1. Hello.
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2. - Hello.
- Hello, everybody.
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3. Hello.
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4. Hello.
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5. Thank you.
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6. And - thank you -
and coming up
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7. in this never-to-be-forgotten
show...
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8. Richard operates a bat...
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9. James sits in a car
humming...
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10. and I park
outside a cathedral.
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11. - Thank you so much.
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12. Exciting stuff.
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13. Now, this is...
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14. this is a bit of
a Ford-based show.
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15. Because we were staggered
to hear the other day,
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16. that they're thinking of
pulling the plug
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17. on the Mondeo.
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18. Now this is enormous news.
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19. In Britain, losing the Mondeo
is a bit like...
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20. Well,
losing the Royal Family.
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21. And if that happens, someone
would make a documentary
about them.
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22. Quite. Which is why
we decided this week
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23. The Grand Tour
should make a documentary
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24. about the passing of Ford's
medium-sized family saloon.
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25. - It's exciting stuff.
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26. The Mondeo story
actually begins way back
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27. when the world
was black and white,
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28. with this -
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29. the Ford Cortina.
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30. This is Genesis,
the first chapter
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31. in easily
the most important book
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32. in British motoring history.
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33. It came along in 1962
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34. and apart from
the CND rear lights,
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35. it was nothing special.
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36. It wasn't revolutionary
like the Mini.
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37. It was just
an ordinary family saloon.
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38. Ford therefore decided
that to put it on the map
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39. they'd mount an assault
on the world's racetracks.
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40. Which meant creating
a high-performance version.
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41. The world's first ever
fast Ford.
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42. And this is what
they came up with.
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43. Life doesn't get
much better than this.
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44. Cadwell Park, sunny day...
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45. Mark One Lotus Cortina.
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46. This thing is a riot.
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47. It had a revolutionary
twin-cam 1.6 litre engine.
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48. Which sounds like
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49. a murder of mad bees.
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50. It revved like hell.
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51. All the way to 8,000 RPM.
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52. And produced 105 horsepower.
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53. Ha-ha, ha-ha!
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54. Oh, wow!
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55. The result was some
spectacular performance.
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56. The road cars
would do 108 mph.
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57. And in race trim
that shot up to 145.
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58. That was the stuff of
spaceships back then.
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59. And best of all...
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60. if you were really on it,
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61. it would lift the front wheel
in the corners.
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62. On the downside
it didn't stop properly...
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63. and there was
very little grip.
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64. So it was
an over-steer mentalist.
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65. It was also
astonishingly brittle.
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66. Autocar magazine
ran one for a year.
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67. 29,000 miles.
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68. And in that time,
it needed six rear axles
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69. and three sets
of rear suspension.
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70. And probably a whole load of
new half-shafts as well,
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71. because they were made
from chocolate.
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72. But it didn't matter.
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73. Because the Lotus Cortina
wasn't designed to
last a lifetime.
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74. It was designed
to last about 40 minutes.
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75. Because that is
how long a race lasted.
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76. Back in the early '60s,
saloon-car racing in Britain
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77. was just about the most
exciting motor sport
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78. the world had ever seen.
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79. The massive American Fords
would roar down the straights
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80. and then in the corners
the army of Minis
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81. would be right back at them.
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82. It was beautiful,
snarling chaos.
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83. But when the dust settled,
it was the Lotus Cortina
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84. that was doing the winning.
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85. - It actually won the
Championship in 1964...
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86. and it didn't only shine
on the tracks.
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87. In 1966, it won the RAC
Rally of Britain.
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88. They even drove one
down the bobsleigh run
in the Italian resort
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89. after which the Cortina
had been named.
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90. Here's what the
famed bobsled run looks like
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91. from the driver's seat of
the world-famous Cortina.
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92. At this point in history,
rationing had only just
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93. given way to
The Rolling Stones.
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94. - Hemlines were going up
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95. and all kinds of groovy stuff
was going down.
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96. And the glamorous Cortina
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97. caught the mood
of the moment perfectly.
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98. It was exciting.
The first car ever that made
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99. the ordinary family man
feel special.
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100. Like he wasn't just
a downtrodden cog.
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101. And it was the same story
with the Mark II Cortina.
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102. And the Mark III.
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103. The result was spectacular.
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104. One car in every three
sold in the UK was a Ford.
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105. And one in ten was a Cortina.
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106. Everyone I've spoken to while
I've been preparing this film
has said the same thing.
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107. "Oh, yeah, my dad
used to have one of those."
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108. I mean, on the crew here,
whose dad had a Cortina?
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109. Ha! Look at that.
It's everyone.
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110. Apart from the director,
obviously, who has a
double-barrelled name,
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111. so his dad had a Range Rover.
But anyway...
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112. the point is, these were
the best-selling cars
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113. Britain had ever seen...
by miles.
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114. Of course it wasn't all
rampant sexism
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115. and hilarious handling
that Ford used to make
a name for its family saloon.
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116. There was some important
business stuff too.
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117. Back in late-1960s Britain,
if you earned £3,000 a year
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118. the government would take
41% of it away in tax.
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119. So, to get round this
problem, a lot of companies
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120. paid their staff a bit less,
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121. but then to make up
the difference
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122. they gave them... a car.
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123. And that...
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124. wasn't subject
to any tax at all.
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125. Ford cottoned on to that.
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126. And came up with
a variety of trim levels
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127. to suit the typical
management structure.
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128. There was a base model
for the sales rep.
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129. And the L
for the sales manager.
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130. Then you had the XL
with a clock and a
locking glove compartment
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131. for the sales director.
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132. And the powerful GT
for the managing director.
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133. Ford's badging policy quite
literally changed the class
system in Britain.
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134. Because we used to judge
people on how they held
their knife and fork,
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135. or whether they said
toilet or lavatory.
