Watching Clarkson's Farm, it really felt like something that May should show up in. I know Hammond likes animals, but for whatever reason I totally thought May would be a good fit for a farm show.
*cut to May giving a lecture on the history of the tractor*
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zepherinRussian warship, go fuck yourselfRegistered Userregular
edited July 2021
I actually believe that James Richard and Jeremy genuinely dislike each other. But they like money and understand the work dynamic well enough to work together. They also understand it only works because they are all together.
I actually believe that James Richard and Jeremy genuinely dislike each other. But they like money and understand the work dynamic well enough to work together. They also understand it only works because they are all together.
nah, it's more like going on a really long vacation with a good friend and afterward you're like "that was great! now I don't to see or hear from you for like a month...", it's like that, but it's like 20 years of going on several month long vacations with each other to really shitty resorts.
I actually believe that James Richard and Jeremy genuinely dislike each other. But they like money and understand the work dynamic well enough to work together. They also understand it only works because they are all together.
How did you come to that?
I mean all of the effortless laughter, especially when one gets the other two going, meant they really like each other.
I am in the business of saving lives.
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zepherinRussian warship, go fuck yourselfRegistered Userregular
I actually believe that James Richard and Jeremy genuinely dislike each other. But they like money and understand the work dynamic well enough to work together. They also understand it only works because they are all together.
How did you come to that?
I mean all of the effortless laughter, especially when one gets the other two going, meant they really like each other.
Based on interviews where they say they don’t talk to each other when they aren’t on the show and “it works cause we hate each other.”
I actually believe that James Richard and Jeremy genuinely dislike each other. But they like money and understand the work dynamic well enough to work together. They also understand it only works because they are all together.
How did you come to that?
I mean all of the effortless laughter, especially when one gets the other two going, meant they really like each other.
Based on interviews where they say they don’t talk to each other when they aren’t on the show and “it works cause we hate each other.”
Money or not believing the show would work w/o Clarkson might account for it, but I rather doubt the other two would just bail on sizeable BBC contracts when Jeremy was fired if they hated him. It's quite probably they didn't until Amazon said "hey, more money and full control here".
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zepherinRussian warship, go fuck yourselfRegistered Userregular
I actually believe that James Richard and Jeremy genuinely dislike each other. But they like money and understand the work dynamic well enough to work together. They also understand it only works because they are all together.
How did you come to that?
I mean all of the effortless laughter, especially when one gets the other two going, meant they really like each other.
Based on interviews where they say they don’t talk to each other when they aren’t on the show and “it works cause we hate each other.”
Money or not believing the show would work w/o Clarkson might account for it, but I rather doubt the other two would just bail on sizeable BBC contracts when Jeremy was fired if they hated him. It's quite probably they didn't until Amazon said "hey, more money and full control here".
I have no doubt that an Amazon phone call goosed the process.
Some people separate work friends from the rest of their friend pool pretty religiously. I'm one of those people.
Like I've had work friends who are so goddamn chummy and yet I still won't invite them over to my place for dinner. Because that there clock says 5:00 PM and that means you and I are done for the day.
I imagine it's very much like that for them.
I also imagine for most famous people they end up keeping to themselves mostly because anywhere they go there's a camera and a scandal so fuck it I'll just watch TV until my agent tells me I gotta be somewhere.
DHSChase lizards.....bark at donkeys..Registered Userregular
edited July 2021
being in a showbiz partnership, or in this case trio is a lot different than most friendships and even work relationships. it's really only something that people in similar situations can get, you need to be able to work together to make the show so you can't and shouldn't in most cases burn that out. best explanation I had heard is from Penn Jillette of Penn & Teller; they have been a team now almost 50 years, they work constantly together and do shows in most years for most weeks in the year (pandemic notwithstanding), however the times they have eaten dinner together in a context outside of professionally he could count one hand. it's not that they don't have love or friendship it's kind of the opposite, their work together is too important to them to expose to unnecessary damage from interpersonal conflict outside of work. IIRC he said it was like the Anna Karenina quote "Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way." Substitute for Showbiz Partnership, the ones that stick together find the boundaries and stick to them, the ones that don't find ways to be in each other's way.
basically they keep each other in the work context because that's how the work gets done, of course they are all very british about it so they can't admit any feeling other than jocular disdain for one another; but if they have been doing this for this long they know the boundaries.
