Jeremy Clarkson has revealed that his views towards climate change were part of a âcaricatureâ he portrays on screen.
His famously grumpy character can be seen on hit motoring shows Top Gear and The Grand Tour, which propelled him to fame and helped him secure columns in various national newspapers.
Speaking to The Guardian ahead of the release of the third season of Clarksonâs Farm, coming to Amazon Prime Video on May 3, Clarkson shared how he acted as an âexaggeratedâ version of himself on television.
âEveryone assumes the character they see on motoring shows is me, but itâs exaggerated,â he shared. âTo think that I was like I was on Top Gear is the same as thinking that Anthony Hopkins is a cannibal,â referring to the actorâs acclaimed role as Hannibal Lecter in The Silence Of The Lambs.

He also spoke about previous dismissive comments he has made about global warming, now suggesting that they weren’t necessarily serious.
âThat was part of the caricature,â he shared. âIt was a joke.â
He added: âNow you think, âJesus Christ, my neighbours over there, theyâve had to replant everything because itâs all drowned.â I canât believe itâs not dominating the news agenda. Oh no, wait, it is.â
Clarkson also weighed in on the topic of electric cars in the interview, suggesting that they wonât have a significant impact on climate change. âI wonât drive a Tesla. Iâve probably got 10 cars, all with V8 engines. I donât think electric cars solve anything.â
He added: âScience is going to be needed here, not politics. Science will solve it eventually. Always does.â
Elsewhere in the interview, Clarkson shared he no longer feels the need to uphold his trademark controversial persona. âI donât have to think, âRight, Iâm going to say something stupidly provocative now.â Thatâs relaxing,â he said.
âAlso, you donât wake up every morning to find youâre in the middle of a tabloid maelstrom for something youâve said or done.â
The third season of Clarkson’s Farm will arrive on Prime Video on May 3.
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