Episode 2 Top Gear


Episode 2

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Tonight, I play tennis.

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Richard points at a minibus.

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And James shakes hands with two men.

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APPLAUSE AND CHEERING

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Thank you so much. Hello! Hello, everybody, and welcome.

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Thank you very much. Thank you. Now...

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Now, a few years ago,

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bosses at a Cheshire-based engineering company called BAC

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decided they'd like to make a car.

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Now, because they're from Cheshire, I assumed it would be made

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from onyx and have bull's-eye glass in the windows

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and then door mirrors made out of Wayne Rooney's ears. But no.

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They decided it should have

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the four-cylinder engine from a Ford people van,

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the gearbox from a Formula 3 racing car

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and that it should be upholstered

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in the same stain-resistant and waterproof material

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that they use to line furniture in old people's homes.

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And then they turned their attention to how it should look.

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Most car designers, for their inspiration,

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go to big cats and bats and jet fighters.

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But the men from Cheshire decided they didn't want any of that.

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They decided to take their inspiration from this.

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MUSIC: "All Is Full Of Love" by Bjork

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So, the styling of an Icelandic robot from a Bjork pop video,

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the gearbox from a racing car and the engine from a van.

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Bring them all together, and this is the result.

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It's called the Mono, and it's amazing.

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The engine may be from a Ford people carrier,

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but it's been fettled by Cosworth, so now it produces 280 horsepower.

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And fitting a 280 horsepower heart

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in a car which weighs just half a tonne is...

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Well, the effects are going to be profound.

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I can see why they lined it

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with material designed to resist trouser accidents,

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because my bladder's gone!

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It's completely gone! I've wet myself.

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0 to 60 takes just 2.8 seconds.

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And in theory, the top speed is 170.

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But in reality, it isn't,

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because the Mono has the same problem as the Ariel Atom.

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No windscreen.

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At 70 miles an hour, your face starts to move about.

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And then when you get to 80, it starts to come off.

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'At 90, you're forced to accept that really, you need a helmet.

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'With a lid on, you can start to appreciate

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'just how clever this car is.'

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First of all, I fit. I mean, only just, but I do actually fit.

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And even though it has

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Formula One-style pushrod suspension,

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the ride is sublime. You could almost call it comfortable.

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Although, that said, at high revs,

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everything starts to tingle and vibrate.

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I don't want to go into too many details, but let me put it this way.

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If I were a girl, I'd like it very much.

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Strangely, even cross-eyed women

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can drive this car legally on the road.

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But realistically, it's built for the track.

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So, let's see what's what.

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It's not really about straight-line speed.

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It doesn't actually feel that fast.

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And when you get used to it, it's not that scary, either.

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If I'm honest, it's not really like driving, this.

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It's like conducting an orchestra

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of parts that know exactly what they're doing.

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They're very well rehearsed.

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There goes the French horns, and here are the violins.

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VIOLIN MUSIC PLAYS

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The brakes, they're good. Gearbox is fantastic.

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It really is an absolutely instant change. Bang, bang, bang, ready.

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'And there's more.'

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Because all the heavy stuff, the engine,

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the gearbox and the driver, is all in a line,

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low down in the middle of the car,

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it has the same centre of gravity as a worm.

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Couple that to the F1 suspension and the specially-made tyres,

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and the cornering speeds are simply immense.

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To demonstrate how immense,

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we've set up a radar trap on the follow-through,

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and coming through it now, as fast as possible, is a Peugeot 208.

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83.5 miles an hour.

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'Then it was the turn of a BMW M3.'

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Ooh, now, look at that. 90.25 miles an hour.

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'After a Nissan GT-R had a go, we unleashed the Mono.'

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See my point?

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It is very fast, then, and it's fun.

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But what about reliability,

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traditionally not a strong point

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for small-volume British sports cars?

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The first time I drove a Mono, it set fire to itself.

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The second time, the engine went wonky,

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and the third time, it broke down before it had even left the factory.

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So I thought of it, really, as another typically British,

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badly-executed good idea.

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But since all those calamities,

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they've had 12 months to work on the design and the detailing,

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and I have to say, it looks not just very well thought out,

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but absolutely beautifully made.

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And it's not just the detailing that's beautiful, either.

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When you stand back,

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that's one of the most exciting shapes I've ever seen.

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The Mono is the nicest thing to come out of Cheshire since the cheese.

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But it does cost £102,000, and that,

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for a twice-a-year toy, is a lot.

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In many ways, then, this is a bit like an iPad,

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because that's not cheap either, and you certainly don't need one.

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But you want one,

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because it's such a lovely...thing.

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-It is.

-It's gorgeous.

-I know.

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And beautifully made. It's a piece of jewellery.

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But...

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-What?

-£102,000?

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I know, it is expensive,

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especially when you bear in mind

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all the other brilliant track-day cars you can buy for a lot less,

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the KTM, Radical, Ariel Atom.

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-Morgan 3 Wheeler.

-No, I said brilliant.

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All right, the Caterham R500.

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That's a brilliant track-day car, and that's half the price of this.

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Yes, and that is enormously fast. But will this be faster?

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To find out, we shall hand it over to our tame racing driver.

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Some say that he breaks into people's houses at night

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and leaves two mysterious extra keys in a kitchen drawer...

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And that as a result of buying Pirelli condoms this week,

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he now has 17 children.

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All we know is, he's called The Stig!

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Stig snaps to attention, and he's off,

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flicking off the line like a flea,

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even though the start-finish line was damp.

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Hopefully, the rest of the track's dry.

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Flying into the first corner, he came in very hot there,

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but sorted it out. No problem at all.

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No stereo, of course,

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just the sound of that Cosworth-tuned engine

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as he zips round Chicago absolutely rock-solid.

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Now, Hammerhead.

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What will this reveal about the mid-engine balance?

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No drama. That is properly nailed down.

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But look, a well-orchestrated drift on the way out!

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High revs now. The vibrations will be stimulating his lady parts.

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Follow-through and yes, he actually changed up through there.

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Stig is brave, even on the brink of a crisis.

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Controlling it beautifully into the second-to-last corner.

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Screams up to Gambon, racing gearbox whining.

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Slides it through, and across the line.

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Now...here we have the Caterham R500,

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which did it in 1.17.9, yeah?

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BAC Mono...

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1.14.3.

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No way!

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-Wow!

-The second-fastest car we've ever had!

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That is something else.

