Top Gear (2002) s27e05 Episode Script

Series 27, Episode 5

1 CHEERING AND APPLAUSE Thank you, thank you! Thank you! Hello and welcome to Top Gear, where we start on a serious note, because we need to talk about Freddie Flintoff and his problem.
LAUGHTER Standing right here, Paddy.
Right here.
That's right.
Fred's not been at Top Gear long, but already we've noticed an issue.
He appears to have no sense of fear.
Literally nothing.
The man's a medical freak.
Still here, lads, still here! So, to test if Freddie has any function left in the old self-preservation gland, the producers signed him up for one of the maddest race events of them all.
And they told me to go along as his mentor.
Did you really say "gland"? I did.
LAUGHTER I did.
Iceland.
A land of fire and.
.
.
.
ice.
A brutal, wild landscape that is home to the most brutal, wild race series of them all.
So, are you going to tell me why we're here? You're taking part in Formula Offroad.
It calls itself the most outrageous form of motorsport on the planet.
I've done extreme stuff before, Chris.
You know, I've rode a bull in a rodeo in Texas, I've done cliff diving in Acapulco, drag racing, NASCAR, professionally boxed, I've sung in a musical.
You've sung in a? OK, that does sound quite intimidating.
That is terrifying.
/ I know you've got this reputation as being a bit dangerous, you're the man that's fearless and all that.
This here is the most extreme stuff out there.
Formula Offroad is a law unto itself.
An automotive torture chamber of near vertical cliffs and punishing off-road sprints, where just finishing the right way up is considered a bonus.
Before sending Flintoff into the fray, then, first he needs some wheels.
And these were the ones he'd been given.
A custom-built chassis, mated to a 5.
7L nitrous injected V8 .
.
producing 600 hp.
But in a motorsport where cars can run to 1,000 more than that, Flintoff's car was actually .
.
beginner's spec.
Is this like the equivalent of 10 pin bowling with the rails up? You don't need all that power.
Part of me wants to style it out and say I'm so disappointed that I've not got 1,600 hp.
If I'm going to be completely honest with you, Chris Yeah .
.
I'm far more comfortable in this! So am I, someone that might have to sit in the passenger seat.
Although for the moment, Fred, I might sit it out on the sidelines and just coach you by proxy.
How's that? You not coming in? No, you're on your own.
Right, let's get you hooked up.
What's he doing? Oh, is this the real car? I don't know, he looks like he's about to drive over you! Hello.
Thank you.
"We didn't want one of you missing out on the fun today, "so, Chris, we found you a car too.
You're both competing.
" FREDDIE LAUGHS Were you in on this? No, Chris! Come on, get in the car.
/fon Look at it! Oh, man! You couldn't be left out.
Apparently not.
And because I was considered an experienced racer, not only was my car bigger, hilariously, it had been tuned up to a much livelier 900 hp.
And while I was still digesting that bit of good news, next, we had to head straight to the course walk.
You're having a laugh, aren't you? How does it get up that? The whole idea of this film was to put you in a car and to watch you roll.
Why am I doing this? Everyone expects it of you, Chris, they've seen you on the telly on Top Gear.
They just think I'm a local.
Just for the avoidance of doubt, if your car falls off that, that'll hurt.
That's just the price you pay, innit? Look, if I'm going to hurt myself, I want it to be at Tamburello or Parabolica in a Formula 1 car.
I don't want to break bad news to you, but you're never going to be a Formula 1 driver.
That ship has sailed, Chris.
One, you're not good enough.
Two, you're too old.
Yup.
Three, you're too fat.
fo I can't deny any of that, really.
But it's nice to have friends around to support you, isn't it? So, the competition ahead of us would play out over six rounds.
Working down the valley's rock and gravel walls to finish on the very wet, very muddy marshland flats.
But what that really meant was, first, we'd be straight in at the deep end, starting at the cliffs.
It's a long time, a long, long time since I've felt me beans going like this! But you know what? The one thing about nerves is, they're only bad because everyone tells you they're bad.
They make you feel alive! And with the wait finally over, it was time to give it a go.
Do not let me down, son! Come on, Freddie lad.
Right, here we go.
As soon as you feel the rise, let's go.
Come on, Freddie! Jesus, Flintoff! Argh! First round, rolled it! Yeah, well good.
I've never been more apprehensive about any motorsport in my life.
I don't want to be doing this, really.
Jeez! Well, nice try.
You had a go.
Yeah! Just went Yeah.
Argh! I tell you what, Chris, this got real, this, didn't it? What happened? I just thought I'd floor it and see what happ Did you have any idea what you were doing? Just got no control.
Well, now you're fully recovered, no word of a lie, you're the he-man, if I don't fancy this first stage, I'm stopping.
Way to go, man.
Be safe.
Be safe?! CHRIS CHUCKLES While the rest of the field took turns attacking the course, Harris made his way to the start line.
Here we go, then.
And soon enough .
.
it was his turn.
CHRIS WHOOPS AND LAUGHS I can't believe what it'll go over.
Ohh! Fair play to Harris, he'd taken round one and made it look easy.
Well done, mate.
Happy with that? No.
Coming down, I've smashed my back.
It really hurt! Did you enjoy it at any point? No, I hated every single secon Really? Yeah.
I don't see any point in this at all.
Yeah, I'm going to carry on, because obviously, I've got to beat you.
I don't like your chances! Round two, then.
Where not only was the climb bigger, this time, there was two of them.