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136. But after
the Cortina came along,
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137. it was all based on what
it said on your boot lid.
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138. Our dads understood
what these badges meant.
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139. And boy, oh, boy, so did we.
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140. You join me in Doncaster
outside my old school.
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141. And I remember very clearly
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142. coming out of that door
one afternoon in 1969,
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143. skipping along here, coming
round this gatepost here,
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144. and I noticed
that parked over there
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145. was a 1600E - an E -
in amber gold.
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146. Just like that one.
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147. And in it... was my dad.
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148. And that was impossible.
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149. The E was the absolute
king of the hill.
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150. It had four dials
set into its wooden dash.
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151. It had a leather and
aluminium steering wheel.
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152. And on the outside
there were Rostyle wheels
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153. and front fog lamps.
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154. It was beautiful and wondrous
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155. and exciting beyond words.
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156. I can still remember now,
vividly, how I felt.
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157. My knees actually buckled.
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158. I mean...
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159. The hairs on the back of
my neck are rising now
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160. in exactly the same way as
they did on that autumn day
50 years ago.
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161. I can also remember
the enormity of the hug
I gave my dad,
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162. cos I was just
so proud of him.
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163. I mean, he had an E!
An E stood for Executive.
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164. My dad had a 1600E.
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165. I mean, that meant
he was better than
the Duke of Edinburgh.
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166. A few years later
in South Wales,
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167. another young boy
called James May
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168. went through
the exact same thing.
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169. I was at my mate
Andrew Jones's house,
just up the road from ours,
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170. when his dad came in
and said that my dad
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171. had just arrived home
and he had a new car.
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172. So, I went outside...
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173. and there
parked next to the kerb,
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174. was a brand-new Cortina GXL.
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175. And I thought, "Well, that
can't be my dad's new car."
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176. But it was.
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177. This was the all-new
Mark III Cortina.
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178. And, because it was
the GXL model,
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179. it had chrome strips
on the grille,
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180. and a vinyl roof.
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181. And four auxiliary dials
that were angled
towards the driver.
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182. It also had something
called a rev counter,
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183. and I'd never seen
one of those before.
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184. But when I looked at it,
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185. I suddenly became aware that
my body could produce semen.
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186. Unfortunately,
not all children in Britain
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187. were as fortunate
as James and me.
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188. Because some of them
were born in Birmingham.
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189. And you couldn't really
have a Ford here
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190. because this was the home
of British Leyland.
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191. I grew up here
on this street.
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192. And I remember the day my dad
came home with our new car.
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193. I prayed it would be
a Cortina. Literally prayed.
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194. But it wasn't.
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195. What it was...
was a shoulder-sagging
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196. bag of disappointment
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197. called the
Austin Allegro Estate.
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198. It doesn't even have
four doors.
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199. What was my father thinking?
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200. Why did he do that to us?
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201. I fell to my childish knees,
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202. threw my head back
and I howled at the sky.
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203. Birds across Birmingham
took off.
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204. Deer in Stratford-upon-Avon
looked up.
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205. Such was my horror.
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206. This was the summit.
This was it!
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207. This is the best that we,
the Hammonds, could do.
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208. We lived in suburbia. People
drive past all the time.
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209. They see your car.
They judge you if have
a wishing well or a gate.
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210. We had this! On our drive!
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211. Where people could see it.
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212. Because my dad had the GXL
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213. he got the brake servo and
the alternator as standard.
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214. I'm sorry to keep banging on
about this GXL thing,
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215. but my mate Lonnie,
his dad only had an XL.
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216. So he was scum.
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217. I walked home from school.
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218. That wasn't cos
I wanted the exercise.
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219. That's because I would rather
walk or hop or crawl 30 miles
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220. than be seen
getting into that.
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221. It's cars like this,
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222. it's secrets,
dark secrets like this
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223. lurking in people's pasts
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224. that creates serial killers
and psychopaths.
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225. It's a bloody miracle
I'm not one.
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226. It's not being short that
makes me an angry man,
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227. or being born in Birmingham,
it's this! It's you!
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228. - I could have been great,
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229. I could have had dignity,
social standing.
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230. I could have mattered.
But you came into my life...
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231. My dad bought
a Mark III Cortina
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232. because he had three children
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233. and he wanted them
to be safe.
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234. And he knew
they would be safe,
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235. because Ford had
made a film telling him so.
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236. We've got the teddy bears in,
we've got the golf clubs.
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237. - We've got the racing car.
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238. And if you don't happen
to carry those things
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239. but you have a bigger family,
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240. you can pack
those in as well.
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241. Even with five children
in the back,
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242. you can drive in a more
or less relaxed fashion,
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243. safe in the knowledge
that they're kept in
the four-door Cortina
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244. with child-proof
safety locks.
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245. I've never driven one
of these before,
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246. and to be honest,
I never wanted to,
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247. because that really would be
meeting a childhood hero.
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248. I love it, though. It's...
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249. You can see
even better now, can't you?
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250. What about this one?
That's it.
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251. Back in 1974, we used to have
regular power cuts
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252. because of
the miners' strike,
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253. and there was
absolutely nothing to do
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254. in our completely
pitch-black house.
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255. So I used to go outside
and sit in my dad's car
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256. and just pretend to drive it,
which was brilliant.
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257. Not least because
you could turn the light on,
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258. which you couldn't do
in the house.
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259. Lights.
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260. Oh, I used to love
the power cuts.
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261. Outside of Birmingham, then,
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262. everyone young and old
was in love
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263. with Ford's four-door saloon.
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264. Because of this love affair,
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265. Ford sold a Cortina somewhere
in Britain every 47 seconds.
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266. In 20 years, they sold
2.6 million of them.
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267. And let me put it this way:
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268. British Leyland took
twice as long as that
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269. to sell half as many Minis.
