Editing Top Gear (2002 TV series)/Series 5/Episode 6

From GearKnob Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search

Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.

The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then publish the changes below to finish undoing the edit.

Latest revision Your text
Line 26: Line 26:
|next = [[Top Gear (2002 TV series/Series 5/Episode 7|Series 5, Episode 7]]
|next = [[Top Gear (2002 TV series/Series 5/Episode 7|Series 5, Episode 7]]
|airdate =
|airdate =
{{FlagUK}} 5th December, 2004<br>
UK: 5th December, 2004<br>
{{FlagUS}} 30th August, 2010
US: 30th August, 2010
| airdates    =
| airdates    =
{{BBCW}} 19th January, 2005<br>
WO: 19th January, 2005<br>
{{FlagPL}} 22nd January, 2005<br>
PL: 22nd January, 2005<br>
{{FlagNL}} 22nd April, 2005<br>
NL: 22nd April, 2005<br>
{{FlagRU}} 1st May, 2005<br>
RU: 1st May, 2005<br>
{{FlagCA}} 4th December, 2005<br>
CA: 4th December, 2005<br>
{{FlagAU}} 16th January, 2006<br>
AU: 16th January, 2006<br>
{{BBCP}} 26th March, 2006<br>
PR: 26th March, 2006<br>
{{FlagBE}} 7th October, 2006<br>
BE: 7th October, 2006<br>
{{FlagFI}} 10th June, 2007<br>
FI: 10th June, 2007<br>
{{FlagHU}} 17th August, 2009<br>
HU: 17th August, 2009<br>
{{FlagEE}} 26th August, 2009<br>
EE: 26th August, 2009<br>
{{FlagCZ}} 12th September, 2009<br>
CZ: 12th September, 2009<br>
{{FlagES}} 5th July, 2010<br>
ES: 5th July, 2010<br>
{{FlagDE}} 8th May, 2011<br>
DE: 8th May, 2011<br>
{{FlagIT}} 4th February, 2013<br>
IT: 4th February, 2013<br>
{{FlagJP}} 27th January, 2014
JP: 27th January, 2014
''Dates may not be 100% accurate.''
''Dates may not be 100% accurate.''
}}
}}
Line 50: Line 50:
{{TG 2002 Episode|episodename=Series 5, Episode 6|airdate=5th December|year=2004|xth=sixth|series=[[Series 5]]|number=45th|number77=607th|number78=598th|prognum=21st|totprog=24|resolution=576i|aspratio=16:9 Widescreen|tvorstream=British television|channel=BBC Two}} {{TG 2002 Episode Starring|hosta=Jeremy Clarkson|hostb=Richard Hammond|hostc=James May|stig=[[The Stig#First White Stig|The Stig]]|star=[[Cliff Richard]]|waswere=was}}, in addition to blind army veteran and land speed record holder [[Billy Baxter]] also taking the [[Reasonably-Priced Car#Suzuki Liana|Suzuki Liana]] around the [[Top Gear Test Track|track]], with Clarkson as co-driver.
{{TG 2002 Episode|episodename=Series 5, Episode 6|airdate=5th December|year=2004|xth=sixth|series=[[Series 5]]|number=45th|number77=607th|number78=598th|prognum=21st|totprog=24|resolution=576i|aspratio=16:9 Widescreen|tvorstream=British television|channel=BBC Two}} {{TG 2002 Episode Starring|hosta=Jeremy Clarkson|hostb=Richard Hammond|hostc=James May|stig=[[The Stig#First White Stig|The Stig]]|star=[[Cliff Richard]]|waswere=was}}, in addition to blind army veteran and land speed record holder [[Billy Baxter]] also taking the [[Reasonably-Priced Car#Suzuki Liana|Suzuki Liana]] around the [[Top Gear Test Track|track]], with Clarkson as co-driver.


This episode is perhaps best-known for featuring ''Top Gear''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s second {{Cheap Challenge}}, the [[Top Gear (2002 TV series)/Series 5/Episode 6/£1,500 Porsche Challenge|£1,500 Porsche Challenge]], where the three presenters were tasked with finding a used rear-wheel drive [[Porsche]] for £1,500 or less and completing a series of challenges with them.
This episode is perhaps best-known for featuring ''Top Gear''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s second {{Cheap Challenge}}, the [[Top Gear (2002 TV series)/Series 5/Episode 6/£1500 Porsche Challenge|£1500 Porsche Challenge]], where the three presenters were tasked with finding a used rear-wheel drive [[Porsche]] for £1,500 or less and completing a series of challenges with them.


