In 2008, Top Gear presenter bought the farm and apparently launched what could become Clarkson’s farm on the BBC, his employer at that time.
In an interview that recently went viral in Tiktok, the former Grand Tour star said: “I launched the agricultural idea to the BBC when I bought the farm in 2008. And all that were worried was where it would have been in May, where there was the product.
“Because at that time, everything that was worried was:” You can’t do anything in London, “and I said we will do it in London,” Oh no, no “(they said).
@Wethreblokes Clarkson offered its agricultural show to the BBC? #Topgear #Grandtour #Clarksonsfarm ♬ original Sound – We Three Buys
“And they didn’t want him because the production office would be in London.
“And I asked them two or three times, but would they say: ‘Can’t you get to the Office of Production in Scotland’, and I would say no, not really, that would be idiot?
“And then, well, so the BBC was never in charge of some, well, I don’t know what they were trying to achieve.”
Clarkson’s fans were glad to hear that the BBC ended up making that decision.
One said: “This is evidence that everything happens for a reason. This program was destined to be in the BBC and I am as slippery as I do not see the BBC for reasons that we all know.”
Another replied: “The best of the best! The big wigs of the BBC would have ruined it with their interference in the same way in ruins.”
Someone else simply said: “His loss is Amazon’s gain.”
Recommended reading:
Clarkson’s Farm Series 4
Prime Video has revealed that the globally popular program will return to the transmission service next month, one year after the third season.
After presenting Motoring Shows Top Gear and Grand Tour, along with Richard Hammond and James May, Clarkson changed their high -speed lifestyle to the Cotswolds field.
Taking place in Diddly Squat Farm in Chadlington, Oxfordshire, the show follows the 64 -year -old man while finding the tests and tribulations of agricultural life.