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Tremendous. Excellent.

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And now, now it is time for the news,

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and it's good news,

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because the Dacia Duster has been named

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budget 4x4 tow car of the year.

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-Great. Now, I've bought a bicycle.

-I thought you were looking a bit trim.

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Well, do you know, it's not really the weight that I've lost,

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-but my core, what's it called?

-Core strength.

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Are we on Loose Women or something?

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No, James, as you well know,

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we have for many years been on Last Of The Summer Gear.

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Since I bought my bicycle, what's driving me mad

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is the amount of people who come and say "You need to get lycra shorts now".

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Well, you do, because it's more comfortable and it stops chafing.

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No, Hammond, you don't.

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People who wear lycra shorts go,

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"Look, it's difficult and dangerous, and I need special..." You don't.

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In fact, the only thing I do wear as a concession that I make

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is this T-shirt, OK? This is

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the back of it as I'm riding along.

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"Motorists, thank you for letting me use your roads."

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LAUGHTER

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Because I think that's polite.

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I don't believe you have a bicycle. What kind of bicycle is it?

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I don't know, they're all the same.

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Is it a mountain bike, is it a racer?

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When you went to the shop, you walked through

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the door of a bicycle shop and the man went, "Oh, my God".

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And you went "I'd like..."?

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I just said, "Can I have the one nearest to the door?"

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He was trying to say, "You can have this one for £10,000..."

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I said "No, I just want a bicycle." 500 quid.

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This bicycle he sold you,

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-is the front wheel a lot bigger than the back wheel?

-No.

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It's just a bike. They're all the same.

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Has it got two little ones at the back?

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No, it hasn't got stabilisers.

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I don't believe you, and I think this has become a new mystery.

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It's like a yeti.

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So if maybe somebody's seen him,

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if you have seen Jeremy on his bicycle, write to us, please,

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at "Help, I've Burst From Laughing", Top Gear, Wood Lane, wherever.

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I don't believe you.

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Now, who saw the British Grand Prix last weekend?

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AUDIENCE: Yes!

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You may have noticed there were a lot of blowouts, OK,

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and I must say, I feel rather sorry for Pirelli.

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For the last few years,

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their tyres have been really good and grippy and lasted too long,

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so the organisers said to Pirelli,

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"Can you design a tyre that's a bit rubbish?"

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So they did, and now everyone's saying,

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"Your tyres are a bit rubbish".

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So how rubbish is too rubbish?

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How much do you think Pirelli spent developing those tyres?

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It's got to be...100 quid?

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It's going to be millions.

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Yeah, millions of pounds developing a tyre,

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and all they get in response is people going into tyre warehouses

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and saying "I need four new tyres for my car, just not Pirellis".

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-Right.

-And then I make silly jokes when introducing the Stig about it.

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It's gone wrong! It backfired.

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This is exactly why I don't get Formula One,

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because surely it should be the pinnacle of automotive technology.

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Pirelli should make a tyre

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as good as it is possible to make a tyre.

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They should have active aerodynamics,

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they should have traction control, the most sophisticated in the world,

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ABS, invisibility cloaks, all that.

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They should be allowed to have anything they want.

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The problem is, the organisers are trying to make Formula One

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a level playing field to make it a drivers' championship. And it isn't.

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You could put Sebastian Vettel in a Marussia

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-and he's going to come last.

-Exactly.

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Let's just make it a championship for car-makers,

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and then let the designers have completely free rein.

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You know what I'd do?

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I'd make a car that was the exact width of the track.

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LAUGHTER

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-How clever's that?

-That's interesting.

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That would only work if you qualified at the front.

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No, you wouldn't have to,

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because it would be a Top Fuel-type dragster, OK?

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So it'd be very poor around the corners

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and I'd qualify last,

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but I would accelerate really quickly past them all

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before the first corner, and then it would expand.

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-Oh, it grows.

-I've just won the championship.

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-Jeremy, what you're proposing is Wacky Races.

-I know!

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Anyway, let's move on.

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There has been a whole rash of new supercars launched recently.

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-This is the one I'm interested in, this Ferrari.

-Ooh.

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Indeed, ooh. It has an 800 horsepower V12.

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It has a KERS system like a Formula One car.

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It's going to cost around a million quid,

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but I think they've got a bit of a problem with the name,

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because they've called it LaFerrari.

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Sorry, what's wrong with that? I mean, it is.

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No, but that's the model name.

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LaFerrari means "the Ferrari", so that's the Ferrari the Ferrari.

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Oh, yeah. The supercar I really want is by Pagani.

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They've got a new car out, except they sort of haven't,

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because it's yet another version

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of the Zonda, their old car. There it is.

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-And what's new about that?

-Not a lot, really, apart from the price.

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-It's now £2.3 million.

-What?

-Yeah.

-For a second-hand car?

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Yeah.

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You know, the one I'm most interested in,

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this is the McLaren P1, because this is just shy of a million quid,

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so it's almost a bargain. And it's got a 903 horsepower engine. 903.

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What fascinates me is,

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there's a wing that comes out of the back of it

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which has got DRS on it.

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You know what DRS is, with the... In Formula One, it opens.

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If you've got 903 horsepower, when would you ever think,

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"Right, I need more straight-line speed.

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"I'll deploy the DRS wing"?

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Well, it could happen.

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"That post office van is getting a shift on. I'll deploy DRS."

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No, you will need that, your DRS,

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when you come across me in the Ferrari the Ferrari,

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because, I hadn't read this properly,

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it has got 800 horsepower in the engine, but of course,

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it's got a KERS system.

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When you deploy it and use the electric bit as well,

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ahem, 963 horsepower.

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-And is that all going through the rear wheels?

-Yes, it is.

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Hang on, that's broadly the same amount of power

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you get from a Bugatti,

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which is almost exactly twice as heavy

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as the Ferrari the Ferrari, and it has four-wheel-drive.

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-That's going to be "an handful".

-Yes.

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-Exciting, though. I want a go in it.

-I really want to go in the McLaren.

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That would be an epic test.

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You in that Ferrari, you in the McLaren, me in that Zonda.

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Anybody want to see that?

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AUDIENCE: Yeah!

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-So do I.

-Let's see if we can put that together.

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But you know how people often come up to us and say,

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"When will Top Gear end?"

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About three minutes after us three have set off.

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Yeah, in a big fireball.

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Does anybody want to see THAT?

0:17:280:17:30

AUDIENCE: Yes!