==Synopsis==
==Synopsis==
Line 60: Line 60:
Series 5, Episode 6 begins with an unusually low, panning shot which switches from a floor-mounted TV displaying the ''Top Gear'' logo to a clearing in the audience, before stopping in front of a silver Volkswagen Golf GTI. Jeremy Clarkson then states how the car revolutionised the hot hatchback and how he voted for the Golf GTI in the ''Car of the Century'' poll held in 1999, before cutting to the episode's first film.
Series 5, Episode 6 begins with an unusually low, panning shot which switches from a floor-mounted TV displaying the ''Top Gear'' logo to a clearing in the audience, before stopping in front of a silver Volkswagen Golf GTI. Jeremy Clarkson then states how the car revolutionised the hot hatchback and how he voted for the Golf GTI in the ''Car of the Century'' poll held in 1999, before cutting to the episode's first film.


===Volkswagen Golf GTI===
==Volkswagen Golf GTI==
{{Unabridged Article|articlename=Volkswagen Golf GTI Film}}
{{Unabridged Article|articlename=Volkswagen Golf GTI Film}}
Clarkson briefly overviews the history of the GTI marque up to 2004, evaluating how the car's performance deteriorated to the point it was outmatched by a diesel saloon from the same automotive conglomerate. He then decides to drive the new model, to see if anything has changed. Much to Clarkson's delight, he is impressed by the new car's increased performance and claims that the car has regained the "puppy dog enthusiasm" that was missing in the previous model. He also complements the car's practicality and its unassuming appearance, meaning that it can serve equally well as a family runabout in addition to its hot hatch credentials. Jeremy recommends the car over 4x4s, which at this point were the dominant choice for family transport.
Clarkson briefly overviews the history of the GTI marque up to 2004, evaluating how the car's performance deteriorated to the point it was outmatched by a diesel saloon from the same automotive conglomerate. He then decides to drive the new model, to see if anything has changed. Much to Clarkson's delight, he is impressed by the new car's increased performance and recommends it as a family car that will apparently help save the world.


Back in the studio, Richard Hammond gives a brief overview of the Golf's rivals. Each of them were driven around the Top Gear Test Track by The Stig, and their lap times placed on a special, smaller lap time board for hot hatchbacks. The Golf GTI was then taken for a lap.
Back in the studio, Richard Hammond gives a brief overview of the Golf's rivals. Each of them were driven around the Top Gear Test Track by The Stig, and their lap times placed on a special, smaller lap time board for hot hatchbacks.


{| class="wikitable" style="width: 40%;"
To the surprise of both hosts, the car fails to beat its older, rebadged brother (the SEAT Léon Cupra) and the aging Honda Civic Type-R.
! style="width: 5%"|Position
! style="width: 25%"|Car
! style="width: 10%"|Time
! style="width: 15%"|Track Conditions
|- align="center"
|1
|Honda Civic Type-R
|1:32.8
|Dry
|- align="center"
|2
|SEAT Léon Cupra
|1:32.9
|Dry
|- align="center"
|3
|'''Volkswagen Golf GTI'''
|1:33.7
|Dry
|- align="center"
|4
|Renault Mégane Sport 225
|1:34.0
|Dry
|- align="center"
|5
|MINI Cooper S Works
|1:34.2
|Dry
|}
To the surprise of both hosts, the car fails to beat its older, rebadged brother (the SEAT Léon Cupra) and the aging Honda Civic Type-R. Hammond also notes that the Type-R is cheaper than the Golf, but Clarkson then remarks that Honda's brand image is not as highly regarded as that as Volkswagen's, and that on the whole, the Golf is the better package, deeming the car a "sensation". The camera then switches to James May, who begins reading out [[{{ROOTPAGENAME}}/The News|The News]] for that week.