I'm under a bit of pressure on this second one.
Come on, this time.
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE We've got it, Freddie lad, we've got this! BLEEP it, I'm having a go.
Whoa! Freddie lad, get in! Get in, son! Was that Fred? Get in! Nobody puts Freddie in a corner! Harris, have a do at that, son.
Flintoff had bounced back with a high scoring run putting the pressure squarely on me and Big Red.
Come on! Oh, yes! Whoa! Close! He's got up the hill.
On to the red one.
I can't even see it! He's reversing.
Harris, look at him, he's taking it serious now, isn't he? Look at him.
Oh, and he's got penalty points, cos he's going backwards! Go backwards again, Chris! Go backwards again! This is insane.
My eyes tell me that's not possible.
Woohoo! CHEERING AND APPLAUSE That is a good thing.
That is a good thing! I'd made it round, but not without penalties.
I had to reverse.
I couldn't get round.
Which meant after his barnstorming run, Flintoff had climbed to an impressive ninth place.
I'm in front against Harris! Just got to keep concentrating, though.
Just concentrate.
We come from the land of the ice and snow From the midnight sun, where the hot springs flow The competition kept rolling on.
Whoa! Jesus Christ! He's going to be OK.
And with round three frankly best forgotten by the both of us Oh, I've stalled.
It's BLEEP stalled! Come on! Harris has only got stuck! Argh! .
.
we took the no-score draw, headed down the valley, and I turned up the mind games.
You wouldn't make a good Aussie, would you? Why? On the Aussie flag, they've got an emu and a kangaroo, do you know why? Why? Because they cannot take a backwards step.
Can't they? /fon Unlike you.
Live your life in reverse, you.
Seed of doubt planted, the next round was a gravel loop time trial.
And I was ready to strike.
I know there's suspension on it, but you feel every bump! Oh, this is driving! Never mind your sports cars, never mind your big 4x4s, this is what it's about! Well, that was not bad.
That was not bad! Now, that, ladies and gentlemen, is how it's done.
I will take that every day of the week.
And as Harris took to the course, I knew I'd got right inside his head.
Tell you what, he's slow, isn't he? Come on, Chris.
Everyone's going home! He's taking this steady, what's going on with him? That's a bit quicker.
Here he comes.
In the end, he crossed the line a full seven seconds slower than me.
Slightly embarrassing! What happened? Chris is showing his true colours now.
Chris has had a bad run and he's having a hissy fit! We had fought our way to the bottom of the valley, and now seventh in the standings, I had built a massive 90 point lead over Harris.
So for the little man, the river crossing round really would be sink or swim.
This is the silliest motorsport event in the world.
FREDDIE CHUCKLES That's why we're here.
What the hell is he doing?! Has he lost a wheel? This was supposed to be YOUR challenge.
You were hired on this show to be the psycho, crazy, I'll-do-anything guy.
That's not my role! I'm supposed to bring it back to the cars! You know when you get nervous, you talk a lot, don't you? Leaving Harris to ponder that, I lined up for my run across the river.
But with the rest of the field now playing mind games of their own Freddie! This is how it's done! .
.
I'd just been told that my beginner's car had never actually made it across the river before.
Blooming heck! To be honest, I wasn't feeling that confident.
I love puddles, but this is a lake! Oh, it's flags down.
Here we go! I'm on water! No! No! It's flooded, and the water is freezing! Ohhh! Turns out Flintoff can't walk on water after all.
Oh, it was going so well! And with his big lead suddenly looking shaky, if I could just teach Big Red to swim, we'd be in with a shot.
I'm not here to lose! I managed to clear the short splash that had drowned Flintoff's car, but to finish the round, next we'd need to conquer a nigh-on impossible 160m stretch.
Just floor it.
Woohoo! Woohoo! Yes, Big Red had done me proud.
First of all, can we admire the pressure the water has done to my I've got to take me hat off to you, Chris.
I've stood on the bank and watched you come in, and I was committed, mate.
.
.
as much as it pains me to say it,/f It was committed.
And the crowd were cheering, it was a lovel It really was.
Especially because I had now climbed to eighth place, a bone dry 30 points ahead of Flintoff, who had sunk down to tenth.
I reckon it's all to play for going into the last.
Yeah.
/fo Which is called .
.
The Swamp.
Yeah.
I don't want to put the pressure on you, but I reckon you're favourite going into this.
You think I'm the favourite? You've got more power.
It's a swamp.
I couldn't get through a little river in this.
Enough mind games.
As the leader, I would be up first, with a sprint across an ancient Icelandic bog to finish the competition.
I've got a funny feeling these overalls might need to go into the wash after this.
He's having a real go.
Oh, Harris! He's only got stuck! Nah, turn it off, Chris.
CHRIS CACKLES That's embarrassing.
RACE ANNOUNCER SPEAKING ICELANDIC He is covered in absolute BLEEP.
Look at him! Look at the state of him! Only thing is, I can laugh now, but that's going to be me in a matter of minutes.
Wow, smells quite pooey.
If he's getting stuck, with all that power, I'm not sure how I'm going to go here.
The rest of the field certainly weren't finding it easy.
Good lad.
No! Go on! No! You poor sod.
And as I took to the start line, one thing was clear - Iceland's Formula Offroad had saved its most technical test till last.
Here we go.
Time to shine, Freddie boy! This is it.
Just got to get round.
If I get round, I've beat him.
Right, Flintoff, here we go.
I'm off.