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Right, let's move on, because it is now 11 years we've been on air,

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and in all that time,

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there is one vehicle that we have never reviewed, which is a surprise,

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because it's the most popular,

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important and used vehicle in the world.

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I'm talking, of course, about the taxi,

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the lifeblood of people movement wherever you go in the world.

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And Britain's contribution to this effort needs no introduction.

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It's a staple of any London street scene.

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There are currently around 19,000 black cabs

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moving people across the capital,

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and this vast fleet covers almost half a billion miles a year.

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There's another. They are literally everywhere.

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London life has caused the black cab

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to evolve into an amazingly efficient vehicle.

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Its famous tiny turning circle, for example,

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is the result of the need to tackle the roundabout outside the Savoy.

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Then there's the black cab driver.

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No cabbie in the world has to go through

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an ordeal as fearsome as The Knowledge,

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which requires that all London taxi drivers memorise 25,000 streets.

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The test is so tough, in fact,

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that cabbies develop an extra large hippocampus,

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which is the area of the brain associated with memory, navigation

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and views on immigration.

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Put this combination of man and machine together,

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and what you have is indisputable.

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What you have is, without doubt, obviously, unquestionably,

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no arguments, the best taxi in the world.

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Or is it?

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The thing is, a New York taxi driver

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would probably disagree with that statement.

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He'd say "Yeah, you may have more space in the back,

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"but your London taxi is slow and the ride is terrible,

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"whereas my yellow taxi has a big V8 and proper suspension."

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But then a cabbie in Delhi would say,

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"My Indian taxi is built to last longer".

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Basically, every cabbie everywhere in the world

0:19:510:19:54

could argue for one reason or another that their taxi is the best.

0:19:540:19:58

Which means, if we really want to find out

0:19:580:20:01

which is the greatest taxi in the world,

0:20:010:20:03

there is only one way to do it,

0:20:030:20:05

and that is, as ever, in the prism of the furnace

0:20:050:20:08

through the looking glass of the crucible of motorsport.

0:20:080:20:13

That means a race, and the venue for our global showdown

0:20:130:20:18

will be Lydden Hill in Kent,

0:20:180:20:20

famous throughout the motorsport world

0:20:200:20:24

for being the only race track with its own cab office.

0:20:240:20:28

That plywood cab office looks perilously close to the track.

0:20:330:20:38

I sincerely hope no harm befalls it.

0:20:380:20:40

Anyway, let's now meet our grid of taxis from around the world.

0:20:400:20:44

Representing Great Britain, we have a 1997 Fairway driver which,

0:20:450:20:50

with a mere 320,000 miles on the clock, is barely run in.

0:20:500:20:54

From Mexico, a 1970 Volkswagen Beetle.

0:20:590:21:03

50,000 of these things ply their trade in Mexico City alone.

0:21:030:21:08

From America, one of the titans of the taxi world,

0:21:090:21:13

a New York yellow cab.

0:21:130:21:15

This particular one is a Ford Crown Victoria, rear-wheel drive,

0:21:160:21:20

4.6 litre V8 and in its day, good for 130.

0:21:200:21:23

That's one to worry about.

0:21:230:21:26

From India, the Hindustan Ambassador, very much the old-timer here.

0:21:270:21:33

The Ambassador has been India's favourite taxi

0:21:330:21:36

for an incredible 55 years.

0:21:360:21:38

Next, from South Africa, we have this. A Toyota HiAce.

0:21:390:21:45

Whereas in most countries,

0:21:450:21:46

they will be rooting for their local taxi,

0:21:460:21:49

you can expect the South Africans to be booing,

0:21:490:21:52

because these things are hated and feared for their wild aggression.

0:21:520:21:57

Moving on to this, from Germany. It's the Mercedes E-Class.

0:21:580:22:03

Neat, smart and fastidiously maintained.

0:22:030:22:07

And finally, from Russia, a Stretched Lincoln Town Car.

0:22:090:22:13

Now, that might not look like a cab, but it is.

0:22:140:22:17

In Russia, rich oligarchs hail limos just like this to get around.

0:22:180:22:22

So if you think we've included a powerful rear-wheel drive

0:22:240:22:28

30-foot long car just in the hope that it will cause chaos,

0:22:280:22:31

get that thought out of your head.

0:22:310:22:33

So there we are, then - the world's most iconic taxis,

0:22:330:22:37

each poised and ready to defend the honour of its country.

0:22:370:22:41

Now, the cab drivers.

0:22:420:22:44

And naturally, because of the magnitude of what's at stake here,

0:22:440:22:48

each country has sent its very best.

0:22:480:22:51

But they all must have got lost or something, so instead,

0:22:510:22:54

we have the usual ragtag bunch of racing drivers.

0:22:540:22:57

For Russia, touring car legend Anthony Reid.

0:22:580:23:02

For South Africa, touring car legend Matt Jackson.

0:23:040:23:07

For Germany, touring car legend Matt Neal.

0:23:090:23:13

For India, touring car legend Gordon Shedden.

0:23:150:23:18

For Mexico, touring car legend Paul O'Neill.

0:23:200:23:23

For America, touring car legend Tom Chilton.

0:23:250:23:31

And in the black cab, me.

0:23:310:23:33

So here we are, ready to plunge once more into the abyss

0:23:330:23:37

of motorsport-based scientific research.

0:23:370:23:40

I should point out that it's the custom for Indian taxi drivers

0:23:470:23:51

to carry a figurine of their chosen God on the dashboard of their car.

0:23:510:23:55

I think our guy may have overdone it a bit.

0:23:550:23:58

ENGINES REV, HORNS BEEP

0:24:010:24:03

The guys are getting impatient. That's good. Five-second board.

0:24:050:24:09

Yeah!

0:24:160:24:18

The South African is through.

0:24:200:24:21

New York taxi alongside, German...everybody is through.

0:24:220:24:27

Absolutely everybody has passed me.

0:24:270:24:30

But this is a marathon, not a sprint.

0:24:310:24:34

'As ever, I'd issued strict instructions

0:24:360:24:38

'for the drivers to avoid body contact.

0:24:380:24:41

'Clearly, the South African hadn't got the memo.'

0:24:410:24:44

The South African is completely insane, largely out of control.

0:24:480:24:52

Huge slide from the limo! That's incredible.

0:24:590:25:02

'But while the Russian limo may have been struggling in the corners,

0:25:040:25:08

'I had issues everywhere.'

