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Jeremy Clarkson’s “fracas” has rolled on for over a week, taking longer, as David Mitchell pointed out during The Jonathan Ross Show on Saturday, than some war inquiries do to reach a verdict.
But reports suggest that the Top Gearpresenter could be set to learn whether his career at the BBC is over today.
“If my son or daughter went to a place of work where they were shouted at, abused, and someone threw a punch at them, then I would want there to be an inquiry and I would want that to be dealt with in a very serious way, and that’s what the BBC is doing.”
Asked whether he’d expect to remain employed if he assaulted someone at work, he answered: “What do you think?”
The BBC declined to comment any further on the speculation.
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An internal investigation into the incident has been carried out by Ken MacQuarrie, the head of BBC Scotland, after Clarkson reported it himself two weeks ago. It is thought he handed his final report to Lord Hall over the weekend.
Show sources have since indicated that were Clarkson to be sacked, his co-presenters Richard Hammond and James May would be expected to go ahead with a series of live events planned this year.
On Monday, The Times quoted a source as saying that Clarkson is already thinking of himself as a man for hire and has even started to pitch new TV shows.
One of which, according to the report, sounds stunningly like Man v Countryfile.
“In the last week [Jeremy] has had a chance to firm it up,” the insider apparently told the paper.
“It’s about trying to run a farm when you don’t know anything about farming, and... getting things wrong, in a Top Gear-esque way.”
Clarkson is thought to have originally pitched the idea to George Entwistle, the BBC’s then director general, in 2012. The Times alleges the project ended because the two failed to agree on a location.
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