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270. The Cortina then
had become a part of
the fabric of Britain.
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271. It was the nitrogen
of our existence.
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272. But, on 22nd July 1982...
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273. Ford pulled the plug.
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274. And that was the end of that.
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275. - Sad story of the Cortina.
- Yeah, it is.
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276. - But it's a great story.
- It goes on.
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277. - Yeah.
- Do you feel better?
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278. - Um... yeah. A bit.
- That's good.
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279. I just want to do...
I just want to do one thing.
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280. Can I just ask,
how many people's dads
here had Cortinas?
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281. This is... Look at that.
Yeah.
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282. That's an astonishing array,
isn't it?
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283. - Amazing.
- Yes, it is.
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284. It makes me feel really—
Just to put some
perspective on this.
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285. - Ford sold
2.6 million Cortinas.
- Hm.
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286. Austin...
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287. - ... sold 57,000 Allegro
Estates. That's it.
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288. - It's a shame
one of them was to your dad.
- You're damn right!
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289. It ruined my life.
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290. Anyway, we shall pick up
the Ford story later on.
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291. But now it is time
for us to deploy
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292. the plastic bag of chat,
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293. to scoop up
some dog eggs of debate...
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294. - ... from the pavements of
Conversation Street.
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295. Wow.
- I don't know. I don't know.
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296. - Whatever it was.
Er...
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297. Now actually, despite
the incredible snazziness
of those graphics,
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298. we don't actually have time
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299. - for traditional Conversation
Street this week.
- No.
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300. Because we are engaged,
as we said,
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301. - in important
documentary-making work.
- We are.
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302. Which is why
I would like to talk about
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303. - body-coloured bumpers.
- Ooh!
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304. - I think you should.
- Yes, I will,
because in the old days,
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305. if you were driving
up the motorway and
a car came up behind you,
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306. and they had bumpers
the same colour as the car,
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307. and you only had
black plastic bumpers,
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308. you knew you had
to get out of the way.
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309. - You did.
- They were better than you.
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310. Yeah, they were better
than you because of that.
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311. What if you were
driving up the motorway,
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312. looked in the rear-view
mirror, OK,
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313. and you saw the car behind
had head restraints?
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314. Honestly, head restraints,
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315. I used to look at those
in the way people these days
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316. look at superyachts.
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317. They were simply
unattainable. I mean,
you could not...
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318. These were
the symbols of rank.
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319. - I mean,
if you had a sun roof...
Oh!
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320. you were an emperor.
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321. What if... it was
an electric sun roof?
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322. Oh, my God!
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323. You were probably from space,
you were a space emperor!
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324. Let me see if I can explain
this in a language
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325. people under 40
understand, OK?
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326. It's the same
as going for a job, OK,
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327. and your boss saying, "We're
gonna give you a pay cut,
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328. but we're gonna give you
a phone, OK?
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329. And this phone
you can use to make calls,
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330. and then if you work
really hard
for a couple of years,
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331. we'll give you
an iPhone L,
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332. and you can use that
to make texts as well.
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333. And then if you stay
with us for 30 years,
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334. and you never put
a foot wrong,
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335. you can have an iPhone GXL."
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336. Because that's what...
I mean, I have no idea
which one this is.
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337. - No, is it a 7,
an 8, a 9? I don't know.
- No, you don't know.
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338. But the thing is,
under 1970s rules,
you would have known,
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339. because that would have
had a great big chrome
GXL badge on.
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340. And a chrome strip round the
outside and fog lights here.
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341. - Yeah, exactly,
so you would know.
- They were the badges of rank
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342. and everybody could see them.
That was the world
we lived in.
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343. My dad, right,
when he had the 1600E,
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344. he had a minor front-end
biff in it, yes?
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345. The local Ford garage
replaced the damaged grille
with one from a 1600 Super.
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346. And my dad said,
"Oh, it doesn't matter."
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347. But it did! It was
more important than
the Vietnam War!
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348. - I mean, it...
- You were being...
being publicly humiliated.
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349. People were going, "You
haven't got a 1600E, there's
chrome..." It is a 1600E!
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350. "You just put fog lights
on." We haven't!
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351. - We've really got one!
- These things
mattered so much.
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352. - Oh, they really did.
- Didn't... You had a 1600E?
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353. Oh, we did. No, ten years
after my dad sold his,
I bought one.
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354. - Well done,
that was imaginative.
- It was—
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355. Says the man
whose first car was?
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356. - Toyota Corolla?
- It was a Liftback, actually.
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357. Yeah, but my 1600E,
I modified it, and put...
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358. I put a Debbie Harry badge
in the middle of
the steering wheel.
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359. - Fur-lined doors...
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360. - Ooh!
- Wolfrace seats...
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361. And a chromed sports
air filter, which I told
me mates,
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362. "That gives extra 40
horsepower, that does."
It didn't. Not really.
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363. - But I told my mates it did.
- Do you know
what you did there?
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364. - What?
- By fitting those extra bits
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365. like the sports air filter
onto your car,
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366. you were effectively calling
yourself Jeremy Clarkson OBE
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367. - when you didn't have one.
- It is a bit like that.
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368. With those fur-lined doors
you had interfered with
the class system.
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369. Mm, mm. But let's not forget,
shall we,
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370. you modified your Corolla
by driving it into a Volvo.
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371. - Yeah, I did.
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372. I did do that,
it was my first crash.
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373. - The first of many.
- Yes, all right. Yes.
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374. - Rather set the trend
for your life, didn't it?
- I got the hang of it.
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375. - Yes. Yes, OK.
- "I like crashing, I'll make
a living out of this.
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376. - There I go again."
- And I did.
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377. Exactly.
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378. Oh, God.
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379. Do you know, I've... I've
never actually owned a Ford.
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380. - What, never?
- No.
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381. That's like saying you've
never owned your own pen.