===The News===
==The News==
{{Unabridged Article|articlename=The News (1st December, 2004)}}
{{Unabridged Article|articlename=The News (1st December, 2004)}}
Continuing on from the theme of hot hatches, May opens The News by unveiling the upcoming hot hatch version of the then-new Vauxhall Astra, the VXR. Though initially impressed by the sub-£20,000 price tag and the promised output of 240 brake horsepower, Clarkson derides the interior's appearance as resembling the "inside of a man's wash bag". Richard Hammond then talks about how DaimlerChrysler CEO Jürgen E. Schrempp had his armour-plated Mercedes-Benz S-Class limousine worth £500,000 stolen<ref>[https://nypost.com/2004/11/23/theft-proof-benz-stolen/ New York Post - Theft-Proof Benz Stolen.]</ref> in 20 minutes during a meeting in Stuttgart, before Jeremy Clarkson follows this up by mentioning that ex-KGB operatives have apparently been stealing<ref>[https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/the-good-the-bad-and-the-ugly-of-2004-5bzg3m86cz9 The Times - The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly of 2004.]</ref> German car industry secrets during constant system breaches that they have been powerless to stop. Clarkson then proceeds to praise Vauxhall's announcement of a new Tigra powered by a 1.3 litre diesel engine, much to the bemusement of his co-hosts, before May diverts the conversation that the New Economics Foundation wishes to impose health warnings on 4x4s, similar to cigarettes. This, along with the prediction that by 2020 the 4x4 will become the world's third biggest killer, greatly annoys Clarkson. Lastly, Hammond shows the audience the [[Lada Kalina]], the company's first true attempt at competing with contemporary brands, albeit against the [[Fiat Brava]] and [[Toyota Starlet]], two cars which were out of production by 2004.
===£1,500 Porsche Challenge, Part 1===
{{Unabridged Article|articlename=£1,500 Porsche Challenge}}
Recently, the producers gave the three hosts £1,500. They were then instructed to purchase a Porsche with the money that they were given. Once they had done this, they were to meet up in London's Exchange Square to see which of the trio had got the best deal. Hammond was the first to arrive, paying just £750 for his 1981 Porsche 924. May was next, with his 944, before Clarkson arrived in a V8-powered 928. Each of the trio complement and disparage each other's choices, before being handed a challenge envelope; veteran cars can go from London to Brighton, but can they? The distance is 70 miles, and predictably, it isn't long before Clarkson's 928 overheats for the first time. Springing various leaks, the car has 15 litres of water dumped into the engine bay before it sets off again, with James having to pull over after just 2 more miles due to a puncture. As May's tyre is repaired, Clarkson's 928 begins to leak fuel. After six hours, the cars are still in South London, and as May's windscreen trim peels off, Clarkson's coolant warning light comes on, forcing the trio to stop again. Another hour later, they are finally on the motorway, where the cars begin to find their feet. The only car which has yet to have a fault at this point is Hammond's 924, and after another hour, the pair of Hammond and May make it to Brighton Pier, where they are handed the second challenge.
This subsequent envelope stipulates that the trio are to modify their cars using the money left over from their initial purchase. Clarkson eventually arrives at sundown on the back of an AA lorry, where he is briefed on the task at hand only to be dismayed once he realises he's spent his entire budget on his car. Back in the studio, Hammond allocates points based on their performance thus far, before Clarkson introduces the episode's guest star.
===Star in a Reasonably-Priced Car (Cliff Richard)===
{{Unabridged Article|articlename=SIARPC (Cliff Richard)}}
The first of the two guest stars appearing in this episode is Britain's best-selling recording artist, Harry Webb, who is perhaps better known by his stage name, Cliff Richard. At the age of "44" (in reality, 64 at the time), Cliff looks surprisingly young for his age, and is currently aiming for his sixth consecutive decade where he achieved a #1 hit, in a year which his calendar outsold<ref>[https://www.thefreelibrary.com/Battle+of+Beckham:+Becks+takes+on+Sir+Cliff+in+calendar+wars-a0109007514 The Free Library - Becks takes on Sir Cliff.]</ref> David Beckham's. After some small talk, Cliff talks about his car history, who started off with a [[Sunbeam Alpine]] before aiming for a more Americanised persona, choosing his subsequent cars in an according fashion. As a noted Christian, Clarkson is interested in Cliff's input in regards to May's theory about adopting a "Christian" driving stance when driving through London, to which Cliff agrees.
Out on the track, Cliff's most terrifying experience was during the preliminary laps in which he was driven around by The Stig, with concerns over the Liana's small, budget tyres. Cliff opines that stars should be given around a week to practice, before Clarkson shows the audience a brief clip of Cliff spinning out at [[Top Gear Test Track#Corners#Bacharach Bend|the second-to-last corner]] during a practice lap. Cliff's actual lap is clean and non-eventful, and is complimented by Clarkson.
{| class="wikitable" style="width: 675px;"
! style="width: 75px"|Position
! style="width: 320px"|Star
! style="width: 115px"|Time
! style="width: 165px"|Track Conditions
|- align="center"
|11
|[[Martin Clunes]]
|1:50
|Dry
|- align="center"
|12
|Jeremy Clarkson
|1:50
|Dry
|- align="center"
|13
|'''Cliff Richard'''
|1:50
|Dry
|- align="center"
|14
|[[Lionel Richie]]
|1:50
|Dry
|- align="center"
|15
|[[Patrick Stewart]]
|1:50
|Dry
|}
Cliff places a respectable 13th overall, his lap time of 1:50 equalling several other stars, including host Jeremy Clarkson.
===Restoration Rip-off===
{{Main Article|name=Top Gear (2002 TV series)/Series 5/Restoration Rip-off}}