DHS on
"Grip 'em up, grip 'em, grip 'em good, said the Gryphon... to the pig."
There are articles floating around from the top gear days where Clarkson has basically said "I spend something like 300 days a year with these guys, I'm not going to spend the rest with them, I do have other friends you know".
Going back to the post that started all this, whether Hammond or May showing up on the farm would be a good thing.... I'd rather not as I think about it. We already have a lot of the same dynamics from the folks who are helping him out, and seeing what APPEARS to be a more "honest" Clarkson is kind of the charm.
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TexiKenDammit!That fish really got me!Registered Userregular
Hammond would be good at trying some kind of doggie daycare, especially if he's still living in that castle. Sir Puppington's Palace.
James, go work on a farm in Hokkaido yes I’m still salty about his Japan series UwU peko.
What they need to do is have a season of all three trying to work on Clarkson's farm. For once, he could blow their actual minds by actually showing real knowledge of something practical, and then we get to watch him channel his inner Kaleb trying to keep the other two from doing the same stupid shit he did the first time around.
And then Kaleb is there to try and keep them from falling into farm equipment.
I think legally Hammond isnt allowed near a thresher of any sort
I have a podcast now. It's about video games and anime!Find it here.
Also it reminded me, that one day I want to do a roadtrip through Scotland with my own car. I've been to Scotland twice now - and I am longing to go back. I went to Ireland 3 years ago with my car and that was a fantastic trip, can only imagine Scotland is even better.
Also it reminded me, that one day I want to do a roadtrip through Scotland with my own car. I've been to Scotland twice now - and I am longing to go back. I went to Ireland 3 years ago with my car and that was a fantastic trip, can only imagine Scotland is even better.
My wife and I want to take a month to go through Ireland, Scotland and England. Hopefully in the next couple years the world calms down enough we might be able to pull it off.
I live in Scotland and still haven't found the opportunity to roadtrip around the north. I want to really badly though, and this show has made the desire even stronger.
This was a good show though!, I was a little more sensitive to the staged elements after AGH but the cars were great, the scenery was awe inspiring and there were a bunch of good laughs throughout. Frankly I could have happily spent an hour watching them try to navigate those cars around central Edinburgh, a city that is legendarily hard to drive around under the best circumstances let alone in ancient American land yachts.
My dad had one of those big ass Buicks back in the day in a not quite neon green color so I was pleased as peaches to see Hammond's selection.
I loved everything about this episode and, climate change aside, would love the return of these massive cars.
I am in the business of saving lives.
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TexiKenDammit!That fish really got me!Registered Userregular
When May fell down opening the door I laughed so hard and then I realized he looked the same way he did when in Syria. But then he was ok so I laughed again. When he falls he just goes, he doesn't try to brace or anything.
Good special, didn't feel scripted outside the end. The bridge was oddly captivating. They should have just taken over that skeet club.
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Ninja Snarl PMy helmet is my burden.Ninja Snarl: Gone, but not forgotten.Registered Userregular
edited August 2021
Yeah, this was a hugely better special, probably in direct proportion to being less ambitious. Just the trio driving old land boats around, with some obstacles and challenges here and there. So easy to forget how fucking HUGE those cars were, and it's amazing how terrible those engines were despite being enormous.
I mean, a goddamn 8-liter engine that only produces 190 HP. A THREE-SPEED GEARBOX. The car weighed fully 2.5 tons. All of that, and the MPG was atrocious. And the burgundy. SO MUCH BURGUNDY. My car has a fucking 1.5 L engine and produces 190 HP with triple the fuel efficiency, without a scrap of burgundy inside or out.