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382. I've never bought a stamp.
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383. - I mean, even I
have managed to own a Ford.
- Really?
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384. After I left Birmingham,
I moved on, and I had two.
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385. But sort of in the same car.
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386. The front... front of one and
the back of the other joined.
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387. - It was absolutely hopeless.
- Were they the same colour?
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388. Well, when I bought them,
broadly similar,
yes, they were.
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389. Look, this is,
it's not really
Conversation Street, is it?
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390. - No.
- It's more Memory Lane.
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391. Anyway, we now have
to get back to the Cortina.
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392. Yes, we do, because when
it was killed off in 1982,
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393. Ford didn't give up
on the idea of a
multi-million-selling
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394. medium-sized family saloon,
Copy !req
395. they came up
with a replacement.
Copy !req
396. It was called the Sierra.
Copy !req
397. Here is a picture of it.
And, to begin with,
Copy !req
398. - it was a bit of a lemon,
wasn't it?
- It was.
Copy !req
399. When it came out,
everybody said they hated
Copy !req
400. its kind of futuristic,
aerodynamic shape.
Copy !req
401. They said it looked horrid,
like a jelly mould.
Copy !req
402. And then everybody worked out
Copy !req
403. the aerodynamics
didn't even work.
Copy !req
404. No, it turned out in a
straight line it was fine,
Copy !req
405. but when it got hit
by a crosswind,
Copy !req
406. or would overtake a truck
on the motorway,
Copy !req
407. it would veer about
like a drunk.
Copy !req
408. Yeah, another problem
was the motor trade hated it
Copy !req
409. because that plastic front
end, if you had a crash,
Copy !req
410. it would boing back into
shape, which was brilliant.
Copy !req
411. But you didn't know that
everything behind it was
actually smashed to pieces.
Copy !req
412. Now, Ford decided
there was only one way
Copy !req
413. to get everybody to
fall in love with its new
mid-sized family saloon.
Copy !req
414. It was something
they'd done before.
Copy !req
415. Make a fast version.
Copy !req
416. What they
came up with was this...
Copy !req
417. the Sierra RS Cosworth.
Copy !req
418. A car that could do
150 miles an hour.
Copy !req
419. It was 1986. Lots of cars
could do 150, but not a Ford.
Copy !req
420. That was madness.
BMW and Mercedes
could not believe it.
Copy !req
421. This was the gardener coming
into the parlour and kicking
the baron's teeth out.
Copy !req
422. The blue-bloods were being
absolutely battered by this -
Copy !req
423. the blue-collar worker.
Copy !req
424. The Sierra's muscle
came from Cosworth.
Copy !req
425. The British engine builder
Copy !req
426. whose most famous
Formula One V8
Copy !req
427. had taken a staggering
176 Grand Prix victories.
Copy !req
428. They took a drab,
cast-iron saloon car engine
Copy !req
429. and fitted it with an
aluminium twin-cam head,
Copy !req
430. a turbo
the size of a dustbin,
Copy !req
431. and turned it
into a masterpiece.
Copy !req
432. It was built to be
a hard-working unit, this.
Copy !req
433. As you can tell.
Copy !req
434. The interesting thing
about this engine,
is if you look carefully
Copy !req
435. you can see there's
a second set of injectors
Copy !req
436. that weren't actually
connected to anything.
Copy !req
437. They were installed because
Ford knew they'd be necessary
Copy !req
438. when they did
what they always did
with their family cars...
Copy !req
439. go racing with them.
Copy !req
440. With those injectors engaged,
and bigger turbos fitted,
Copy !req
441. the race cars were churning
out a massive 525 horsepower.
Copy !req
442. They were unstoppable.
Copy !req
443. The Ford Sierra Cosworth,
Copy !req
444. the top touring car
of the day.
Copy !req
445. In its day,
the Sierra won 84%
Copy !req
446. of races it entered.
Copy !req
447. 84%.
Copy !req
448. And that makes it
the most successful
racing car ever made.
Copy !req
449. I'd love to meet a driver who
raced one and didn't win.
Copy !req
450. "Right, so I had absolutely
the best tool for the job,
Copy !req
451. and everyone else
has won with it except me.
Copy !req
452. I'm fired, aren't I?"
Copy !req
453. To keep the
road-going rocket ship
Copy !req
454. pointing mostly
in the right direction,
Copy !req
455. it got beefed-up suspension,
a limited slip diff,
Copy !req
456. and its most
famous feature...
Copy !req
457. that massive back wing.
Copy !req
458. And that wing says everything
about the Cosworth.
Copy !req
459. Compared with grown-up things
from Mercedes and BMW,
Copy !req
460. it said, "Ah, sod off!
Copy !req
461. I don't care
what you think about me."
Copy !req
462. But it was also there
for a reason,
Copy !req
463. to make actual downforce.
Copy !req
464. Which, according
to men called Gav
Copy !req
465. in every flat-roof pub
in the country,
Copy !req
466. meant the Sierra
could drive upside-down
Copy !req
467. on the roof of a tunnel.
Copy !req
468. I'm not sure about that.
Copy !req
469. This thing
is still pretty lively.
Copy !req
470. Ha-ha, ha-ha!
Copy !req
471. It brings out
the worst in you.
Copy !req
472. This is like
a really bad mate.
Copy !req
473. You know,
the one you absolutely love
Copy !req
474. but nobody appreciates you
hanging around with him.
Copy !req
475. Cosworth turned the Sierra
into one of the most
desirable cars on the planet.
Copy !req
476. And because
it only cost 17 grand,
Copy !req
477. six grand less
than a BMW M3,
Copy !req
478. your local builder
could have one.
Copy !req
479. However, while everyone
wanted Ford's latest
working-class hero,
Copy !req
480. not everyone was
prepared to pay for it.