I'm off! Can't see a thing! He's got to where I got to.
Yes, yes! I've made it! No, he's still going! Yes! Well, that's going nowhere now.
FREDDIE SHOUTS CHRIS LAUGHS RACE ANNOUNCER: And Freddie Flintoff I'm stuck, officially stuck.
I'd given it my all I'm out.
.
.
but would it be enough to beat Harris? I think he might have me there.
That's so close.
How close is that? This is going to be tight.
Someone's going to have to come and get me.
You look like the monster from the deep! I tell you what, the last ounce of credibility I've got - I just left it in that mud.
Oh, God! But how did you get on? According to the official scoring Yeah? .
.
there was one point in it.
Shut up! One point in it.
Shut up! Freddie Flintoff, 1050 points.
C Harris, 1051! Seventh overall, sixth overall.
This is a national championship.
We are the sixth and seventh best in Iceland! Get in! Now, let's go and have a tetanus jab and a shower.
/ No, don't do that I'm so tempted I'm going nowhere near that, Fred! CHEERING AND APPLAUSE Oh, yes! I've got to say, respect! Cos that looks brutal.
And Iceland - no ice, just mud everywhere! Savage! It was horrendous, it was like being beaten up for fi rounds by a heavyweight boxer, and just as you get your breath back at the end, someone pours a bucket of poo on your head.
That's what it was like, it was horrendous.
And that wasn't mud, it smelt a lot more organic than that It was 2m out, wasn't it? You were just 2m from beating him.
That's two Chris Harrises! I've got a problem with this, because LAUGHTER Ah, they got it in the end! It took a while.
It took YOU a minute! The thing about it was, if they'd have given me a proper car, like his, I'd have won.
Oh, my God! He was like this as a professional sportsman, always blaming his tools.
Look, you had the agile car for the agile round, you got the points there, you didn't make it stick when it counted.
You lost fair and square.
No, if I'd had a proper car, I'd And not just beaten you, young man, I'd have won the tournament.
No, no, we've given I'd have come home with silverware.
We've given you proper cars at other times, and you've crashed them.
So, you lost.
Well, we did sixth and seventh best in Iceland, right? Granted Some going! CHEERING AND APPLAUSE But But, but, but .
.
the biggest winner here is me, cos I didn't have to do it.
Yes! While these two were off mud wrestling in Iceland, I was having a lovely time in Wales, on me own, just me and me dream car.
The Toyota Supra.
Specifically the A80 Toyota Supra of 1993.
The original giant-slaying sports car.
And the very top of my bucket list.
Oh, you absolute beauty.
I was 19 when these came out, and growing up in Bolton, you'd never see a Ferrari or a Lamborghini or a 911 driving around, but every now and again, you'd see one of these.
And, God, I wanted one.
I never got to drive one, but today, for the first time ever, that's exactly what I'm going to do.
HE SIGHS This is a massive deal for me.
ENGINE TURNS OVER REVS Here we go.
HE CHUCKLES Come on.
Let's go.
Forgive me for a moment.
I'm just taking this in The power! What?! Oh! When this car launched in Britain, it cost £37,000.
Its twin turbo, straight-six engine gave the Supra 325 brake hp.
Nought to 60 in just under five seconds.
Nought to 60 in just under five seconds, in the '90s! This was a proper supercar-killer.
In fact, car magazines of the day pitched the Supra against some of the biggest players in the game.
Players like the Porsche 911 Turbo.
The Aston Martin DB7.
Even the Ferrari 512 Testarossa.
HE LAUGHS I have literally just overtaken me teenage bedroom wall.
Amazing.
These were cars that cost three, four, even five times more than the Supra.
But it kept pace with the lot of 'em.
And then some.
Supercar-scaring performance as standard was just the start Oh! .
.
because the Supra was also very easy to make very much faster.
Listen to them pop and hiss! ENGINE ROARS I've died and gone to Japanese sports car heaven! This was the car that kick-started Generation Fast and Furious.
With a little bit of know-how, you could boost these cars to up to 800 brake hp or even more than that, and they'd never blow up.
Mostly.
But me, I'll take my Supra as nature intended.
Completely stock and utterly captivating.
I absolutely love this car.
And the sad thing is there's not many of these left.
After just a few years on sale in the UK, Toyota pulled the plug, and the best Japanese sports car of the lot was done.
But now .
.
more than a quarter of a century later .
.
the Japanese icon is back.
Yes! This is the new Supra.
A two-seat, rear-wheel drive, £50,000 sports car that picks up right where we left off.
Just like the old Supra, it's got a three-litre, straight-six, turbo-charged engine, nudging over 300 brake hp.
And just like the old Supra, it'll do nought to 60 in about four and a bit seconds.
And it'll hit the limiter at 155.
And, yes, Toyota only making the new Supra about as quick as the old one might sound a bit lazy.
And do you know what? I think it's the right call.
I mean, it's not going to show a new Ferrari or a 911 a clean pair of heels, but 300 hp in the '90s was plenty.
And the roads haven't changed much since then.
So, 300 hp now is still plenty.
Ho-ho! Come on! Oh! Hard on the brake, dropping down a gear.
Oh-ho-ho! So agile, so quick, so responsive.
Oh! HE LAUGHS This is so much fun.
But before you run out the door with your cheque book, there is potentially a bit of a problem with the new Supra.
And it's called the BMW Z4.
Yep, Japan's most iconic sports car has been properly German-ed up.