The cars themselves were so hilariously terrible that they already gave a lot of comedy to the special.
American engines of that era were notorious. Consider the C3 Corvette, over 400hp at one point, and later down to double digits, still from a big V8. Did they think people wouldn't notice? It really was flabbergasting.
But if my extremely limited experience driving something vaguely comparable to the Lochdown cars is anything to go by ('77 Thunderbird), I can completely understand why they fell so hard for those cars despite everything and (at least in Clarkson's case, not sure about the others in the end) decided to keep them. For all their many, undeniable, often inherent, and extraordinary flaws, they really do have bucketloads of personality. And if their rather particular, of-a-very-specific-place-and-time aesthetic appeals at all (like it does to me), they are beguilingly beautiful.
American engines of that era were notorious. Consider the C3 Corvette, over 400hp at one point, and later down to double digits, still from a big V8. Did they think people wouldn't notice? It really was flabbergasting.
But if my extremely limited experience driving something vaguely comparable to the Lochdown cars is anything to go by ('77 Thunderbird), I can completely understand why they fell so hard for those cars despite everything and (at least in Clarkson's case, not sure about the others in the end) decided to keep them. For all their many, undeniable, often inherent, and extraordinary flaws, they really do have bucketloads of personality. And if their rather particular, of-a-very-specific-place-and-time aesthetic appeals at all (like it does to me), they are beguilingly beautiful.
That’s when foreign cars started really eating Detroit’s lunch. It’s like nobody wants your planned obsolescence. Did you think you’d be able to conceal that your cars performed worst and were much less reliable? I mean American consumers are dumb, but at one point you could buy a Honda that would last 200,000 miles or more and you’d be lucky if your ford/Chevy/Chrysler would get to 110,000 before the transmission would shit the bed.
zepherin on
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webguy20I spend too much time on the InternetRegistered Userregular
The worst part....
That poor Charger. Like I hope they didn't have to go back and get reaction shots of Hammond. I hope those were the original ones. I can see that thought "I've just broken something very rare and very expensive that doesn't belong to me".
That poor Charger. Like I hope they didn't have to go back and get reaction shots of Hammond. I hope those were the original ones. I can see that thought "I've just broken something very rare and very expensive that doesn't belong to me".
No worries.
He's far more thoroughly wrecked much more expensive vehicles.
That poor Charger. Like I hope they didn't have to go back and get reaction shots of Hammond. I hope those were the original ones. I can see that thought "I've just broken something very rare and very expensive that doesn't belong to me".
Wow - I just had to go back and skip through the episode to that part, because for the life of me I didn't remember what you were talking about. And I only watched it on friday. I think I am getting old...
If he's just driving along and the damn brake caliper falls off, that has to be on the builder. I mean, I'm sure Amazon paid for it, but I would definitely be checking all the other bolts and screws on the car again.
If he's just driving along and the damn brake caliper falls off, that has to be on the builder. I mean, I'm sure Amazon paid for it, but I would definitely be checking all the other bolts and screws on the car again.
Yeah, to be fair
it was just bad luck that Hammond was driving it, that was going to happen to that poor car regardless as it turned out.
I can guarantee if I'd been driving the Rimmac up that hill I wouldn't have crashed it, but only because I wouldn't have been brave enough to take it over about 40. :P
That is a pants shittingly fast car on a small windy road and Hammond apparently has no fear of death.
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webguy20I spend too much time on the InternetRegistered Userregular
I'm watching the Boat special right now and really like it. I like it when nature throws them the middle finger and they suffer a bit for real.
I'm watching the Boat special right now and really like it. I like it when nature throws them the middle finger and they suffer a bit for real.
The end of that one is pretty scary. It isn't if you don't understand the difference in design between flat water and open water boats, but if you do.. man.
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nah, it's more like going on a really long vacation with a good friend and afterward you're like "that was great! now I don't to see or hear from you for like a month...", it's like that, but it's like 20 years of going on several month long vacations with each other to really shitty resorts.
