Top Gear USA Is Back And Here’s Why You Should Embrace It

The biggest problem with Top Gear USA is that people refuse to separate it from Top Gear UK. When you do that, you see it’s actually good fun
Top Gear USA Is Back And Here’s Why You Should Embrace It

People love to rip on Top Gear USA. Correction - car people love to rip on Top Gear USA. Another correction - car people that watch Top Gear UK love to rip on Top Gear USA. Can you guess the point I’m trying to make here?

Straight up, I’m a fan of both shows for different reasons, and I’d bet the Stig’s helmet that there are a whole bunch of people out there who feel the same way, but for whatever reason won’t admit it publicly. That’s okay, because I’ll admit it publicly for you. I like Top Gear USA, and I’m not just saying that because I’m American. I’m saying it because it’s a good, fun, entertaining car show.

Top Gear USA Is Back And Here’s Why You Should Embrace It

In fact, I know I can’t be alone on this because TG USA has managed to survive for six years despite just about every car blog, auto forum, and self-proclaimed motoring television expert complaining about it. For all the naysayers, it gives me pleasure to say the eighth season will be starting at the end of April. It comes after a hiatus of a year and a half that was filled with rumours of cancellation. It also comes after the infamous fracas that ended the much-loved programme it stemmed from.

I’m not interested in telling you what you should and shouldn’t like, but I am interested in raising some points that I believe could be keeping people from enjoying and embracing a program that speaks directly to motoring enthusiasts. So hold up on all your hate for Tanner, Adam and Rut for a few moments and let me explain why Top Gear USA isn’t as bad as you think it is.

Remote video URL

They have the same name, the same basic format, and they have the same BBC roots. But since the very first USA episode, Top Gear fans have watched through UK eyes, and that’s just not a fair comparison. Top Gear UK had years to dial in the format, and more importantly, develop the chemistry among the presenters that made it such a success. To expect that kind of home run right off the bat is simply unrealistic, and it’s unfair to the hosts. The show should be watched, judged, and appreciated on its own merits, not to the expectations of the UK version.

Remote video URL

When Top Gear relaunched in the UK in 2002, it already had the benefit of more than two decades of established history on television. Despite Top Gear’s global success, the only established Top Gear audience in the U.S. was a relatively small number of petrolheads. For Top Gear USA to survive it had to reach new viewers while keeping the traditional Top Gear fans interested.

Could the producers have done better on that last bit? Possibly, but I also believe they faced a no-win scenario with the fans no matter how good the show was. Again, it comes back to the viewers holding the new TG USA to the same standards it took TG UK nearly a decade to build.

Remote video URL

It’s pretty easy to tell the first couple of seasons were a struggle as the show tried to find its own voice. Curiously enough, it evolved away from the studio to become an hour-long car challenge format - something the new Amazon Prime show with Clarkson, Hammond and May is reported to be following. Yes, there are still the obvious scripted moments, but do you really think the UK boys constantly ended up on sketchy back roads and stuck in random swamps by accident?

Remote video URL

At first it felt like Tanner, Rutledge and Adam were the awkward strangers at a party pretending they knew everyone. In the years that have passed there’s still the sense some of their actions aren’t their own, but each has their own personality and niche in the show, and it’s satisfying to watch them interact. No, they don’t have the same chemistry as Clarkson, Hammond and May. But again, this isn’t UK Top Gear and they haven’t been doing this for 14 years.

Remote video URL

I hate to be Captain Obvious here, but it’s not like our televisions are burning up with all kinds of motoring programs in the States. Never mind that it’s a legitimately entertaining car program done by guys who do actually know and love cars. It’s not Top Gear UK - it has a different feel with different presenters that focus on different cars. That doesn’t make it better or worse, just different. Once you realise that, you understand very quickly just what kind of great, silly, enjoyable fun this show is.

Sponsored Posts

Comments

Anonymous

Next up I’m writing an article on why Pimp My Ride India edition is Awesome.

04/09/2016 - 18:43 |
0 | 0
Fin Jimbo

I don’t like Top Gear US because I can’t understand english.

04/09/2016 - 19:08 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

i liked the show from day 1, a new turn on top gear, i wouldn’t be surprised if people watch the us version instead of the new uk version

04/09/2016 - 19:20 |
0 | 0
ExtremePlunder

I gave it a sincere chance, but the lack of effort the show made ruined it for me. I know Topgear UK isn’t real, it’s mostly scripted and set up, but it’s still believable. A Ford Superduty cannot pull a full size locomotive, along the rough surface of the tracks, while doing a four-wheel burnout, on gravel. I like physics just the way it is in real life and I very much dislike it when shows and movies perpetuate false information. Shooting gasoline does not make it explode, getting a flat tire does not result in a barrel roll, and wheelspin does not give you better traction.

End rant.

On a separate note, which season starts the “good” ones?

04/09/2016 - 21:19 |
0 | 0
Hamza Qureshi

at least there is something now.

04/09/2016 - 21:58 |
0 | 0
Carson Degeorge

I like them both

04/10/2016 - 02:42 |
0 | 0
Antiprius

I do enjoy the USA version, but I see no reason to watch it when the UK version is in existence.

04/10/2016 - 02:47 |
3 | 1

I’m moving to team 5th gear with a sad mood

04/10/2016 - 15:43 |
0 | 1
ProHorizon34

Honestly I love both. I haven’t seen as much of the Uk version as I did the US but in both versions, they love to have fun with cars and they’re both VERY entertaining to watch.

04/10/2016 - 08:28 |
0 | 0
Hywel Davies
04/10/2016 - 10:23 |
1 | 0
Anonymous

I admin that the first episode of TG US got me and got me good. I still go back and watch it again when I have new car/off-road buds over. But I’ll also admit that it took awhile for me to start to the like the show and just when I did they dropped the studio and went to an open format like the UK version does every so often. The problem I had with that was those UK shows where “specials” and it seemed to me that the producers of the US variant where trying to save TG US by make it like the “specials” of the UK version. I almost stopped watching the US version because of that peel away from the UK format but then it grew on me and the presenters all started syncing and comrodery between them started to pick up so I stuck around and now I’ve actually missed the show. It could be from also missing TG UK since the last season was cut short but now that I know the US version is back and none changed with a whole new TG UK, with a “yank” at the helm as well as the original trio coming back I could not be happier!

Oh and on a side note people thought I was a little odd sitting at the bar watching a crossrally race and cheering for a guy. And when he won and me and my wife cheered loudly people had to ask and a few of them picked up quickly on who he was. So the US guys are more known than one may think.

04/10/2016 - 12:25 |
0 | 0