0:25:080:25:09

Yeah. I'm quite badly outpaced on the hill,

0:25:140:25:18

on the straights and in the turns.

0:25:180:25:21

This is all I've got.

0:25:220:25:24

'However, I had a plan.'

0:25:240:25:26

When it comes to cunning, remember, black cab drivers do The Knowledge.

0:25:270:25:32

I know where all the shortcuts are. I'll nip down here, love.

0:25:320:25:37

Thanks to my super tight turning circle, I can make this.

0:25:370:25:41

That's me back in the race.

0:25:410:25:42

I'd say more than back in, I am leading it.

0:25:420:25:45

'Sadly, my fellow cabbies weren't impressed by this tactic

0:25:460:25:50

'and when they caught up with me,

0:25:500:25:52

'they were quick to show their displeasure.'

0:25:520:25:55

He's just ramming me! That is just...oh, you're joking.

0:25:550:25:59

Yeah. Some good-natured jostling from the other nations.

0:26:050:26:10

'With the race now at the halfway point, no clear leader was emerging,

0:26:170:26:21

'which meant inevitably that the drivers began to turn up the heat.'

0:26:210:26:25

There's been a crash, but we're OK.

0:26:340:26:36

'Fed up of the South African's hooliganism,

0:26:390:26:42

'the limo gave him a taste of his own medicine.'

0:26:420:26:45

Oh! Whoa! Getting a push now.

0:26:530:26:56

This is by far the fastest I have been.

0:26:560:27:00

Oh, Jesus. Sorry about that. Oh, God, it's the Mexican, isn't it?

0:27:010:27:06

It's going to be bad.

0:27:060:27:09

'With just two laps to go, everybody was still running. But then...'

0:27:110:27:15

Oh, the limo takes himself off entirely.

0:27:210:27:26

Oh, my word! That is Russia taken out.

0:27:260:27:30

In fact, America has taken itself out as well.

0:27:320:27:35

Right, still in play, we have the Beetle...

0:27:380:27:41

The Mercedes is holding up well.

0:27:440:27:45

It's really sustained very little damage.

0:27:450:27:48

'But the marauding South African had other ideas.'

0:27:480:27:51

Oh! Bad luck.

0:27:550:27:58

'Now into the final lap,

0:27:590:28:01

'and desperate to beat the remaining runners, I took another sneaky turn.'

0:28:010:28:06

Ha-ha!

0:28:080:28:09

There is the finish line.

0:28:140:28:15

I think I can win this.

0:28:190:28:21

I think I can win... Oh, no, no!

0:28:240:28:27

It's entirely possible that I am a bit last.

0:28:310:28:34

'Nevertheless, the crucible of motorsport

0:28:360:28:40

'had once more given us the answer.

0:28:400:28:43

'As it turns out, the greatest taxi in the world...

0:28:430:28:46

'is the Hindustan Ambassador'.

0:28:480:28:50

Well done, mate. Excellent.

0:28:550:28:59

Excellent. Good science.

0:28:590:29:02

But may I ask, Hammond, an important question?

0:29:030:29:06

How many people were killed in the making of that film?

0:29:060:29:11

-Actually, only three.

-Three. See, that's more than I was hoping for.

0:29:110:29:15

But with science, there often has to be sacrifice.

0:29:150:29:18

But you've decided, have you not, after subjecting those cars

0:29:180:29:22

to the white heat of the crucible of motorsport,

0:29:220:29:24

that the best taxi in the world

0:29:240:29:26

-started out in life as a Morris Oxford.

-Yeah, and there it is.

0:29:260:29:30

That would explain why the company that makes the London black cab

0:29:300:29:33

-has gone bust.

-You say that, but they're back.

0:29:330:29:36

They've been rescued. They're going to start production again very soon.

0:29:360:29:39

Pointlessly, as it turns out.

0:29:390:29:41

Yes, absolutely.

0:29:410:29:42

So, let's put a star in our brand-new reasonably-priced car.

0:29:420:29:46

Now, you may be aware that later on this year,

0:29:460:29:49

we're going to be treated to a film called Rush.

0:29:490:29:51

It's about the epic battle in 1976

0:29:510:29:53

for the Formula One world championship

0:29:530:29:56

between James Hunt and Niki Lauda,

0:29:560:29:58

and my guest tonight is the man who directed it.

0:29:580:30:01

Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Ron Howard!

0:30:010:30:04

CHEERING

0:30:040:30:06

Ron Howard is here.

0:30:060:30:09

How are you? He's here!

0:30:090:30:12

The man who made Rush. Have a seat.

0:30:160:30:18

Now, Ron, over the years,

0:30:190:30:22

your films have been nominated for 29 Oscars

0:30:220:30:26

and I think you've won two yourself.

0:30:260:30:29

And now you've made a historical film

0:30:290:30:32

about a sport that most of the world doesn't really watch.

0:30:320:30:35

So why did you think, "Yeah, Hunt and Lauda"?

0:30:350:30:39

Great story. Great human interest story,

0:30:390:30:42

and I knew just enough about Formula One to just know how cool it was.

0:30:420:30:46

And I felt like the combination of those characters,

0:30:460:30:49

the kind of human drama,

0:30:490:30:51

the world of Formula One, particularly in the '70s,

0:30:510:30:55

was a chance to offer something fresh to audiences.

0:30:550:30:57

It was a movie I wanted to see.

0:30:570:30:59

I was nervous about it because I thought

0:30:590:31:01

oh, no, they'll make it too nerdy

0:31:010:31:03

and everyone will say Formula One's boring,

0:31:030:31:06

or they'll do a Hollywood number of "I love speed!"

0:31:060:31:08

and it will all be set in NASCAR

0:31:080:31:10

to make it easy for the Americans to understand.

0:31:100:31:13

And yet, it's neither of those things.

0:31:130:31:17

It is genuinely a film that takes you back to the '70s,

0:31:170:31:20

when motor racing was bloody dangerous.

0:31:200:31:23

You weren't the only one who was nervous.

0:31:230:31:25

You certainly want the fans to feel the sport's respected,

0:31:250:31:28

but you also need to make a movie that works on a lot of levels

0:31:280:31:32

for a lot of people.

0:31:320:31:33

I had that opportunity with Apollo 13,

0:31:330:31:36

and it's one of the films I enjoyed making most.

0:31:360:31:38

And I've got to tell you, Rush was right up there.