They've got the same engine, same gearbox, most of the suspension, pretty much all the same dash.
And do you know what? I'm totally fine with that.
If you're going to borrow something, borrow it off the best.
You're not going to get them mixed up.
The Supra only comes as a coupe, the Z4 only comes as a convertible.
That's Japanese and stylish, that is not.
ENGINE REVS In the end, it's just economics.
If they hadn't teamed up, Toyota couldn't have made the new Supra, and BMW couldn't have made the new Z4.
And a world with two new sports cars is just better.
No, this is a good car, this.
It might not be as ground-breaking as the old Supra, but it's still a little barrel-chested bulldog of a sports car.
And that'll do for me just fine.
But I am well aware that won't do for everyone.
In fact, only yesterday I received a letter off a brave little lad who wants to know what it's like to skid this car around a track.
Well, I'm all about helping out the little 'uns.
Mr Harris.
Morning, sir.
Are you getting in? Step out of that seat, and apply yourself to the shotgun position.
Let's go! Come on! Allow me to escort you out of the vehicle.
You're keen, ain't Of course I am.
Now, get in.
Oh-ho! Well Well, well, well, well Not well.
What's the problem? The problem is I'm sitting in a BMW.
Have you not noticed? There is nothing about this that's a Toyota.
You've not even started yet.
Because that's a BMW starter b BMW gear lever.
This is really wrong.
I don't understand what the problem is.
If you go to Lidl for your big shop and get home and find they've packed your bags full of Waitrose, are you going to complain? No.
Set off.
It's a BMW steering wheel! CHRIS EXHALES Oh, did I hear you go, "cor" there? Well, look, it goes wel I'm not going to deny that.
Let's just take a bit of time.
Knock yourself out.
So, let's just start with the basics.
The torque of the motor is great.
BMW make a really good engine at the moment.
And do you know what? From the moment I got in it, it sounded like a BMW.
Here we go, look at this.
BMW actually keep their power-steering pumps linear all the way through to full opposite lock like that, and that's why this feels, to me, so flipping BMW, there! That is BMW oversteer.
That's not Toyota oversteer.
No-one' No-one's bothered about that.
What do you mean no-one's bothered.
It's not a Toyota.
What does a Toyota feel like, Chris? Well, from the inside, it would have a really crazy interior.
You'd have a 2JZ upfront making hissing and whooshing noises.
Yeah.
It would sound turbo-charged.
Do you know what, Paddy? It might be a little bit worse as a car, but it would reek of style.
Wowsers.
I just think it's a missed opportunity, you know? It's ridiculous.
It's like finding out that Charles Dickens wants to write the best book ever, and he phones up Emily Bronte and says, "Can you do this and then just send me the manuscript afterwards?" It's wrong.
Can you imagine Charles Dickens and Emily Bronte writing a book together? It's a bestseller, Chris! CHRIS LAUGHS It's a bestseller! Oh, I don't know It's perfectly good, but it just No, no, no buts, no buts! Is it a good sports car? Yes.
Good.
Now, I think there might still be a few milli on the rubber.
Knock yourself out, go and do some more skids.
I've not been sick yet.
CHEERING AND APPLAUSE That is fab.
What are you doing that for now? APPLAUSE What are you doing that for now? What's wrong with you? You liked it.
What's wrong? You liked it.
It's perfectly good, but it's not a real Supr What do you mean? It's not a real Supra.
I've said it three Which part of "not a real Supra" do you not understand? Well, what's not real about it? Well, it's a BMW.
Lads, lad No-one cares! Lads, lads, lads! The font color="#00f Just let me clear this up for you.
It's easy.
Go on.
If you want to buy a sports car, and it bothers you that the new Supra has a BMW interior, don't buy one.
You know? On the flipside, if you like the BMW bits, knock yourself out.
Simple.
He's got a point.
I'm not taking logic from a man who believes the Earth is flat.
Come on.
Yeah! LAUGHTER Can I add to that? And we've never been to the moon.
Anyway Whoa! You've heard it He's dropped the mic! Never mind that, there's two things I want to know.
First, Paddy, how close were you to chucking up there? Well It was terrible, his aftershave was really bad/fo He smells, he smells like Boots chemist.
It was all right for a little bit.
It got a little bit tricky towards the end, but I got through it OK, yeah, it was all right.
And the other thing is how fast is it on our track? So, we sent the Stig out earlier today and you can watch the lap online to see how fast it was.
So, where are you expecting, Chris? She's down the bottom, got to be.
You reckon? Yeah, because, you know, it's not much firepower not that much grip, it's a bit lazy.
It's you, this car! This car is you! Well, I can tell you the new Toyota Supra went round our track font color="#00ff .
.
in one minute Brilliant.
.
.
20 The suspense.
.
.
3.
1.
Oh, my God.
Harris, you're right, it's right down here.
/fo Oh.
That's terrible.
APPLAUSE Are you disappointed, Paddy? I am! You loved this car.
/font Not a patch on the original.
Now LAUGHTER If you're in the market for a new car, or you just like watching a very small man talk very quickly, here's Chris Harris with some high-speed buying advice.
Right, what cars to buy, what cars not to buy, in a bunch of different categories all in under two minutes-ish, font color="#00fff Category one, small convertibles.
The Fiat 500.
So, you think it's a fun little Italian job.
Actually it's a conspiracy by the world's chiropractors to wreck your back.
It's a terrible thing.
And this one's in afterbirth pink.
Disgusting.
