Jump to content
The mkiv Supra Owners Club

The official Series 12 Top Gear thread.


jamesmark

Recommended Posts

this should be one hilarious episode.

 

:shrug:

 

What an amazing place. Knocks Malaysia and Thailand into a cocked hat. The end section with the aquatic mopeds had amazing scenery.

Stunning place!!! and funny episode...

Finished watching it and still hated it, CARS DAM IT CARS!

Didn't really think much of that as a TG episode, but the tourism promotion for Vietnam did the trick!

 

:iagree:

 

For comedic value not a patch on the USA and Botswana eps.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 235
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Maybe, the guys should also do a travel program, they were much better than Judith Charmers...

 

I can see where you are coming from with that idea, would work for me as I can't stand travel shows, Sarah watches them all the time and they are so boring. However something like lastnight, a travel programme with a twist.

 

As Michael has said before it is being more of a light entertainment programme.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I can see where you are coming from with that idea, would work for me as I can't stand travel shows, Sarah watches them all the time and they are so boring. However something like lastnight, a travel programme with a twist.

 

As Michael has said before it is being more of a light entertainment programme.

 

 

Travels around the world with the Top Gear team, and their daft challenges would certainly be a breath of fresh air for travel programmes IMO.

 

That episode was very funny, I thought.

 

Maybe they're being told to calm down the exposure of super-expensive, super-cars for more affordable transport in these troubled times, or they were just having a laugh.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I just finished watching that and loved it. :D

 

I see the Mirror have "caught Clarkson out in a lie" when he said he couldn't ride a bike because he was photographed on a Vespa the month before filming in Vietnam.

And here was me thinking that TG wasn't scripted weeks in advance and the guys really couldn't find cars. D'Oh! ;)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

And here was me thinking that TG wasn't scripted weeks in advance and the guys really couldn't find cars. D'Oh! ;)

 

That's one of the reasons I can't watch an episode all the way through. Every time some supposedly spontaneous incident happens, for me, the idea that it is scripted beforehand takes all the humour out of it.

 

"OK, James...now you've just discovered the prank they've played on your car...look outraged...now look resigned....great...cut!"

 

The over-scripting of the characters and the escapades has turned it into a situation comedy, in my opinion.

 

I caught the start of some crappy 'reality' programme about Paris Hilton and at least they had a disclaimer to the effect that 'some scenes have been scripted for entertaiment purposes".

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I was just looking for the article about Clarkson on the Vespa, when I found somethingabout the Tesla. Now, I certainly got the impression that the Tesla ran out of charge on the track and that they had to push it back into the hangar.

 

Except the Tesla didn't run out of charge. According to Tesla, it didn't go below 20%. No one knows where Clarkson got the '53 mile range' with heavy usage from. Clarkson's claims that they 'never once said that it had run out of charge' is pure dissembling, because the impression that it had gone flat was exactly what the piece deliberately implied.

 

It's one thing to give a strong opinion on a car, but quite another to deliberately mislead viewers about it.

 

NY Times report

 

Telegraph article

 

During a comparison drive, he storms past the Elise in a straight, amid tire squeals and music, and says in a voice-over: “This car really was then shaping up to be something wonderful, but then…”

 

His voice trails off. We see a shot of Mr. Clarkson, appearing confused, looking down to the gas pedal. The tire squeals and music dissipate as the car slows to a stop on the test track.

 

Tara Davies, a spokeswoman for the BBC, said: “We never claim that the car ran out of charge. The voice-over says, ‘If it does run out it’s not a quick job to charge it up again.”

 

But the sequence of images leading up to the car being pushed into the warehouse is powerful. And the segment ends with Mr. Clarkson walking alone down an empty track under a dark sky with no car in sight:

 

“So with the light fading, we had no cars at all,” he says.

 

He concludes: “What we have here then is an astonishing technical achievement: the first electric car that you might actually want to buy. It’s just a shame that in the real world, it doesn’t seem to work.” Fade to black.

 

Ms. Davies, the BBC spokeswoman, said several times in an interview that “Top Gear” was “an entertainment program.”

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Except the Tesla didn't run out of charge. According to Tesla, it didn't go below 20%. No one knows where Clarkson got the '53 mile range' with heavy usage from.

 

Well yes Top Gear is scripted, but I highly doubt the Tesla would still have a 200+ mile range being ragged around a race track all day. 53 miles sounds quite reasonable to me.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well yes Top Gear is scripted, but I highly doubt the Tesla would still have a 200+ mile range being ragged around a race track all day. 53 miles sounds quite reasonable to me.

 

In the articles, Tesla's representative are quite up front about the range of the car decreasing with heavy use. The problem is that Clarkson came up with this figure based on...no one seems to know. 53 miles sounds reasonable - but so might 70 miles, or 42 miles.

 

When queried about it, Clarkson said that it was a fact and can't be disputed. However, if the figure doesn't come from Tesla, and Top Gear never ran the car below 20% charge (as the computer logs show), again, where does that come from - a back of the envelope extrapolation?

 

To me, it's a big deal if a programme with a huge following presents unverifed information about a product as a fact. And it's a bigger deal if they deliberately create the impression that a car ran out of charge and died on the track, when in fact nothing of the sort happened.

 

Tesla must be fuming, especially as TG have refused to correct the deception for the American broadcast. To me, that's incredible arrogance.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

In the articles, Tesla's representative are quite up front about the range of the car decreasing with heavy use. The problem is that Clarkson came up with this figure based on...no one seems to know. 53 miles sounds reasonable - but so might 70 miles, or 42 miles.

 

When queried about it, Clarkson said that it was a fact and can't be disputed. However, if the figure doesn't come from Tesla, and Top Gear never ran the car below 20% charge (as the computer logs show), again, where does that come from - a back of the envelope extrapolation?

 

To me, it's a big deal if a programme with a huge following presents unverifed information about a product as a fact. And it's a bigger deal if they deliberately create the impression that a car ran out of charge and died on the track, when in fact nothing of the sort happened.

 

Tesla must be fuming, especially as TG have refused to correct the deception for the American broadcast. To me, that's incredible arrogance.

 

I completely agree with you here. It IS misleading to viewers, and the way the scene is constructed leads us to belive the car died. Much like in a movie if someone turns a gun on themselves, it fades to black and we hear a gunshot, we are lead to belive the person shot themself.

They could have drove the car until it DID die, or say that it was almost out of juice, and then give some other reason why the car wouldn't work in our world and move on, but 'lying' about it is just pointless.

 

I see Top Gear falling away from what it should be. Yeh it's entertaining, but what's the point if they mislead their audience and script everything? What's wrong with 3 blokes having a laugh and talking about cars, telling us the facts and figures with a little humour and personal opinions thrown in? Why push it so that it's almost not even factual anymore?? And now they've had their budget slashed it seems... Top Gear, I predict, will soon be dead! :(

 

Also, it's made out that Clarkson came up with these figures... But I'm sure he was just saying what he'd been told to say. After all, he's just the presenter, not the script writter or researcher, or even the director!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Also, it's made out that Clarkson came up with these figures... But I'm sure he was just saying what he'd been told to say. After all, he's just the presenter, not the script writter or researcher, or even the director!

 

I suspect he does have something to do with the writing side of things. All 3 of them are journalists after all.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Does all this really matter???

 

You either like watching it or you dont.

 

I certainly wouldnt buy a car going by their reviews and see it just as fun.

 

A little too much is being read into all this me thinks.

 

I think having their budget slashed could be a good thing as it might bring back more reviews of cars instead of the challanges.

 

Just my opinion of course.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue. You might also be interested in our Guidelines, Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.