0:31:380:31:41

I had a blast.

0:31:410:31:42

We've got a clip for those of you who want to see what it looks like.

0:31:420:31:46

We'll show it for you now, because it is quite something.

0:31:460:31:49

There's a lie that all drivers tell themselves.

0:31:510:31:53

"Death is something that happens to other people."

0:31:530:31:57

What kind of person does a job like this? Each year, two of us die.

0:31:570:32:01

I accept every time I get in my car

0:32:020:32:04

that there's a 20% chance I could die.

0:32:040:32:07

Being driven round at 170 mph? This thing's a bomb on wheels.

0:32:070:32:10

-I'm quicker than all of you.

-Then let's race.

0:32:100:32:13

I'm a world champion on the verge to become world champion again.

0:32:230:32:27

I could beat this guy. Trust me.

0:32:270:32:29

The closer you are to death, the more alive you feel.

0:32:340:32:37

This lot are going to wet themselves.

0:32:440:32:46

In the film, you show Niki Lauda, warts and all.

0:32:460:32:52

I had no idea he was like that, this OCD, very straight guy.

0:32:520:32:56

How did he react when he saw the finished product?

0:32:560:32:59

When he saw it, he was moved by it,

0:32:590:33:02

and I think it was because he never really had a perspective

0:33:020:33:06

on that period around the accident.

0:33:060:33:08

First of all, he couldn't remember much of it.

0:33:080:33:11

Secondly, what he does remember was all about the anger that people were

0:33:110:33:15

writing him off, thought he had died.

0:33:150:33:17

He could hear that. And also the myopic drive to get back in the car.

0:33:170:33:21

He was so single-minded that he blanked everything else out

0:33:210:33:25

and when he saw this he began to realise what other

0:33:250:33:28

people around him, Marlene, his wife then, in particular,

0:33:280:33:32

what they were going through, and a more human side of it.

0:33:320:33:35

and I think it was emotional for him to deal with.

0:33:350:33:37

Then of course you've got James Hunt

0:33:370:33:39

as the complete counterbalance to that.

0:33:390:33:41

We've got a picture of James Hunt which we keep on our office wall.

0:33:410:33:45

This just sums him up. His pop-riveted car.

0:33:450:33:47

He's thinking, "When I've finished this cigarette

0:33:470:33:49

"and this can of beer, you, my dear, are next."

0:33:490:33:52

You just don't see this today. It is one of the tragedies.

0:33:540:33:57

You can't see Nico Rosberg posing.

0:33:570:33:58

"I would like to thank my watch manufacturer

0:33:580:34:01

"and my hat manufacturer and the people who made my oil."

0:34:010:34:03

That's what I really like about it.

0:34:030:34:05

There are two guys, who bowed to no-one.

0:34:050:34:07

There was no Yoda guiding them to their higher purpose.

0:34:070:34:12

These were guys who defined themselves on their own terms,

0:34:120:34:15

very different terms, and they would bear the scars

0:34:150:34:21

of those decisions, but they also could certainly claim the triumphs.

0:34:210:34:25

I'm sure everybody in the room here... We move off Rush.

0:34:250:34:28

I'm sure everybody in the room here is looking at you thinking,

0:34:280:34:32

everyone over 40 that is, thinking that is a familiar face,

0:34:320:34:35

because a lot of people don't realise that you were in Happy Days.

0:34:350:34:39

You are Richie Cunningham.

0:34:390:34:41

I was him.

0:34:410:34:43

CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

0:34:430:34:45

It's one of those things I think people find hard to equate.

0:34:490:34:51

Here's this amazing film director, but you were,

0:34:510:34:54

so you really did obviously switch into directing and I was just

0:34:540:34:57

making a list of the better-known ones that you've directed and...

0:34:570:35:00

This is extraordinary.

0:35:000:35:02

It's Splash, Cocoon, Apollo 13, Da Vinci Code, Beautiful Mind,

0:35:020:35:04

Frost/Nixon, Angels & Demons,

0:35:040:35:06

Backdraft, Parenthood - that's very funny - Ransom.

0:35:060:35:10

I'm just thinking, "Hang on a minute, he did Happy Days and all

0:35:100:35:14

"that. I do a car show and I'm flat-out." How do you find the time?

0:35:140:35:19

The simple answer is I enjoy what I'm doing, so I don't need a hobby.

0:35:190:35:23

I love this.

0:35:230:35:24

Having been on a show like Happy Days, you sort of are doing

0:35:240:35:27

the same character over and over

0:35:270:35:28

and when I realised I had a chance to be a director I thought,

0:35:280:35:32

"I want to do as many diverse things as I possibly can."

0:35:320:35:35

So I was renting 16mm cameras,

0:35:350:35:37

making my own little independent movies.

0:35:370:35:40

Eventually doing my first movie, which was a car movie,

0:35:400:35:42

-Grand Theft Auto.

-Of course.

-Car crash comedy.

0:35:420:35:45

I did that during one of the hiatuses from Happy Days.

0:35:450:35:49

-Moving onto personal life if I may, four children?

-Yes.

0:35:490:35:53

-Their middle names interest me.

-Oh, yeah, I guess they might.

0:35:530:35:57

-You've got one called, middle name of Dallas.

-Yes.

0:35:570:36:00

-Which I believe was named...

-After the city.

-Where...?

0:36:000:36:03

She was conceived. Yes.

0:36:030:36:05

Then you've got twins, both of whom have the middle name Carlyle.

0:36:050:36:09

Yes. In New York there is a lovely hotel called The Carlyle...

0:36:090:36:14

-OK.

-And...

0:36:140:36:15

LAUGHTER

0:36:150:36:17

And we sorted that one out, kind of backtracked, and thought,

0:36:170:36:22

-"That's a very beautiful middle name, let's keep the tradition."

-OK.

0:36:220:36:26

-The youngest son is called Cross.

-Cross. Reed Cross Howard.

0:36:260:36:30

We sort of found out we were pregnant again. Great.

0:36:300:36:34

"All right, well let's sort through it.

0:36:340:36:36

"I wonder if we can figure it out.

0:36:360:36:38

"Volvo is not much of a middle name."

0:36:400:36:42

LAUGHTER

0:36:420:36:43

-And...

-Yeah, Volvo doesn't work.

0:36:450:36:50

But there is a road near us called Lower Cross Road.

0:36:500:36:52

Which is where the Volvo was.