Copy !req
481. - Joy riders...
- Joy riders...
Copy !req
482. Joy riders in a stolen
Sierra Cosworth...
Copy !req
483. driving around a
Newcastle housing estate...
Copy !req
484. The high-performance vehicle
is the twoccer's favourite.
Copy !req
485. In the late '80s,
Copy !req
486. car crime saw
a massive spike.
Copy !req
487. And the Cosworth
was at its tip.
Copy !req
488. Here was a car with the
performance of a supercar
Copy !req
489. and the locks of a shed.
Copy !req
490. If you had five seconds
and a screwdriver,
Copy !req
491. you too could have
a Sierra Cosworth.
Copy !req
492. And whatever you did next,
the fuzz couldn't catch you.
Copy !req
493. Ford tried to get
on top of things,
Copy !req
494. by stripping off the wing,
Copy !req
495. and putting
the firecracker engine
Copy !req
496. into a sober,
four-door shell...
Copy !req
497. to make this the Sierra
Sapphire Cosworth.
Copy !req
498. But it didn't work.
Copy !req
499. If anything,
the crims were grateful.
Copy !req
500. "Oh, thanks, back doors.
Copy !req
501. Makes it easier for the lads
to get in after a bank job."
Copy !req
502. But ultimately... What?
Copy !req
503. Oh, for God's sake!
Copy !req
504. Things got so bad
by the early '90s
Copy !req
505. that the Sierra Cosworth was
five-and-half times more
likely to be stolen
Copy !req
506. than any other car.
Copy !req
507. There were many owners
who reported being followed
by criminals,
Copy !req
508. waiting for them to park
so they could nick it.
Copy !req
509. That would take the edge off
the pleasure of owning it,
if I'm honest.
Copy !req
510. Ford got so desperate,
Copy !req
511. they dropped the price
of the Cosworth by £7,000 -
Copy !req
512. the value of
an entire Fiesta -
Copy !req
513. just to shift the things.
Copy !req
514. And even that didn't work.
Copy !req
515. There were numerous reports
at the time
of Cosworth owners
Copy !req
516. receiving insurance quotes
that were more than
the value of the car.
Copy !req
517. And eventually,
insuring a Sierra Cosworth
Copy !req
518. became not just expensive
but impossible.
Copy !req
519. They were uninsurable.
Copy !req
520. But by then,
it didn't matter.
Copy !req
521. The Sierra Cosworth
had done its job,
Copy !req
522. just as the Lotus Cortina
had done 25 years earlier,
Copy !req
523. by making an ordinary family
saloon seem impossibly cool.
Copy !req
524. Honestly,
I was flipping drooling.
Copy !req
525. - It's a legend of a car.
- Absolute legend.
Copy !req
526. I was drooling, watching.
Copy !req
527. I absolutely loved...
Copy !req
528. I adored the Sierra Cosworth.
Copy !req
529. - It was brilliant.
- Fabulous.
Copy !req
530. Absolutely fabulous, but
I need to do a bit more
documentary work.
Copy !req
531. - I think you should.
- The Cosworth wasn't
the most important thing
Copy !req
532. about the Sierra.
The most important thing was,
Copy !req
533. the Sierra changed
the Labour Party.
Copy !req
534. - Really?
- It genuinely did.
Copy !req
535. A young Tony Blair
was out canvassing one day,
Copy !req
536. saw a man washing
his Sierra on the drive,
Copy !req
537. sort of went up to him.
Copy !req
538. The Labour Party policy
back then, as now, actually,
Copy !req
539. was to get the man out of
his car and back where
he belonged on a bus.
Copy !req
540. - Yes.
- Tony Blair realised this guy
didn't want to go on a bus.
Copy !req
541. He wanted a better Sierra,
faster Sierra,
Sierra with headrests.
Copy !req
542. So he went away and
he created New Labour
Copy !req
543. as a result
of that conversation.
Copy !req
544. And then started
an illegal war.
Copy !req
545. Well, he did.
Copy !req
546. Well...
Copy !req
547. - Well, he did.
Copy !req
548. He did. He did.
Copy !req
549. He did do those... He did do
those two things, yes.
Copy !req
550. Should we get
back to the car?
Copy !req
551. Good idea, because we must
now find out how fast...
Copy !req
552. Let's see if I can still
pronounce it properly.
Copy !req
553. - ... the Cozzer...
- Yeah, you've still got it.
Copy !req
554. The Cozzer. You know
what I mean? The Cozzer.
Copy !req
555. Let's see how fast it goes
round the Eboladrome.
Copy !req
556. And away it goes,
gentle off the line,
Copy !req
557. but then a scuff of wheel
spin as the turbo
roars into life
Copy !req
558. and catapults it
onto the Isn't.
Copy !req
559. The 1980s gear change
workout there,
Copy !req
560. and a lot of body roll
on those soft '80s springs.
Copy !req
561. Ooh, look at that!
Copy !req
562. Driving it like it's stolen,
Copy !req
563. which 30 years ago,
it would have been.
Copy !req
564. Here we go,
ooh, yeah, bit of oversteer
into Your Name Here.
Copy !req
565. You don't see that
from the modern stuff.
Copy !req
566. And now the turbo lag clears
Copy !req
567. as it fires back down
the Isn't.
Copy !req
568. This won't be the fastest car
we've ever seen,
Copy !req
569. but I can bet you Abbie
is having an absolute riot
in there.
Copy !req
570. OK, hard braking
for Old Lady's House,
Copy !req
571. wrestling it in,
keeping it neat
Copy !req
572. through the right,
and then the left.
Copy !req
573. And now back on the power
for the blast to Substation.
Copy !req
574. Engine note that screams,
"Oi, Gary!"
Copy !req
575. That's it, braking, flicks it
in like a touring car driver.
