This news almost made me well up on the train.
Its hard to convey just how integral to my childhood obsession for cars Jeremy Clarkson had been.
Even now he's a beacon of common sense and stability in a very turbulent and frequently insane world.
I wish him a full recovery.
I loved Jeremy Clarkson on Top Gear.
Loved him on the Grand Tour.
Love Clarksons Farm.
I know he’s outspoken and controversial but he is who he is.
That news has has hit me like a juggernaut.
I’ve never felt attached to any celebrity you’d find on TV. Clarkson, Hammond and May are the only personalities I’ve ever grown attached to. This makes me deeply sad to read. I send all my wishes for a speedy recovery
I think I speak for a lot of people when I say this.
For years, Sunday nights meant Top Gear. We’d sit down at 8pm and watch Jeremy Clarkson, Richard Hammond and James May do what they did best.
Now, through Clarkson’s Farm, Jeremy has introduced a whole new generation to the realities of British farming and earned the respect of millions all over again.
He’s made us laugh, he’s frustrated us, and he’s entertained us for decades.
Get well soon, Jezza.
The country is rooting for you. ❤️🇬🇧🙏
I used to play Xbox 360 late into the morning when I was in school. My parents found out and started turning the router off at night.
Amazingly they didn’t require a parliamentary majority and royal assent.
@PolitlcsUK@thetimes What a fucking joke. Costs rising everywhere, unemployment at a high (even when standardised) yet the government is parenting children. What a shit stain of a PM.
@FrMiller@LeftwaffenWatch Alec Baldwin killed a woman - a mother, a wife. David Tennant was Dr Who and played the father of an autistic child. What is your problem
He’s dating Kim Kardashian, who has an estimated net worth of nearly $2 billion. He's worth nearly $500 million and lives in Monaco to avoid paying taxes in the UK.
Remarkable lack of self-awareness.
Today’s decision from the Health Secretary on prostate cancer screening is a missed opportunity - too timid, too slow, and lacking the bold ambition that we so desperately wanted to see.
As I set out last week, I fundamentally disagree with the National Screening Committee’s advice on a future screening programme for prostate cancer, which is far too narrow. I strongly believe that if we are really to get on top of prostate cancer - the most common cancer in British men - then a proper, targeted screening programme for all those at higher risk is needed… and needed now.
I welcome expanded provision of focal therapy, which I benefited from last year with my own cancer; this must be an urgent priority to make available across the NHS. And the recognition that more work is needed to screen at risk groups, such as black men, is important.
But this was an opportunity for bold, decisive, life-saving action - action that would help save the heartache of too many families losing a loved-one to this disease. That, sadly, has been missed. We will continue the campaign to urge the Government to go further, faster and put in place a progressive policy that includes a proper screening programme for the most at-risk men.