0:36:520:36:55

LAUGHTER

0:36:550:36:57

-We have a good marriage.

-Evidently.

-Richard Hammond does the same.

0:36:570:37:01

I was talking to his kids the other day.

0:37:010:37:03

They're called Bus Stop and By The Bins.

0:37:030:37:05

LAUGHTER

0:37:050:37:08

Now, you are the first person to properly drive our brand-new

0:37:090:37:12

reasonably-priced car.

0:37:120:37:14

-Yes.

-What did you think of it?

0:37:140:37:16

First of all I will say the right-hand drive

0:37:160:37:18

and the gearshift on the left was a concern to me.

0:37:180:37:21

The correct way round.

0:37:210:37:23

It was... It definitely threw me.

0:37:250:37:27

And I also implore, before you get into all this, I implore anyone who

0:37:270:37:32

has any interest in seeing my movie Rush, I didn't drive in the movie.

0:37:320:37:37

Real drivers drove in the movie.

0:37:390:37:41

Right, there's your excuses out of the way.

0:37:410:37:43

Now who'd like to see Ron's lap?

0:37:430:37:46

AUDIENCE: Yes.

0:37:460:37:47

-Let's have a look.

-Oh, Lord.

0:37:470:37:49

Let's have a look.

0:37:490:37:52

Look at that mighty machine leaping off the line.

0:37:520:37:56

-AFFECTED ACCENT:

-You've got to stick it, Ron.

0:37:560:37:58

You've got to really stick it.

0:37:580:37:59

Niki was giving me a little coaching the other day.

0:37:590:38:02

That's Niki Lauda's explanation.

0:38:020:38:04

"You've got to stick it. You've got to really stick it."

0:38:040:38:06

-Holy smokes.

-Is that sticking it?

0:38:060:38:10

-I don't know!

-Not using all the track.

0:38:100:38:13

Smooth.

0:38:130:38:14

-Right.

-I don't know.

0:38:160:38:18

That car is gripping quite well there.

0:38:180:38:20

This is the one that always destroys me.

0:38:220:38:25

The fearsome Hammerhead.

0:38:250:38:27

I look like I'm being destroyed, don't I?

0:38:270:38:29

This is looking good. That's very good. Very tidy.

0:38:290:38:33

Listen to that engine(!)

0:38:330:38:35

-Wow, what a machine this is(!)

-Concentrate here a little bit.

0:38:370:38:42

See, I'm taking it seriously.

0:38:420:38:43

You were. That is a man who is concentrating.

0:38:430:38:46

Tyres tortured as he goes through the follow-through. Nicely done.

0:38:460:38:51

Nicely cut. Let's have a look at the second-to-last corner.

0:38:510:38:54

This is the bit normally catch... Oh! Bang on.

0:38:540:38:59

And then on into Gambon and look at that grip. That's bloody good.

0:38:590:39:05

There we are across the line.

0:39:050:39:07

Wow.

0:39:070:39:09

-Thank you.

-So, Ron, not many times on the board.

0:39:140:39:21

-Where do you think you've come?

-Lord.

0:39:210:39:24

It wasn't quite as ugly as I imagined it would be.

0:39:240:39:26

My director's eye on the outside had it looking pretty bad.

0:39:260:39:29

It looked smooth. Not sure about fast, but it looked smooth.

0:39:290:39:33

Where do we think?

0:39:330:39:35

I'd like to think I'm not flat on the bottom.

0:39:350:39:39

That would be Mike Rutherford out of Genesis.

0:39:390:39:41

I suspect I'm right down there.

0:39:410:39:44

-That's where I think.

-Ron Howard, you did it in 1...

0:39:440:39:47

-Right.

-So that's good.

-OK.

0:39:470:39:50

-..40.

-Oh, OK, not the very bottom.

-So that's good.

-OK.

0:39:500:39:56

The next bit's not so good.

0:39:570:39:59

..9.9.

0:39:590:40:04

-OK.

-You're not the bottom.

0:40:050:40:09

So what this means is we've finally found something

0:40:120:40:19

you can't do.

0:40:190:40:21

Good at directing, brilliant in Happy Days,

0:40:210:40:25

a charming human being, but utterly crap at driving.

0:40:250:40:29

-Fair enough.

-Ladies and gentlemen, Ron Howard.

-Thank you.

0:40:290:40:32

CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

0:40:320:40:35

Now you may have seen that a few months ago

0:40:440:40:48

the famous BBC TV Centre closed down.

0:40:480:40:52

When it did, the airwaves were swamped with emotional

0:40:520:40:54

tributes from the giants of television.

0:40:540:40:57

Ronnie Corbett, David Attenborough, Michael Parkinson.

0:40:570:41:00

But nothing from Top Gear. Until now.

0:41:000:41:04

This is the building in question.

0:41:060:41:08

For 53 years, it was the engine room for some of the most iconic

0:41:120:41:16

television in the world.

0:41:160:41:18

But now, today, this is all that's left.

0:41:200:41:23

And that is great news

0:41:270:41:30

because what we've realised is that once you take away all

0:41:300:41:33

the people and the tea trolley and you've locked all the doors

0:41:330:41:36

this abandoned building makes an excellent venue for a race.

0:41:360:41:41

You have these curving corridors that could be long, fast

0:41:410:41:45

sweepers on a top F1 track.

0:41:450:41:47

You have these beautiful offices full of interesting obstacles

0:41:480:41:51

and technical turns.

0:41:510:41:53

And you have all this outdoor area where you can literally

0:41:550:41:58

get some air.

0:41:580:42:00

All in all, a unique and exciting racing circuit I think you'll agree.

0:42:020:42:06

And so to the racers.

0:42:060:42:08

Now, unfortunately this building isn't very suitable for cars,

0:42:080:42:12

as indeed Jeremy proved a while back with the Peel P50.

0:42:120:42:16

So today we'll be racing these two. Of which there are three.

0:42:160:42:22

We have Dougie Lampkin MBE,

0:42:220:42:25

a trials rider with 16 World Titles to his name.

0:42:250:42:29

And he's up against Tim Shieff and Paul Joseph,

0:42:310:42:35

two of the finest Free Runners on the planet.

0:42:350:42:38

They may not have an engine between them

0:42:380:42:41

but apparently they can run along corridors and scamper over

0:42:410:42:44

balconies and fire escapes like a couple of randy squirrels.

0:42:440:42:49

So with the introductions over, let's look at the route

0:42:490:42:52

of the race itself.

