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Member Since: 21 Mar 2014
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I kind of think I'm with gilarion on this actually, I don't really see the point of doing it on public roads.
I mean, they're doing it because you and I can't do it and presumably the target audience would like to so it's a bit of escapism. But shouldn't we be encouraging escapism in places where it's safe and that other people *can* do it?

You or I could quite happily take a car and drive it sideways round a track, but we couldn't take a car and drive it sideways round London. Well, I couldn't drive it sideways full stop, but in principal I could. I like watching shows about things that if I put some effort in I could reasonably expect to be able to do, and I like them as something to aim towards.

Hey ho, it's done a load of free marketing I guess. When I first cancelled my TV Licence I consoled myself with the fact that I could still watch iPlayer. Now they're heading in the entirely sensible direction of charging for iPlayer I really don't think I'll bother. Subscribe to a few interesting Patreon campaigns and get the videos I actually appreciate.
Post #514898 16th Mar 2016 12:43pm
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Petronius4



Member Since: 07 Oct 2015
Location: Somerset
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Grenadier wrote:
As former HM Forces, I have to say I don't understand the fuss. I see nothing that insults me or my fallen colleagues. If you clamber and p*ss all over the Memorial itself, during an anti-something or other March, then that is specifically targeting the Memorial and what it stands for. If you drive past and flick the bird, if you steal a wreath, etc etc, likewise it is targeting the Memorial a is entirely disrespectful. But If you do doughnuts on a public street along which the Memorial happens to stand, then you're not targeting the Memorial or making it a centrepiece. So what's the fuss?

Further, think of the sort of men and women who join the forces. The Spitfire Pilots doing fly pasts against their Squadron Leader's express wishes. Soldiers doing doughnuts it tanks. Photos of crazy sailors in Bermuda shorts on their big grey machines. Let's be honest, most servicemen and women are made of exactly the sort of DNA that Top Gear is derived from. People who like fun, excitement, irreverence. To challenge the norm. Who are fed up with H&S, PC, EU led Britain. So as long as it wasn't directly targeting the memorial, then I'm sure many would love a good doughnut in central London. Life is just too bl**dy serious now. Thumbs Up


Hear, hear!! -------------------------------
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Post #514924 16th Mar 2016 1:58pm
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jimbob7



Member Since: 06 Jul 2013
Location: uk
Posts: 2055

Grenadier wrote:
As former HM Forces, I have to say I don't understand the fuss. I see nothing that insults me or my fallen colleagues. If you clamber and p*ss all over the Memorial itself, during an anti-something or other March, then that is specifically targeting the Memorial and what it stands for. If you drive past and flick the bird, if you steal a wreath, etc etc, likewise it is targeting the Memorial a is entirely disrespectful. But If you do doughnuts on a public street along which the Memorial happens to stand, then you're not targeting the Memorial or making it a centrepiece. So what's the fuss?

Further, think of the sort of men and women who join the forces. The Spitfire Pilots doing fly pasts against their Squadron Leader's express wishes. Soldiers doing doughnuts it tanks. Photos of crazy sailors in Bermuda shorts on their big grey machines. Let's be honest, most servicemen and women are made of exactly the sort of DNA that Top Gear is derived from. People who like fun, excitement, irreverence. To challenge the norm. Who are fed up with H&S, PC, EU led Britain. So as long as it wasn't directly targeting the memorial, then I'm sure many would love a good doughnut in central London. Life is just too bl**dy serious now. Thumbs Up


But you got upset at someone not fastening his top button/ tie?? (sorry,I got's nowt else to do,tho caramel (coffee) syrup with vodka is worth tryin,you will have to looksy on the bottom shelf in Tesco tho!)

http://www.defender2.net/forum/topic40125-15.html

"Yes it does. He is able bodied and able of mind, so can do his top button up and make sure his tie isn't half mast. A slovenly appearance shows lack of forethought, lack of effort and a lack of appreciation for the event. It take five secs to do your button up, five secs more to pull your tie up. Given the reason he is there, to remember the huge efforts/sacrifices these pilots made, ignoring (or I suspect positively rebelling against) these tiny little details equals lack of respect, notably in an environment where most of the attendees (and those being remembered) take a huge pride in their appearance. Indeed in any similar context (any remembrance services) the service men and women who attend, into their 90s, missing limbs, infirmed, incapable, maybe suffering from dementia etc, all make a huge effort to look their smartest, because you are making that effort in memory of fallen comrades.

