bastion that showed to the general audience how a lot of car guys really are and what they think about cars, so non-car people at least had an idea of why we care about cars so much. My mom, for example, has nothing to do with cars and never really sat through any car show or movie on TV (she would always invite me to watch but would herself leave and go do her own stuff) but Top Gear was the one car show she enjoyed watching, and the same goes for my uncle and aunt. Top Gear took the cars and presented them in a way normal people could enjoy. 2) in a world where media portrays men as either insufferable or incompetent (or both), Top Gear was one of the few, if not the only, major TV shows that showed competence, healthy camaraderie and companionship among men as friends and colleagues, even if they did stupid things and bickered and troubled each other but ultimately were close friends and very intelligent - it was a good example of men to look up to. And that chemistry and friendship is what sold the show, and also why post-2015 Top Gear just doesn't feel the same. There are many more reasons as well why Top Gear is so great, such as the writing, the humour, the presentation, the cinematography, the music selection and so on, but I'll stop this long ass essay right here.
The "controversy" side of it got worse because of modern stuff today, people just got offended by being so thin skinned. Clarkson isn't a racist person, only meant as a joke but he can laugh at himself, which in itself makes it even. He makes jokes of others and others make jokes of him and he doesn't mind it!
Hello you industrious little fellow
Then you need to pay attention more or were ignorant to it because you aren't British. The controversy isn't recent. It was almost always immediately after it aired. "Woke" wasn't even a thing back then. It's not because people were thin skinned, it was because it was from the BBC.
@@GloomGaiGarno it's because people are pathetic and still got offended over everything back then. Nobody who was actually watching the show was offended. It was always some Karen who heard about it.
@@LawrenceTimmePrecisely. That other user is in full on denial of reality... and/or has never heard of Mary Whitehouse.
@@GloomGaiGar i am British you thin skinned knob
At 20:20, the abject fear on Hammonds face when Clarkson asks if the "bridge" is "straight".
The "in all my 5 weeks of television" joke was great
What happened to the born in the USA music in the Vietnam special? Was it removed in the American airings?
Copyright strike???
Copyright. They change a lot of the music when they upload to social media or broadcast to other areas.
I have watched the Vietnam special like 12 times. It is so good. The pace, the editing, the music but also that gorgeous country. Amazing.
To be honest; It's actually because of Top Gear that I started to love cars as a kid ❤
And later studied as a Car Mechanic 😅
Top Gear aired on a Sunday evening at 8pm which was the perfect time slot for the show. Everyone was at home, Mum, Dad, and the kids were all watching the same show. Mum maybe wasn’t a car fan but she was happy all the family were together. Dad was happy because it was car related and was probably the same age as the presenters so he got all the jokes. The kids loved it because it could be very childish and silly. Plus they had the star in a reasonably priced car segment which showed the pulling power and popularity of the show. It really was the perfect family show.
I have no clue when I discovered this show as a kid but it is easily one of, if not my favourite shows.
It was never about the cars, it was never about the studio. It was the 3 idiots enjoying the challenges and each others company.
This show is beyond rewatchable. Its fantastic. I still find myself using clarkson vocabulary like "yeeeeeeess"
Also the specials episodes are still peak tv
I now always pause before i say in the woooorld
It really frustrates me that any time there is a video or article talking about the success of Top Gear, no one mentions Andy Willman.
He is the sole reason for the success of the show, no ifs, ands, or buts.
Top Gear was amazing and damn I miss it. My dad and I saw it for the first time around 2004-2005 I believe. Jeremy was driving a Peugeot hatchbatch that had the engine in the rear, it was a proof of concept and it was hilarious. Every single corner he took the car would spin out and he said “Just like the French, sits in a cloud of its own smoke with its hands up!” We cried laughing and were hooked to it. The Bentley Brooklands review got me too. Love The Grand Tour too, but it ain’t top gear.
It was a Renault Clio V6, Series 4 I believe
NONE of the past presenters apart from Jeremy, brought the laughter and happiness that Jeremy, Richard and James brought to our screens. Sadly missed. ❤❤❤❤
Excellent video, well done. So many people I know just didn't get Top Gear. I stopped watching it when the trio left, I loved their loyalty to each other.