0:42:520:42:53

Here we have a birds' eye view of Television Centre.

0:42:540:42:57

It's actually only a model.

0:42:570:42:59

And you will see it's shaped a little bit like a question mark.

0:42:590:43:02

So what I'm proposing is we start here, which is

0:43:020:43:05

roughly where we're standing now,

0:43:050:43:06

enter the building at the base of the question mark

0:43:060:43:09

and then race all the way through it to finish here

0:43:090:43:12

which is up there.

0:43:120:43:15

'As an excited crowd gathered, I positioned

0:43:180:43:21

'myself on the finish line.'

0:43:210:43:22

Are you ready? In three, two, one.

0:43:240:43:30

HORN

0:43:300:43:32

This is interesting. Dougie Lampkin has chosen to go through the door.

0:43:450:43:49

'But the youths are making their way up the outside of the building

0:43:490:43:53

'which actually isn't such a bad idea'

0:43:530:43:55

because once you're inside here, you will be completely baffled.

0:43:550:43:58

'If they stay on the outside they will have some idea

0:43:580:44:01

'of where they're going.'

0:44:010:44:02

Good thinking.

0:44:020:44:03

Right, this should allow me to get a direct feed

0:44:090:44:13

from any of the CCTV cameras around the building.

0:44:130:44:17

And there are the jumpy boys.

0:44:170:44:19

They are literally breaking news.

0:44:200:44:23

'As the youths made their way through the newsroom,

0:44:340:44:36

'Dougie was looking for a way upstairs.'

0:44:360:44:39

There is Dougie Lampkin.

0:44:420:44:44

'In the Newsnight office, the youths had found their path blocked

0:44:460:44:50

'and were having to make their way down again.'

0:44:500:44:52

'Having found himself literally in a lock-in in the BBC bar

0:45:140:45:18

'Dougie too needed to find a way back down.'

0:45:180:45:22

So he is, God knows, somewhere over in the main

0:45:300:45:34

leg of the question mark just approaching the curvy bit.

0:45:340:45:37

I've no idea who's in the lead, but it's very exciting.

0:45:400:45:43

'That, chaps, is a locked door.'

0:45:470:45:48

The Health and Safety department will have something to

0:45:530:45:55

say about that.

0:45:550:45:57

Into the studio and the Daleks still waiting

0:46:040:46:07

at the bottom of the stairs there.

0:46:070:46:09

'Amazingly even though the youths were now at the management

0:46:130:46:16

'offices on the sixth floor

0:46:160:46:18

'they were having no trouble making decisions.'

0:46:180:46:21

'Meanwhile Dougie, now completely frustrated by the maze

0:46:310:46:34

'of BBC corridors, had decided on a more direct approach.'

0:46:340:46:38

Oh.

0:46:400:46:42

And Dougie Lampkin is going onto the roof I believe.

0:46:510:46:54

I can hear a bike.

0:47:320:47:34

It's Dougie Lampkin, ladies and gentlemen!

0:47:490:47:52

What a fantastic two-wheeled tribute

0:47:520:47:54

to BBC Television Centre W12 8QT.

0:47:540:47:57

Congratulations, sir.

0:47:570:47:59

Where are the Free Runners?

0:47:590:48:01

And here they come.

0:48:010:48:03

Tim Shieff, Paul Joseph, close,

0:48:030:48:06

not quite close enough,

0:48:060:48:08

but well done anyway.

0:48:080:48:09

-Well done, great race.

-Your victor, Dougie Lampkin. How was it?

0:48:090:48:13

-I'm knackered.

-That thing's a labyrinth.

0:48:130:48:16

You know there's a lift? In that tall bit there.

0:48:160:48:19

You just go straight up to the top.

0:48:190:48:21

That was incredible. I couldn't do a single thing that those guys did.

0:48:260:48:30

I was going to do the bike. I couldn't put the helmet on.

0:48:300:48:33

The jumps were amazing.

0:48:330:48:35

I just want to say that when I made that film

0:48:350:48:39

Television Centre had closed, but since then, owing to the unique way

0:48:390:48:44

the BBC is run, they've decided to open it again.

0:48:440:48:47

LAUGHTER

0:48:470:48:49

-Right, so you've made a tribute film to a building that isn't shut?

-Yes.

0:48:490:48:53

-Isn't that like making an obituary for Holly Willoughby?

-Yes.

0:48:550:48:58

But imagine how pleased you'd be

0:48:580:49:00

when you found out she was still alive.

0:49:000:49:02

-That's a point.

-Chaps, may I interrupt?

0:49:020:49:05

Because I much enjoyed your smashing-up-the-taxi film

0:49:050:49:08

and your race between the motorcyclist

0:49:080:49:10

and the two pedestrians, but I'm afraid we have to get serious now.

0:49:100:49:14

-Because we've had a letter.

-Oh, no(!)

-It's from...

0:49:140:49:18

Well, it's from a mealy-mouthed, small-minded idiot.

0:49:180:49:20

And it says, "Dear Jeremy Clarkson, because Britain is so crowded

0:49:220:49:26

"and there's so much traffic, there's no point owning a Ferrari

0:49:260:49:29

"and therefore no point road testing them on your programme."

0:49:290:49:33

Well, now I disagree, Mr Small-minded Idiot.

0:49:350:49:38

Because there are plenty of places in Britain

0:49:380:49:41

that aren't crowded at all.

0:49:410:49:42

This is Hertfordshire.

0:49:510:49:53

It's just 40 miles from London and it's motoring nirvana.

0:49:530:49:58

Mmm! We have everything we need.

0:50:020:50:05

Huge scenery, swooping road, no traffic.

0:50:050:50:09

The Holy Trinity for anyone whose communion wine comes with

0:50:090:50:13

an octane rating.

0:50:130:50:14

Can't enjoy a Ferrari in Britain? Oh, yes, you can.

0:50:150:50:19

But can you enjoy THIS one?

0:50:210:50:24

It's called the F12.

0:50:300:50:32

It costs £240,000 and thanks to a 730 horsepower V12 it's

0:50:320:50:38

the most powerful road-going Ferrari ever made.

0:50:380:50:42

It's almost as powerful, in fact, as Fernando Alonso's Formula 1 racer.

0:50:440:50:49

Of course, at this point, people with mouths of meal would say,

0:50:570:51:01

"What's the point of all that when we've got speed limits?"