Copy !req
576. Only Field of Sheep left.
Copy !req
577. Not much drama there,
and across the line!
Copy !req
578. That looks great,
looks really exciting.
Copy !req
579. I was really expecting
the full crossed up...
Copy !req
580. No, but that... it does that
four-wheel drift thing,
Copy !req
581. same as the Lotus Cortina,
wah!
Copy !req
582. - It's what they do.
- Anyway, let's see now
Copy !req
583. how quickly Abbie got it
round the Eboladrome.
Copy !req
584. Let's find out the time -
oh, quicker than I thought.
Copy !req
585. Oh-ho!
Copy !req
586. What?
Copy !req
587. Well, it's faster
than a Lamborghini.
Copy !req
588. I told you
that thing was slow,
Copy !req
589. it's actually
slower than a Ford Sierra.
Copy !req
590. But the interesting thing
for me there
Copy !req
591. is it's quicker than
a Ford Fiesta ST200,
Copy !req
592. and they both have the same
power, about 200 horsepower.
Copy !req
593. They did, yeah.
I think what that goes
to show is,
Copy !req
594. despite all the improvements
in suspension and tyres,
Copy !req
595. you can't beat
fitting something with
a sodding great turbo.
Copy !req
596. - Exactly.
- A massive turbo
does the job.
Copy !req
597. Anyway, can I get back
to our documentary, yes?
Copy !req
598. In 1993, Ford stopped
making the Sierra
Copy !req
599. and decided instead
to export the idea
Copy !req
600. that had revolutionised
Britain to the whole world.
Copy !req
601. What they came up with
was something they called
a World Car.
Copy !req
602. Something not just
for everyone here,
Copy !req
603. but for everyone everywhere.
Copy !req
604. They called it the Mondeo.
Copy !req
605. And it achieved something
that no car in history
has ever managed.
Copy !req
606. Over the years, Richard,
James and I have driven
Copy !req
607. almost every car ever made.
Copy !req
608. We've waxed lyrical
about many of them...
Copy !req
609. drooling over
their styling...
Copy !req
610. or their handling...
Copy !req
611. or the way they make the
roots of our penises fizz.
Copy !req
612. But incredibly, there is only
one car that we all like.
Copy !req
613. This one -
Copy !req
614. the Mondeo ST Estate.
Copy !req
615. Let's be clear,
there are lots of cars
we all don't like.
Copy !req
616. - Yeah, yes.
- Nissan Juke.
Copy !req
617. Hate it. The Beetle.
Copy !req
618. Good one on the Beetle,
we all hate that.
Copy !req
619. - Nissan "Quashquai".
- Yeah, that's a good one.
Copy !req
620. Audi Q5.
Copy !req
621. - No, don't like that.
- All hate that.
Copy !req
622. - And the Q7.
- And the Q7.
We all hate that.
Copy !req
623. - Jaguar X-Type.
- Yeah, we all hate that.
Copy !req
624. The new Land Rover Discovery.
Copy !req
625. - Yes.
- Yeah.
Copy !req
626. BMW X3.
Copy !req
627. - Yep, yeah.
- Yes.
Copy !req
628. - Mini Countryman.
- Oh, yeah, yeah!
Copy !req
629. We all hate that.
Copy !req
630. So, we've established
there are many, many cars
we all don't like.
Copy !req
631. But cars we do like?
Copy !req
632. - There's this.
- There's this.
Copy !req
633. What about
the Subaru Legacy Outback?
Copy !req
634. But the front diff's rubbish.
Copy !req
635. You can't go round a corner
when you're going slowly.
Copy !req
636. - So it's a bit annoying.
- So it is just this?
Copy !req
637. Yeah.
This is it.
Copy !req
638. Do you know what I liked?
It's the fast version,
but it was still comfortable.
Copy !req
639. These seats were great.
It still rides properly.
Copy !req
640. It doesn't make a terrible
racket, it's just civilised.
Copy !req
641. I like the way
it was a practical estate.
Copy !req
642. It had a massive boot,
and Ford had the sense
to give it five doors.
Copy !req
643. Which is something
Austin didn't think of
with the Allegro.
Copy !req
644. No, that is true.
I like the speed.
Copy !req
645. Oh, there's a surprise.
Copy !req
646. V6 engine, 200 horsepower.
Copy !req
647. 0-60, seven seconds.
Top speed, 150.
Copy !req
648. It didn't look it, but this
was as quick as a Cosworth.
Copy !req
649. And when they turned it
into the ST220 in 2002,
Copy !req
650. it looked right as well.
Copy !req
651. They should have sold these
by the million.
Copy !req
652. But there was a problem.
Copy !req
653. This.
Copy !req
654. The first so-called MPV,
the Toyota Picnic.
Copy !req
655. In 1996 when it was first
introduced, we laughed at it,
Copy !req
656. because it seemed so stupid.
Copy !req
657. I mean, why name a car
after something you
might do in it? Picnic.
Copy !req
658. No, they didn't have
a Toyota Dentist, did they?
Copy !req
659. The Honda Pop-to-the-Shops.
It's just an ordinary act,
it's not even exciting.
Copy !req
660. The Volkswagen Dogging.
Copy !req
661. - It's just a stupid idea.
Copy !req
662. A naff thing to do.
Copy !req
663. It cost the same as a Mondeo,
it was just a bit taller.
Copy !req
664. Yeah. It's in case your head
suddenly grows tall.
Copy !req
665. Was there a fashion
for wearing
Copy !req
666. Victorian industrialist hats
at the time?
Copy !req
667. - No, there wasn't.
- Well, there's no excuse
for it, then.
Copy !req
668. Unless you've actually
got a Busby
Copy !req
669. glued to the top
of your head...
Copy !req
670. There is no other reason.
Copy !req
671. And what troubles me,
Copy !req
672. is think of the damage
this did to children.
