Top Gear blasted for Clarkson's drinking at the wheel
LONDON - 'Top Gear' has been criticised by the BBC Trust for glamorising drink-driving when it showed presenters Jeremy Clarkson and James May drinking gin and tonic at the wheel.
The presenters were seen sipping gin and tonics in a Toyota pick-up truck during their attempt to become the first people to drive a car to the Magnetic North Pole as part of the show's Polar Special last year.
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At one point, May said to Clarkson: "Slow down while I cut the lemon".
They raced against Richard Hammond, who was making the same journey in a sled pulled by dogs.
'Top Gear''s executive producer said that they were beyond the jurisdiction of drink-driving laws in international waters and that the pair were neither drunk nor out of control at any point during the making of the programme.
Following a complaint from a viewer about the "blatant use of alcohol", the BBC Trust ruled that the scene "was not editorially justified in the context of a family show pre-watershed".
The trust's report from its editorial standards committee, said: "The committee took into account that the situation -- a trip to the Magnetic North Pole -- was far removed from the ordinary experience of viewers and that the drink was included on one occasion for entertainment purposes as a comic device to play up the relaxed travel of those in a car compared to the presenter who was travelling by sled.
"However, the committee was nonetheless concerned that, given some children might regard the presenters as role models, the scenes could be seen to glamorise the misuse of alcohol."
The trust ruled that repeats of the show should not be shown pre-watershed unless this scene was edited out.
The same viewer also complained about a scene showing a frostbitten penis but the trust said that "there was a clear editorial purpose for the use of the image in that it was used for a medical rather than a sexual purpose".
The latest complaint about Clarkson follows his acquittal for a speeding offence. He had been accused of failing to name the driver on a speeding ticket sent to him by car company Alfa Romeo.
The company said he had been loaned a car caught by a speed camera travelling at 82mph in a 50mph zone on the A40 in Ruislip, west London, last October.
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Comments
Helge Gruttke - 03/07/2008
Editorial standards committee: Get a life.
Nuts n Seeds - 03/07/2008
Always hoped I'd see the words 'Jeremy Clarkson' and 'frostbitten penis' in the same article, but never dared believe.
pixie x - 03/07/2008
Is anyone else really really bored of hearing about all these losers that complain about everything they see, hear and read within media. No wonder the government thinks we all need constant monitoring and supervision at all times! GRRRR!!! On another note, feel bad for heinz who can't do right for doing wrong. That 'kiss' was fine. Any parent who feels that they have to 'explain' what the men were doing should just explain it. What is the big deal?! they are going to have to come into contact with different lifestyle choices anyway ...and breathe.
Joseph Jones - 03/07/2008
Jeremy Clarkson, role model...What is the world coming to? The nanny state mentality of the UK gets worse by the year. They were outside of UK law, so no law was broken. And for all this crud about role models behaving properly, a society's role-models actually reflect the society that produced them rather than shape the society they exist in. So UK, if you count Top Gear presenters, BB contestants and ex-page 3 girls as celebrity role-models it just goes to show why so many young, talented, broad-minded people are leaving, never to return.
Jess Ford - 03/07/2008
Completely agree, Pixie X - you do have to wonder why people who insist on complaining about lists of things on a particular programme don't just switch the TV off and go to bed?
LeeH - 03/07/2008
"Following a complaint from a viewer"... A viewer? One lone person? Jeez, all this fuss over one loser who has nothing better to do than whinge about something so insignificant. Find me that person and I'll send them some dutch porn that should keep them away from complaining about terrestrial TV for many years!
Paul Chatwyn - 04/07/2008
Are you not all forgetting the words of the complaints comittee from Family Guy - "As we all know, 1 complaint equals 1 billion viewers". I think TV execs and the complaints comission now genuinely believe this!