0:51:010:51:04

You don't have to use all of it all the time.

0:51:060:51:09

In a town, you can sit back, turn on the radio,

0:51:090:51:13

put the suspension in bumpy road mode to make everything nice

0:51:130:51:17

and comfy, set the gearbox in automatic,

0:51:170:51:19

the air conditioning just so,

0:51:190:51:21

and then you can drive along quite happily at 20 miles an hour.

0:51:210:51:24

Easy. 'It's not even especially big.'

0:51:260:51:29

I'm not saying this is tiny,

0:51:310:51:34

but it's not preposterous. You don't go through every gap like that.

0:51:340:51:37

So this car works in Letchworth just like any other car.

0:51:390:51:43

But when the built-up area ends, it's not like any other car at all.

0:51:430:51:50

Wow. Wow, this is fast.

0:51:580:52:00

Ferrari say it will go from 0 to 60 in 3.1 seconds.

0:52:130:52:18

And that flat-out, it will be doing 211 miles an hour.

0:52:180:52:22

And it's not just the massive engine which makes it all so savage.

0:52:230:52:28

Unlike the old 599, this has a double clutch gearbox,

0:52:300:52:34

so gear changes are immediate.

0:52:340:52:37

You build up the speed until the noise gets too much

0:52:370:52:40

and your ears are bleeding and then you change up

0:52:400:52:43

and there's no gap. How do you do that?

0:52:430:52:47

They've also fitted a more sophisticated traction

0:52:500:52:54

control system which lets you have fun without allowing you to crash.

0:52:540:52:59

But the most impressive thing is how this car manages the air.

0:53:040:53:09

These flaps down here, when the brakes are hot, they open,

0:53:130:53:16

to allow cooling air to pass on to the discs.

0:53:160:53:20

But the rest of the time, they're shut for better aerodynamics.

0:53:200:53:24

And then you have these channels on either side of the bonnet.

0:53:240:53:27

The air is funnelled along them

0:53:270:53:29

into here and out of here so it provides a boundary

0:53:290:53:33

layer of smooth air passing down the flanks of the car

0:53:330:53:36

making it more slippery.

0:53:360:53:38

There's real downforce as well.

0:53:380:53:40

At 125 miles an hour, the weight of the air

0:53:400:53:43

pressing down on the car is 19 stone.

0:53:430:53:47

That's like having half of John Prescott on the roof forcing

0:53:470:53:51

the tyres into the Tarmac, giving better grip.

0:53:510:53:54

They have done everything in the book to exploit

0:53:570:54:00

the colossal firepower.

0:54:000:54:03

And the results are mesmerising.

0:54:030:54:06

In the past, big Ferraris felt big.

0:54:110:54:15

The Testarossa, the 612, they were immense. They were fat-boy cars.

0:54:150:54:21

This isn't. This is light and nimble and sharp.

0:54:220:54:25

It's... It is spectacular.

0:54:250:54:29

I must confess though that while the car is fine,

0:54:370:54:40

I am struggling, because it is a bit frantic in here.

0:54:400:54:45

I just went airborne then.

0:54:500:54:52

You read about those early test pilots in Mach Two

0:54:570:55:00

jet fighters going to the very limits of what was possible.

0:55:000:55:05

That's what it feels like in this - like you're sort of out of control.

0:55:050:55:09

And it has incredibly fast steering, so the slightest movement

0:55:160:55:21

of the wheel causes an immediate dart one way or the other.

0:55:210:55:24

And then there's the throttle.

0:55:260:55:28

You put your foot down and you think, "Whoa, yes,"

0:55:280:55:30

and then immediately you think, "No, actually. Too scary."

0:55:300:55:34

And when life is as hectic as this, what you really

0:55:410:55:44

want are for all the controls to be conventional.

0:55:440:55:48

And they're not.

0:55:480:55:49

All the knobs and buttons for the lights and the wipers

0:55:490:55:52

and the indicators are all on the steering wheel

0:55:520:55:55

which moves about, so they're never where you left them.

0:55:550:55:58

You can't even sneeze when you're driving this car

0:55:590:56:02

because if you did... Well, they'd have to hose you off the road.

0:56:020:56:05

To try and explain what I'm on about,

0:56:090:56:11

I've come to this tennis court.

0:56:110:56:13

This is what it's like to drive an ordinary car

0:56:190:56:25

on the roads of Hertfordshire.

0:56:250:56:27

There you go, Golf GTI...

0:56:290:56:31

BMW M3, Ferrari 458. This is easy

0:56:330:56:37

and manageable

0:56:370:56:40

and I could do it all day.

0:56:400:56:43

Now let me show you what it's like to drive

0:56:430:56:50

a Ferrari F12.

0:56:500:56:52

Ugh! Ugh! Oh, in the face!

0:56:550:57:02

The Stig says, this is the only car in the world that can hold

0:57:200:57:24

a candle to the Lexus LFA.

0:57:240:57:27

He also says it's the first Ferrari he's ever driven that he

0:57:270:57:30

would actually buy -

0:57:300:57:32

if he had any concept of money, which of course he doesn't.

0:57:320:57:35

Me, though... It is brilliant,

0:57:380:57:41

but I think it would be better still if it had slower steering...

0:57:410:57:46

and it's hard for me to say this, but a bit less power.

0:57:460:57:50

Yes, you can really enjoy it in Britain,

0:57:530:57:57

but you can't really enjoy all of it.

0:57:570:58:00

CHEERING AND APPLAUSE

0:58:170:58:19

It is frantic. I'd still have an LFA.

0:58:190:58:21

The LFA is 100 grand more

0:58:210:58:23

although the options on this,

0:58:230:58:26

they do take it up to 350 as well.

0:58:260:58:28

-Hang on, hang on, hang on.

-What?

0:58:280:58:31

Did I just hear you, Jeremy Clarkson,

0:58:310:58:33

-say that you'd like "a bit less power"?

-Yes, you did.

0:58:330:58:37

Isn't that a bit like Gordon Ramsay saying, "Yes, I like this dish,

0:58:370:58:40

"but I wish it had a bit less flavour."

0:58:400:58:43

Or James May saying, "Yes, I like this, but can it be

0:58:430:58:46

"a bit less brown?"

0:58:460:58:47

No, it is like that, but it is a bombshell, which means we can end.

0:58:470:58:53

Thank you very much for watching. See you all next week. Take care.

0:58:530:58:56

Good night.

0:58:560:58:57

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