Copy !req
673. "Come out and see
the new car, kids!"
Copy !req
674. It's just a Picnic!
- "That...
Copy !req
675. That's our car.
Copy !req
676. It's hateful!"
Copy !req
677. It's dismal.
Copy !req
678. "It's got big windows so
people will see me in it."
Copy !req
679. It actually says,
"Family fun vehicle" on it.
Copy !req
680. It doesn't?
What's fun about it?
Copy !req
681. It isn't more fun.
Copy !req
682. We thought,
when it first came along,
that it would be a fad,
Copy !req
683. like culottes,
or deep fried brie,
Copy !req
684. or Crocs, or tattoos.
Copy !req
685. Something where you think,
"Oh, that's fun,"
Copy !req
686. and then realise
five minutes later that
it's actually ridiculous.
Copy !req
687. But, no.
Copy !req
688. This idiotic tall car idea
Copy !req
689. actually started to catch on.
Copy !req
690. Renault came up
with their version,
Copy !req
691. which was called
the Scenic.
Copy !req
692. And pretty soon,
everyone was at it -
Copy !req
693. Mazda, Fiat,
Vauxhall, the lot!
Copy !req
694. Think what
you started, you bastard.
Copy !req
695. You deserve this,
and you're having it.
Copy !req
696. And you're having more of it.
Copy !req
697. A new car is a great thing,
but not when it's you!
Copy !req
698. Oh, you've got a mirror left.
Copy !req
699. Think how many lives
you ruined.
Copy !req
700. You are the Allegro Estate
of modern times,
Copy !req
701. and you deserve this.
Copy !req
702. To make matters worse
for Ford,
Copy !req
703. in 2000, the British
Government decided
that company cars
Copy !req
704. should be taxed,
like income.
Copy !req
705. Yeah, that meant people
had to buy their own cars.
Copy !req
706. And many responded
by not buying a car at all.
Copy !req
707. As interest rates
were so low,
Copy !req
708. it made more sense
to lease.
Copy !req
709. And if you're gonna do that,
why not get a BMW?
Copy !req
710. Or a Mercedes?
Copy !req
711. As the rot
started to take hold,
Copy !req
712. Ford reverted to type
and got serious
about motor racing.
Copy !req
713. In 2000, they came first,
second and third
Copy !req
714. in the British Touring Car
Championship.
Copy !req
715. All three Fords
were on the front row again
for the sprint race...
Copy !req
716. And the following year,
Mondeo sales did go up a bit.
Copy !req
717. Ford drivers clocking ...
Copy !req
718. But then,
they stopped motor racing.
Copy !req
719. And the MPVs kept coming,
and leasing a Mercedes
got cheaper,
Copy !req
720. and the effect on Ford
was astonishing.
Copy !req
721. In 1994, they sold
127,000 Mondeos in Britain.
Copy !req
722. In 2017,
that was down to 12,000.
Copy !req
723. And 85% of those
12,000 were fleet sales,
Copy !req
724. hire car companies
and the police.
Copy !req
725. And that means only
1900 Mondeos
Copy !req
726. were sold to private buyers.
Copy !req
727. - Yeah, people that actually
went and bought one.
- Yeah, 1900.
Copy !req
728. And, if you think about it,
Copy !req
729. Ford has 500 dealers
in Britain, yeah?
Copy !req
730. - Yeah.
- Each of those will have
taken two Mondeos a year?
Copy !req
731. Oh, God, yeah,
as demonstrators.
Yes, they would have done.
Copy !req
732. - So really, we are...
- 900, you're talking about.
Copy !req
733. 900 people actually said,
"I'll buy one of those
with my money."
Copy !req
734. Yeah, 900 people.
Copy !req
735. When they used to sell
127,000 of them a year.
Copy !req
736. - That's an astonishing fact.
- I know.
Copy !req
737. In America, things are so bad
the Mondeo will be pulled
from the showrooms this year.
Copy !req
738. And it's predicted
that soon after that,
Copy !req
739. it'll go from the rest
of the world as well.
Copy !req
740. And when that happens,
Copy !req
741. Britain will have lost
much more than just a car.
Copy !req
742. The Mondeo was never fancy
or spectacular,
Copy !req
743. it never won Le Mans, it was
never awarded a Nobel Prize,
Copy !req
744. it didn't write
The Grapes Of Wrath.
Copy !req
745. It was just your mate,
Copy !req
746. someone you enjoyed
going to the pub with.
Copy !req
747. And here's the thing.
Copy !req
748. When someone fancy
or spectacular like, say,
Copy !req
749. Mick Jagger dies,
it'll be sad.
Copy !req
750. But when your mate dies,
that is heart-breaking.
Copy !req
751. So, to give this car
the send-off it deserves...
Copy !req
752. we've booked
Lincoln Cathedral.
Copy !req
753. And invited some
like-minded souls
Copy !req
754. to mark the moment
of its passing.
Copy !req
755. This'll be a funeral
for a friend.
Copy !req
756. A few people
have turned up already.
Copy !req
757. Look at that.
Copy !req
758. Big, isn't it?
Very.
Copy !req
759. Tallest building in the world
for 250 years, this.
Copy !req
760. How many people do you think
are gonna turn up?
Copy !req
761. Well, it is
a Tuesday afternoon.
Copy !req
762. Well, we might get 50.
Copy !req
763. No, I think it could be 100.
Copy !req
764. - 100 would be nice,
wouldn't it?
- Yeah.
Copy !req
765. In fact, it was
rather more than 100.
Copy !req
766. So many people came,
Copy !req
767. that the traffic in Lincoln
ground to a halt.
Copy !req
768. And we had to begin
the service before
they'd all arrived.
Copy !req
769. Ford, Ford.
Copy !req
770. Yep.
Copy !req
771. It is very sad.
Copy !req
772. It is, um...
Copy !req
773. It's very sad, and
it's not the only British
motoring institution
Copy !req
774. that's coming to an end.
