His comments come after the BBC confirmed Top Gear would be not returning for the “foreseeable future”.

By Katelyn Mensah

Published: Wednesday, 22 November 2023 at 10:17 AM


Former Top Gear co-presenter James May has said the show’s format “needs a rethink” following the BBC’s decision to “rest” the UK show for the “foreseeable future”.

The BBC’s decision comes after the future of the series was in doubt following Freddie Flintoff’s car accident in 2022.

Flintoff was involved in a crash at the Dunsfold Aerodrome, Surrey, in December last year while filming on the Top Gear test track, which led to filming for the 34th season being halted.

May, who previously hosted the show alongside Jeremy Clarkson and Richard Hammond, told BBC Radio 4’s Today Podcast that a new approach to the show is needed.

“My honest view is – I can say this now – it does need a bit of a rethink,” he said.

“It’s time for a new format and a new approach to the subject because the subject has not been this interesting, I suspect, since the car has been invented.”

 

After Clarkson, May and Hammond left the series in 2015, the trio began working on a new series on Amazon Prime Video, The Grand Tour.

He noted that since their departure, the motoring series has “followed a very similar format and framework to the way we left it”.

He added: “We’re getting quite old and we already do that. There’s another way. I’m not saying I know what it is but there must be another way of doing a show about cars that will perhaps embrace more fulsomely many of the questions that are being asked about cars now that weren’t for a long time.”