The Mazda MX-5.
I normally hate these, but this latest one is actually really good to drive, and I love that dark burgundy paintwork.
The Mini.
I would rather appear on a Saturday night dating game show with Paddy McGuinness than be seen anywhere near that thing.
It's disgusting.
The Audi TT.
Now, I should hate these, but this car's just been discontinued, and I feel slightly sorry for it, so, for me, I'm going to take the Audi TT, which is the least bad of a bad bunch.
Let's move on.
The estate car.
I think the new Insignia is quite a good looking car, but you can't buy a Vauxhall, can you? It's like giving up.
The Volvo V90.
Smashing it out of the park at the moment, Volvo.
The engines are a bit mean, and it's 40 grand for the cheapest one, but what a great-looking car.
.
Skoda Superb.
Massive, nothing wrong with it.
It's just a bit vanilla, isn't it? And then the old Ford Mondeo, in that kind of primer grey.
I'm going to come back down here, and I'm going to say .
.
it's the Volvo all day long, because the Skoda looks like it might be an unmarked police car, and that scares me.
OK Hot hatches, here we go.
This is the new i30 N from Hyundai.
It's a great hot hatch, but it just doesn't do anything to me, and a hot hatch should make you tingle.
No tingle there.
The Mercedes A35.
Hugely expensive, hugely capable, and, I hate to say it, hugely dull.
The Honda Civic Type R.
Look at that.
Styled by an eight-year-old, drives brilliantly, but could you do it to yourself? Could you turn up in front of the people you love looking like that? No, you couldn't.
And there it is.
The shining glory of hot hatches.
A Volkswagen Golf GTI.
It's like tomato sauce.
You try it once, you then go and try all the others, the Hyundai, the Mercedes, the Honda, and you come back to the red sauce that's made by the company I can't mention on the BBC.
Hmm.
Lightweight British sports cars.
These are great cars.
The Morgan 3-Wheeler.
Look at it.
One of the rawest driving devices ever.
Bizarre.
It'll get you more looks than a Lamborghini, with that added thrill of knowing that death is just round the corner.
Then down here, come on, follow me down here, come on, come on, font color="#00ffff The Lotus Elise, 23 years old, still the definitive lightweight British roadster.
And the Ariel Atom.
The greatest thing to come out of Somerset since fizzy alcoholic apple juice.
Great car, four-wheel motorcycle, no windscreen.
But for me, the winner, there it is.
I love a Caterham Seven.
That's the basics of driving in one machine.
And I love the green.
So, there you go - lightweight sports cars, convertibles, we've covered them all.
I'm going to go off and do some serious work now.
APPLAUSE I quite enjoyed that.
Chris, I've got to tell you.
Yeah?/fo Genuinely, that was nearly impressive.
Thank you, Andrew.
Very kind of you.
So close, so close.
Very supportive.
So close, Paddy.
So close.
What's wrong with dating shows? Certain dating shows are OK.
Oh, we wouldn't get you in the lift, the size of you.
Now it's time to meet our studio guest who tonight is Will Young.
Here's what happened when we met him on the track earlier today.
Will.
Look who's here.
How are you? Lovely to see you.
Good to see you.
Come here, Will.
How are you, pal? You know how uncomfortable Chris is with hugs.
Come on, let's have a practice.
Mr Half Nelson there.
Like wrestling.
What we have here is barrier chicken.
OK.
We have a lovely Fiat Punto and we have a barrier.
Patrick, demonstrate.
Certainly.
You had one job.
There we go, there we go.
That's lovely.
OK.
Well, you have to choose someone to go in the car with and then the two of you will be against the two remaining here.
Does that make sense? Yeah.
Who are you choosing? You.
Great choice! Really? Gre It's not personal.
Well, I just want to be on the winning team.
You two are up first.
Stop standing there being cool.
You couldn't even work the barrier.
Come on.
It's like Thelma and Louise, this.
Don't they die in the end, them two? Will, you're in charge of this, OK? Thank you.
That will give you the speed.
Fastest through the barrier wins.
If you don't make it through the barrier, you can't win.
Come on, we can't get beaten by Harris.
We're not doing.
/f Are you going to go, lads, or just going to have a chinwag down there? Chris, shut up.
Men at work.
I like that record.
Got to get to 90.
It's a fine line between bravery and stupidity and we're walking it.
Here we go! Come on, it's going to go down, we're going to Thelma and Louise! Hold my hand! Come on, come on, come on! Thelma and Louise! Yeah! Thelma and Louise did it! It didn't happen.
TYRES SQUEALING Very aggressive driving.
Oh, smooth, Paddy.
Smooth! Thelma and Louise! Come on, what did we get, Chris? It was 91.
Oh, we'll take that.
We'll have that.
fo I have to say, boys, that's a great effort, because I didn't even think the Punto was capable of doing 91mph.
You were going so fast you peeled the stickers off the side.
Yeah, yeah.
Paddy did the maths.
That's how we roll.
We're going to go round that corner there.
Yeah.
We're going to go through the cones.
Through those cones? Ye OK, let's go.
We're on our way, boys.
Where have they gone? They've gone round the corner! Where are you going? Full power now.
Everything.
Yeah.
Then run it out to six.
Third.
You're better off going straight back rather than coming round.
Go round a corner you're going to lose speed.
Keep going.
/f Am I going the right way? Yeah, you are.
Through there.
Straight through there.
You see the channel? Yeah.
We're going to do it.
We're going to hit it.