Takes me back to a simpler time. The ultimate comfort show with Carkson, Hammond and May.
Season 3 attempt to kill a Toyota Hylux was the first episode leading into the Top Gear of legend. Season four remained conservative but did have the first cheap car challenge. Season five had the first cheap car road trip challenge. Six had the second cheap car and 7 had the third cheap car/second road trip, but Top Gear as we know it arrived with season 8.
Series 4 also had the first big race, Aston DB9 vs train to Monte Carlo
Well edited, well presented. Kept me hooked till the last second. Great job!
The part in the Vietnam special where the USA bike is revealed is edited- in the original the song is "Born in the USA" by Bruce Springsteen. Maybe the BBC changed it in the US release so the joke is more obvious to Americans? Someone in the know please explain. This just seems weird to me lol
Copyright issues. I could be wrong here, but my understanding is any show that broadcasts on a bbc television channel can use as much music as it wants to as because the organisation is publicly funded.
Unfortunately, when it comes to home releases and streaming, those songs will be replaced because the bbc is making a profit there.
Hope this comment helps.
@anoctoberdaybreak3365 Ahhhh, thanks very much, it was just such a weird little change that it made me curious. Cheers!
Top Gear was arguably funnier than most comedy shows.
Not arguably
It Was funnier than most comedy shows
Very good video which captures the essence of why the Clarkson/May?hammond incarnation of Top Gear was SUCH a success. As someone who has has watched TG since its start and who has known several of the presenters (Clarkson e.g. and Sue Baker, who didn't get a mention) as I was a professional car photographer from the mid 1970s to the mid 1990s. I hope you don't mind if I point out one key change you haven't mentioned which helped to make the Clarkson/May/Hammond incarnation the success it was, namely the excellent and creative standard of photography which kicked in when they took over.
During that Vietnam clip, originally the song that played with the bike was "Born In The USA". If you're wondering why Jeremy randomly says "evidently" while looking at the bike, it's because in the broadcast and DVD version, when he pushes the button on the box the chorus to "Born In The USA" plays. To this, Jeremy says "That's Born In The USA... evidently".
ok but the making the australian top gear presenters show up in a prison bus was a 10/10 joke (im australian)
Havent seen an episode of top gear since "the trio" left
Very well done program. I learned some things about the early days of the show. And I agree with a majority of the positions you take on the program, the 3 blokes, and their individual paths. Thank you!
Growing up, my scout group watched the episode where they attempted to glide a car off a cliff in Utah, then we went out and camped in Moab, saw the place where they did it, and we even collected some parts that had been scattered across the ground. That’s one of my favorite memories.
Peak Top Gear at least for me was 2007 - 2011.
Especially when two British drivers, Lewis Hamilton in 2008 and Button and Brawn GP in 2009, won back-to-back championships.
The Grand Tour never landed until they made it a specials-only show
Bro you only have 600 subs? I genuinely thought you had like 500k to a million! You deserve way more subscribers!
1 year later, grand tour is ending.
I barely missed an episode when Clarkson, Hammond, and May presented the show. But since they left, I can literally count on one hand how many times I have watched the new series, even though I am a fan of Freddy and Paddy, the show has lost its authenticity, and is a shadow of its former self.
As someone who absolutely LOVED the rebooted Top Gear, it lost some of its lustre towards the end of _The Three Amigos_ time on the show. (Maybe a season or two before Clarkson was fired) It felt contrived and almost forced at times. I feel the same about The Grand Tour.
I miss the Orang Utan, Hamster and Captain Slow. 😢
They're still alive...
That disastrous radio broadcast at the end. I remember that from so long ago, and it's just as funny. The opening of the Grand Tour though, when Hammond and May come alongside Clarkson I know I speak for a lot of people, it brought tears to my eyes. That's beyond friendship right there.
Also from what I've seen of Clarkson's farm, as entertaining as it is it really shows you some of the real agony farmers go through. Such an obscene effort for such little reward at the end of the day.