Anyone can rock up in their day-to-day attire. Taking the time to be smart on such occasions, I still do, engenders respect for your comrades by saying 'I have made a little more effort for you today' and takes you out of your day-to-day comfort zone. That is what 'remembrance' is all about.

So yes, huge disrespect and even more so, IMHO, than not singing the anthem. He simply 'couldn't be bothered' for the sake of 10 secs of effort or as I mentioned above, he feels it is his socialist duty not to kow-tow to the tie-wearing establishment, which as a political statement in a non-political environment, is wholly inappropriate. Imagine if the pilots had the same lackadaisical, give a f*** mentality, he wouldn't even be in opposition.

Tw*t. Censored".
 Pov.spec,ftw. 2006, 110,TD5.


Last edited by jimbob7 on 17th Mar 2016 4:57pm. Edited 1 time in total
Post #515365 17th Mar 2016 4:51pm
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jimbob7



Member Since: 06 Jul 2013
Location: uk
Posts: 2055

Double f**in tap!! Pov.spec,ftw. 2006, 110,TD5.
Post #515366 17th Mar 2016 4:51pm
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Projectblue



Member Since: 22 Nov 2011
Location: Devon
Posts: 1096

England 
So this just out:

Quote:
Ken BlockLike Page
17 March at 14:20


Explanation FOR THE FANS: the British tabloid media decided to try to make Top Gear, host Matt LeBlanc and myself look bad this week by exaggerating a story about us doing some slides and donuts near a war memorial in London. That is unfortunate and I want my fans to know that I have complete and total respect for veterans (my Dad was a veteran) and would never do anything to deliberately disrespect them in any way whatsoever - so I was quite disappointed that some of the media was (and still is!) misinforming the public about what we were doing.

For those of you that dont know what happened: we did our slides/donuts down the street (closest drift tire mark was 180 feet (60 meters) away) from a war monument (the Cenotaph) in central London. The press ran long-lens photos that compress the distance and makes it look like we are much closer - and then they said that we disrespected the memorial. I drove past the memorial several times (its in the middle of a two lane road, London traffic goes past it 24 hours a day, every day of the year), but I did not do anything on or around it. We were respectful, and the production crew instructed me to be the appropriate distance away - which I adhered to.

This whole tabloid negativity came as a complete surprise to me as BBC are the ones who invited me over, worked for months applying for all of the proper permits to do the driving/filming, got it all approved by the proper councils of government as well, and directed my actions. We did nothing wrong, yet the British tabloids have made something out of nothing.

Unfortunately, sensationalized headlines garner attention in this day and age. I was in London to work with Top Gear to make awesome automotive television programming and promote the country and city - and we continued to do that and make an awesome piece, despite the paparazzi and false reporting.

Anyway the entire shoot went amazing, Matt LeBlanc and I had a great time making an amazing/funny piece and it will be broadcast in a few months. And, it will not feature the war memorial because it never was intended to be featured in the first place!
 New project and it's green: www.projectoverland.info
Post #516099 19th Mar 2016 11:25pm
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lambert.the.farmer



Member Since: 11 Apr 2012
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Oh well in that case, fine, crack on boys. Rhubarb and custard let fly with their secret weapon.
Post #516116 20th Mar 2016 6:56am
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Grenadier



Member Since: 23 Jul 2014
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jimbob7 wrote:
Grenadier wrote:
As former HM Forces, I have to say I don't understand the fuss. I see nothing that insults me or my fallen colleagues. If you clamber and p*ss all over the Memorial itself, during an anti-something or other March, then that is specifically targeting the Memorial and what it stands for. If you drive past and flick the bird, if you steal a wreath, etc etc, likewise it is targeting the Memorial a is entirely disrespectful. But If you do doughnuts on a public street along which the Memorial happens to stand, then you're not targeting the Memorial or making it a centrepiece. So what's the fuss?