Oh! It was a light touch.
I think we're OK! First bit of bad news is you clipped the barrier.
No, we didn You did, you did.
Where is the evidence of that? We'll show it you after.
On these.
These are called cameras, And the second piece of bad news.
Come on.
87mph.
Four miles an hour difference.
It's a win for the working classes! Come on, let's go and eat some pasties.
The northerners prevailing over posh.
Where's Nanny? Nanny! Let's have a pasty and a cup of tea.
APPLAUSE Ladies and gentlemen, Will Young.
I feel I let you down.
No, you didn't.
You couldn't let me How you doing, pal? Oh, Will! No, I feel I let you down.
I feel like you gloated too much, you two.
Ooh-hoo-hoo! A little too much.
Straight in there! Well, you started in another county, Will.
You took one hell of a run-up.
I mean, they're not known for being modest winners, are they? Let's face it.
No.
Basically, I hate losing.
I absolutely And I just realised again today that I'm so competitive.
I'm really competitive.
It's terrifying though when you go towards the barrier.
It was so exhilarating I want to do it again immediately.
Tough! Tough! Oh, no! Oh, no! Let's talk about some car history.
Yes.
So, first car was wh Mini.
Mini? Yeah, original Mini.
This is my old one.
One like that.
You've got to have a Mini as a first car, that kind of thing.
You do, yeah.
Because they're like little go-karts.
It's a joyous little place to begin your life journey, isn't it? Yeah.
It's a great car.
But you've owned some lovely cars/ and it's a selection that shows that you do love motor vehicles and you're definitely a petrol head, aren't you? Yes.
/font But there's one car story in there that stands out and it surrounds a Porsche 356 and I think it's lovely.
Can you tell us a bit about that? Oh, yeah, the 3 Oh, yeah, there's my baby! Look at that.
So when I was at school, I had My friend's dad was Italian and had one of these cars in white and it was a left-hand drive and I would see him drive away and I would say, about 11 years old, you know, "One day I would love a car like that.
" So fast forward, I was going out to buy a Mini, actually, and then I saw one of those in black, so that, bought it.
It was the same car.
No! It was my friend's dad's car just been re-sprayed.
/fon Exact car? 30 years later.
Didn't it end up getting clamped and Yeah, that's how I found out it was his, because I hadn't changed the registration.
Yeah.
And didn't someone else live in it for a bit? Yeah, some tramps lived in it in a car park.
And one of them had BLEEP in a bag, font color="#00f AUDIENCE GROANING I actually think that's quite all right.
I mean, he's not done it on the car seat.
No, at least it wasn't A bit of courtesy.
Do it in a bag.
Will, I promised myself if I ever saw you, I'd apologise.
LAUGHTER Pay my dues.
I accept your apology.
Thank you, Will.
You're too kind.
Was it around 2005, end of the summer? Was it around then, Freddie? Shh! Something like that.
We were both in a bad place.
You also used to own an XR3i.
I've still got it.
No! Yeah, Escort XR3i.
What colour? Black with a red stripe.
That was exactly the same as mine.
Yeah.
Grey cloth seats.
/f Fantastic car.
Oh, they're great.
Because I'm an '80s boy, so that's what I want.
I had a Mark 1 Golf GTI and I saw this Escort on eBay and I thought, I can't have that go to a wrecker's yard, so it's now just a wreck in my friend's garage.
And tell us about the new album, Will.
Er Yeah, it's called Lexicon.
It's sort of electro, mid-tempo electro pop.
Is it '80s inspired? Well, it is, actually.
I think it is.
Yes, we like that.
Kind of Pet Shop Boys.
I mean, I love it.
It's just been an utter pleasure to do.
And I know you've got something in common with one of my learned colleagues down there is cricket.
Oh, I hate cricket.
I thought How can you hate cricket?/f You're amazing, I don't hate you, but I Oh, thank you.
Thanks, Will! I'm glad we cleared that up.
Well, yeah, I'm with you.
I also hate cricket.
But it's different, though.
You're just too thick for it.
No, what happened to 1-0? "He's 70 round the back for two googlies and a wicket.
" What's that?! What's that? I've got to tell you, Paddy, there's been times when I've stood there for five days and we've drawn at the end thinking, "What was the point in that?" I had to go out there I went to this horrible school and I had to go out there and I was made to play one cricket match a week.
And you stand there and someone throws a very hard leather ball at you.
That's the crux of it.
Yeah, but it's like Why would you do that? So I learned from a young age that I could just If you knock the wicket over What's that called when you do that? Hit wicket.
Hit wicket, then you're out, so they'd go, "Here comes Young.
" And I'd just knock the wicket over and then I'd walk back again.
Cheers.
Cheers, boy.
I'm not standing there with someone throwing that at me! No, no.
Someone like you There were points in your career where if you'd done that, you'd have scored more runs.
Yeah.
Or I might have been accused of match fixing.
One of the two.
You make the Yes.
Will, you've been here before.
You've done a lap in the Lacetti in the wet.
What was it like this time in the GT86? The car's amazing.
It's a bit livelier now, isn't it? It's a lot livelier.
And the Stig was lovely, just as non-communicative as he was the last time.
Now, who wants to see Will's lap? Yes! Come on! Let's have a look.
Oh, God, oh, God Right, here we go.
Off the line.
Could have used a bit more of first gear.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa One more chance to make it right I'm singing my own music That's really, really BLEEP font color="#00ff00 So, the tunes are good.