The purpose of a show is to *feel* what the protagonists experience, and Top Gear gave any viewer an experience to appreciate. Three friends gather to poke fun, compete, and share ups and downs in a way that’s so genuine and uplifting. There never felt like a dull moment, the humor was spot on, and if you’re just an ordinary person who never thought twice about cars, you might begin to find value in what makes cars so special. For the most part, it could be enjoyed with family. It was a memorable experience for any age, sex, or if you could take a joke, race. That kind of genuine fun is difficult to mimic, and I fear the days of heart-felt television are over. If anyone has any show suggestions to prove me wrong, feel free to reply and thank you for your time.
You’re right, the original format TG is damn hard to find in any relevant chunks - mostly just a few clips here and there - I can’t even find an entire episode.
Great video!!!!
It streams on Tubi for free.
@@Herefornow-571 it also is on freevee for free all seasons but the first one except a lot of the specials aren’t there - that’s where Tubi comes in lol
I know people always loved the specials way more than the actual episodes of seasons but having the meat in-between the specials is what helped them to be so good. You see with the grand tour now they don't do the show anymore they just do specials but without the actual meat of the show with regular episodes I have found my self not enjoying them as much
Classic top gear will exist in the bbc archives, it just won’t have any public release
top gear wasnt about cars, it was about 3 mates who liked cars
Top Gear has to be one of my all time favorite and most watched shows. It was just so special and the peak of humor for me.
The slope thing was always ridiculous. At that time the newspapers were always looking for some reason to create a controversy, and so they looked up this archaic slur that I guarantee no one in modern Britain had ever heard
Its sad to me how Gran Tour especially lately feels incredibly forced compared to trio's run in Top gear especially in mid-late 2000s.
Entertainment gets the most views even if its fake. Its the same on youtube. Now i researched all the stunts and crashes and specials and also rewatched it frame by frame and almost everything is scripted or fake, except hammonds accidents
Don't ask me for a source but I recall from somewhere that the guy who Jeremy punched was 24 karat, stone cold arsehole. He only got the job because of his connections and was just a dick. Then on the day of the incident he apparently spent the whole day winding Jeremy up. So the whole no hot food thing was just the straw that broke the camel's back.
I'm not condoning violence. Just saying it wasn't as simple as Jeremy arrived somewhere wanting hot food, the producer told him that wasn't possible so Jeremy just flew into a rage and punched the guy.
There was also the Argentina controversy with Clarkson’s license plate on his Porsche.
Yeah, everyone likes to shit on Clarkson but to be honest, he just says shit we all say with the bros at the pub, problem is he said it with the bros on TV.
Another thing is that he was kicked from BBC during really hard time in his life and that says more about BBC than him imo. If he was jsut attacking people becasue he is a celebrity primadona, people around him would not risk their reputation and career by leaving BBC with him, but he have very good friends that stood by him in difficult time and thats kind wholsome :D
This show meant and still means so much for me... In 2002 I started working my dream job, though it was kinda exhausting at times. I lived alone, didn't really have much to do outside of work, so I would always just watch TV or some VHS tapes of which I still have a huge collection, though I was just missing something. There weren't many interesting things on TV for me at the time, at least not most of the time I actually could just sit and watch. Fast forward to fall 2003, when I got cable television that included multiple foreign channels, including the BBCs. Knowing English pretty well, I decided to check it out one day just out of curiosity. I remember it like yesterday - I was preparing some food, when I heard a catchy intro song and a summary that sounded pretty hilarious. So I finished making the food and came to see Clarkson, Hammond and May enthusiasticly talking about what they've been up to on their latest challenge. I've never been a car person, but these three just instantly caught my eye, the way they talked to each other and to the camera felt like being in a pub with a group of friends, so I stayed to watch it and at the end of the episode and many laughs later I finally knew that this is it, this is what I've been missing since 2002, such a hilarious show to be excited about! And since that I would just watch every single episode (when I wasn't at work during some of them). And it actually still is my "tradition" to this day, though it's The Grand Tour now. I still work the same job, just for a different company, I don't live alone anymore, but my Wife loves the show too, we've in fact binged the entire Top Gear and The Grand Tour stock on some of our free days and never regretted even a second! It really isn't just about the cars, it's mainly about these three absolutely legendary presenters 💯
In the early 2010s, it started getting strained, and it became increasingly obvious that moments like the Dacia Sandero were indeed absolutely scripted and planned... the way they increasingly stretched their silly antics became lame and not at all amusing; very mean spirited. Extremely formulaic. "Oh this is the bit where they park up and Clarkson bashes into James's car..." "Oh wait, they're going to have Richard's car have engine trouble right now..."
