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Desert Island Discs

Jeremy Clarkson

Desert Island Discs

BBC

Music, Society & Culture, Personal Journals, Music Commentary

4.314.3K Ratings

🗓️ 16 November 2003

⏱️ 33 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week Sue Lawley's castaway is the motoring journalist and motor-mouth Jeremy Clarkson. He came from a comfortable background - his mother was a teacher and his father a travelling salesman. But his parents had greater ambitions for their son and wanted to send him to public school. Their determination led his mother to set up a business making Paddington Bear toys, and the proceeds funded Jeremy's place at Repton School. However, he was a far from ideal pupil and says he was 'asked to leave' apparently for inappropriate behaviour including drinking, smoking and seducing girls. He left school with no A-levels and started work as a trainee reporter on the Rotherham Advertiser. But the local news diet was not enough of a challenge and, in the middle of an assignment to a vegetable and produce show, he left the paper to seek his fortune in London, as a freelance motoring writer.

He ended up presenting Top Gear for the BBC and stayed on the programme for nine years, kick-starting it into a brash, opinionated motor show with a large and loyal fan base. He has indulged his love of speed and risk-taking through programmes including Extreme Machines and Speed. He's hosted a chat-show, Clarkson, and, more recently, his razor-sharp tongue has turned on our fellow Europeans with Meet the Neighbours. But, although his public image is as a brash, opinionated and sexist boor, he claims that he's been misrepresented - he says he's always been a bit of a mother's boy: his mother describes him as a family man who has a softer side that the public never sees. Married to his agent-cum-manager Francie, the couple have three children and two homes.

[Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs]

Favourite track: Time by Pink Floyd Book: Photograph album Luxury: Jet ski

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello, I'm Krestey Young, and this is a podcast from the Desert Island Discs archive.

0:05.0

For rights reasons, we've had to shorten the music.

0:08.0

The program was originally broadcast in 2003, and the presenter was Sue Lawley. My castaway this week is a journalist and a television presenter.

0:27.0

He's done for boys toys what Pavarotti did for opera.

0:31.0

His image is that of the likable lout, his panchant for fast cars and his conservative

0:35.7

approach to dress, sex and race are tempered by wit and irony, with very engaging results.

0:42.1

He was expelled from public school, got a job on a

0:44.2

local newspaper, started writing for car magazines and graduated from that to

0:49.0

become presenter of the BBC's Top Gear program, which he transformed from an ordinary magazine programme

0:55.2

into an icon of popular entertainment. He's done other television series too and he writes columns

1:00.9

in two national newspapers.

1:03.0

Laughing is the most important thing, he says, you haven't got time to be stuck in traffic jams

1:08.2

or to be sad.

1:09.8

He is Jeremy Clarkson.

1:11.8

But no matter how fast your car, car Jeremy if you're stuck in a

1:15.0

traffic jam which most of us are in Britain the whole time what is the point of

1:18.0

having a fast car you can't move you can't do naught to 60 in two seconds

1:22.4

well you can't when youaught to 60 in two seconds.

1:22.6

Well you can't when you're stuck in a traffic jam you're absolutely right but eventually the

1:26.0

traffic jam will end.

1:27.4

But what is the real point of having a car that can do whatever it is, 170 miles an I mean it just more than that mine does

1:34.9

over 200 but do you ever do it?

...

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