How did you come to that?
I mean all of the effortless laughter, especially when one gets the other two going, meant they really like each other.
Based on interviews where they say they don’t talk to each other when they aren’t on the show and “it works cause we hate each other.”
Money or not believing the show would work w/o Clarkson might account for it, but I rather doubt the other two would just bail on sizeable BBC contracts when Jeremy was fired if they hated him. It's quite probably they didn't until Amazon said "hey, more money and full control here".
Like I've had work friends who are so goddamn chummy and yet I still won't invite them over to my place for dinner. Because that there clock says 5:00 PM and that means you and I are done for the day.
I imagine it's very much like that for them.
I also imagine for most famous people they end up keeping to themselves mostly because anywhere they go there's a camera and a scandal so fuck it I'll just watch TV until my agent tells me I gotta be somewhere.
basically they keep each other in the work context because that's how the work gets done, of course they are all very british about it so they can't admit any feeling other than jocular disdain for one another; but if they have been doing this for this long they know the boundaries.
James, go work on a farm in Hokkaido yes I’m still salty about his Japan series UwU peko.
I think legally Hammond isnt allowed near a thresher of any sort
Oooooh is it out? I'll have to watch it tonight.
Origin ID: Discgolfer27
Untappd ID: Discgolfer1981
Origin ID: Discgolfer27
Untappd ID: Discgolfer1981
They had asked fans to do trailers and posters for the new special. Here are some of them:
Also it reminded me, that one day I want to do a roadtrip through Scotland with my own car. I've been to Scotland twice now - and I am longing to go back. I went to Ireland 3 years ago with my car and that was a fantastic trip, can only imagine Scotland is even better.
My wife and I want to take a month to go through Ireland, Scotland and England. Hopefully in the next couple years the world calms down enough we might be able to pull it off.
Origin ID: Discgolfer27
Untappd ID: Discgolfer1981
This was a good show though!, I was a little more sensitive to the staged elements after AGH but the cars were great, the scenery was awe inspiring and there were a bunch of good laughs throughout. Frankly I could have happily spent an hour watching them try to navigate those cars around central Edinburgh, a city that is legendarily hard to drive around under the best circumstances let alone in ancient American land yachts.
I loved everything about this episode and, climate change aside, would love the return of these massive cars.
Good special, didn't feel scripted outside the end. The bridge was oddly captivating. They should have just taken over that skeet club.
I mean, a goddamn 8-liter engine that only produces 190 HP. A THREE-SPEED GEARBOX. The car weighed fully 2.5 tons. All of that, and the MPG was atrocious. And the burgundy. SO MUCH BURGUNDY. My car has a fucking 1.5 L engine and produces 190 HP with triple the fuel efficiency, without a scrap of burgundy inside or out.
The cars themselves were so hilariously terrible that they already gave a lot of comedy to the special.
But if my extremely limited experience driving something vaguely comparable to the Lochdown cars is anything to go by ('77 Thunderbird), I can completely understand why they fell so hard for those cars despite everything and (at least in Clarkson's case, not sure about the others in the end) decided to keep them. For all their many, undeniable, often inherent, and extraordinary flaws, they really do have bucketloads of personality. And if their rather particular, of-a-very-specific-place-and-time aesthetic appeals at all (like it does to me), they are beguilingly beautiful.
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Origin ID: Discgolfer27
Untappd ID: Discgolfer1981
No worries.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lmQQO4L8TM4
That Rimac crash very nearly ruined the company.
Steam | XBL
Wow - I just had to go back and skip through the episode to that part, because for the life of me I didn't remember what you were talking about. And I only watched it on friday. I think I am getting old...
Yeah, that was hard to watch.
Yeah, to be fair
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That is a pants shittingly fast car on a small windy road and Hammond apparently has no fear of death.
Origin ID: Discgolfer27
Untappd ID: Discgolfer1981
The end of that one is pretty scary. It isn't if you don't understand the difference in design between flat water and open water boats, but if you do.. man.