Copy !req
775. We are.
Copy !req
776. Aww.
Copy !req
777. This is not just
the last in the series.
Copy !req
778. I mean... sorry,
the show as you know it
is actually ending,
Copy !req
779. with you know, the track,
audience, us three,
Copy !req
780. and bad... really badly
fitting jackets every week.
Copy !req
781. This is the last one.
Copy !req
782. It is. It is.
Copy !req
783. It's sad but we have been
doing it together
for 17 years.
Copy !req
784. 16.
Copy !req
785. - OK, that's... you were late.
- Sorry.
Copy !req
786. - Yeah, he was.
Copy !req
787. Nevertheless, we do feel the
time has come to move on.
Copy !req
788. - Yeah.
Aww.
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789. Boo!
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790. The problem for us is
we can't...
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791. We can't make an announcement
as momentous as that
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792. and then just walk out
of the tent, can we?
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793. No, we can't. So we've uh...
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794. We've actually put together a
montage of some of the things
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795. we've done not just at Amazon
but also with our previous
employers at the BBC.
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796. Here it is.
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797. This is gonna take forever.
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798. Oh... Here we go.
Agh!
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799. Oh, my God.
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800. Its carrot's come out.
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801. Power! Power, come on!
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802. You have to let...
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803. Watch this.
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804. Oh, yeah!
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805. - Let's go!
- Go on!
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806. Holy shit.
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807. We are in fact at the cutting
edge of cocking about.
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808. Am I dead?
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809. I can't believe
I'm looking in... whoa!
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810. This could go so wrong.
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811. I've crashed!
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812. Now I know what it's like
to be Richard Hammond.
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813. It's looking good.
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814. Oh, my God!
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815. The fact is...
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816. Ooh, shit! Sorry.
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817. What are you two wearing?
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818. You bastards!
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819. Oh, no!
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820. Agh!
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821. USA! USA! USA!
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822. Very scared.
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823. See you there.
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824. Aagh!
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825. Bollocks.
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826. Whoa!
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827. Agh!
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828. - Ho-ho-ho!
- We have travelled far!
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829. Is that all right?
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830. Thank you.
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831. Thank you, and honestly.
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832. Tell you what, though, we
haven't half had some laughs.
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833. - We have.
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834. - It was brilliant, wasn't it?
- Yeah, it's all
just brilliant.
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835. I'm just going back in
my head, there's the cow
on the Camaro...
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836. - Yeah.
- The indestructible Toyota...
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837. - Yeah.
- Oliver.
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838. Beach buggies across
the dunes, that was...
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839. Driving down - it was
in there - driving down
the ski slope in Col...
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840. That was one of the best
things I've ever done.
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841. My horse mating with
your horse whilst we were—
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842. I didn't like that so much,
no.
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843. - Him falling off his horse.
- Yes.
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844. - Him falling off
his motorcycle.
- A lot, yeah.
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845. And the great thing was,
in all of the years we've
worked together,
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846. every single time um...
one of us fell over,
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847. there was never any sympathy.
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848. - You'd burst into laughter
straight away,
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849. "Ha-ha! He's hurt himself!"
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850. A whole 17 years of
your mates not giving a shit.
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851. Well, anyone out there
got fond memories?
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852. James falling over
and hitting his head.
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853. James hitting his head in
Syria, that was hilarious.
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854. - At least I can't remember.
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855. Caravans.
- What?
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856. - Caravans.
- Just caravans, generally.
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857. Endlessly caravans, no,
the disintegrating cow...
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858. - It just goes...
Spitfire!
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859. - Spitfires was good.
- Sitting in a Spitfire
looking at your mates
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860. also in Spitfires was just...
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861. Vietnam.
- Oh, yeah.
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862. God, I hated Vietnam.
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863. I liked it.
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864. I mean, I liked Vietnam,
I just didn't like being
on a motorcycle.
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865. Italian supercar.
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866. Well, we've done
Italian super cars.
There isn't an—
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867. - I liked when we did
the cheap ones.
- Oh, the cheap ones?
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868. I blew the Maserati's big end
right through the windscreen
of your Lamborghini.
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869. You literally threw
an engine at me.
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870. Yeah, I did literally throw
an engine at his head.
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871. It's all been epic.
Robin Reliant.
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872. - Don't stop.
- What?
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873. - Don't stop. Carry on.
- Please.
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874. Well, um...
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875. We do have some good news.
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876. We do have some good news,
we're not.
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877. - No.
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878. - We're not stopping.
- We can't.
We'd have to get jobs.
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879. Eugh!
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880. No, we're not
actually stopping.
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881. I mean the truth is, Amazon
loves us, we love Amazon.
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882. So we'll carry on a bit,
yeah?
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883. Yeah, we'll stick around.
The thing is, as I said,
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884. the show as you know it
is ending, and that's very
upsetting for us.
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885. You know, the audience,
and this sort of thing,
and the track.
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886. But, who'd like to see us
doing more big adventures?
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887. Road trips. Road trips?
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888. Specials, who wants
some specials, yeah?
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889. Thing is, there is...
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890. - That's uh...
- There is...
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891. Thank you.
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892. There's still so much of the
world we haven't been to yet.
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893. So many people
I haven't insulted.
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894. There are so many cars
he hasn't crashed.
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895. - There's a few.
- Exactly. So although this is
gone, The Grand Tour goes on.
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896. - It goes on!
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897. It goes on.
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898. We are gonna need
walking sticks and nappies.
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899. - No, we are.
- We are.
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900. So while it's um...
it's not goodbye from us,
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901. it is goodbye from this.
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902. Anyone want to buy a tent?
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903. - See you, take care.
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904. - See you soon.
- Thank you.
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