This week, the candidate is an old [[Mini]] with a more illustrious history than most. Irish rally driver [[Paddy Hopkirk]] would drive another such Mini, prepared by John Cooper, to victory at the 1964 Monte-Carlo Rally, but it's this car, 407 ARX, with which he demonstrated the Mini's racing potential a year earlier. The car's current owner possesses the car's basic chassis and bodyshell, along with a majority of the period-correct parts the car requires, but it needs the extra push from the public so that it may live once again. Every tuned Mini since its creation, up to and including the "Cooper" trim Minis manufactured by BMW, owe their existence to this one car.
===Star in a Reasonably-Priced Car (Billy Baxter)===
{{Unabridged Article|articlename=SIARPC (Billy Baxter)}}
At this point in time, ''Top Gear'' is often inundated by letters from nobodies who wish to have a go around the track in the Suzuki Liana. Typically, these letters are dismissed without any further action. However, this particular letter comes from a man named [[Billy Baxter]], a former soldier who was blinded<ref>[https://www.telegraph.co.uk/motoring/motorbikes/2723932/Blindness-is-no-barrier-for-Billy-the-Whizz.html The Telegraph - Blindness is no barrier for Billy the Whizz.]</ref> in 1997 by a rare eye disease, and who aims to beat [[Richard Whiteley]], the slowest driver on the board. With Jeremy Clarkson sat in the passenger seat, relaying the necessary visual information, the pair were able to successfully navigate the car around the track at speed.
{| class="wikitable" style="width: 675px;"
! style="width: 75px"|Position
! style="width: 320px"|Star
! style="width: 115px"|Time
! style="width: 165px"|Track Conditions
|- align="center"
|42
|[[Johnny Vegas]]
|1:58.6
|Dry
|- align="center"
|43
|[[Harry Enfield]]
|2:01
|Dry
|- align="center"
|44
|'''Billy Baxter'''
|2:02
|Dry
|- align="center"
|45
|[[Terry Wogan]]
|2:03.4
|Dry
|- align="center"
|46
|Richard Whiteley
|2:06
|Dry
|}
Amazingly, despite his disability, Baxter was able to get the Liana around the track 4 seconds quicker than Whiteley, also beating Terry Wogan in the process.
===£1,500 Porsche Challenge, Part 2===
After their troubled drive to Brighton, the three Porsches from earlier in the show were taken to the airfield and modified by each of the three presenters. Obviously, with Clarkson having spent all his money on his car, the task of modifying his car was more of a challenge, but all three presenters altered their cars and placed them under tarps, ready for adjudication from members of Porsche Club GB. James is the first to unveil his car, and although it looks identical on the surface, save for some bathroom sealant around the windscreen and some DIY fixtures on the interior, May spent the majority of his money cleaning up the engine to a professional standard, which draws some initial criticism from the other two presenters before they realise the judge would probably have a more concours-oriented criteria. Hammond is next to reveal his car, giving his 924 a sporting paint job reminiscent of Gulf Porsches from the past. He also replaced the gear knob with a chrome skull, added some track-oriented performance upgrades, a faux carbon-fibre hood with air intake, and stuck a "Turbo" sticker on the tailgate, despite not adding a turbocharger to the car. Clarkson, on his extremely limited budget, instead decided to coat his entire car in what was tantamount to "blackboard paint" as described by Hammond, who then proceeds to write Clarkson's name on the driver's door in white chalk.
The judges are somewhat impressed by May's engine despite having their reservations over his Tippexed switches and handyman fixes, mock Clarkson for his paintjob (which he describes as mimicking the SR-71 Blackbird and is somehow "better") and critique Richard's gear knob as "vulgar", to which Hammond counters as "bling". As the judges make their decision, May is handed another Golden Envelope from which he reads a new set of instructions, stating that The Stig is to take all three cars for a lap around the test track, with each presenting earning a point for every second under 1:35, and losing a point for every second under. The Stig struggles to start Clarkson's 928, which pulls away slowly in a cloud of smoke. The car eventually builds up quite the momentum, and is able to set a 1:45. May's car sets a 1:43, but pays a hefty price by spraying brown sludge all over his clean, polished engine. Hammond's car is slower than the latter, fitting in-between the other two. This is followed by the next challenge, 'Elevenses', where the presenters were tasked with creating the longest tyre streaks.
# Richard Hammond (Porsche 924) - '''35 feet'''
# James May (Porsche 944) - '''31 feet'''
# Jeremy Clarkson (Porsche 928) - '''1 inch'''
Due to the latter's car lacking the necessary torque to perform smoking starts, Clarkson decides to do doughnuts instead, which he claims are "Tibetan" elevens. He measures the resultant streaks to a total of 42 yards, or 126 feet, but is summarily dismissed. A producer hands the trio a final envelope instructing the three to sell their car in the name of profit. Back in the studio, each of the presenters' performances are evaluated and calculated within a scoring table.
{| class=wikitable style="text-align: center;"
|+ The Cheap Porsche Challenge
|-
! Host !! Bonnet Up !! Fuel !! Lonely Hearts !! First Total !! Elevenses !! Lap !! Concours !! Second Total !! Selling !! Final Total
|-
| '''JC''' || -35 || -90 || 10 || -115 || 0 || -10 || 3 || -122 || 300 || 178
|-
| '''JM''' || -5 || 0 || 15 || 10 || 15 || -8 || 10 || 27 || -100 || -73
|-
| '''RH''' || 0 || 10 || 0 || 10 || 20 || -9 || 8 || 29 || -1500 || -1471
|}
Despite gaining the upper hand, Hammond is unable to sell his car, thus going from a slight lead of 29 points down to a major deficit of -1471 points, thoroughly putting him out of the running. May sells his car for £1400, gaining £500 from his initial purchase, but still losing a further £100, demoting him to -73 points. Going into the final round as the underdog, Clarkson decides to bend the rules in much the same way as he did earlier by advertising his "Lonely Hearts" advertisements towards homosexuals, by selling his car for spare parts, netting himself £1200, and then having the engine and seats turned into functional pieces of furniture valued at a further £600. This not only results in a surplus of 300 points, but means Clarkson is the only host to finish the challenge with a positive points account of 178, and means he is the overall winner.