Further, think of the sort of men and women who join the forces. The Spitfire Pilots doing fly pasts against their Squadron Leader's express wishes. Soldiers doing doughnuts it tanks. Photos of crazy sailors in Bermuda shorts on their big grey machines. Let's be honest, most servicemen and women are made of exactly the sort of DNA that Top Gear is derived from. People who like fun, excitement, irreverence. To challenge the norm. Who are fed up with H&S, PC, EU led Britain. So as long as it wasn't directly targeting the memorial, then I'm sure many would love a good doughnut in central London. Life is just too bl**dy serious now. Thumbs Up


But you got upset at someone not fastening his top button/ tie?? (sorry,I got's nowt else to do,tho caramel (coffee) syrup with vodka is worth tryin,you will have to looksy on the bottom shelf in Tesco tho!)

http://www.defender2.net/forum/topic40125-15.html

"Yes it does. He is able bodied and able of mind, so can do his top button up and make sure his tie isn't half mast. A slovenly appearance shows lack of forethought, lack of effort and a lack of appreciation for the event. It take five secs to do your button up, five secs more to pull your tie up. Given the reason he is there, to remember the huge efforts/sacrifices these pilots made, ignoring (or I suspect positively rebelling against) these tiny little details equals lack of respect, notably in an environment where most of the attendees (and those being remembered) take a huge pride in their appearance. Indeed in any similar context (any remembrance services) the service men and women who attend, into their 90s, missing limbs, infirmed, incapable, maybe suffering from dementia etc, all make a huge effort to look their smartest, because you are making that effort in memory of fallen comrades.

Anyone can rock up in their day-to-day attire. Taking the time to be smart on such occasions, I still do, engenders respect for your comrades by saying 'I have made a little more effort for you today' and takes you out of your day-to-day comfort zone. That is what 'remembrance' is all about.

So yes, huge disrespect and even more so, IMHO, than not singing the anthem. He simply 'couldn't be bothered' for the sake of 10 secs of effort or as I mentioned above, he feels it is his socialist duty not to kow-tow to the tie-wearing establishment, which as a political statement in a non-political environment, is wholly inappropriate. Imagine if the pilots had the same lackadaisical, give a f*** mentality, he wouldn't even be in opposition.

Tw*t. Censored".


Hope you enjoyed the shots Jimbob. Thumbs Up Popular over here on Apres Ski, not my cup of tea. Neat, straight and very cold is my preference for Vodka.

In answer, they're not one and the same. The doughnuts were not deliberately targeting the memorial, they were near it. They used the whole road and people getting their knickers in a twist about disrespecting the memorial were doing so disengenuously and likely or not (as non members of the Armed Forces) doing so on 'our' behalf. As far as Corbyn is concerned, I stand by what I said. He's a public figure representing our nation and his party and a slovenly appearance questions the man's attention to detail in other matters of his work. Tidy desk, tidy mind, blah, blah, blah. But as I also said, if anyone believes his tie and top button combo are anything less than a purposeful decision and a uniform of the disestablshment and therefore a nod to his hardline, sailor cap wearing socialist Union chums, then they are misguided. His button being undone and his brown tie being half mast are no less 'considered' than Cameron wearing a conservative, blue suit. So yes, I do think his attitude is inappropriate and I don't have any issue with TG having fun. Indeed, refreshing that they have done so in the greatest city in the world rather than, say, Vietnam. Movies are made on these streets all the time, not to mention what the general public get up to, so why target TG? Because they're the 'bad boys' of British TV and an easy target for the Daily Mail reading chattering classes and it's a nonsense. Monsieur Le Grenadier

I've not been everywhere, but it's on my list.....

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Post #516139 20th Mar 2016 8:53am
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walfy



Member Since: 29 Aug 2007
Location: Frome
Posts: 2661

 
After a bit of thought and listening to the arguments from either side I'm still of the opinion that it was wrong to do it.

The BBC and that ginger knob said they had no intention of insulting the monument and it wasn't supposed to appear. To that I say what a crock of sh*te. They knew exctly what they were doing. If they had no intention of filming the Cenotaph or having it in the background, why film there? Is that the only piece of tarmac that could of been used for this stunt.
Also with the amount of Brit presenters on the new TG, why have the Yank doing this segment? Because they knew it would cause issues?? 110 D250 SE HT
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Post #516214 20th Mar 2016 6:07pm
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jimbob7



Member Since: 06 Jul 2013
Location: uk
Posts: 2055

Grenadier wrote:
jimbob7 wrote:
Grenadier wrote:
As former HM Forces, I have to say I don't understand the fuss. I see nothing that insults me or my fallen colleagues. If you clamber and p*ss all over the Memorial itself, during an anti-something or other March, then that is specifically targeting the Memorial and what it stands for. If you drive past and flick the bird, if you steal a wreath, etc etc, likewise it is targeting the Memorial a is entirely disrespectful. But If you do doughnuts on a public street along which the Memorial happens to stand, then you're not targeting the Memorial or making it a centrepiece. So what's the fuss?