It was as formula tv, just like the cop procedurals where the suspect is identified, found, does a runner and is apprehended to be cleared around the 20 minute mark and the true culprit is caught at the last minute due to a seemingly insignificant piece of information or evidence in plain sight in the first few moment of the episode.
The audience was already declining when Clarkson was basically fired, and it was seen by all and sundry that HE was Top Gear - and whether true or not, Hammond and May felt that too, hence them bailing also (of course, it was in support of their mate, but if they'd had better advice from their agents, they'd've stuck it out).
Top Gear these days is absolutely a shadow of those days, as instead of being about cars, it's about three not terribly interesting blokes buggering about and being paid to have holidays and mid-life crises about cars.
What you failed to mention is that when Top Gear was originally cancelled by the BBC, the entire team pitched the idea of the show to UK's Channel Five, and within weeks, Fifth Gear was launched on that channel, with an hour long slot (42 mins run time), and longer segments sometimes split into two parts.
It was an instant hit, and the BBC revived Top Gear to compete as they realised what a mistake they'd made in not restructuring the show.
Still, it was good fun for about 10 years... but it was a COPY of what the original Top Gear became when the team managed to get a new gig... even mocking the BBC with the name of the show!
It ran for about a decade, also.
While much of it is remembered with affection in the UK, it was pretty much in zombie mode from about 2013, having lost many viewers tired of the setup fakery and just wanting to see some sometimes exotic metal.
I can’t really disagree with your excellent post because essentially that was how Top Gear evolved and is where it is now.
At its zenith like 5th Gear, it was still a show about cars with some entertainment thrown in. Where the two shows diverged was 5th gear remained a program for car enthusiasts whereas Top Gear tried to expand its audience (very successfully) to a much wider audience through the use of big budget road trips, stunts and various pieces to camera that although had mass appeal became ever more gimmicky and contrived (the inevitability of appealing to a global market I suppose).
What remained at the core however was IMO the genius of Wilman and Clarkson who throughout the years understood how to build successful franchises (Top Gear, The Grand Tour, Clarksons Farm) and although Top Gear did indeed run out of ideas when Clarkson was fired it’s a testament to that duos creative skills that they were able to revive some of the earlier Top Gear magic and create something different in Clarksons Farm that in some ways I enjoy even more than Top Gear at its height.
BTW, I only realised recently that Phil Churchwood (the Director in many of the episodes of the Grand Tour) is married to Vicki Butler-Henderson who of course has been a presenter on 5th Gear for many years.
Thanks for including the first clip of the video, makes me happy to see polish vehicles on the road
In addition to my Dad, I got into cars by watching the ludicrous of these 3 guys 😂
Maybe Top Gear was the friends we made along the way
I think what the road-trips did was tap into not only the cars but escaping to the places a car can take you with some friends. You can drive your dream car every day but if your only driving it on the same roads back and forth it loses some of the shine. As a American I never once wanted to go to Europe then I watched top gear and now I love it there so much I want to move there. As for the new top gear, if they just handed it to Harris and let him be himself then it would still be fun, but they make him act like a childish stooge and it just doesn’t work. He was excellent in /Drive with Matt Farrah and another dude, but that show had a horrible time slot on a secondary network, never knew when it was on.
Top gear helped shaped my personality. First episode i watched was in 2005 and sculpted into my high school career, even quoted the Africa special Clarkson quote “Power and Speed” as my yearbook quote in 2014.
I own many seasons on DVD and on ITunes.