==Reception==
==Reception==
Line 221: Line 79:


{{Unabridged|episodename=Series 5, Episode 6}}
{{Unabridged|episodename=Series 5, Episode 6}}
{{Airing History}}
<big>'''United Kingdom'''</big><br>
Series 5, Episode 6 would premiere on [[BBC/BBC Two|BBC Two]] on the night of the 5th December, 2004. Unlike later episodes of ''Top Gear'', the episode would not be repeated following its initial airing, though it would be edited down into a 45 minute version by [[Red Bee Media]] for usage on [[UKTV]] channels such as [[UKTV/UKTV People|UKTV People]] and [[UKTV/Dave#UKTV G2|UKTV G2]], where the episode began airing approximately 2 weeks after its premiere on BBC Two.
<big>'''Worldwide'''</big><br>
Internationally, the episode would first premiere on [[BBC/BBC World|BBC World]] on the 19th January 2005, more than a month following its UK release. It would then be shown in Poland on [[TVN Turbo]] 3 days later in a longer form, before premiering in the Netherlands on [[Veronica (TV channel)|Veronica]] exactly three months after that. Russia would air the episode in its own cut-down form on [[NTV]] from May 2005, before [[BBC/BBC Canada|BBC Canada]] began showing the episode in Canada that December. Australia would air the episode early the following year, before [[BBC/BBC Prime|BBC Prime]] gave the full-length episode its worldwide premiere that March. The episode would be reshown in a handful of countries thereafter, but would not premiere in many Baltic and Balkan nations such as the Czech Republic, Hungary and Estonia until as late as mid-2009, a full four and a half years after the episode was first shown in the United Kingdom. Italy wouldn't show the episode on its local version of DMAX until 2013 (though the country had previously aired the episode on BBC Prime), and Japan wouldn't air the episode on [[Fuji TV]] until January 2014, almost a full decade after its original UK premiere.


==References==
==References==
Please note that all contributions to GearKnob Wiki are considered to be released under the GNU Free Documentation License 1.3 or later (see GearKnob Wiki:Copyrights for details). If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly and redistributed at will, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource. Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel Editing help (opens in new window)