- 02 Feb 11, 18:13#237320
I came across a video of Clarkson from the mid-90s regarding a tribute to the 1949 Dodge Powerwagon pickup that was built by a Dubai oil sheik. What made it so remarkable was it was a 64:1 scale replica.
Not 1:64, 64:1. Every inch on the original Powerwagon was five feet and four inches on the replica. And it was drivable.
Yeah.
So I hunted down a copy of the entire series. It was titled "Motorworld" and ran twelve episodes total in 1995-96. Jezza's satirical bent shines through but his wit isn't so polished or biting as in his later work.
Anyway, that got me to wondering how many other series JC was the central (or indeed only) figure in. So I looked it up and found there were two others that fit that formula. I already had "Clarkson Meets the Neighbours," a 2003, 5-episode travelogue of several continental European countries in which JC seeks the truth to the stereotypes we associate with certain European nations. And the third was a 6-episode 2000 series titled "Car Years," which I have yet to watch.
All three are available through the "customary Internet resources." "Neighbours" is worth the trouble of looking up even if you're only a modest fan (unless, of course, you are a continental European).
Not 1:64, 64:1. Every inch on the original Powerwagon was five feet and four inches on the replica. And it was drivable.
Yeah.
So I hunted down a copy of the entire series. It was titled "Motorworld" and ran twelve episodes total in 1995-96. Jezza's satirical bent shines through but his wit isn't so polished or biting as in his later work.
Anyway, that got me to wondering how many other series JC was the central (or indeed only) figure in. So I looked it up and found there were two others that fit that formula. I already had "Clarkson Meets the Neighbours," a 2003, 5-episode travelogue of several continental European countries in which JC seeks the truth to the stereotypes we associate with certain European nations. And the third was a 6-episode 2000 series titled "Car Years," which I have yet to watch.
All three are available through the "customary Internet resources." "Neighbours" is worth the trouble of looking up even if you're only a modest fan (unless, of course, you are a continental European).

"I'll bet ya a hundred and five thousand dollars you go to sleep before I do."
--Dobbsie
--Dobbsie