The best UK TV shows of every year this century 2002: Top Gear

It would end in a punch-up over a cold-meat supper, but when Jeremy Clarkson and producer Andy Wilman rebooted the BBC’s creaky motoring show as a lad mag in TV form, they were doing something genuinely revolutionary. Top Gear was TV for Blokes that wasn’t in the least apologetic about it. Cyclists were jeered at, expensive cars driven at speed, single-entendres dropped like breadcrumbs at a pigeon convention. Top Gear quickly became BBC’s global cash-cow. The audience spanned continents and, at its peak, the franchise was worth an estimated £50m annually to the corporation. Clarkson and co-presenters Richard Hammond and James May left under a cloud when Clarkson lamped one of his crew in 2015. Top Gear has since struggled to replace the dynamic trio. Cheeky duo Freddie Flintoff and Paddy McGuinness were recently unveiled as the latest strapping in for a test drive. We wish them well – perhaps in vain.

BBC