Top Gear (2002 TV series)/Series 22

From GearKnob Wiki
< Top Gear (2002 TV series)
Revision as of 21:27, 22 February 2022 by AlexGRFan97 (talk | contribs) (Series 22 page created.)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigationJump to search
Series 22 (2002 format)
Series 22: The end of an era.
Series 22: The end of an era.
Episodes 11
Originally aired 27/12/2014 - 28/06/2015
Original network BBC Two
Resolution 1080i
Aspect ratio 16:9 Widescreen
Preceded by Series 21 (2014)
Superceded by CHM Live Pilot Shorts (2015)

The twenty-second series of Top Gear premiered in the United Kingdom on the 27th December, 2014, and concluded on the 28th June, 2015, after a run of 11 episodes. The series' main host was Jeremy Clarkson, and he was accompanied by Richard Hammond, James May and The Stig as co-presenters. The series was produced at Television Centre in Wood Lane, London, and aired on BBC Two in a 60-minute studio format. Series 22 attracted an average viewership rating of 6.49 million viewers per episode, with a peak of 7.38 million viewers for Patagonia Special Part 2, and a low of 5.84 million viewers for Episode 5.

Highlights from this series include the conclusion to the set-up of the "Holy Trinity" showdown and its associated wager, a humourous retrospective on the history of French automaker Peugeot, both in and outside the world of cars, an Australian Road Trip featuring three grand tourers, and the fallout following Clarkson's dismissal from the show in March 2015.

The total number of episodes is a debated topic. AlexTGRF's unofficial count declares it to be 11, with the An Evening with Top Gear live special preceding the series' eight seasonal episodes after the two-part Patagonia Special. This means that in spite of external factors cutting the series short, Series 22 is the longest series of Top Gear in terms of length, especially if one adds the subsequent Top Gear: From A-Z two-part special narrated by John Bishop and Ralph Ineson in December 2015, as well as the second series of James May's Cars of the People, totalling in 16 episodes.