For years, Jeremy Clarkson was untouchable. The towering, sharp-tongued host of Top Gear wasn’t just the face of a car show — he was the BBC’s global golden boy, the man who could turn petrol fumes into prime-time ratings. His wit was biting, his controversies endless, but his empire seemed unbreakable.

And then, in 2015, came the punch.

One moment of rage, a fist thrown over a cold steak, and the empire crumbled overnight. Clarkson wasn’t just fired; he was exiled. But in that exile, he became something else: not the BBC’s king of cars, but a rebel leader with an army of millions at his back.


From Motoring Geek to Cultural Titan

Clarkson’s career was not built on diplomacy. He mocked, insulted, and provoked — and audiences loved him for it. Alongside Richard Hammond and James May, Top Gear became the most-watched factual TV program in the world, a strange hybrid of car show, comedy, and chaos.

Offscreen, Clarkson showed flashes of surprising softness. He raised millions for Help for Heroes, supporting injured veterans. He lived a life riddled with contradictions: the multimillionaire motoring mogul who also stumbled through two failed marriages, yet later found stability with Irish actress Lisa Hogan.

Jeremy Clarkson's girlfriend Lisa Hogan 'wary' about finding new romance |  Celebrity News | Showbiz & TV | Express.co.uk

But through it all, Clarkson’s defining trait was his unpredictability — the sense that he might say or do anything at any moment. And in 2015, that unpredictability boiled over.


The Steak Incident

The story has been retold a thousand times, but it still feels surreal. After a long day of filming, Clarkson expected a hot steak dinner. When he learned the kitchen had closed, words were exchanged with producer Oisin Tymon. Words turned into shouting. Shouting turned into fists.

By the end of the night, Tymon was bruised and bloodied, and Clarkson’s career was in flames. The BBC suspended him immediately, and an investigation led to his contract being torn up. For a man who had once seemed bigger than the broadcaster itself, it was a fall of Shakespearean proportions.

Jeremy Clarkson said to have got in row with producer over 'cold platter' |  Daily Mail Online


The Fallout and the Fan Revolt

But Clarkson wasn’t finished. When the BBC announced his dismissal, fans revolted. More than a million people signed a petition demanding his return, some even delivering it to the BBC’s headquarters in a tank. Clarkson had crossed a line, yes — but in the eyes of many viewers, he had also cemented his image as the last of television’s true mavericks.

Amazon smelled opportunity. With Clarkson, Hammond, and May untethered from the BBC, The Grand Tour was born. Bigger budgets, bigger stunts, bigger egos — and Clarkson at the center, still unrepentant, still commanding audiences worldwide.


From King to Rebel

Today, Clarkson remains a divisive figure. To some, he is a bully who lets arrogance get the better of him. To others, he is the very spirit of rebellion in a media landscape increasingly bound by caution. The steak incident, far from destroying him, simply rewrote his legend.

Once the BBC’s crown jewel, he is now the outsider who thrives without their approval. And maybe that was always his destiny.