You're singing along.
The line's pretty good, using all the circuit.
There's a crow.
Into Chicago.
That's not so good.
That's not so good, William! Could be maybe a gear lower.
A bit bogged down on the exit.
Breaking hard into Hammerhead.
Direction change is quite tricky.
Round Hammerhead.
Let's have a look at the exit.
Again Oh, no, the gear's probably right.
Yeah! Oh, this is amazing.
Using all the track.
Coming up to the follow-through.
Good turning, nice bit of tyre squeal.
Now through the tyre wall.
Look at that.
Whoa! BLEEP! Now the technical section.
That looks like a good line into second to last to me.
Interesting line.
But it's a good one.
Using most of the circuit.
Now through Gambon.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah APPLAUSE Tidy, tidy.
Will, I can see you're eyeing the board up.
Where would you like to be? Obviously top, but I think I'd like to be above Gregory Porter.
Gregory Porter, so mid-table? Yeah, but I want to be number one, but I know I'm not.
I can tell you you're not number one.
Sorry for giving the game away.
Aw! I can tell you, Will Young, you went round our track/fon in one minute .
.
42.
7.
Oh! So you're just above You've done it.
Above Gregory Porter.
Gregory Porter.
That's a good effort, come on.
That's all right.
You don't seem best pleased.
Are you coming back for another go? I'm going to watch that at home and cry a little bit.
No, you're not.
Don't! No, you'll be OK.
No, no, hey, listen, I just love cars so much and I genuinely mean this, I'm such a fan of this show, so to be able to come back and just talk cars and have a laugh, I'd do it every day, so thank you.
Oh, thank you.
Ladies and gentlemen, let's hear it for Will Young! APPLAUSE Thanks so much.
Thank you, Will.
Thank you.
Thank you very much.
OK.
Yeah? Time for you two to Here we have the regulations for a Formula 1 car this year.
Look at that.
Look at the size of that.
You hold on to that.
And that is why all Formula 1 cars basically look the same and the action's a bit boring.
And this slim document here is the rule book for Formula 1 in 1978 Wow! .
.
when Formula 1 cars were proper.
MUSIC: 20th Century Boy by T.
Rex The '70s, the era when F1 cars went totally and utterly bonkers.
It was the era that brought us a six-wheeled Tyrrell, a Brabham with an onboard fan, but there was one car more than any other in history that totally rewrote the rule book .
.
the Lotus 79.
They called it Black Beauty.
Not only is it one of the best-looking F1 cars ever made, but it definitely has the best-ever paint job.
It's also quite possibly the most revolutionary F1 car of all time.
The story begins here at Ketteringham Hall in deepest Norfolk.
In the '70s, this was the fortress for one of the greatest minds in F1 history - Lotus founder Colin Chapman.
Colin Chapman was the most amazing person to work for.
I mean, it was the most exciting period of my life.
I worked with him on pleasure boats, racing boats, road cars, racing cars, aeroplanes and even - believe it or not - flying saucers.
And it was never, ever dull.
But Chapman's true passion was Formula 1 and putting Lotus on the top step of the podium.
In 1974, after a number of years of not being very competitive, Colin Chapman wanted to completely look at the Grand Prix car as a whole and redefine it.
Chapman's aim - to cheat aerodynamics.
You see, in racing, you can have straight-line speed or grip in the corners, one or the other.
That's physics.
But Chapman wanted both.
He wanted to hack physics.
So, what he did was he packed off Peter Wright and his team to Imperial College in London for as long as they needed with some models, a load of tape, a load of clay and said, "Come back with some results.
" And here are those models that were taken to the wind tunnels.
Look at them.
For months, Wright's team experimented in the wind tunnel without success.
But after more than 1,400 hours of testing, they chanced upon something extraordinary.
Due to the forces that the air put on the model, we noticed that the side pods were sagging during the run and that the gap between the outer edge of the side pod and the road was changing.
So we went, "Ah, OK.
What happens if we fix that gap?" And we put card skirts on that ran about half a millimetre away from the moving road and we had a big eureka moment.
What they'd discovered was ground effect.
Funnelling the air under the car caused it to speed up, creating a vacuum, sucking the car to the track.
Lotus calculated it was worth two seconds a lap.
That's a lifetime in motorsport.
Ground effect really was the golden ticket.
It gave you more straight-line speed and it gave you more grip.
The only problem was that ground effect required a perfect seal between the skirts on the side of the car and the road beneath.
Easy enough in a wind tunnel, rather trickier out on the tarmac.
With no computer modelling, Lotus went lo-fi.
The engineers, well, they commandeered one of the company's Renault 4 delivery vans, bolted a metal rig to the back and then attached to that some different skirt arrangements.
Then they'd barrel round the test track seeing which one stuck itself to the tarmac the best.
I lay on my stomach in the back of the van, my head sticking out of the rear doors, and watched what was happening.
The chief mechanic drove this thing as hard as he could round Hethel test track and, of course, being a Renault 4, it rolled a lot and it pitched a lot and it bounced a lot, which was perfect for testing the skirts.
That was a very key piece of R and D equipment.
After testing skirts made from plastic, bits of draught excluder, even brushes, Lotus eventually settled on these spring-loaded strips of aluminium coated with ceramic tips.
They provided a perfect seal down the side and they were tough enough to last hundreds of miles of racing.
So Lotus now had its ground effect racing car.
Now all it needed were some drivers.
And, boy, did it have them.
On one side of the garage was Mario Andretti.