Further, think of the sort of men and women who join the forces. The Spitfire Pilots doing fly pasts against their Squadron Leader's express wishes. Soldiers doing doughnuts it tanks. Photos of crazy sailors in Bermuda shorts on their big grey machines. Let's be honest, most servicemen and women are made of exactly the sort of DNA that Top Gear is derived from. People who like fun, excitement, irreverence. To challenge the norm. Who are fed up with H&S, PC, EU led Britain. So as long as it wasn't directly targeting the memorial, then I'm sure many would love a good doughnut in central London. Life is just too bl**dy serious now. Thumbs Up


But you got upset at someone not fastening his top button/ tie?? (sorry,I got's nowt else to do,tho caramel (coffee) syrup with vodka is worth tryin,you will have to looksy on the bottom shelf in Tesco tho!)

http://www.defender2.net/forum/topic40125-15.html

"Yes it does. He is able bodied and able of mind, so can do his top button up and make sure his tie isn't half mast. A slovenly appearance shows lack of forethought, lack of effort and a lack of appreciation for the event. It take five secs to do your button up, five secs more to pull your tie up. Given the reason he is there, to remember the huge efforts/sacrifices these pilots made, ignoring (or I suspect positively rebelling against) these tiny little details equals lack of respect, notably in an environment where most of the attendees (and those being remembered) take a huge pride in their appearance. Indeed in any similar context (any remembrance services) the service men and women who attend, into their 90s, missing limbs, infirmed, incapable, maybe suffering from dementia etc, all make a huge effort to look their smartest, because you are making that effort in memory of fallen comrades.

Anyone can rock up in their day-to-day attire. Taking the time to be smart on such occasions, I still do, engenders respect for your comrades by saying 'I have made a little more effort for you today' and takes you out of your day-to-day comfort zone. That is what 'remembrance' is all about.

So yes, huge disrespect and even more so, IMHO, than not singing the anthem. He simply 'couldn't be bothered' for the sake of 10 secs of effort or as I mentioned above, he feels it is his socialist duty not to kow-tow to the tie-wearing establishment, which as a political statement in a non-political environment, is wholly inappropriate. Imagine if the pilots had the same lackadaisical, give a f*** mentality, he wouldn't even be in opposition.

Tw*t. Censored".


Hope you enjoyed the shots Jimbob. Thumbs Up Popular over here on Apres Ski, not my cup of tea. Neat, straight and very cold is my preference for Vodka.

In answer, they're not one and the same. The doughnuts were not deliberately targeting the memorial, they were near it. They used the whole road and people getting their knickers in a twist about disrespecting the memorial were doing so disengenuously and likely or not (as non members of the Armed Forces) doing so on 'our' behalf. As far as Corbyn is concerned, I stand by what I said. He's a public figure representing our nation and his party and a slovenly appearance questions the man's attention to detail in other matters of his work. Tidy desk, tidy mind, blah, blah, blah. But as I also said, if anyone believes his tie and top button combo are anything less than a purposeful decision and a uniform of the disestablshment and therefore a nod to his hardline, sailor cap wearing socialist Union chums, then they are misguided. His button being undone and his brown tie being half mast are no less 'considered' than Cameron wearing a conservative, blue suit. So yes, I do think his attitude is inappropriate and I don't have any issue with TG having fun. Indeed, refreshing that they have done so in the greatest city in the world rather than, say, Vietnam. Movies are made on these streets all the time, not to mention what the general public get up to, so why target TG? Because they're the 'bad boys' of British TV and an easy target for the Daily Mail reading chattering classes and it's a nonsense.


Dunno dude, JC obviously and quite rightly objects to war (especially for oil and money).Be honest,bearing in mind your most recent post,how many squaddies joined the army for a MORAL cause?? Pov.spec,ftw. 2006, 110,TD5.
Post #516446 21st Mar 2016 3:50pm
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