The Italian-American racer had grafted his way up through the USA's dirt track series to win the Indy 500 before Colin Chapman lured him into F1.
What I loved about Colin is that The fact that he just wanted to win.
He just wanted to win and that's That's who you want to be with, you know? If you were with him when he was really right on - and I was - you know, in a period, then you had a chance of pulling off a championship.
On the other side of the Lotus garage was Swedish racer Ronnie Peterson.
Softly spoken off track, but utterly fearless on it, Peterson's caution-to-the-wind racing style had already earned him a handful of F1 wins and the nickname Super Swede.
Ronnie Pearson was, yeah, absolutely a tough competitor.
I mean, he was well known for his talent, car control and everything and the nicest guy in the world.
You know, we were really good friends.
What a guy, what a guy.
May, 1978.
The Belgian Grand Prix.
The 79's first race outing, and it was Andretti who got first dibs on the new car.
Andretti immediately stuck it on pole, qualifying streets ahead of Carlos Reutemann's Ferrari.
The F1 grid didn't know what had hit it.
The 79 was one of those big steps.
You know, it was the sudden two seconds a lap change.
And it was what was coined as the unfair advantage.
It was something the opposition, even once they understood it, they couldn't copy it overnight, so it was just a win-win-win in so many different ways.
The next day, Andretti dominated the race, taking the chequered flag almost half a minute ahead of the closest Ferrari.
It was the start of an era of total domination.
At the next race in Spain, Andretti won again with Peterson second.
The French Grand Prix - same result.
In fact, ground effect was so game changing, so effective, that Lotus sought to throw the competition off the scent.
The type 79 had such an advantage that my father got to the point of thinking, look, we mustn't show them just how fast we can go, so in qualifying at times, extra fuel would be put in to sandbag, slow them down a little bit, but even with that, you couldn't disguise the fact that the 79 was just so much faster than the rest.
As the season unfolded, Andretti won in Germany and the Netherlands, Peterson in Austria.
The 79 was head and shoulders ahead of the pack.
You know, ground effect really led to another one of those eras when Team Lotus was just going to win and the others were desperately trying to keep up.
But the others couldn't get close.
At the 1978 Italian Grand Prix, having already secured the Constructors' Championship, Lotus could wrap up the drivers' title with a couple of races to spare.
But things didn't go to plan.
Peterson, driving Lotus's older backup car after crashing his 79 in qualifying, was involved in a collision on the first lap.
Conscious but suffering leg injuries, he was taken to hospital.
Back out on track, Andretti stayed out of trouble, grabbing the points he needed to secure the championship.
But the team's celebrations were short-lived.
The following morning, suddenly and unexpectedly, Ronnie Peterson died from complications following surgery.
And the next day, on my way to the hospital, you know, I hear on the radio that he'd died.
And, er I just could not believe it.
It was just tragic, tragic, tragic.
It's one of those things that's so hard to accept, you know, for many reasons.
And, you know, just It was tough.
Monza would prove to be the last hurrah for the Lotus 79.
As rival teams developed yet faster ground effect cars the following season, Black Beauty would never win another race.
No sooner had it conquered the world, the original ground effect car was done, a museum piece.
But here's a thing.
Thanks to Classic Team Lotus, this car .
.
the car in which Mario Andretti won three Grand Prix, still drives.
And they've said I can drive it.
Whoo! Hoo-hoo-hoo! I'm at the home of Lotus in possibly the coolest Lotus ever made.
Well, these are the numbers - 470 horsepower, and it weighs just over half a tonne.
It's seriously, seriously potent.
And behind my head is the iconic F1 engine, the Cosworth DFV, three litres singing all the way to 10,000 RPM.
It's a thing of joy.
Honestly, if you told me that one day I'd get to even sit in this thing, I'd never have believed you, but I'm driving it! But that wasn't all the 79 had to give .
.
because Lotus said I could drive one lap - just one lap - with the car's revolutionary vacuum inducing skirts all the way down.
Full ground effect mode.
Skirts down, the skirts are down.
They don't go down very often.
Oh, you can feel the down force even at medium speed.
It's just so agile.
So, let's take the fastest corner at Hethel with the skirts down.
Accelerating in third, fourth, fifth gear now.
Skirts down.
Turn it in quicker than I had before.
Oh! HE YELLS Ground effect! Ground effect! The Lotus 79 gave me everything that I needed.
It was a step forward.
We were right at the very beginning of something very big.
The 79 was obviously an incredibly important car because it was a step change in technology.
The 79 is just It's one of those cars that will always be one of the greatest.
APPLAUSE Track car, beautiful.
So Let's clear one thing up.
Ground effect keeps the car stuck to the ground but F1 don't use it any more.
Why not? It was banned in 1982, because ground effect was too effective.
It effectively created even faster accidents because racing drivers pushed so hard, so they got rid of it.
Even so, you looked like you were having the time of your life.
I've never seen you as happy.
To be fair, I've never seen you happy, like, but All right, working with you two, it's a strange feeling, I have to say.
Well, let's end it there before he discovers any other emotions, because that is the end of this series and it's been brilliant.
We've been to the most amazing places - Ethiopia, Borneo, Iceland.
And Telford.
Telford, yes! We've laughed a bit, we've crashed Well, he's crashed a lot.
Honestly, it's been a blast and we can't wait to do it all again.
We'll be back later in the year with a properly massive adventure.
Thanks so much for watching.
Goodnight.

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